Department Blog - August 2016

Posted 8/24/2016 by Linda Kesselring

Zika Virus Update Published in EMCNA

Jon Mark Hirshon, MD, MPH, PhD, collaborated with colleagues from the University of California, Irvine, on the article titled “Zika Virus: Critical Information for Emergency Providers,” published in Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America this month*.* The article reviews transmission patterns, clinical presentation, diagnostic procedures, implications for mass gatherings (including the Olympics), and management strategies for an infection for which antiviral therapy has not yet been developed.


Posted 8/22/2016 by Linda Kesselring

Orthopedic Literature Review

Michael Bond, MD, and Mike Abraham, MD, with Jason Brown, MD, and Stephen Shaheen, MD, recent residency graduates, published “The Orthopedic Literature 2015” in the August issue of the American Journal of Emergency Medicine. The authors reviewed and summarized articles on the topics of acute compartment syndrome, scaphoid and clavicular fractures, ankle injuries, hip fractures in the elderly, and sports medicine.


Posted 8/19/2016 by Linda Kesselring

How to Choose, Use, and Create Podcasts

Michael Bond, MD, director of our residency program, collaborated with James Ahn, MD, and P. Charles Inboriboon, MD, associate residency directors at the University of Chicago and the University of Missouri-Kansas City, respectively, on the article titled “Podcasts: Accessing, Choosing, Creating, and Disseminating Content,” published in the July issue of the Journal of Graduate Medical Education.


Posted 8/17/2016 by Linda Kesselring

Effect of a Freestanding ED on EMS Metrics

Several emergency medicine faculty members contributed to the article titled “The Impact of a Freestanding ED on a Regional Emergency Medical Services System,” published in the August issue of American Journal of Emergency Medicine. The authors report that the opening of the Shore Emergency Center in Queenstown on Maryland’s Eastern Shore decreased ambulance turnaround time and out-of-service intervals. The contributors from the Department of Emergency Medicine are Benjamin Lawner, DO, MS, EMT-P, Jon Mark Hirshon, MD, PhD, Laura Pimentel, MD, Christina L. Tupe, MD, and Brian Browne, MD. They collaborated with Angela C. Comer, MPH (National Study Center for Trauma and Emergency Medical Systems), J.V. Nable, MD, MS, NRP (Georgetown University School of Medicine), Jeffrey Kelly, MS, NREMT-P (Maryland State Police), Richard Alcorta, MD (MIEMSS), and Mary Alice Vanhoy, RN, MSN, University of Maryland Shore Emergency Center.


Posted 8/11/2016 by Linda Kesselring

Are Hikers Ready for Emergencies?

Two students at the University of Maryland School of Medicine spent several weeks in Rocky Mountain National Park last summer, talking with backcountry hikers about their ability to avoid emergencies and their preparedness in case one occurs. Using a written survey, Michael Yue, BA, MS-2, and David Spivey, BA, MS-3, collected information from 379 hikers. Michael presented the results as a poster, “Rocky Mountain National Park Hiker Preparedness Survey: Does Wilderness Medicine Training Correlate with Preparedness for Injury and Altitude Illness?,” at the 7th World Congress of Mountain & Wilderness Medicine, held in Telluride, Colorado, last week. Their faculty advisors and collaborators were Daniel Gingold, MD, MPH, and Douglas Sward, MD


Posted 8/5/2016 by Linda Kesselring

Skin Rash Turns Deadly

Chrissie Tupe, MD, and Mike McCurdy, MD, published a case report (“A Fatal Case of Eczema Herpeticum with Septic Shock Due to Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus”) in the July issue of the American Journal of Critical Care. In collaboration with colleagues from the Department of Medicine, they describe the clinical challenges presented by an immunocompromised woman whose undifferentiated rash became complicated by scabies, herpes simplex virus infection, and MRSA.


Posted 8/2/2016 by Linda Kesselring

Case Report Focuses on Uterine Malformations

Zach Dezman, MD, MS, and Sarah Sommerkamp, MD, RDMS, published a case report titled “A Woman with Vaginal Bleeding and an Intrauterine Device” in the July issue of the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine. Their patient, who was pregnant despite her use of an IUD, was found to have a bicornuate uterus.