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1.
Mil Med ; 188(11-12): 3683-3686, 2023 11 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35830418

ABSTRACT

Medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) from a combat zone requires complex decision-making and coordination of assets. A MEDEVAC helicopter team transports not only battle-injured patients but also patients with urgent non-battle-related medical diagnoses from extremely remote locations and are at the mercy of terrain, weather, and enemy contact. The military represents a young population particularly susceptible to venous thoracic outlet syndrome (vTOS) given the rigorous physical activity demands. Current literature supports immediate anticoagulation and surgical decompression within 14 days of diagnosis of vTOS to prevent long-term morbidity. Presented is a case of service member with vTOS presenting at an extremely remote military clinic who underwent a prompt evacuation ∼7,000 miles utilizing rotary-wing transport, followed by three to four more fixed-wing flights to a military treatment facility in the United States. Immediate recognition and ultrasound of this patient to confirm vTOS upon presentation and effective communication to non-medical military commanders and the receiving medical personnel at each Echelon was necessary to ensure an expedited evacuation. The surgeons treating this patient recommend prompt evacuation of deployed service members with suspected vTOS, venogram at the Role 3 if ultrasound is inconclusive, anticoagulation, and return to a Role 4 CONUS facility for definitive surgical management within 14 days. This case is an example of the efficiency of the military MEDEVAC system on a global scale, ensuring optimum medical care for all service members deployed.


Subject(s)
Military Personnel , Thoracic Outlet Syndrome , Humans , United States , Thoracic Outlet Syndrome/surgery , Decompression, Surgical , Anticoagulants/therapeutic use , Sorbitol
2.
Cureus ; 13(7): e16510, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34430124

ABSTRACT

Eclampsia, a condition diagnosed in pre-eclamptic patients who experience seizures, can lead to maternal and fetal death if not treated early. The present case discusses the clinical management of an 18-year-old female who presented to the emergency department (ED) after a generalized tonic-clonic seizure. A physical examination revealed that she was also hypertensive. Based on these symptoms which required urgency due to the patient's instability, and the suspicion that the patient could be pregnant, point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) was performed. In this case, a POCUS was a faster more accessible modality than a urine or serum human chorionic gonadotropin test. Although the patient denied that she was pregnant, POCUS identified that she was approximately 22-24 weeks pregnant. The patient was promptly diagnosed with eclampsia and given medication to control her blood pressure and seizures. This case highlights the benefits of using POCUS in the ED to expedite clinical decisions by identifying the etiology of a patient's condition and lends itself to the discussion of its utility in a critically ill pregnant woman. It also serves to reinforce the importance of keeping eclampsia as part of an emergency physician's differential when confronted with a potentially pregnant patient with relevant symptoms.

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