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Annals of Internal Medicine | 1990

Clinical Prediction Rule for Pulmonary Infiltrates

Paul S. Heckerling; Thomas G. Tape; Robert S. Wigton; Kim K. Hissong; Jerrold B. Leikin; Joseph P. Ornato; Julia L. Cameron; Edward M. Racht

OBJECTIVE To derive and validate a clinical rule for predicting pneumonic infiltrates in adult patients with acute respiratory illness. DESIGN Prevalence studies in three settings. SETTING Emergency departments of the University of Illinois Hospital at Chicago, the University of Nebraska Medical Center at Omaha, and the Medical College of Virginia at Richmond. PATIENTS Symptoms, signs, comorbidity data, and chest roentgenogram results were recorded for 1134 patients from Illinois (the derivation set), 150 patients from Nebraska, and 152 patients from Virginia (the validation sets). All patients presented to the emergency department and had a chest roentgenogram to evaluate fever or respiratory complaints. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Within the training set, temperature greater than 37.8 degrees C, pulse greater than 100 beats/min, rales, decreased breath sounds, and the absence of asthma were identified as significant predictors of radiographically proved pneumonia in a stepwise logistic regression model (P = 0.001). The logistic rule discriminated patients with and without pneumonia in the training set with a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) area of 0.82. In the validation sets, the rule discriminated pneumonia and nonpneumonia with ROC areas of 0.82 and 0.76 after adjusting for differences in disease prevalence (P greater than 0.2 compared with the training set). The predicted probability of having pneumonia for patients with different clinical findings corresponded closely with the incidence of pneumonia among patients with such findings in the three settings. CONCLUSIONS Among adults presenting with acute respiratory illness, a prediction rule based on clinical findings accurately discriminated patients with and without radiographic pneumonia, and was used in two other samples of patients without significant decrement in discriminatory ability. This rule can be used by physicians to develop more effective strategies for detecting pneumonia and for helping to determine the need for radiologic study among patients with acute respiratory disease.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1995

Management of Observation Units

Judith Brillman; Lala Mathers-Dunbar; Louis Graff; Tony Joseph; Jerrold B. Leikin; Carl H. Schultz; Harry W. Severance; Carl Werne

Abstract [American College of Emergency Physicians: Management of observation units. Ann Emerg Med June 1995;25:823-830.]


Clinical Toxicology | 1999

Hypersensitivity Myocarditis Associated with Ephedra Use

Zaacks Sm; Klein L; Tan Cd; Rodriguez Er; Jerrold B. Leikin

BACKGROUND Ephedrine has previously been described as a causative factor of vasculitis but myocarditis has not yet been associated with either ephedrine or its plant derivative ephedra. CASE REPORT A 39-year-old African American male with hypertension presented to Rush Presbyterian St. Lukes Medical Center with a 1-month history of progressive dyspnea on exertion, orthopnea, and dependent edema. He was taking Ma Huang (Herbalife) 1-3 tablets twice daily for 3 months along with other vitamin supplements, pravastatin, and furosemide. Physical examination revealed a male in mild respiratory distress. The lung fields had rales at both bases without audible wheezes. Internal jugular venous pulsations were 5 cm above the sternal notch. Medical therapy with intravenous furosemide and oral enalapril was initiated upon admission. Cardiac catheterization with coronary angiography revealed normal coronary arteries, a dilated left ventricle, moderate pulmonary hypertension, and a pulmonary capillary wedge pressure of 34 mm Hg. The patient had right ventricular biopsy performed demonstrating mild myocyte hypertrophy and an infiltrate consisting predominantly of lymphocytes with eosinophils present in significantly increased numbers. Treatment for myocarditis was initiated with azothioprine 200 mg daily and prednisone 60 mg per day with a tapering course over 6 months. Anticoagulation with warfarin and diuretics was initiated and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition was continued. Hydralazine was added later. One month into therapy, an echocardiogram demonstrated improved left ventricular function with only mild global hypokinesis. A repeat right ventricular biopsy 2 months after the first admission showed no evidence of myocarditis. At 6 months, left ventricular ejection fraction was normal (EFN 50%) and the patient asymptomatic. CONCLUSION Ephedra (Ma Huang) is the suspected cause of hypersensitivity myocarditis in this patient due to the temporal course of disease and its propensity to induce vasculitis.


Archive | 2007

MERCURY LEVELS IN COMMERCIAL FISH AND SHELLFISH

Jerrold B. Leikin; Frank Paloucek

els found in different test samples, it is difficult to know how much mercury is in any given fish meal. There are also contradictions between different studies. One study showed moderate mercury content in tuna, while another report showed much higher levels. Ditto for lobster, in which one report showed high mercury levels while another showed a modest amount. All studies we have looked at show that salmon contains very little mercury. In the following table, mercury levels are provided for different fish species. The “ND” stands for “none detected,” and salmon is one of the few fish species in which mercury was not detected. The first four fish species listed on this chart are those with the highest mercury content. MERCURY LEVELS IN COMMERCIAL FISH AND SHELLFISH


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1988

Cervical injury in head trauma

Gary L. Neifeld; John G. Keene; George Hevesy; Jerrold B. Leikin; Arthur Proust; Ronald A. Thisted

