You are on the ED observation unit morning ward round. Your next patient is a 25-year-old man, admitted during the night for “head injury observations” following an alleged assault.…

You are on the ED observation unit morning ward round. Your next patient is a 25-year-old man, admitted during the night for “head injury observations” following an alleged assault.…
A 30-year-old professional martial artist sustained a direct blow to the left side of his face during training.…
Identify the anatomical factors that contribute to the pathophysiology of mandibular and temporomandibular joint injury…
Fractures of the mandible are the second most common facial fracture seen in the ED after nasal fracture…
Anyone who has ever worked in an ED on a Friday night knows that facial injuries are a common presentation…
This session covers the assessment, investigation and management of injuries to the bones of the midface; the zygoma, zygomatic arch, maxilla, orbit and nose.…
Cranial nerve injuries are important clinical signs, which alert the examiner to intracranial pathology. This session will look at the more common traumatic and medical causes of cranial nerve injury…
This 18-year-old patient was allegedly punched by a stranger during a night out.…
This session covers the assessment, treatment and management of patients presenting to the emergency department with primary blast injuries…
Another night out and another facial injury.…
FRCEM Primary Examination Single Best Answer…
A 23-year-old male presented to the ED on a Friday night with a punch injury to the face.…
Managing Parkinson’s in the ED, Flaoting in the Face of Danger, MaxFax injuries in the E, and Paediatric Heart Murmurs & what to do with them…
You put an adult trauma call out and start preparing for the patient.…
The 3rd in the series on Eye Anatomy. This vodcast looks at the bits that move the eye. Make sure you check out the other 2 vodcasts, bits of the eye and bony parts of the eye as well. Enjoy!…