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result(s) for
"Strayer, Reuben"
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Alternatives to Rapid Sequence Intubation: Contemporary Airway Management with Ketamine
by
Merelman, Andrew
,
Perlmutter, Michael
,
Strayer, Reuben
in
Airway management
,
Anesthetics, Dissociative - pharmacology
,
Critical Care
2019
Endotracheal intubation (ETI) is a high-risk procedure commonly performed in emergency medicine, critical care, and the prehospital setting. Traditional rapid sequence intubation (RSI), the simultaneous administration of an induction agent and muscle relaxant, is more likely to harm patients who do not allow appropriate preparation and preoxygenation, have concerning airway anatomy, or severe hypoxia, acidemia, or hypotension. Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic, can be used to facilitate two alternatives to RSI to augment airway safety in these scenarios: delayed sequence intubation - the use of ketamine to allow airway preparation and preoxygenation in the agitated patient; and ketamine-only breathing intubation, in which ketamine is used without a paralytic to facilitate ETI as the patient continues to breathe spontaneously. Ketamine may also provide hemodynamic benefits during standard RSI and is a valuable agent for post-intubation analgesia and sedation. When RSI is not an optimal airway management strategy, ketamine's unique pharmacology can be harnessed to facilitate alternative approaches that may increase patient safety.
Journal Article
Adverse events associated with ketamine for procedural sedation in adults
by
Nelson, Lewis S.
,
Strayer, Reuben J.
in
Adult
,
Airway management
,
Airway Obstruction - etiology
2008
Ketamine is widely used as a procedural sedation agent in pediatrics, where its safety and efficacy are supported by numerous studies. Emergency physicians use ketamine infrequently in adults, as it is believed to have a more significant side effect profile in this population. However, adult data on ketamine use in the emergency medicine literature are sparse. Our objective was to determine ketamine's adverse effect profile in adults when used for procedural sedation.
We performed a literature review based on adverse effect research methodology recommendations. PubMed, EMBASE, TOXNET, and a variety of specialized databases were queried without regard to publication date or language. Experts were contacted to locate additional data.
Inclusion criteria included adult study; ketamine used to facilitate the performance of painful procedures; dose of at least 1 mg/kg intravenous or at least 2 mg/kg intramuscular; original data and adverse events reported; spontaneously breathing patient, and no continuous cotherapies. Studies that met inclusion criteria were abstracted onto structured forms and their results qualitatively summarized.
Of the 5512 unique citations that were evaluated, 87 met criteria for inclusion. Most studies were performed in the 1970s and published in the anesthesia literature. Contexts, end points, and methodological quality varied widely across studies. Ketamine reliably produces conditions that facilitate the performance of painful procedures. Pharyngeal reflexes are generally preserved and cardiovascular tone stimulated, including a rise in blood pressure and myocardial oxygen demand. Laryngospasm and airway obstruction are reported, and though ketamine is a respiratory stimulant, a brief period of apnea around the time of injection is common. Reports of significant cardiorespiratory adverse events are rare, despite ketamine's frequent use in austere, poorly monitored settings. Dysphoric emergence phenomena occur in 10% to 20% of cases; sedating medications are effective in preventing and managing these reactions.
When ketamine is used for procedural sedation in adults, emergence phenomena occur in 10% to 20% of patients. Although providers must be prepared to recognize and manage airway obstruction, cardiorespiratory adverse events are rare and typically do not affect outcomes.
Journal Article
Something for pain: Responsible opioid use in emergency medicine
by
Nelson, Lewis S.
,
Motov, Sergey M.
,
Strayer, Reuben J.
in
Acute Pain - drug therapy
,
Addictions
,
Alternatives
2017
The United States is currently experiencing a public health crisis of opioid addiction, which has its genesis in an industry marketing effort that successfully encouraged clinicians to prescribe opioids liberally, and asserted the safety of prescribing opioids for chronic non-cancer pain, despite a preponderance of evidence demonstrating the risks of dependence and misuse. The resulting rise in opioid use has pushed drug overdose deaths in front of motor vehicle collisions to become the leading cause of accidental death in the country. Emergency providers frequently treat patients for complications of opioid abuse, and also manage patients with acute and chronic pain, for which opioids are routinely prescribed. Emergency providers are therefore well positioned to both prevent new cases of opioid misuse and initiate appropriate treatment of existing opioid addicts. In opioid-naive patients, this is accomplished by a careful consideration of the likelihood of benefit and harm of an opioid prescription for acute pain. If opioids are prescribed, the chance of harm is reduced by matching the number of pills prescribed to the expected duration of pain and selecting an opioid preparation with low abuse liability. Patients who present to acute care with exacerbations of chronic pain or painful conditions associated with opioid misuse are best managed by treating symptoms with opioid alternatives and encouraging treatment for opioid addiction.
