Now showing items 80-99 of 160

    • Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP; Williams, Saralyn; Fiechtl, Jim (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2009-12-10)
      Dr. Saralyn Williams joins us this month for Toxicology and Environmental articles. She works as a board certified toxicologist and in the ED. Her enthusiasm for teaching and her laughter are infectious. Get ready to ...
    • Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP; Fiechtl, Jim (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2009-12-09)
      The top ten trauma articles from this year (2008) are here! In this month's podcast, we discuss radiation dose in trauma patients as they get multiple CT scans, use of steroids in c-spine trauma, the latest on zone 2 neck ...
    • Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP; Fiechtl, Jim (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2010-05-19)
      Welcome to the new Keeping Up paradigm! We are moving from a monthly to a weekly format. This will get you the latest research in Emergency Medicine in a fresher, more relevant, and more concise way.
    • Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP; Fiechtl, Jim (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2010-05-19)
      We have a swine influenza (H1N1) update, ROMICAT CTA for MI rule out, Ottawa Ankle Rule for kids, vancomycin misdosing, whole body CT in trauma and effect on mortality, and many more.
    • Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP; Fiechtl, Jim (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2010-05-19)
      New American Heart SAH guidelines, antibiotics and pneumonia (does 4 hours really matter?), ED overcrowding, and many more for you on this week's edition of Keeping Up.
    • Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP; Fiechtl, Jim (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2010-05-19)
      Welcome to Keeping Up Week 20, This Week in Journals. From calcium channel blockers vs. adenosine for SVT to green bananas for diarrhea in kids, these are ten articles you need to know for your practice. Get ready for ...
    • Fiechtl, Jim; Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2010-05-19)
      A couple of key cardiology articles came out this week that you need to know. Also, to help you learn more, we have added the Keeping Up Bullets: 60 seconds at the end summarizing everything in this week's podcast. Once ...
    • Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP; Heavrin, Ben (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2009-12-10)
      Should we do the ABCs or focus more on compressions... the CBAs? What can you learn from >42,000 pediatric head injury patients? You have to know the latest decision rule for peds head CT. Also, can we safely omit ...
    • Smith, Clay, MD, FACEP, FAAP; Johnston, Michael, MD, FAAP (Vanderbilt Medical Center. Vanderbilt Emergency Medicine, 2009-12-29)
      So begins the new paradigm... ten super-high quality articles in 15 minutes every other week. What is the evidence for high-flow oxygen for cluster headache? Should LMA size be based on actual or ideal body weight for big ...
    • Spindler, Kurt P. (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2010-04-09)
    • Knee OA 
      Carey, James L. (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2011-01-06)
    • Carey, James L. (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2010-04-09)
    • Knee PE 
      Spindler, Kurt P. (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2011-01-27)
    • Preston, Emily (Emily B.) (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2011-01-13)
    • Guy, Jeffrey S. (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2011-11-12)
      This podcast is a description of how lactate is produced and metabolized. I will discuss the role of lactate in the diagnosis and management of shock. This podcast will focus on Type A lactic acidosis.
    • Guy, Jeffrey S. (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2011-11-19)
      The types of lactic acidosis that are not familiar. They can be caused by medications, underlying disease, or inborn errors of metabolism.
    • Guy, Jeffrey S. (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2007-05-14)
      Lightning injuries are rare, but when you do treat a patient they can have facinating presentations. This lecture follows a patient we treated at Vanderbilt. The patient present to a local ED with stroke like symptoms ...
    • Kirschner, Marc (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2007-07-06)
    • Tessier-Lavigne, Marc (Vanderbilt University. Medical Center, 2007-07-06)
    • Sahasrabuddhe, Vikrant V.; Newton, Mark W.; Goudar, Shivaprasad (Vanderbilt University. Institute for Global Health, 2008-02-22)