Sinai EM Journal Club

Emergency Medicine Discussion Forum

SAH Update: Are New CT Scanners Good Enough to Obviate the LP?

At our last Journal Club, Tom presented a 2005 paper from JEM on new CT scanners in the evaluation of SAH. The paper was called Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Diagnosis By Computed Tomography and Lumbar Puncture: Are Fifth Generation CT Scanners Better at Identifying SAH? by Boesiger and Shiber, and it appears in Journal of Emergency Medicine (2005: Vol. 29, No. 1 pp23-27).

The article is motivated by the fact that 1% of headache patients in the ED have SAH. Most are traumatic, but those that aren’t are usually from Circle-of-Willis aneurysm ruptures, which often kill or disable otherwise healthy people. EM physicians hate that sort of unsettling risk, and the situation is further complicated by the 20-50% of SAHers who present with a sentinel bleed. So there’s a real opportunity to help some potentially moribund patients —  but if you ask most interns, they’ll say they’re shoving too many needles into the backs of people who probably just needed some exedrin.

Maybe we can change our practice, based on recent upgrades in CT scanner technology. These authors were the first to look at the new scanners with an eye toward sensitivity in SAH diagnosis. More below…

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May 7, 2007 Posted by Nick | Headache, Procedures, Radiology, Stroke / CVA | | 2 Comments

Dexamethasone in Benign Headaches

This week in journal club, Matt reviewed a nice little trial submitted by a group of Texans to the Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine. They studied IV dexamethasone in preventing benign headache recurrence (Can J Emerg Med 2006;8(6):393-400, PDF) – something I had never tried, but apparently has been bouncing around the neurology and EM literature for 20 years.

It turns out that migraines may not be simply a vascular disorder, but rather an inflammatory disease. And, as Matt pointed out, it’s very difficult to diagnose migraines; it might be simpler for us ED folk to say headaches exist on a continuum between tension and migraine, and maybe ED patients with primary headache would benefit from a steroid.

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January 15, 2007 Posted by Nick | Headache, Pain Management | | 8 Comments