Spermatic cord anesthesia block (SCAB) is a useful technique for providing anesthesia to males with scrotal pain. This technique has been described and published in the urology and anesthesia literature for more than 40 years. Initially described as a blind injection, anesthesia of the spermatic cord provides pain control to the scrotal contents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Emergency ultrasound (EUS) has been recognized as integral to the training and practice of emergency medicine (EM). The Council of Emergency Medicine Residency-Academy of Emergency Ultrasound (CORD-AEUS) consensus document provides guidelines for resident assessment and progression. The Accredited Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has adopted the EM Milestones for assessment of residents' progress during their residency training, which includes demonstration of procedural competency in bedside ultrasound.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFemur fractures typically affect elderly patients with multiple co-morbidities. Pain control can be difficult, requiring intensive nursing and physician care as elderly patients may manifest cardiovascular and respiratory complications from opiate administration. Ultrasound (US)-guided three-in-one (3-in-1) femoral nerve block (FNB) is an option for pain management in patients with femur fractures, as it provides regional anesthesia to the femoral, obturator and lateral cutaneous nerves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe influence of using ofloxacin in place of ciprofloxacin on hospital fluoroquinolone expenditures, total antimicrobial expenditures, and susceptibility of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to fluoroquinolones was studied. Hospitals with fluoroquinolone expenditures of at least $1 per occupied bed per year were administered annual surveys covering the years 1993 through 1996. The two most recent consecutive years of data were compared among hospitals that used ciprofloxacin as their primary fluoroquinolone during both years (group 1), hospitals whose ofloxacin purchases increased from accounting for < or =25% of total fluoroquinolone expenditures during year 1 to accounting for >25% during year 2 (group 2), and hospitals whose ofloxacin purchases accounted for at least 25% of total fluoroquinolone expenditures for both years (group 3).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Health Syst Pharm
September 1996
Hospital expenditures on antimicrobial drugs, antimicrobial management practices, and the effects of these practices were studied. A survey on institutional budget, size, and staffing; intensive care unit drug costs and use evaluations; and pharmacy expenditures, including antimicrobial costs, for 1993 and 1994 was sent to 122 hospitals. The written survey was followed by telephoned questions regarding each institution's antimicrobial management and expenditures, and any perceived link between the two.
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