jueves, 3 de mayo de 2018

WebM&M Cases & Commentaries | AHRQ Patient Safety Network

WebM&M Cases & Commentaries | AHRQ Patient Safety Network

PSNet: Patient Safety Network



Hyperbilirubinemia Refractory to Phototherapy

    Vinod K. Bhutani, MD, and Ronald J. Wong; October 2017
    A newborn with elevated total serum bilirubin (TSB) due to hemolytic disease was placed on a mattress with embedded phototherapy lights for treatment, but the TSB continued to climb. The patient was transferred to the neonatal ICU for an exchange transfusion. The neonatologist requested testing of the phototherapy lights, and their irradiance level was found to be well below the recommended level. The lights were replaced, the patient's TSB level began to drop, and the exchange transfusion was aborted.

    Transfusion Thresholds in Gastrointestinal Bleeding

    • SPOTLIGHT CASE
    • CME/CEU
    Lisa Strate, MD, MPH, and Sophia Swanson, MD; September 2017
    An older man with Crohn disease was admitted for abdominal pain and high stool output from his ileostomy. Despite blood passing from his ostomy and a falling hemoglobin level, the patient was not given a timely blood transfusion.

    The Forgotten Radiographic Read

      Clinton J. Coil, MD, MPH, and Mallory D. Witt, MD; September 2017
      A woman developed sudden nausea and abdominal distension after undergoing inferior mesenteric artery stenting. The overnight intern forgot to follow up on her abdominal radiograph, which resulted in a critical delay in diagnosing acute mesenteric artery dissection and bowel infarction.

      Failed Interpretation of Screening Tool: Delayed Treatment

        Casey A. Cable, MD; David J. Murphy, MD, PhD; and Greg S. Martin, MD, MSc; September 2017
        For an older patient presenting with upper back pain and faint bilateral crackles, physicians misinterpreted a negative sepsis screen as a negative infection screen and delayed antibiotic treatment for pneumonia. The patient developed worsened hypoxemia, hypotension, delirium, and progressive organ failure.

        Despite Clues, Failed to Rescue

        • SPOTLIGHT CASE
        • CME/CEU
        Amir A. Ghaferi, MD, MS; August 2017
        Admitted to gynecology due to excess bleeding and low hemoglobin after elective surgery, an older woman developed severe pain, nausea, and new-onset atrial fibrillation. She was moved to the telemetry unit where cardiologists treated her, and she had episodes of bloody vomit. Intensivists consulted, but the patient arrested while being transferred to the ICU and died despite maximal efforts.

        Add-on Case and the Missing Checklist

          Ken Catchpole, PhD; August 2017
          Because the plan to biopsy a large gastric mass concerning for malignancy was not conveyed to the hospitalist caring for the patient, she was not made NPO, nor was her anticoagulant medication stopped. The nurse anesthetist performing the preanesthesia checklist noted she received her anticoagulation that morning but did not notify the gastroenterologist. The patient had postprocedural bleeding.

          Point-of-care Mixup: 1 Shot Turns Into 3

            F. Ralph Berberich, MD; August 2017
            A 2-month-old boy brought in for a well-child visit was ordered the appropriate vaccinations, which included a combination vaccine for DTaP, Hib, and IPV. After administering the shots to the patient, the nurse realized she had given the DTaP vaccination alone, instead of the combination vaccine. Thus, the infant had to receive two additional injections.

            Pseudo-obstruction But a Real Perforation

            • SPOTLIGHT CASE
            • CME/CEU
            Shirley C. Paski, MD, MSc, and Jason A. Dominitz, MD, MHS; July 2017
            Following an uncomplicated surgery, an older man developed acute colonic pseudo-obstruction refractory to conservative management. During a decompression colonoscopy, the patient's colon was perforated.

            Delayed Recognition of a Positive Blood Culture

              Sarah Doernberg, MD, MAS; July 2017
              A woman was discharged with instructions to complete an antibiotic course for C. difficile. The same day, the microbiology laboratory notified the patient's nurse that her blood culture grew Listeria monocytogenes, a bacterium that can cause life-threatening infection. However, the result was not communicated to the medical team prior to discharge.

              The Hidden Harms of Hand Sanitizer

                Stephen Stewart, MBChB, PhD; July 2017
                Hospitalized for pneumonia, a woman with a history of alcohol abuse and depression was found unconscious on the medical ward. A toxicology panel revealed her blood alcohol level was elevated at 530 mg/dL. A search of the ward revealed several empty containers of alcoholic foam sanitizer, which the patient confessed to ingesting.

