Importance: There is limited evidence regarding the frequency of diagnostic errors and outcomes associated with them in emergency care in the US.
Objective: To examine rates of potential diagnostic errors and associated clinical outcomes among Medicare beneficiaries with emergency hospitalizations.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This cohort study examined a national sample of fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 years or older with emergency hospitalizations for 10 high-risk conditions from 2016 to 2019.
Dizziness is a common clinical presentation that incurs huge financial costs. It is frequently misdiagnosed due to a wide differential involving both benign (inner ear disease) and serious (stroke) disorders. Traditional frameworks that emphasize symptom quality (dizziness/lightheadedness/vertigo) lack diagnostic utility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Correct identification of those patients presenting with an acute vestibular syndrome (AVS) or an acute imbalance syndrome (AIS) that have underlying posterior-circulation stroke (PCS) and thus may benefit from revascularization (intravenous thrombolysis (IVT), endovascular therapy (EVT)) is important. Treatment guidelines for AVS/AIS patients are lacking. We reviewed the evidence on acute treatment strategies in AVS/AIS focusing on predictors for IVT/EVT and outcome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Vestibular migraine (VM) is a subset of migraine and, as its name suggests, presents with both migrainous and vestibular symptoms. However, a more worrisome diagnosis that can present with similar features is posterior circulation transient ischemic attack (pc-TIA) presenting as episodes of isolated dizziness.
Objectives: The purpose of this article is to introduce emergency physicians to the diagnostic features of VM focusing on epidemiological context, timing and quality of symptoms that help differentiate vestibular migraine from pc-TIA.
Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome is a common, increasingly recognized cause of thunderclap headache. Most patients have some type of trigger that precedes the onset (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEmerg Med Clin North Am
February 2025
Headache is a common complaint of patients in the emergency department. The large majority of them have self-limited causes but some have life, limb, brain, or vision-threatening secondary causes. The job of the emergency physicians is to distinguish the 2 groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree validated diagnostic algorithms for diagnosing patients with acute onset dizziness or vertigo (HINTS, HINTS-plus and STANDING) exist. All are extremely accurate in distinguishing peripheral from central causes of dizziness when done by experienced clinicians. However, uptake of these diagnostic tools in routine emergency medicine practice has been sub-optimal, in part, due to clinicians' unease with the head impulse test, the most useful component contained of these algorithms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis
November 2024
Diagnosing patients presenting to the emergency department with self-limited episodes of isolated dizziness (the episodic vestibular syndrome) requires a broad differential diagnosis that includes posterior circulation transient ischemic attack. Because these patients are, by definition, asymptomatic without new neurologic findings on examination, the diagnosis, largely based on history and epidemiologic context, can be challenging. We review literature that addresses the frequency of posterior circulation transient ischemic attack in this group of patients compared with other potential causes of episodic vestibular syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe alpha-gal syndrome is a recently described cause of anaphylaxis to red meat that has been increasing in frequency over time. It is related to Lone Star tick bites in the United States and occurs in many other parts of the world. It is especially common in the southeastern United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcute vertigo and dizziness are frequent presenting symptoms in patients in the emergency department. These symptoms, which can be subtle and transient, present diagnostic challenges because they can be caused by a broad range of conditions that cut across many specialties and organ systems. Previous work has emphasized the value of combining structured history taking and a targeted examination focusing on subtle oculomotor signs.
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