April 2016 Critical Care Case of the Month
Samir Sultan, DO
Banner University Medical Center Phoenix
Phoenix, AZ
Critical Care Case of the Month CME Information
Members of the Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and California Thoracic Societies and the Mayo Clinic are able to receive 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ for each case they complete. Completion of an evaluation form is required to receive credit and a link is provided on the last panel of the activity.
0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™
Estimated time to complete this activity: 0.25 hours
Lead Author(s): Samir Sultan, DO. All Faculty, CME Planning Committee Members, and the CME Office Reviewers have disclosed that they do not have any relevant financial relationships with commercial interests that would constitute a conflict of interest concerning this CME activity.
Learning Objectives:
As a result of this activity I will be better able to:
- Correctly interpret and identify clinical practices supported by the highest quality available evidence.
- Will be better able to establsh the optimal evaluation leading to a correct diagnosis for patients with pulmonary, critical care and sleep disorders.
- Will improve the translation of the most current clinical information into the delivery of high quality care for patients.
- Will integrate new treatment options in discussing available treatment alternatives for patients with pulmonary, critical care and sleep related disorders.
Learning Format: Case-based, interactive online course, including mandatory assessment questions (number of questions varies by case). Please also read the Technical Requirements.
CME Sponsor: University of Arizona College of Medicine
Current Approval Period: January 1, 2015-December 31, 2016
Financial Support Received: None
History of Present Illness
The patient is a 22-year-old African-American man who was initially seen following a rapid response team called to the neonatal intensive care unit for a seizure. He was visiting his newborn child. The nurses described the seizure as tonic-clonic which resolved spontaneously without treatment before the rapid response team arrived.
Past Medical History, Family History and Social History
The patient has a past medical history of a brain aneurysm treated by coil embolization 2 years earlier. He had no complications of the embolization including seizures. Family history is unremarkable. He smokes 1-2 cigars per day but does not drink alcohol.
Physical Examination
He was drowsy when initially seen but the drowsiness resolved in about 5 minutes. The physical examination was unremarkable and there were no focal neurologic signs.
What should be next? (Click on the correct answer to proceed to the second of seven panels)
- CT scan of the head
- Phenytoin administration
- Metabolic screening (BUN, glucose and electrolytes)
- 1 and 3
- All of the above
Cite as: Sultan S. April 2016 critical care case of the month. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2016 Apr;12(4): . doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc033-16 PDF
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