Journal Article
Improving Uptake of Emergency Department-initiated Buprenorphine: Barriers and Solutions
by
Hawk, Kathryn
,
Strayer, Reuben
,
Samuels, Elizabeth
in
Addictions
,
Addictive behaviors
,
Behavioral Health
2022
Emergency departments (ED) are increasingly providing buprenorphine to persons with opioid use disorder. Buprenorphine programs in the ED have strong support from public health leaders and emergency medicine specialty societies and have proven to be clinically effective, cost effective, and feasible. Even so, few ED buprenorphine programs currently exist. Given this imbalance between evidence-based practice and current practice, proven behavior change approaches can be used to guide local efforts to expand ED buprenorphine capacity. In this paper, we use the theory of planned behavior to identify and address the 1) clinician factors, 2) institutional factors, and 3) external factors surrounding ED buprenorphine implementation. By doing so, we seek to provide actionable and pragmatic recommendations to increase ED buprenorphine availability across different practice settings.
Journal Article
Prevalence of serious injuries in low risk trauma patients
by
George, Megha R.
,
Carroll, Moira
,
Strayer, Reuben J.
in
Clinical significance
,
Clinically significant injury
,
Computed tomography
2020
Computed tomography (CT) utilization is widespread in contemporary Emergency Departments (EDs). CT overuse leads to radiation exposure, contrast toxicity, overdiagnosis, and incidental findings. This study explores the prevalence of clinically significant injuries in patients identified as low-risk trauma patients (LRTPs) using newly created criteria that account for the patient's age, trauma mechanism, assessability (which relies on level of consciousness, intoxication, and neurologic deficits), vital signs and other evidence of hypoperfusion, bleeding risk, and past medical history.
This was a 6-month retrospective chart review of all LRTPs presenting to a level 1 trauma center in Queens, New York. Data abstraction was performed independently by two abstractors and discrepancies adjudicated by the senior author. Patients were identified using the hospital trauma registry and two reports, created by the researchers, identifying selected chief complaints and discharge diagnoses.
750 patients were identified of which 352 (46.93%) received one or more CT scans. There were a total of 790 CT scans ordered, of which 731 (92.53%) were negative for acute injury. There were 13 clinically significant injuries of which only one (0.13%) required immediate intervention. There were no mortalities in this LRTP group.
The prevalence of clinically significant injuries in this population is very low and injuries requiring immediate intervention are even lower. CT utilization in LRTPs should be guided by an explicit consideration of benefit and harm for each patient.
Journal Article
Cold water immersion implementation for hyperthermia induced cardiac arrest
2025
Cold water immersion (CWI) is the most effect, evidence-backed intervention for managing severe hyperthermia. The Wilderness Medical Society recommends prioritizing airway, breathing, and circulation before cooling, followed by treating heat stroke with CWI and intravenous hydration [ 5]. While CWI should not replace critical interventions such as high-quality chest compressions or airway management, we call upon the emergency and prehospital community to recognize the high mortality associated with hyperthermic cardiac arrest and the proven efficacy of CWI.
Journal Article
Medical Utilization Rate at Music Festivals: The Effect of Crowd Behavior
by
Friedman, Matt S.
,
Fidacaro, George A.
,
Strayer, Reuben J.
in
Body temperature
,
Crowding
,
Drug use
2021
Electronic dance music festivals (EDMFs) are rising in popularity but have gained notoriety due to an alarming incidence of hospitalizations and deaths.1,2 In order to estimate needed resources, mass-gathering medicine literature has focused on predicting medical utilization at these events. Commonly used variables thought to influence MUR include event type and duration, temperature, geographic location (indoor versus outdoor), crowd type and behavior, and alcohol and drug use.3,4 Previously described experience at similar events has been shown to accurately predict future needs.5 The National Association for EMS Physicians (NAEMSP; Overland Park, Kansas USA) has incorporated these factors into guidelines to help medical directors allocate resources and design risk mitigation tactics.5 However, there are currently no evidenced-based recommendations regarding optimal allotment of assets at musical festivals. The sympathomimetic properties of MDMA elevate the body’s core body temperature while its euphoric qualities both encourage increased physical activity and distract the user from resulting potentially dangerous hyperthermia.
Journal Article
Succinylcholine, rocuronium, and hyperkalemia
[...]rocuronium offers a tremendous safety advantage in the much more common cannot intubate, can ventilate scenario, preventing the return of airway reflexes (and vomiting) as repeated airway attempts are executed.
Journal Article
Best practice during procedural sedation with ketamine
2017
Ketamine reliably causes an increase in blood pressure and heart rate; this is generally self-resolving and of no consequence but may rarely precipitate dangerous conditions such as pulmonary edema.
Journal Article