A 36-year-old gentleman presents with intermittent flank pain and has microscopic haematuria. His BP is 220/110 and he is now pain free. What would you do next?
An 8-months-old boy is brought to the Emergency Department with a 1-day history of worsening seal-like barky cough and inspiratory stridor when crying, preceded by coryza.
A gentleman presents with loss of power and sensation to his left side, slow speech and facial droop; CT brain is normal.
A new mum comes into your ED with her child, worried about his red eye.
A 75-year-old man presented to the ED of a District General hospital complaining of severe abdominal pain that followed an episode of vomiting earlier in the day. He also reported one episode of loose stool that morning.
A 72-year-old gentleman presents to the ED with a 3 week history of intermittent abdominal pain; it is now constant in nature and 8/10 in severity.
Dont trip yourself up in patients with trauma and neurological symptoms.
A 45-year-old male patient presents to the Emergency Department having fallen on his outstretched hand.
A teenage boy is referred to you by his GP with nose bleeds, bruising and low energy levels
A 12-year-old boy attends the ED with left knee pain and swelling while playing at school.
A 50-year-old female presents to the Emergency Department with non-traumatic neuropathic sounding upper limb pain.
A young boy with abdominal pain and distension is brought in by his father. The triage nurse mentions that he is hypertensive, with microscopic haematuria on his urine dipstick.
An anxious 45-year-old male presents to your Emergency Department with acute neck swelling.
An asylum seeker presents to the ED with a chronic headache prompting questions of finance, logistics and follow up from the staff.
A 38-year-old gentleman has just finished a course of antibiotics for pneumonia, but his symptoms arent resolving
You are on the ED observation unit morning ward round. Your next patient is a 25-year-old man, admitted during the night for head injury observations following an alleged assault.
A 57-year-old gentleman self-presents to the ED with a 1-hour history of headache and chest pain.
A 62-year-old patient went too far with a seemingly benign ingredient in her kitchen.
A 30-year-old professional martial artist sustained a direct blow to the left side of his face during training.
Whilst waiting in the ED relative's room, a 59-year-old woman complains of chest pain.
An elderly lady, Susan, arrives in the emergency department with a sudden visual loss.
An 11-year-old girl presents to Paediatric A&E complaining of left knee and thigh pain.
A middle-aged man presents to the emergency department with chest pain and syncope
A 29-year-old lady presents with double vision