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The Resus Room

January 2019; papers of the month

The Resus Room

Simon Laing

Science, Emergencymedicine, Medicine, Health & Fitness, Em, Ae

4.8678 Ratings

🗓️ 1 January 2019

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Happy New Year!! Hopefully you got a bit of downtime over the festive period and are feeling suitably refreshed and ready to attack 2019!

We've got 3 great papers to kick off the year. First up we look at the recent PReVENT trial which looks at ventilator strategies in patients without ARDS with respect to tidal volumes. This paper continues the work from the much cited ARDSNet paper from 2000, and we'd highly recommend you go and have a look at that paper first.

Next we look at another paper from JAMA which compares Thrombolysis to Aspirin in minor non-disabling strokes. We say enough about this one in the podcast, but for a bit of background to our thoughts and the evidence surrounding stroke, check out our previous Stroke Thrombolysis podcast.

Lastly we have a look at a paper investigating their systems use of push-dose-pressors, which whilst not the most methodologically sound piece of research, certainly brings out some interesting thoughts and points.

As always make sure you take a look at the papers yourselves and we'd love to hear and comments or feedback you've got.

Enjoy!

Simon & Rob

References & Further Reading

Effectof a LowvsIntermediateTidalVolumeStrategyon Ventilator-FreeDaysin IntensiveCareUnitPatientsWithout ARDS: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA.2018 Writing Group for the PReVENT Investigators

Ventilationwith lowertidal volumesas comparedwith traditionaltidal volumesfor acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome. Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeNetwork. N Engl J Med.2000

PReVENT; The Bottom Line

EMCrit; Vent and Prevent, an update

Effectof AlteplasevsAspirinon FunctionalOutcomefor PatientsWith AcuteIschemicStrokeand MinorNondisabling Neurologic Deficits: The PRISMS Randomized Clinical Trial. Khatri P. JAMA.2018

TheResusRoom; Stroke Thrombolysis podcast

Push dose pressors: Experience in critically ill patients outside of the operating room. Rotando A. Am J Emerg Med.2018

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Recess Room podcast.

0:03.9

Five, four, three, two, one, fire.

0:13.3

So hi, and welcome back to the Recess Room podcast in 2019.

0:18.8

Ooh, I'm Simon Lang, And I'm Rob Fenwick.

0:21.4

And this is January 2019 Papers of the Month.

0:25.9

If you hear the bells chiming, he is a hard taskmaster.

0:29.2

It is literally being recorded at the turn of midnight.

0:33.3

So here we go.

0:34.4

Another year down.

0:35.5

Thanks for all the support of the podcast in 2018.

0:38.1

It's been a fantastic year.

0:39.9

And we're very much hoping that 2019 will be even better.

0:43.4

We've got some big plans of what we want to bring you.

0:45.6

And yeah, it should be a good year for all of us.

0:48.6

Definitely.

0:49.2

I completely echo that.

0:50.6

And I'm sure James would as well.

0:51.9

It has been phenomenal. Thank you for the continued

0:54.1

listening to the podcast and all the interactions on social media. Tolerating. Yeah, it's probably a

0:59.6

better way to put it. It has been genuinely fantastic and we are all very humbled by you sticking

1:05.0

with us. So thanks again. A big thanks again to A Prack for supporting the podcast. They deliver

1:09.8

high quality advanced clinical practitioners to EDs up and down the country.

...

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