EMERGENCY MEDICINE

4,748 views 52 slides Jan 30, 2023
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 52
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25
Slide 26
26
Slide 27
27
Slide 28
28
Slide 29
29
Slide 30
30
Slide 31
31
Slide 32
32
Slide 33
33
Slide 34
34
Slide 35
35
Slide 36
36
Slide 37
37
Slide 38
38
Slide 39
39
Slide 40
40
Slide 41
41
Slide 42
42
Slide 43
43
Slide 44
44
Slide 45
45
Slide 46
46
Slide 47
47
Slide 48
48
Slide 49
49
Slide 50
50
Slide 51
51
Slide 52
52

About This Presentation

Emergency Medicine
Emergency Department
Accident & Emergency Services


Slide Content

1
EMERGENCY MEDICINE:
Principles & Practice
Prof. Syed Amin Tabish
FRCP (London), FRCP (Edin.), FAMS, MD(AIIMS)
Postdoc Fellowship (England)
Doctorate in Educational Leadership (USA)

2
Goals of a Health System
Health is fundamental to quality of life
All human beings have an equal right to
heath
The Ideal Health system has to achieve:
Attaining Good health for all people
Being responsive to the expectations of the
people
Maintaining fairness in allocation of
resources for obtaining service

3
Health For All
The universal goal of the Health
System is to ensure adequate
access to quality care at a
reasonable cost
Achieving Health for All requires:
Primary Health Care (Key to HFA)
Emergency Care

4
Morbidity & mortality
Rapid industrialization & urbanization
Motor Vehicle accidents are the leading
cause of death by injury and the 10
th
.
leading cause of all deaths
Violence: political unrest, conflict-
related, militancy-related episodes, war
Disasters: natural, man-made including
technological disasters
Emergent infection: SARS, Bird flu,
Plague, Influenza, etc.

5
Injury Prevention/Disease
Identification
Several health care issues have become
important to the public and the medical
profession:
Real public health threats such as injury,
injury prevention, substance abuse,
violence, etc.
These issues represent a major cost to
society, both in terms of medical
expenditures as well as lost productivity.

6
EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Emergency Medicine is in a unique
position in the health system:
The interface between community care and
hospital care and is usually well integrated
with the community services (general
practitioner, ambulance service, district
nursing), with outpatient services conducted
by hospitals and with inpatient services
EM: ideally situated to demonstrate the
relationship between these.
The public expects that all medical students
and physicians are capable of providing care
for medical emergencies -care for all ages
and all diseases, either illness or injury.

7
EM: Scope
Patients present to Emergency Departments
with problems rather than diseases,
highlighting the importance of a problem-
based approach to clinical decision making
Emergency Medicine is integrated both
horizontally (with other clinical disciplines) and
vertically (with basic science and applied
science disciplines). Emergency Medicine is
Multidisciplinary.
These features make Emergency
Departments ideal learning environments for
medical students.

8
EM: Scope (contd.)
All doctors should possess general skills and
knowledge regarding emergency care of the
acutely ill or injured patient.
There is a need for every medical school
graduate to handle emergencies as they
arise in the daily practice of medicine.
The assessment and management of
emergencies is a central component of
medical education encompassing principles
that apply to all clinical disciplines.

9
EM: Scope (contd.)
The emergency department (ED) provides a
unique educational experience that is distinct
from both inpatient and ambulatory care
settings.
Because of the high acuity, interesting
pathology, and rapid patient turnover, the ED
is an ideal location to train medical students.
Numerous teaching opportunities exist within
the domain of the ED.
OBJECTIVE:Saving lives and limbs,
reducing disability

10
Scope (contd.)
Encounters such as the acutely poisoned or
intoxicated patient, environmental
emergencies, interaction with out-of-
hospital providers, and patients requiring
emergency procedures are just a few
situations that make emergency medicine a
distinct clinical specialty.
Essential elements to create a progressive learning
environment over the entire undergraduate
educational experience include:
Resuscitation room
The undifferentiated problem
Health system management
Common minor problems

11
EM: Unique Content
Content areas unique to EM include:
Out-of-hospital careinvolves medical care in the
community.
Toxicologyoffers the medical student a good
correlation between biochemistry, pharmacology,
and clinical medicine. Many poisoned patients also
require resuscitative and critical care skills.
Environmental disease and injuriessuch as
bites and stings, dermatitis, burns, disorders of
temperature, near drowning or lightning injuries
commonly present in the ED.

