Questions of the Week for 8/22/2023

Authors: Christian Gerhart and Aaron Lacy

You have a 14-year-old boy who had sudden onset, acute, testicular pain 10 hours prior to presentation with diagnosed testicular torsion on doppler ultrasound. The family is concerned about his testicular viability after they read online that detorsion should occurs within 6 hours. What can you advise the family about possible testicular viability rates in patients who present with torsion that has been ongoing >6 hours, and what is your next step? 

15-year-old boy presented to the emergency department after developing severe lower abdominal pain after soccer practice. He was diagnosed with stomach cramps and discharged home after a CT abdomen pelvis was done and negative for appendicitis. He represented to a different emergency department the next day and was found to have testicular torsion, and during scrotal exploration the testicle was non-viable, and orchiectomy was performed. How common is it for patients with testicular torsion to present without testicular pain, and is it possible that the first emergency physician can be found liable for missing the initial torsion presentation?  

A patient with known, severe aortic stenosis presents with generalized weakness and dyspnea. On exam they are ill appearing with cool extremities. Lungs are clear. Vitals are BP 85/60, HR 123 (irregular), T: 37, RR 28, O2 sat 94% on RA. EKG shows atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response. Describe your initial approach and stabilization package.  

List 4 chronic conditions in which atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response is especially poorly tolerated.  

You have a 68 yo male who presents with right flank pain. The patient has a history of prior renal stones, which have all passed spontaneously without intervention. He has normal vital signs and no fevers. He reports this feels exactly like his previous stones. What, if any, imaging would you order?

You have a 35 yo male with a past medical history of urolithiasis who presents with left flank pain and nausea. He has hematuria on his UA without any WBCs. He has not had any fevers and says this feels similar to his prior stones, none of which have required intervention in the past. He is well appearing, nontoxic, with a benign abdomen and his pain is improving after IV ketorolac. What, if any, imaging would you pursue?

A 35 yo male with no past medical history presents with acute onset left flank pain and nausea. He has hematuria but no WBCs on his UA. His exam is notable for LLQ abdominal tenderness. He feels better after IV analgesia. What, if any, imaging would you obtain for this patient?

A 45-year female with a history of renal stones presents with acute onset right flank pain, vomiting, and chills. Her vitals are HR: 110, BP: 110/70, RR: 22, O2 sat: 98% RA, T: 38C. Her hCG is negative. Her UA micro shows 50+ WBCs and 20-50 RBCs. What, if any, imaging would you obtain for this patient?

You have a 38 yo male patient with no past medical history who you just diagnosed with a 11 mm ureteropelvic junction ureteral stone on CT with moderate hydronephrosis. The patient has normal vital signs, no WBCs on their UA and feels better after IV analgesia. Their creatinine is normal and they are able to tolerate PO intake in the ED. How would you manage this patient? 

References: 

 

1) Augustin, K. (2022, July 1). CV-EMCRIT 327 - acute valve disasters part 2 - management of critical aortic stenosis. EMCrit Project. https://emcrit.org/emcrit/critical-aortic-stenosis/ 

2) Lei B, Harfouch N, Scheiner J, Demissie S, Hayim M. Can obstructive urolithiasis be safely excluded on contrast CT? A retrospective analysis of contrast-enhanced and noncontrast CT. Am J Emerg Med. 2021 Sep;47:70-73. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2021.03.059. Epub 2021 Mar 22. PMID: 33774453. 

3) Dym RJ, Duncan DR, Spektor M, Cohen HW, Scheinfeld MH. Renal stones on portal venous phase contrast-enhanced CT: does intravenous contrast interfere with detection? Abdom Imaging. 2014 Jun;39(3):526-32. doi: 10.1007/s00261-014-0082-4. PMID: 24504541; PMCID: PMC4295488. 

4) Moore CL, Carpenter CR, Heilbrun ME, et al. Imaging in Suspected Renal Colic: Systematic Review of the Literature and Multispecialty Consensus. J Am Coll Radiol. 2019;16(9 Pt A):1132-1143. doi:10.1016/j.jacr.2019.04.004 

5) Jendeberg J, Geijer H, Alshamari M, Cierzniak B, Lidén M. Size matters: The width and location of a ureteral stone accurately predict the chance of spontaneous passage. Eur Radiol. 2017;27(11):4775-4785. doi:10.1007/s00330-017-4852-6