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How much epinephrine is sufficient?

Emergency Medicine Education

Epinephrine and cardiac arrest: what’s the question? How much epinephrine is enough? published a retrospective study in AJEM discussing cumulative epinephrine dosage in cardiac arrest. Link to article Garcia et al.

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IM Epinephrine for Cardiac arrest

Emergency Medicine Education

Resuscitation recently published an article that assessed the association between intramuscular (IM) epinephrine and survival outcomes, including survival to hospital discharge, survival to hospital admission, and functional survival. Link to article

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Epinephrine versus norepinephrine

Emergency Medicine Education

Intensive Care Medicine recently published an article with focus on “Epinephrine versus norepinephrine in cardiac arrest patients with post-resuscitation shock” This study was in Paris metropolitan region. Link to article

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The November 2024 Research Roundup

First 10 EM

Back for another month of interesting, arcane, important, or baffling articles. As we enter the winter in the Northern hemisphere, and I have little interest in heading outside, I will probably spend more time reading, so these write ups might get longer for the next few months.

OR 58
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SGEM Xtra: Dogmalysis 2021

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

There is also a link to the original article for people to read the primary literature for themselves. Key results are provided with a number of the study limitations (dog leash) identified. There is an SGEM bottom line and a link to the original SGEM episode to provide more results and critical appraisal.

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SGEM#188: Icatibant Bites the Dust – For ACE-I Induced Angioedema

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

Your resident tells you that they recently read an article in the NEJM that argued for the administration of icatibant to usher along resolution of symptoms in ACE-I induced angioedema and asks whether you should consider this treatment. Though this disorder is routinely treated with medications for anaphylaxis (i.e.

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SGEM#253: Everybody’s Working on the Weekend

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

The article was called “A lexicon for gender bias in academia and medicine: Mansplaining is the tip of the iceberg” It was published in the December 2018 edition of the BMJ. It attracts participants from all over Ontario and even the US. It is 2am Saturday morning and the night shift has been busy.