12
Components of EM
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
Basic first aid
ED/EMS observation
Injury prevention/disease identification
Approach to patient with life or limb threatening
disease -case correlation with pathology,
pharmacology, pathophysiology courses.
Procedures -suturing, splinting, basic airway
management, intubation, IVs, NGT placement
Focus on the acutely ill or injured patient
The coordination of treatment with other physicians
and health services.

13
Triage
Medical prioritization and triage
decision making
Triage is the process used to sort
patients in order of acuity or the
severity of illness
Right Patient at Right Place at the
Right Time
The utilization of scant resources
and the ability to prioritize care with
minimal or incomplete information

14
Resuscitation Presentations
Major topics to be addressed include:
"collapse", chest pain, shortness of breath,
altered conscious state and the multiply
injured patient.
Procedures appropriate to this section are
basic life support,advanced cardiac life
support and the assessment and
management of the multiply injured. The
emphasis is on rapid assessment skills
and airway, breathing and circulation
procedures.

15
The Undifferentiated Problem
Many patients present to ED with
undifferentiated problems for example
abdominal pain, headache and dyspnoea
Students should learn about linking the
clinical task with clinical decision making
and practice.
Also know how to use investigations to
assist (not direct) the decision making
process.

16
The Undifferentiated Problem (contd.)
Procedures include:
•history taking
•clinical examination
•documenting of findings
•charting and measurement of vital signsincluding
pulse, blood pressure, temperature and Glasgow
Coma Score
•performance of bedside testssuch as urinalysis,
ECG, venepuncture, intravenous access,
catheterizationof the bladder and stomach and
administration of oxygen and nebuliser therapy.

17
Other Common Problems
A number of non-life threatening problems include
the assessment and management of soft tissue
injuries and infections, extremity injuries, burns
and otolarygological(ENT) and ophthalmological
problems.
Relevant procedures to be learntinclude
examination ofthe neurovascular system,
tendons, ears, eyes, nose and throat, local
anesthetic techniques,soft tissue injury repair,
joint dislocations and the reduction and
management of minor fractures.

18
General Skills
General Assessment Skills
Such skills include:
focused patient history
physical diagnosis
medical decision making
exposure to a broad base of
"undifferentiated" patients and a wide
variety of personal and social issues
that influence patient care.

19
Life-saving Resuscitation Skills
All physicians should
learn recognition of
life-threatening
situations and
initiation of
resuscitation skills.

20
Life -saving procedures
Airway management and intubation
Augmentation of circulation
Hemorrhage control
Limb stabilization
Suturing
Splinting
Central line insertion
Defibrillation
Respiratory and circulatory support, IV's,
NGT's
Neurologic treatment
care for the acutely psychotic and the poisoned
patient

21
EM: Clerkship
Perform an appropriately directed history and
physical examination
Recognize emergent and urgent problems
Develop a differential diagnosis for common
presenting complaints such as chest pain,
shortness of breath, abdominal pain.
Develop an appropriate and cost-effective
management plan for the ED patient presenting
with common complaints such as acute asthma
exacerbation, congestive heart failure,
bronchitis, etc.
Demonstrate proper wound care and suture
technique for simple lacerations.

22
EM Clerkship (contd.)
Recognize ischemic patterns and
arrhythmias on EKG tracings.
Appropriately interpret results of complete
blood count, chemistries, urinalysis, arterial
blood gases, and the common laboratory
studies.
Appropriately interpret radiographs (X ray)
of the chest, abdomen, and extremities.
Recognize the indications for specialty or
subspecialty consultation.

23
Toxicology/Hazmat
Know the
principles of:
biochemistry
pharmacology
pathophysiology
as they relate to poisoning
and hazardous material

24
Trauma
One of the leading causes of
disability and premature
death
Know the epidemiology,
pathophysiology and
principles of treatment.

25
Specific Patient Care
Specific clinical conditions:
The approach to the patient
with:
short of breath
altered mental status
chest pain
multiple injuries
hypertension
pregnant patient
The pediatric patient

26
Other Skills
To gain first-hand experience with
airway management (bag-valve-mask
and oxygen administration, etc.),
hemorrhage control, fluid resuscitation,
limb stabilization and CPR in the ED
Universal Precautions to be observed
Emergency Preparedness
-Code Blue: for management of Cardiopulmonary Arrest
-Code Yellow: for poly trauma/ mass casualties
-Code Green/Black: Disaster Management
Legal Aspects of Emergency Care

27
Management of the Health Care System
Emergency physicians often act as
"gatekeepers" and are responsible for
the coordination of a patient's care
among outpatient clinics, observation
services and patient transfer.
The ED provides an ideal environment
to educate the medical student on
appropriate consultation practices and
referral to other health care services,
while providing cost-efficient care.

