1.The Role of On-Call Duty at the Tenri Hospital Emergency Department in Clinical Training in a General Outpatient Setting.
Hirotaka ONISHI ; Hiroyasu ISHIMARU ; Masatoshi MATSUMOTO ; Nobuaki INOUE ; Tetsuya YAMADA ; Noriyo YAMASHIKI ; Kentaro OKAZAKI ; Hiroshi NAKAI ; Kazuhiro HATTA ; Takanobu IMANAKA ; Shunzo KOIZUMI
Medical Education 1999;30(6):413-418
Objective: To investigate the role of postgraduate clinical training at the emergency department of Tenri Hospital in teaching the diagnostic process in the general outpatient department.
Method: Patients seen by 11 first-year residents at the emergency department were consecutively registered with summary sheets. Further information was added, and an analysis was performed of: 1) the distribution of chief complaints in the emergency and general outpatient departments and 2) initial diagnoses and the diagnostic process in the emergency department and the final diagnoses.
Results: The distributions of chief complaints in 89 cases in the emergency department and in 183 cases in the general outpatient department were closely correlated (p=0.0016). Diagnoses in the emergency department were correct in 58% of cases. Treatment was incorrect in 3% of cases.
Conclusion: The distributions of chief complaints in the emergency and general outpatient departments were similar. In our hospital the emergency department plays a major role in postgraduate clinical training by teaching the diagnostic process for the general outpatient department. Clinical management, including decision making for further tests and consultation, in the emergency department by first year residents did lead to any major adverse events.
2.Thyroid hormone alterations in trauma patients requiring massive transfusion: An observational study
Hifumi TORU ; Okada ICHIRO ; Kiriu NOBUAKI ; Hasegawa EIJU ; Ogasawara TOMOKO ; Kato HIROSHI ; Koido YUICHI ; Inoue JUNICHI ; Abe YUKO ; Kawakita KENYA ; Hagiike MASANOBU ; Kuroda YASUHIRO
World Journal of Emergency Medicine 2014;5(4):270-274
BACKGROUND: Although non-thyroidal illness syndrome (NTIS) is considered a negative prognostic factor, the alterations in free triiodothyronine (fT3) levels in trauma patients requiring massive transfusion have not been reported. METHODS: A prospective observational study comparing 2 groups of trauma patients was conducted. Group M comprised trauma patients requiring massive transfusions (>10 units of packed red blood cells) within 24 hours of emergency admission. Group C comprised patients with an injury severity score >9 but not requiring massive transfusions. Levels of fT3, free thyroxine (fT4), and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) were evaluated on admission and on days 1, 2, and 7 after admission. The clinical backgrounds and variables measured including total transfusion amounts were compared and the inter-group prognosis was evaluated. Results are presented as mean±standard deviation. RESULTS: Nineteen patients were enrolled in each group. In both groups, 32 were men, and the mean age was 50±24 years. In group C one patient died from respiratory failure. The initial fT3 levels in group M (1.95±0.37 pg/mL) were significantly lower than those in group C (2.49±0.72 pg/mL;P<0.01) and remained low until 1 week after admission. Initial inter-group fT4 and TSH levels were not significantly different. TSH levels at 1 week (1.99±1.64 μIU/mL) were higher than at admission (1.48±0.5 μIU/mL) in group C (P<0.05). CONCLUSION: Typical NTIS was observed in trauma patients requiring massive transfusions. When initial resuscitation achieved circulatory stabilization, prognosis was not strongly associated with NTIS.