Understanding paediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome temporally associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome.
It's a busy Saturday night in your ED and another patient with a facial injury presents following an alleged assault.
Another night out and another facial injury.
At the 8am departmental handover, you discuss a 69-year-old man with COPD who presented two hours earlier with SOB.
10 X-rays in SAQs and 5 in MCQs to test your knowledge of fractures of the midfoot and forefoot.
A 7-year-old girl presents with an acute, painful hot knee and a red-purple non-blanching rash.
A 21-day-old term baby presents to your emergency department in respiratory distress and appears dusky blue.
Explore the NICE guidance on wound management of dog bites (NICE CKS and NICE Guidance)
A 22-year-old lady delivers a 36-week-old baby unexpectedly at home. The baby was initially pink with an Apgar of 9, and a birth weight of 7lbs.
The paramedics arrive with a 3-year-old boy who has had two seizures today. He has known developmental delay but has no history of seizures previously
A 10-year-old boy is brought into hospital after a fainting episode at school.
56-year-old presents with a bleeding base of tongue tumour. You cannot intubate and you cannot ventilate. How do you proceed?
You are called by a resident doctor to help manage a 22-year-old male brought into the ED resuscitation area, presenting with wheeze, cough and shortness of breath.
Mr X is a middle aged gentleman who was assaulted with a house brick whilst riding a push bike.
An 81-year-old presents following a collapse. His blood tests from triage included a troponin level. Its significantly elevated. What next?
It is a busy winter evening in the ED. The next patient to be seen is a 37-year-old female presenting with a headache, nausea and general malaise.
An 8-year-old girl is brought to the ED by her mother after having fallen from a climbing frame.
A patient starts seizing in your ED, standard management is commenced but the cause and management may not be so straightforward.
A 17-year-old man attends your ED having taken an unconventional shortcut on his way home. Check out this SAQ on Drowning.
RIF pain and PV bleeding - history and treatment.
You are about to see two patients both of whom have testicular pain
Principles of consent in view of recent case law
Learning about lightning injuries
There's more than meets the eye in this case of orbital cellulitis.