Emergency Medicine articles covering diagnosis, lab studies, imaging, procedures, prehospital care, emergency department care, prognosis, follow-up.
Trick of the Trade: A mini-suction device
You are doing a shift in the pediatric ED and you are evaluating a kid with a small bead in her ear. There are a ton different approaches you can use (eg. tissue adhesive glue on a q-tip stick). If the bead is in too deep, blindly trying to adhere the foreign body to the glue is a bit risky. Sometimes applying gentle irrigation might not be enough to wash out the bead. You want to avoid irrigation if you worry about a tympanic membrane rupture.
Trick of the Trade: Build a mini-suction device using part of a butterfly needle.
Cut off the back end of a butterfly needle, leaving about a 2-4 cm tail off of the white plastic hub.
Tightly wedge the hub into a suction hose.
Turn on the suction.
Thanks to Dr. Liz Brown (UCSF-SFGH EM resident) for this fantastic idea.
This is a question that I’ve gotten a few times over the years. You’ve got a patient in AFIB that has been rate controlled after a bolus of...
online dating chat rooms,free online dating chat,online dating chat tips,dating sites chat,chat avenue dating,online games dating,online chat singles,love dating
online dating chat rooms,free online dating chat,online dating chat tips,dating sites chat,chat avenue dating,online games dating,online chat singles,love dating