332: How to predict oversedation in hospitalized patients, nitroglycerin for hepatic artery spasm in the interventional radiology suite, and a tip for responding to medical emergencies
331: The first thing I tell PGY-1 residents and APPE students on rotation with me
330: Beware of using propofol for “moderate” sedation in the ED
329: Can buprenorphine be used in opioid overdose?
328: Medications that may increase weakness and impair neuromuscular transmission in patients with myasthenia gravis
327: When should combination therapy in sepsis be de-escalated to monotherapy?
326: Thiamine to improve outcomes in septic shock, why the dose of adenosine is reduced when given via a central line, and a tip for responding to inpatient medical emergencies
325: When “prophylactic” anticoagulation can be confused with full-intensity anticoagulation
324: 2018 Updated Pain, Agitation/Sedation, Delirium, Immobility, and Sleep Disruption (PADIS) Guidelines
323: Why patients with variceal bleeding should receive antibiotics
322: Prothrombin time and bleeding in hospitalized patients receiving rivaroxaban, melatonin and physical dependence, and a tip for responding to inpatient medical emergencies
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