clusions Infected ethmoid-frontal mucoceles with a defect of the lamina papyracea tend to induce orbital infection, so prompt surgery for the infected mucoceles should be considered early even with Types I and II, before visual acuity is impaired, because surgery is the only curative treatment for the mucoceles.Objective To alleviate pain after tonsillectomy (TE) with escalating gradual treatment protocols in a prospective trial. Materials & methods Following TE, 83 consecutive adult patients were treated with two different four-staged escalating analgesic protocols. Metamizole served as basic medication in protocol 1 (PT1; n = 44), whereas with protocol 2 (PT2; n = 39) ibuprofen was applied as baseline analgesic. Both protocols were escalated according to the patient´s needs to metamizole and ibuprofen vice versa and additional weak to strong opioids. The primary efficacy endpoint was defined as the minimum and maximum pain as well as pain on ambulation (NRS, 0-10). Secondary endpoints comprised analgesic score, patient satisfaction and treatment-related side-effects. Results Both patient groups exhibited similar demographic characteristics (PT1 Ø 28.8 years; 64% ♀ and PT2 Ø 26.6 years; 56% ♀). Maximum pain (6.7 ± 1.9 vs. 7.6 ± 1.6, t(81) = -2.254, p = 0.027) and pain on ambulation (5.0 ± 1.8 vs. 5.8 ± 1.8, t(81) = -2.114, p = 0.038) were significantly higher with PT2. 68.2% of patients with PT1 needed an escalation of analgesic treatment compared to 100% with PT2 (p less then 0.001). The opioid consumption was also significantly higher with PT2 (43.2% vs. 71.8%, p less then 0.001). There were no significant differences regarding functional impairments, side-effects and patient satisfaction (7.0 ± 2.0 vs. 7.4 ± 2.4, t(79) = -0.897, p = 0.373). Conclusion Both treatment protocols yielded in a high degree of patient satisfaction but dissatisfactory pain relief following TE. Metamizole can be recommended as a basic medication allowing for improved pain relief. Reported pain intensities were independent of the amount of opioid intake. Further research is mandatory to standardize and improve analgesic treatment after TE.Hypopharyngeal multichannel intraluminal impedance (HMII) that can measure laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR) events has supported the causal relationship between chronic cough (CC) and LPR containing liquid. However the role of "gas" LPR associated with CC has been poorly understood. We present two cases of patients with CC who had negative LPR containing liquid but had multiple episodes of "gas" LPR on HMII. The majority of "gas" LPR events had a minor pH drop at hypopharynx. Since any etiology of CC was excluded and medical therapy failed, both patients underwent laparoscopic antireflux surgery (LARS). Both of the patients had complete resolution of cough postoperatively. The present cases demonstrated successful outcome of LARS to treat the patients with CC who had documented "gas" LPR on HMII, thus suggesting the causal relationship between CC and "gas" LPR. The number of "gas" LPR events may need to be considered as an important diagnostic parameter.Migratory foreign body appeared to be bird feather, caused peritonsillar and periparotid abscess in a nine-month-old infant. Patient presented painful, tender and fluctuating red neck mass on the left neck region II, and refusal of oral intake, with no fever. Azithromycin was introduced four days before presentation for suspected urinary tract infection. ENT examination revealed left peritonsillar abscess; ultrasound confirmed periparotid abscess, **** verified both diagnoses. Under general anaesthesia, we performed abscess incision, after pus drainage, small foreign body spontaneously came through the wound. After washing it with saline, it appeared like a bird feather. Subsequently, peritonsillar abscess was incised and drained. After 24-hour postoperative care on pediatric intensive care unit, the patient continued three-day parenteral antibiotic treatment on the otolaryngology department; it was discharged with a recommendation to continue seven days of oral antibiotic therapy. Suggested mechanism was ingestion of bird feather from stuffed bedding, that got trapped in the tonsillar crypt. Afterwards, it started to migrate through the neck tissue. Households with children younger than three years should not have feather stuffed clothes or beddings.Background Myocarditis is a rare sequelae of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and typically presents after the initial diagnosis of AML has been made. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/thiomyristoyl.html Case report We present the case of a 37-year-old female who came to the emergency department with chest pain, ST elevations on electrocardiogram, and a positive point-of-care troponin. She was brought emergently to the cardiac catheterization laboratory. After a negative catheterization, blasts were noted on the complete blood count, ultimately leading to the diagnosis of AML, with myopericarditis as the presenting manifestation. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS? This case highlights the need for emergency physicians to consider a broad differential for chest pain, especially in those who do not fit into the prototypical patient with acute coronary syndrome.Background Eighty-eight percent of pediatric emergency department (ED) visits occur in general EDs. Exposure to critically ill children during emergency medicine (EM) training has not been well described. Objective The objective was to characterize the critically ill pediatric EM case exposure among EM residents. Methods This is a secondary analysis of a multicenter retrospective review of pediatric patients (aged less then 18 years) seen by the 2015 graduating resident physicians at four U.S. EM training programs. The per-resident exposure to Emergency Severity Index (ESI) Level 1 pediatric patients was measured. Resident-level counts of pediatric patients were measured; specific counts were classified by age and Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Network diagnostic categories. Results There were 31,552 children seen by 51 residents across all programs; 434 children (1.3%) had an ESI of 1. The median patient age was 8 years (interquartile range [IQR] 3-12 years). The median overall pediatric critical case exposure per resident was 6 (IQR 3-12 cases).
clusions Infected ethmoid-frontal mucoceles with a defect of the lamina papyracea tend to induce orbital infection, so prompt surgery for the infected mucoceles should be considered early even with Types I and II, before visual acuity is impaired, because surgery is the only curative treatment for the mucoceles.Objective To alleviate pain after tonsillectomy (TE) with escalating gradual treatment protocols in a prospective trial. Materials & methods Following TE, 83 consecutive adult patients were treated with two different four-staged escalating analgesic protocols. Metamizole served as basic medication in protocol 1 (PT1; n = 44), whereas with protocol 2 (PT2; n = 39) ibuprofen was applied as baseline analgesic. Both protocols were escalated according to the patient´s needs to metamizole and ibuprofen vice versa and additional weak to strong opioids. The primary efficacy endpoint was defined as the minimum and maximum pain as well as pain on ambulation (NRS, 0-10). Secondary endpoints comprised analgesic score, patient satisfaction and treatment-related side-effects. Results Both patient groups exhibited similar demographic characteristics (PT1 Ø 28.8 years; 64% ♀ and PT2 Ø 26.6 years; 56% ♀). Maximum pain (6.7 ± 1.9 vs. 7.6 ± 1.6, t(81) = -2.254, p = 0.027) and pain on ambulation (5.0 ± 1.8 vs. 5.8 ± 1.8, t(81) = -2.114, p = 0.038) were significantly higher with PT2. 68.2% of patients with PT1 needed an escalation of analgesic treatment compared to 100% with PT2 (p less then 0.001). The opioid consumption was also significantly higher with PT2 (43.2% vs. 71.8%, p less then 0.001). There were no significant differences regarding functional impairments, side-effects and patient satisfaction (7.0 ± 2.0 vs. 7.4 ± 2.4, t(79) = -0.897, p = 0.373). Conclusion Both treatment protocols yielded in a high degree of patient satisfaction but dissatisfactory pain relief following TE. Metamizole can be recommended as a basic medication allowing for improved pain relief. Reported pain intensities were independent of the amount of opioid intake. Further research is mandatory to standardize and improve analgesic treatment after TE.Hypopharyngeal multichannel intraluminal impedance (HMII) that can measure laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR) events has supported the causal relationship between chronic cough (CC) and LPR containing liquid. However the role of "gas" LPR associated with CC has been poorly understood. We present two cases of patients with CC who had negative LPR containing liquid but had multiple episodes of "gas" LPR on HMII. The majority of "gas" LPR events had a minor pH drop at hypopharynx. Since any etiology of CC was excluded and medical therapy failed, both patients underwent laparoscopic antireflux surgery (LARS). Both of the patients had complete resolution of cough postoperatively. The present cases demonstrated successful outcome of LARS to treat the patients with CC who had documented "gas" LPR on HMII, thus suggesting the causal relationship between CC and "gas" LPR. The number of "gas" LPR events may need to be considered as an important diagnostic parameter.Migratory foreign body appeared to be bird feather, caused peritonsillar and periparotid abscess in a nine-month-old infant. Patient presented painful, tender and fluctuating red neck mass on the left neck region II, and refusal of oral intake, with no fever. Azithromycin was introduced four days before presentation for suspected urinary tract infection. ENT examination revealed left peritonsillar abscess; ultrasound confirmed periparotid abscess, MSCT verified both diagnoses. Under general anaesthesia, we performed abscess incision, after pus drainage, small foreign body spontaneously came through the wound. After washing it with saline, it appeared like a bird feather. Subsequently, peritonsillar abscess was incised and drained. After 24-hour postoperative care on pediatric intensive care unit, the patient continued three-day parenteral antibiotic treatment on the otolaryngology department; it was discharged with a recommendation to continue seven days of oral antibiotic therapy. Suggested mechanism was ingestion of bird feather from stuffed bedding, that got trapped in the tonsillar crypt. Afterwards, it started to migrate through the neck tissue. Households with children younger than three years should not have feather stuffed clothes or beddings.Background Myocarditis is a rare sequelae of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and typically presents after the initial diagnosis of AML has been made. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/thiomyristoyl.html Case report We present the case of a 37-year-old female who came to the emergency department with chest pain, ST elevations on electrocardiogram, and a positive point-of-care troponin. She was brought emergently to the cardiac catheterization laboratory. After a negative catheterization, blasts were noted on the complete blood count, ultimately leading to the diagnosis of AML, with myopericarditis as the presenting manifestation. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS? This case highlights the need for emergency physicians to consider a broad differential for chest pain, especially in those who do not fit into the prototypical patient with acute coronary syndrome.Background Eighty-eight percent of pediatric emergency department (ED) visits occur in general EDs. Exposure to critically ill children during emergency medicine (EM) training has not been well described. Objective The objective was to characterize the critically ill pediatric EM case exposure among EM residents. Methods This is a secondary analysis of a multicenter retrospective review of pediatric patients (aged less then 18 years) seen by the 2015 graduating resident physicians at four U.S. EM training programs. The per-resident exposure to Emergency Severity Index (ESI) Level 1 pediatric patients was measured. Resident-level counts of pediatric patients were measured; specific counts were classified by age and Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Network diagnostic categories. Results There were 31,552 children seen by 51 residents across all programs; 434 children (1.3%) had an ESI of 1. The median patient age was 8 years (interquartile range [IQR] 3-12 years). The median overall pediatric critical case exposure per resident was 6 (IQR 3-12 cases).
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