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Latest Articles

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Mesenteric Ischemia

Shannon Toohey, MD*

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21980/J8CC7FIssue 1:1[mrp_rating_result]
At the end of this simulation session, the learner will: 1) Recognize signs and symptoms of mesenteric ischemia; 2) order appropriately imaging and labs in the workup of an elderly patient with abdominal pain; 3) manage a patient with mesenteric ischemia, a rare, but serious cause of abdominal pain in the elderly; 4) discuss anchoring bias, specifically related to patients referred to the ED with an established diagnosis by outside specialists.
Abdominal/GastroenterologySimulation
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Atrial Myxoma

Alisa Wray, MD*

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21980/J87P45Issue 1:1[mrp_rating_result]
Bedside ultrasound revealed the presence of a left atrial mass that appeared to be tethered to the mitral valve. The mass was best viewed on ultrasound in the apical four-chamber window with the phased array probe placed over the patients’ point of maximal impact (PMI), with the patient in left lateral decubitus position.
UltrasoundCardiology/VascularVisual EM
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Hampton’s Hump in Pulmonary Embolism

Jonathan Patane, MD* and Megan Boysen Osborn*

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21980/J83W27Issue 1:1[mrp_rating_result]
In the lateral view chest x-ray, there is a Hampton’s Hump, a pleural based, wedge-shaped opacity at the base of the right lung, representing lung infarction (black arrow). These findings correlate with the sagittal view on CT angiography of the chest. The CT chest also shows a filling defect in the distal posterior basal segmental pulmonary artery (white arrow), as demonstrated by the absence of contrast enhancement in the distal portion of the vessel. This is associated with an opacification of the lung parenchyma distal to the occlusion (red arrow), representing lung infarction.
RespiratoryVisual EM
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Acute Pericarditis: Electrocardiogram

Jason Mefford, MD* and Shannon L Toohey, MD*

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21980/J8059QIssue 1:1[mrp_rating_result]
The ECG shows diffuse ST- elevation. The patient also has mild PR-depression, most notably in the inferior and lateral leads. The patient also has minimal PR elevation in lead aVR. The patient was diagnosed with acute pericarditis (ECG stage 1).
Cardiology/VascularVisual EM
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Thompson Test in Achilles Tendon Rupture

Spencer Albertson* and Megan Boysen Osborn, MD, MHPE*

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21980/J8VC7SIssue 1:1[mrp_rating_result]
The left Achilles tendon had a defect on palpation, while the right Achilles tendon was intact. When squeezing the right (unaffected) calf, the ankle spontaneously plantar flexed, indicating a negative (normal) Thompson test. Upon squeeze of the left (affected) calf, the ankle did not plantar flex, signifying a positive (abnormal) Thompson test. The diagnosis of left Achilles tendon rupture was confirmed intraoperatively one week later.
OrthopedicsTraumaVisual EM
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Pediatric Retractions

[mrp_rating_result]
Keywords: pediatrics, retractions, respiratory, pulmonary
RespiratoryVisual EM
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Normal CXR: AP and Lateral

[mrp_rating_result]
  Keywords: radiology, normal, chest, CXR, pulm, respiratory, cardiovascular, CV, AP, lateral
Respiratory
post intubation chest x-ray
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Normal CXR and Post-Intubation CXR

[mrp_rating_result]
  Keywords: radiology, normal, intubation, CXR, chest, respiratory, respiratory failure, AP, ETT, post-intubation
RespiratoryProcedures
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Normal Head CT

[mrp_rating_result]
  Keywords: radiology, normal, CT head, neuro, axial
Neurology
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FAST Exam: Normal Suprapubic

[mrp_rating_result]
  Keywords: radiology, trauma, normal, suprapubic, FAST exam, videos, ultrasound, US
Trauma
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