                The Perils of Contrast Media

                • SPOTLIGHT CASE
                • CME/CEU
                Umar Sadat, MD, PhD, and Richard Solomon, MD; June 2017
                To avoid worsening acute kidney injury in an older man with possible mesenteric ischemia, the provider ordered an abdominal CT without contrast, but the results were not diagnostic. Shortly later, the patient developed acute paralysis, and an urgent CT with contrast revealed blockage and a blood clot.

                Chest Tube Complications

                  Lekshmi Santhosh, MD, and V. Courtney Broaddus, MD; June 2017
                  A woman with pneumothorax required urgent chest tube placement. After she showed improvement during her hospital stay, the pulmonary team requested the tube be disconnected and clamped with a follow-up radiograph 1 hour later. However, 3 hours after the tube was clamped, no radiograph had been done and the patient was found unresponsive, in cardiac arrest.

                  Diagnostic Overshadowing Dangers

                    Maria C. Raven, MD, MPH, MSc; June 2017
                    Presenting with pain in her epigastric region and back, an older woman with a history of opioid abuse had abnormal vital signs and an elevated troponin level. Imaging revealed multiple spinal fractures and cord compression. Neurosurgery recommended conservative management overnight. However, her troponin levels spiked, and an ECG revealed myocardial infarction.

                    Diagnostic Delay in the Emergency Department

                    • SPOTLIGHT CASE
                    • CME/CEU
                    Kyle Marshall, MD, and Hardeep Singh, MD, MPH; May 2017
                    Emergency department evaluation of a man with morbid obesity presenting with abdominal pain revealed tachycardia, hypertension, elevated creatinine, and no evidence of cholecystitis. Several hours later, the patient underwent CT scan; the physicians withheld contrast out of concern for his acute kidney injury. The initial scan provided no definitive answer. Ultimately, physicians ordered additional CT scans with contrast and diagnosed an acute aortic dissection.

                    Hemolysis Holdup

                      Christopher M. Lehman, MD; May 2017
                      In the emergency department, an older man with multiple medical conditions was found to have evidence of acute kidney injury and an elevated serum potassium level. However, the blood sample was hemolyzed, which can alter the reading. Although the patient was admitted and a repeat potassium level was ordered, the physician did not institute treatment for hyperkalemia. Almost immediately after the laboratory called with a panic result indicating a dangerously high potassium level, the patient went into cardiac arrest.

                      Communication Error in a Closed ICU

                        Barbara Haas, MD, PhD, and Lesley Gotlib Conn, PhD; May 2017
                        Admitted to the ICU with septic shock, a man with a transplanted kidney developed hypotension and required new central venous access. Since providers anticipated using the patient's left internal jugular vein catheter for re-starting hemodialysis (making it unsuitable to use for resuscitation), the ICU team placed the central line in the right femoral vein. However, they failed to recognize that his transplanted kidney was on the right side, which meant that femoral catheter placement on that side was contraindicated.

                        Engaging Seriously Ill Older Patients in Advance Care Planning

                        • SPOTLIGHT CASE
                        • CME/CEU
                        Daren K. Heyland, MD, MSc; April 2017
                        When a 94-year-old woman presented for routine primary care, the intern caring for her discovered that the patient's code status was "full code" and that there was no documentation of discussions regarding her wishes for end-of-life care. The intern and his supervisor engaged the patient in an advance care planning discussion, during which she clarified that she would not want resuscitation or life-prolonging measures.

                        Patient Allergies and Electronic Health Records

                          Matthew J. Doyle, MBBS; April 2017
                          Prior to undergoing a CT scan, a patient with no allergies documented in the electronic health record (EHR) described a history of hives after receiving contrast. During a follow-up clinic visit, the patient inquired whether this contrast reaction was listed in the EHR. Investigation revealed that it had been removed from the patient's profile, thus leaving the record with no evidence of allergy to contrast.

                          Wrong-side Bedside Paravertebral Block: Preventing the Preventable

                            Michael J. Barrington, MBBS, PhD, and Yoshiaki Uda, MBBS; April 2017
                            An older woman admitted to the medical-surgical ward with multiple right-sided rib fractures received a paravertebral block to control the pain. After the procedure, the anesthesiologist realized that the block had been placed on the wrong side. The patient required an additional paravertebral block on the correct side, which increased her risk of complications and exposed her to additional medication.

                            Consequences of Medical Overuse

                            • SPOTLIGHT CASE
                            • CME/CEU
                            Daniel J. Morgan, MD, MS, and Andrew Foy, MD; March 2017
                            Brought to the emergency department from a nursing facility with confusion and generalized weakness, an older woman was found to have an elevated troponin level but no evidence of ischemia on her ECG. A consulting cardiologist recommended treating the patient with three anticoagulants. The next evening, she became acutely confused and a CT scan revealed a large intraparenchymal hemorrhage with a midline shift.

                            No hay comentarios: