Does LAT gel reduce the need for general anaesthesia for wound closure in children?

You are assessing a wound on the forearm of a 4 year old boy who fell whilst playing football. There does not appear to be any deeper structure involvement but you feel the wound is likely to require suturing. Your department does not currently perform paediatric sedation and therefore the vast majority of young children presenting with wounds requiring suturing are referred to specialty teams for general anaesthetic for wound closure. You have worked in a department where topical anaesthetic is applied to wounds in children to facilitate closure and wonder whether the use of this in your department would reduce the number of children referred for closure under general anaesthetic.

High flow nasal oxygen therapy for acute respiratory failure in adults

A 62 year old man is brought in to hospital with a 48 hour history of breathlessness, a productive cough and fever. He is tachypnoeic and hypoxaemic with SpO2 on air of 89%. His oxygen saturations correct to 98% with high flow oxygen via a facemask. However, he is confused and uncomfortable and repeatedly removes the facemask resulting in recurrent desaturations. You wonder whether there is an effective alternative to face mask oxygen that he is more likely to tolerate.

Physiotherapy intervention in community-dwelling adults post-CABG: What is effective intervention to improve exercise tolerance?

A multidisciplinary supported discharge team (Physiotherapists, Occupational Therapist, Rehabilitation Assistants) notice an increase in referrals for patients in the early post-op phase (2-6 weeks) following CABG. The team provide short-term rehab (up to 6 weeks) to patients in their own homes. Team physiotherapists are unsure what form of intervention is most effective at improving exercise tolerance in this patient group.

Is Norepinephrine better than Dopamine in vasopressor support of Septic Shock?

A 47-year-old female presents to the emergency department with fever, shortness of breath, tachycardia and tachypnea. Her O2 saturation is 90% with an Fi02 of 50% and her blood pressure is 75/35 mmHg. Her x-ray reveals a large consolidation compatible with the diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia. After adequate fluid resuscitation and early antibiotics, she remains hypotensive and poorly perfused. You have dopamine and norepinephrine at hand for vasopressor support, and you wonder which one is the best in septic shock.

Steroids in addition to antibiotics for Community Acquired Pneumonia

A 38 year-old teacher presents to the ED with bilateral pneumonia. On arrival he is confused, SpO2 is 91% on air, RR is 38/min and BP is 105/59mmHg. You start treatment for severe CAP with a CURB-65 score of ≥3 and inform ITU. Would the addition of steroids to antibiotics improve this patient’s mortality and shorten his length of stay in hospital?

Treatment of Patients with Cocaine Induced Arrhythmias n

A 19 year old male who has been using crack cocaine for the past few days presents to the emergency room with chest pain and a wide complex tachycardia. He is quite agitated, hypertensive and uncooperative. You know that benzodiazepines are the recommended drugs for cocaine overdose, but what is the best medical treatment for cocaine induced arrhythmias.

Diagnosing Pneumoperitoneum with Abdominal Ultrasound

A 42 year old man presents with severe constant upper abdominal pain with no nausea and vomiting preceded by two days of vague ‘heartburn’. He has been binge drinking over the weekend and is a smoker of 20 pack years. He had been diagnosed with peptic ulcer three years previously by his GP. He appears to be in obvious distress with a distended rigid abdomen, rebound tenderness, absent bowel sounds and is unwilling to sit up or be moved. His ECG is normal. You clinically suspect a perforated duodenal ulcer as your main differential diagnosis and as you resuscitate him you think if it is possible to detect free intra-peritoneal air using ultrasound.

Clinical Toxicity of the Designer “Party Pills” (Piperazine Derivatives)

An 30-year-old female is brought to your Emergency Department by ambulance with a chief complaint of drug overdose. The patient has intermittent tonic-clonic seizure activity and decreased responsiveness. In her pocket, you find several tablets later identified as party pills (or piperazine derivatives). As she is admitted to the hospital, you wonder what her prognosis will be.

Diphenhydramine as prophylaxis against akathisia in patients receiving metoclopramide n n

A 52-year-old woman presents to your emergency department with a severe gastroenteritis. She is moderately dehydrated and is nauseated. While you prescribe intravenous rehydration and metoclopramide as antiemetic medication, one of your colleagues comes in and suggests that you add prophylactic diphenhydramine to prevent metoclopramide-induced akathisia. You wonder if this should be done routinely and perform a thorough search of the literature.

Hand and Wrist Splinting in infants with Erbs Palsy

An infant under 3 months with Erb’s Palsy is referred to occupational therapy for hand splints. You wonder if splinting is a useful intervention to improve joint range of movement (ROM) for this client group.

Clearing the Cervical spine clinically in young children (0-3 years)

A 3-year-old boy is brought to your ED after falling top to bottom of stairs at home. Parents witnessed his landing and he did not lose consciousness. The child is distressed, and only his mother is able to have a reasonable rapport with him. Would having Clinical Decision Rule (CDR) help in clearing C-spine clinically, to avoid imaging?

TENS for post-operative shoulder pain

Clinical Scenario Your musculoskeletal physiotherapy service is considering developing a supervised gym class for post-operative shoulder patients. Many patients experience post operative pain which impacts on their ability to perform exercises. Would the use of TENS machines during the class be beneficial in decreasing pain?

In adult stroke patients does participation in an upper limb circuit class improve upper limb motor function in the hemiplegic arm n

Evidence for the effectiveness of circuit class therapy (CCT) in patients post stroke has concentrated on lower limb parameters, walking tasks and balance. There is some research emerging on the effects of participation in CCT on upper limb recovery post stroke. This BET will help to inform class structure and content.