28
MINIMUM LIBRARY RECOMMENDATIONS
Cambridge Textbook of Accident and
Emergency Medicineedited by David V Skinner, J
W Rodney Peyton, Colin E Robertson, Andrew Swain
Emergency Medicine: A Comprehensive Study
Guide
by American College of Emergency Physicians
Principles and Practice of Emergency
Medicine bySchwartz, George R.
Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1999.
Emergency Medicine Manual
by O. John Ma, David M. Cline, Judith E. Tintinalli
Emergency Medicine: Concepts and clinical
practice
Eds: Rosen P, Baker FJ, BarkinRM

29
JOURNALS
Emergency Medicine. Australasian Society for Emergency
Medicine.
Annals of Emergency Medicine. American College of
Emergency Physicians
Journal of Emergency Medicine. PermagonPress
Emergency Clinics of North America. WB Saunders
Company
Emergency Medical Abstracts.Ed: HasapesGA
Medline

30
THANK
YOU

31
THANK
YOU

32Head trauma
Injuries are the leading cause of death in children, and
brain injury is the most common cause of pediatric
traumatic death.
Theautomobile is the most lethal component of a
child's environment.

33•200-300/100,000 per annum
•$7.5 Billions per annum in the USA
•multipleaetiologies
–automobiles
–abuse
–falls (bikes, skateboards, ATVs, walkers,windows)
–missiles (lawn darts, bullets)
Head trauma: statistics

34

35•diffuse axonal injury
•brainstem injury
•bilateral hemispheric damage
Coma can result from:Coma can result from:

36Subdural Subdural vs.vs.epiduralepidural
LifeArt: Williams & WilkinsLifeArt: Williams & Wilkins
http://www.lifeart.comhttp://www.lifeart.com

37•is venous in origin (bridging
veins)
•is associated with a
reasonable outcome if
removed early
Subdural hematoma ISubdural hematoma I
WebPath: University of UtahWebPath: University of Utah
http://wwwhttp://www--medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.htmlmedlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.html

38•is venous in origin
(bridging veins)
•is associated with a
reasonable outcome if
removed early
Subdural hematoma IISubdural hematoma II
WebPath: University of UtahWebPath: University of Utah
http://wwwhttp://www--medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.htmlmedlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.html

39•usually arise from the
bridging veins
•bridging veins are more
susceptible to tearing
when there is cortical
atrophy
Subdural hematoma IIISubdural hematoma III
WebPath: University of UtahWebPath: University of Utah
http://wwwhttp://www--medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.htmlmedlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.html

40•video of subdural
hematoma resection
•dura is bluish, discolored,
tense
•pressure on cortex
relieved upon resection of
dura
Subdural hematoma resectionSubdural hematoma resection
DogByte ProductionsDogByte Productions
Oregon Health Sciences UniversityOregon Health Sciences University
QuickTime™ and a
Sorenson Video decompressor
are needed to see this picture.

41•is arterial in origin
•middle meningeal artery is
torn
•often is a true neurosurgical
emergency
Epidural hematoma IEpidural hematoma I
WebPath: University of UtahWebPath: University of Utah
http://wwwhttp://www--medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.htmlmedlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.html

42Epidural hematoma IIEpidural hematoma II
WebPath: University of UtahWebPath: University of Utah
http://wwwhttp://www--medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.htmlmedlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.html

43http://www.neurosurgery-neff.com/trauma_research.html
Hematoma: distortion
•hematoma displaces brain
toward the right
•strain or distortion of brain
tissue visualized
colorimetrically: deep blue low
distortion, and yellow and red
high distortion or stretching
•in this case there is about
17% distortion

44http://www.neurosurgery-neff.com/trauma_research.html
Hematoma: interstitalpressure
•interstitial pressure is
depicted
•although the midbrain
is in contact with the
tentorialincisura, the
most greatly affected
perfusion is within the
ipsilateralhemisphere

45•is usually frontal or
temporal lobe
•can be bilateral
(contracoupinjury)
IntracerebralIntracerebralhemorrhagehemorrhage

46•is usually frontal
or temporal lobe
Focal injuryFocal injury
WebPathWebPath: University of Utah: University of Utah
http://wwwhttp://www--medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.htmlmedlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.html

47•a fall backwards
resulted in
bilateral injury
•inferior frontal
and temporal
lobes
Coup Coup --contracoupcontracoupinjuryinjury
WebPathWebPath: University of Utah: University of Utah
http://wwwhttp://www--medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.htmlmedlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/webpath.html

48

49Cerebral perfusion scanCerebral perfusion scan

50Cerebral perfusion scan IICerebral perfusion scan II

51
Thank
you

52