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75F with Lleg pain after direct trauma
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Classroom Contents
High Risk Geriatrics - The High Risk Emergency Medicine Course
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- 1 Intro
- 2 High Risk
- 3 What we're going to talk about today
- 4 75F with Lleg pain after direct trauma
- 5 Tibial plateau fracture?
- 6 What's the problem here?
- 7 Older adults use NSAIDs; NSAIDs worsen renal function
- 8 M with abdominal pain
- 9 Appendicitis in the geriatric
- 10 Causes of abdominal pain in geriatric ED patients
- 11 (Not-so-) Fun facts about geriatric patients with abdominal pain
- 12 CT a/p changes our management a lot in geriatric ED patients
- 13 We might be too stingy with CT a/p in geriatric patients
- 14 Geriatric EM Take-home #2
- 15 Recalibrate your vital sign thresholds for geriatric trauma patients
- 16 52M pedestrian vs. auto
- 17 Geriatric patients are under- triaged in trauma
- 18 C-spine evaluation
- 19 Anticoagulation in head trauma
- 20 6-month mortality: a case for geriatric fracture programs
- 21 Watch the geriatric patient walk after a fall
- 22 F with fatigue and AMS
- 23 Sepsis in the geriatric patient
- 24 Take-home points about geriatric ED patients