STEMI With Musculoskeletal Chest Pain: A Case Report

STEMI With Musculoskeletal Chest Pain: A Case Report

Urgent Message: Reproducible chest wall pain is often considered a symptom that indicates a musculoskeletal diagnosis. However, it should not be used as the sole criterion for ruling out acute coronary syndrome, especially in high-risk populations. Key Words: STEMI; Reproducible Chest Pain; Atypical ACS; Urgent Care Evaluation Abstract Introduction: Chest pain remains a leading cause of emergency department (ED) visits, and its differential encompasses both life-threatening and benign conditions.  In the United States, the lifetime …

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Could This Young Patient Really Have a STEMI? A Case Report of a Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection

Could This Young Patient Really Have a STEMI? A Case Report of a Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection

Urgent Message: It is important to quickly obtain an electrocardiogram in patients presenting with chest pain or other symptoms suggestive of acute coronary syndrome, even for those who are young and without traditional coronary risk factors. Citation: Krauss WC. Could This Young Patient Really Have a STEMI? A Case Report of a Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection. J Urgent Care Med. 2024; 19 (1):21-23 Key Words: chest pain, spontaneous coronary artery dissection, acute coronary syndrome Abstract …

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Abstracts in Urgent Care: December, 2013

Long-term survival following pneumococcal pneumonia Key point: Pneumococcal pneumonia foretold considerably higher  10-year  mortality  than the expected rate. Citation: Sandvall B, Rueda AM, Musher DM. Long-term sur- vival following pneumococcal pneumonia. Clin Infect Dis. 2013;56(8):1145-1146. Before antibiotics, pneumonia was called “the old man’s friend” for carrying the old and infirm to a swift and relatively painless death. Now that short-term survival after pneumonia is the rule, does the disease provide any long-term prognostic information? Veterans …

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