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This month, for the May 2026 episode of the RCEM Learning Podcast, Rob speaks with another seven amazing speakers from the RCEM Annual Conference.
A 32-year-old female presents with back pain and shortness of breath indicating possible pulmonary embolism who gets sent home despite positive D-Dimer.
An elderly female patient presents to the ED with abdominal pain, constipation, and vomiting, with a picture of large bowel obstruction with unusual aetiology.
A febrile patient presents with severe headache, periorbital swelling, proptosis, painful ophthalmoplegia and cranial nerve deficits following recent facial or sinus infection.
A RTC patient sustains a right leg fracture and develops a stroke while applying a plaster requiring thrombectomy and hemicraniectomy.
A 47-year-old woman presents to the emergency department with descending paralysis.
A young person presenting with recurrent UTI
A 33-year-old male with haemochromatosis and mental health history presents with recurrent dizziness and chest tightness. Despite extensive normal investigations, symptoms persist, raising the challenge of diagnosis.
In this blog we're talking about hyperglycaemia in the ED. There aren't any official guidelines on management, but our experience has shown that there's a huge variation in practice, and many cases are mismanaged.