EM Quick Hits 27 Colchicine for COVID, Bicarb in Cardiac Arrest, Troponin in CKD, GHB Withdrawal, Iloprost for Frostbite, Patient Complaints

Emergency Medicine Cases - A podcast by Dr. Anton Helman - Martedì

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Topics in this EM Quick Hits podcast Justin Morgenstern on colchicine for COVID pneumonia (0:52) Victoria Myers on sodium bicarbonate in cardiac arrest (6:25) Brit Long on troponin in chronic kidney disease (14:06) Michelle Klaiman on GHB withdrawal management (21:00) Ian Walker on iloprost for frostbite (26:46 ) Sarah Reid on tips on preventing patient and parent complaints (33:54) Podcast production, editing and sound design by Anton Helman Podcast content, written summary & blog post by Brit Long, Michelle Klaiman, Ian Walker and Anton Helman Cite this podcast as: Helman, A. Klaiman, M. Long, B. Walker, I. Myers, V. Reid, S. Morgenstern, J. EM Quick Hits 27 - Colchicine for COVID, Bicarb in Cardiac Arrest, Troponin in CKD, GHB Withdrawal, Iloprost for Frostbite, Patient Complaints. Emergency Medicine Cases. March, 2021. https://emergencymedicinecases.com/em-quick-hits-march-2021/. Accessed [date]. Colchicine for COVID - COLCORONA RCT * Design - COLCORONA is an RCT that enrolled 4488 patients age > 40, with either PCR confirmed or clinical criteria for COVID pneumonia and one of the following high-risk criteria: age >70, obesity, diabetes, uncontrolled hypertension, known respiratory disease, known heart failure, known coronary disease, fever of at least 38.4°C within the last 48 hours, dyspnea at the time of presentation, bicytopenia, pancytopenia, or the combination of high neutrophil and low lymphocyte counts; patients were randomized to either colchicine 0.5mg bid x 3 days, then once daily x 27 days or placebo * Outcome was a composite of death OR hospitalization due to COVID * Results - no significant difference in death; no significant difference in hospitalization, no significant difference in mechanical ventilation; however, intention to treat analysis: Odds ratio of protection from death OR hospitalization: , 0.79 (95% CI 0.61 to 1.03); Prespecified subgroup analysis: PCR confirmed cases only: Odds ratio of protection from death from hospitalization, 0.75 (95% CI, 0.57 to 0.99), mostly driven by prevention of hospitalization; patients on colchicine had significant side effects (eg., GI bleed) and increased rates of pneumonia and PE * Problems with this trial * Trial stopped early (not because of major harm or significant benefit), because of difficulty recruiting patients, and may be underpowered * The odds ratio crosses 1 therefore there is no clear protective benefit from colchicine * Conclusion - There is presently no role for colchicine for COVID-19 in ambulatory patients with high risk factors Expand to view reference list * Tardif J-C, Bouabdallaoui N, L’Allier PL., et al. Efficacy of Colchicine in Non-Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19. Infectious Diseases (except HIV/AIDS); 2021. IV Sodium Bicarbonate in Cardiac Arrest * Administration of sodium bicarbonate in cardiac arrest is likely to increase serum pH (which is generally lower the longer a patient is in cardiac arrest), however it does not lower serum potassium as is commonly believed, and it adds a potentially detrimental sodium and volume load as well as shifts the oxygen-Hb curve and decrease serum calcium; it ...