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This month we have High MAP targets in sepsis | Guidelines for EM - Top of the Guidelines | Antibiotics for max fax fractures | New Online.
Patient with combined beta-blocker and calcium channel blocker overdose with hypoglycemia, hypotension and bradycardia.
A 39-year-old man presents with a 4–5-day history of fever, rigors, general malaise, and worsening shortness of breath.
A 55-year-old presents with bilateral lower leg pitting oedema and heart failure symptoms. Unremarkable initial investigations lead to digging deeper for the correct diagnosis.
A 34-year-old G2P1 IVF patient at 40+5 weeks presents with severe epigastric pain, bilateral leg swelling, hypertension and proteinuria. Despite initial management, she subsequently collapses and develops cardiac arrest, requiring on-site resuscitative hysterotomy.
A 68-year-old man with a prior history of MI is pre-alerted to hospital as having had a pre-syncopal episode with an abnormal ECG.
A 58-year-old man presents to your Emergency Department with a headache and right sided vision loss.
A 10-year-old boy presents with fever, malaise, and rapidly spreading painful skin lesions with oral and eye involvement, following a recent course of antibiotics.
A 56-year-old lady with a severe learning disability presents to ED with abdominal pain and distension, suspecting her last bowel movement was 2 weeks ago.