Criteria for excluding cervical spine injury in patients who have sustained blunt head or neck trauma were prospectively studied at four hospitals in the Chicago area. The authors attempted to define a subset of these adult patients who, based on clinical criteria, could reliably be excluded from cervical spine radiography, thus avoiding unnecessary radiation and saving considerable time and money in their evaluation. Patients fell into four groups: (1) patients who were awake, alert, and had no complaint of neck pain or tenderness on physical examination; (2) patients who were awake, alert, but had complaint of neck pain or tenderness on physical examination laterally over the trapezius muscle only; (3) patients who were awake, alert, but had complaint of central neck pain or tenderness on physical examination over the cervical spine or center of the neck; and (4) patients who were not fully awake or alert, were clinically intoxicated, had other painful or distracting injuries, or had focal neurologic findings. Patients in group 4 had significantly more fractures (21/387) when compared with all other patients (7/478). Patients with central neck pain or tenderness (group 3) had significantly more fractures (7/237) than patients without pain or tenderness or with these findings limited to the trapezius area (0/236). It is clear that patients who have altered mental status, abnormal examination findings, distracting injury, or pain or tenderness over the cervical spine must have cervical spine radiographs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Clinical Toxicology | 2003

Post-mortem Toxicology: What The Dead Can And Cannot Tell Us

Jerrold B. Leikin; William A. Watson

The evaluation of postmortem laboratory assays of drugs needs to be performed in a systematic manner. The condition of the body, drug characteristics, matrix and site analysis are factors which need to be considered in the proper interpretation of an autopsy specimen result.


American Journal of Therapeutics | 2002

Biological and chemical agents : A brief synopsis

Mark Rosenbloom; Jerrold B. Leikin; Stephen Vogel; Zafar A. Chaudry

The objective of this article is to provide a concise overview of the most likely biological and chemical agents that could be used as biochemical weapons. The diagnosis, pathology, prevention, decontamination, treatment, and disposition of these biological and chemical agents are presented in a tabular format for quick reference purposes. The information provided outlines the bare essentials needed to deal with any emergency or catastrophic event involving these agents.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1987

Predictors of Occult Carbon Monoxide Poisoning in Patients with Headache and Dizziness

Paul S. Heckerling; Jerrold B. Leikin; Andrew Maturen; James T. Perkins

Headache and dizziness occur at carboxyhemoglobin levels of greater than 10%. We studied 89 patients with headache or dizziness for evidence of carbon monoxide exposure. The mean carboxyhemoglobin level was 2.87%. Number of cigarettes smoked per day (r = 0.471; p less than 0.00002), use of gas kitchen stoves for heating purposes (r = 0.252, p less than 0.02), problems with the home heating system (r = 0.278, p less than 0.01), and cohabitants with concurrent headache or dizziness (r = 0.427, p less than 0.01) correlated with carboxyhemoglobin levels. Multiple regression analysis identified number of cigarettes smoked daily, use of stoves for heat, and concurrently symptomatic cohabitants as significant predictors of carboxyhemoglobin level (F = 13.939 [3, 85]; p less than 0.01). Obtaining carboxyhemoglobin levels from patients who used stoves for heat or had similarly affected cohabitants identified 4 of 4 patients with levels greater than 10% (sensitivity, 100%) and excluded 47 of 85 patients with lower levels (specificity, 55.3%). The 4 patients with carboxyhemoglobin levels in excess of 10% may represent occult carbon monoxide poisoning in this population.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1992

Seizure Following Brief Exposure to the Insect Repellent N,N-Diethyl-m-Toluamide

Lipscomb Jw; Jane E Kramer; Jerrold B. Leikin

A 5-year-old boy with a history of mild developmental delay experienced a major motor seizure at day camp after topical application that morning of the insect repellent Muskol and a later application of OFF [both contain N,N-Diethyl-m-toluamide (DEET)]. The patient continued convulsing in the emergency department and was treated with diazepam. Laboratory tests were unremarkable, as were lumbar puncture, computed tomography scan, and blood cultures. Skin decontamination was performed. DEET levels in the urine were 0.003 micrograms/mL. Although seizures and encephalopathic syndrome have been described with DEET in previous case reports involving topical exposure of pediatric patients, atypical aspects with regard to this case include that this patient was a male (most other case reports involve females), exposure was relatively brief compared with other reports, and the patient developed seizures without a prodrome described in previous reports. Avoidance of high-concentration DEET formulations in pediatric patients should be considered.


Archive | 2007

Poisoning and Toxicology Handbook

Jerrold B. Leikin; Frank P. Paloucek

Special Topics in Toxicology * Approach to Toxicology * Antidotes and Drugs Used in Toxicology - Poison Antidote Preparedness in Hospitals, Clinical Toxicokinetics * Biological Agents - General Considerations Regarding Biological Poisonings, The Management of Plant Exposures * Diagnostics Tests/Procedures - Drug Testing in the 21st Century - Drug Use and Abuse in the USA * Nonmedical Agents - Acids and Alkalis, Pharmacy Preparedness for Incidents Involving Weapons of Mass Destruction Alphabetical Monographs - 701 Medicinal Agents, 311 Nonmedicinal Agents, 266 Biological Agents, 135 Diagnostic Tests/Procedures, 83 Antidotal Agents, and 62 Herbal Agents. Appendix - Includes tables, algorithms, charts, graphs, general and specific toxicology guidelines. Alphabetical Index - Contains monograph names, brand names, synonyms, and scientific names to assist in easy location of monographs.

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Daniel O. Hryhorczuk

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Andrew Maturen

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Christine Moore

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Anthony M. Burda

Rush University Medical Center

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Robin B. McFee

Winthrop-University Hospital

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Timothy Erickson

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Todd Sigg

Rush University Medical Center

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Lipscomb Jw

Rush University Medical Center

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