Intravenous Sub-dissociative Dose Ketamine Injection Versus Infusion for Analgesia in the Emergency...
PainObjective: The purpose of this study is to determine if administering ketamine as an intravenous (IV) infusion over 15 minutes, as compared to an IV push, will decrease adverse drug reactions without attenuating its analgesic effects. Study design: prospective, randomized, controlled, double-blind trial.
EMERGEncy Versus Delayed Coronary Angiogram in Survivors of Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest
Out-of-Hospital Cardiac ArrestSudden cardiac death (SCD) remains a major public health issue with a low survival rate. The most common cause of SCD is acute coronary artery occlusion. Several registry based studies suggest that coronary angiography (CA) performed at admission followed if necessary by coronary angioplasty improves in-hospital and long term survival. Recent guidelines recommend performing an immediate CA in all survivors of SCD with no obvious non cardiac cause of arrest. However there is a lack of randomized data on this topic. Several retrospective studies have shown that if the post-resuscitation electrocardiogram (ECG) shows ST segment elevation, the probability of finding an acute coronary artery lesion during the CA is high (70-80%). In contrast, if no ST segment elevation is present the probability is low (15-20%). Performing an immediate CA in all survivors of SCD can be challenging. It requires admitting these patients to centers with an intensive care unit and facilities allowing 24/24 7/7 CA. It may increase the delay of performing other therapeutic modalities such as CT brain or thorax scan to determine the cause of SCD. Performing the CA 48 to 96 hours after admission would facilitate the management of these difficult patients. However if the cause of the arrest is a coronary artery occlusion and there is a delay in reperfusion, the rate of post-arrest shock and the mortality may increase. Therefore a randomized study comparing immediate versus delayed (between 48 to 96 hours) CA in survivors of SCD with no obvious non-cardiac cause of arrest is warranted.
Translation of an Intervention for Violence Among Adolescents in Emergency Departments
ViolenceThe translation study aims to refine and package intervention and training materials essential to translating an efficacious Emergency Department (ED) based Brief Intervention (BI) for violence (SafERteens) for two delivery methods: by ED staff on site or by therapist remotely. The study will take place in two phases. During the Effectiveness phase, we will determine the effectiveness of the interventions [on-site therapist delivered BI + text messages (n=133); remote therapy delivered BI + text messages (n=133)], as compared to a usual care control (brochure; n=133), on violence outcomes at 3 months. Note that tailored text messages will be delivered daily for the first month post-discharge, and three times per week in the second month post-discharge to the BI groups. During the Implementation phase, components of the RE-AIM model will be assessed over a 4-month period.
Intravenous Fluid Therapy for the Treatment of Emergency Department Patients With Migraine Headache...
Migraine HeadacheThe purpose of this study is to determine whether patients in the emergency department with migraine headache who are administered an intravenous fluid bolus will report greater improvement in pain scores than control patients.
Intravascular Access of COVID-19 Patient Under Personal Protective Equipment
Cardiac ArrestEmergenciesThe current COVID-19 pandemic, this is especially since the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is thought to occur mainly through respiratory droplets generated by coughing and sneezing, by direct contact with contaminated surfaces and because in a large number of patients COVID-19 disease may be asymptomatic. As recommended by the CDC medical personnel should be equipped with full personal protective equipment (PPE) for AGP in contact with suspected/confirmed COVID-19 patient. Therefore, it is reasonable to search for the most effective methods of intravascular access in those conditions.
A Pilot Study on the Use of Methoxyflurane (Penthrox®) for Pain Control in the Emergency Department...
Acute Traumatic PainPatients commonly visit the emergency department (ED) for pain after musculoskeletal injury and need early treatment with analgesic. Prompt and adequate pain relief can reduce suffering and promote early discharge and return to work. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and opioids are the major injectable analgesic used for moderate to severe pain in EDs in Hong Kong. They are given via intravenous or intramuscular route for faster onset of action to achieve rapid pain relief in the emergency setting. However, injections are invasive and can be distressing for patients. Methoxyflurane (Penthrox®) is recently introduced to our emergency department as an inhalational analgesic. It has been granted registration approval in Hong Kong since 2018, but it is not widely used in the locality. Methoxyflurane is a volatile fluorinated hydrocarbon self-administrated by inhalation through a portable hand-held whistle-shaped inhaler device (Penthrox®) to relieve pain associated with trauma or minor surgical procedures in stable and conscious patients. In this study, the investigators will evaluate the efficacy and safety Penthrox® in the treatment of acute traumatic pain in hospital emergency department setting by comparing it to another conventional analgesic commonly used.
Comparison of Great Occipital Nerve and Supraorbital Nerve Blockade Methods at Treatment of Acute...
Migraine DisordersAim Acute migraine attack is a clinical condition that is frequently encountered in emergency departments and varies from patient to patient in terms of treatment modalities. There are many different treatments whose effectiveness has been proven by concrete evidence(1). Drug treatments applied to patients are generally given intravenously or intramuscularly. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, metoclopramide and intravenous magnesium therapy is generally used for treatment in emergency departments (1). The effectiveness of supraorbital nerve blockade and great occipital nerve blockade in migraine treatment and prophylaxis has been proven in many studies(2-6). The aim of this study is to discuss the effectiveness of supraorbital and great occipital nerve blockade treatments in acute migraine attack, when combined or used individually.
Non-invasive Airway Management of Comatose Poisoned Emergency Patients
PoisoningConsciousness2 moreA decreased level of consciousness is a common reason for presentation to the emergency department (ED) and is often the result of intoxication (up to 1% of all ED visits and 3% of ICU admission). In France, approximately 165 000 poisoned patients are managed each year. Originally developed in head injured patients, the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) is a validated reproducible score evaluating the level of consciousness: a GCS ≤ 8 is strongly associated with reduced gag reflex and increased incidence of aspiration pneumonia. Although recommended for patients with traumatic brain injury and coma, it remains unknown whether the benefit of an invasive management of airways with sedation, intubation and mechanical ventilation should be applied to other causes of coma in particular for acute poisoned patients. The investigator hypothesize that a conservative management with close monitoring without immediate endotracheal intubation of these patients is effective and associated with less in-hospital complications (truncated at 28 days) compared to routine practice management (in which the decision of immediate intubation is left to the discretion of the emergency physician).
ED-LEAD: Emergency Departments Leading the Transformation of Alzheimer's and Dementia Care
Alzheimer's Disease Related DementiaAlzheimer DiseaseThe purpose of this study is to improve the care of persons living with dementia (PLWD) and their informal care partners by addressing emergency and post-emergency care through different combinations of three PLWD-care partner dyad focused interventions. The primary aims are to use coaching to help connect PLWD and their care partners with community support and services to improve transitional care, quality of care, care satisfaction and reduce future ED visits and hospitalizations.
Effectiveness of a Mobile App in Reducing Therapeutic TAT in an Emergency Department
Pediatric Emergency MedicineTherapeutic Turnaround TimeThis study is a single center, non-equivalent comparison group, pre-post study in a tertiary pediatric emergency department in Switzerland. the study will compare the control and experimental groups on outcome measures before (12-month period) and after (6-month period) the intervention consisting of the implementation and use of the evidence-based mobile app-the ''Patients In My Pocket in my Hospital'' (PIMPmyHospital) app. The primary outcome will be the mean elapsed time in minutes between the delivery of lab results and the emergency department caregivers accessing them before (i.e., on the institutional electronic medical records) and after the implementation of the app (i.e, directly on the app).