General anaesthesia or conscious sedation for reducing a dislocated hip prosthesis?

An otherwise fit 71-year old lady presents to your department having slipped on the ballroom floor during a tea dance. She is unable to weight bear and has pain in her left hip. X-ray reveals a dislocation of her hip prosthesis, and she tells you that it's not the first time. You wonder if it's reasonable to sedate her and manipulate it in the department, or refer her to orthopedics to join the rather long emergency list, to be manipulated later. Perhaps days later. She is starved, and you have suitable anaesthetic experience.

The use of tocolytic therapy in a pregnant trauma patient

A pregnant woman of 32 weeks gestation is admitted to the ED after a fall. She has blunt abdominal trauma and is having what seem to be uterine contractions. You wonder whether you start tocolytic therapy to try to prevent or delay a premature delivery and so prevent some of the possible complications for both mother and baby.

What’s the evidence for evidence-based medicine?

During a lull in the action over the Festive Season, an Academic ST trainee and a Specialist Registrar are discussing a case. The ST trainee cites a paper to back up his arguments. The Specialist Registrar ignores the ST trainee, claiming that his experience and "old school expertise" are obviously superior. You wonder whether evidence-based medicine is truly superior to expert opinion. Expert opinion holds that evidence-based medicine is superior. But what does the evidence say?

Gammahydroxybutyrate overdose and physostigmine

A 25 year old man is brought to the Emergency Department after collapsing in a club. His friends report ingestion of Gammahydroxybutyrate (GHB) and alcohol. His Glasgow Coma Scale score is 3 on arrival and he is intermittently apnoeic. When you attempt to intubate him he seems to rouse but quickly becomes unresponsive again once you stop. You ask for anaesthetic help. The anaesthetic registrar has a similar experience on attempting intubation. You are sure you have read that physostigmine can be used to avoid intubation in this situation. You wonder if you have remembered correctly.

Does oral aciclovir improve clinical outcome in immunocompetent children with primary herpes simplex gingivotomatitis?

A 3-year-old previously well boy presents with a fever of 38.6°C and several ulcers and erosions extending from his lips, along the tongue and cheek, to the back of the throat. The lesions have all appeared within the last 2 days. He has been crying inconsolably over the past 24 h and is refusing food and drink. Considering the current evidence we question whether the use of oral aciclovir is indicated for primary herpes gingivostomatitis in children.

Treating Chlamydia in Pregnancy

A patient presents to the Emergency Department with complaints of abdominal pain and vaginal discharge. You find out she is pregnant and has chlamydia; will antibiotic treatment help decrease the incidence of miscarriage and/or preterm labor?

Use of pericardiocentesis for patients with cardiac tamponade in penetrating chest trauma

A 43-year-old male is brought into the resuscitation room having been stabbed with a knife in his left chest. The patient is hypotensive (blood pressure 80/40mmHg) but remains conscious, and cardiac tamponade is suspected. A focussed abdominal sonography for trauma scan (FAST) shows an obvious haemopericardium with early right ventricular collapse. There is no on site cardiothoracic support and the general surgeons want to transfer the patient to another hospital for definitive surgery. The on call surgical registrar decides to perform pericardiocentesis for this patient but you wonder if this procedure is useful.

Can paramedics’ accurately perform drug calculations?

Paramedics may be exposed to incidents in uncontrolled environments, managing potentially critically ill patients, other people, and other emergency services. In the presence of these factors, can paramedics still conduct drug calculations with a high degree of accuracy?