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ED Practice Cases

Content Reviewed: June 13, 2024

Emergency Series
Preview Course

48.25 CME

61 DICOM Case Files

51 Videos

50 Practice Reports

50 Quiz Questions

3 hr. 11 min.

Course Description

Welcome to the Emergency Imaging Practice Cases course!

 

In this course, you’ll be presented with a series of worklists, comprised of high-yield cases selected by top radiology experts for you to practice your interpretation and reporting skills.

 

You must complete all topics in this course to receive your Fellowship Certificate. Access Full Fellowship Certificate Program Here

 

This Practice Cases Course includes:

 

Practice cases - work through each case in our simulated case review module. Review the DICOM file(s) in our cloud-based viewer, write or dictate your report, answer the quiz question(s), and then compare your report to a gold standard report written by expert faculty.  

 

Review topics - review faculty instructional materials, including expert case review videos, case discussions, key images, and references.

With each practice case question you complete, you’ll receive an updated Emergency Imaging Mastery Score to monitor your ongoing performance improvement.

 

Once you complete all topics in this course, return to the Fellowship Certificate Program page here to claim your Certificate of Completion.

 

Contact us at support@medality.com with any questions or feedback about the program.
 

Welcome to the Emergency Imaging Practice Cases course!

 

In this course, you’ll be presented with a series of worklists, comprised of high-yield cases selected by top radiology experts for you to practice your interpretation and reporting skills.

 

You must complete all topics in this course to receive your Fellowship Certificate. Access Full Fellowship Certificate Program Here

 

This Practice Cases Course includes:

Faculty

Laura L Avery, MD

Assistant Professor of Emergency Radiology Harvard Medical School

Massachusetts General Hosptial

John A Carrino, MD, MPH

Vice-Chairman, Radiology and Imaging

Hospital for Special Surgery

Jamlik-Omari Johnson, MD, FASER

Chair, Department of Radiology

University of Southern California

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Mahla Radmard, MD

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Introduction to ED Practice Cases

1-1

Preview Case
82-year-old male presents to the emergency department with abdominal pain and altered mental status.

1-2

Seizure.

1-3

Patient presents to the ED with aphasia.

1-4

Child presents with left facial swelling and pain with eye movement; concern for orbital cellulitis.

1-5

Chest pain.

1-6

Patient presents to the ED with right gaze preference, left weakness after first time seizure, and hyperreflexia.

1-7

Shoulder pain.

1-8

32-year-old male presents to the ED after a street party melee with complaints of shortness of breath.

1-9

38-year-old male with one week of right upper quadrant pain, yellow eyes, light stools and pruritis.

1-10

Progressive lower extremity weakness over the course of 1 or 2 weeks and diminished/absent lower extremity reflexes. Recent history of outdoor camping.

2-1

A 56-year-old patient is intubated and has an orogastric tube.

2-2

A 46-year-old female with a history of vascular myelopathy presents with new right arm tingling and sensory changes. Rule out cord infarct or worsening myelopathy.

2-3

32-year-old female with 3 days of intense abdominal pain and diffuse tenderness.

2-4

Left elbow pain after a fall on the outstretched hand.

2-5

A 28-year-old patient presented to the ED after a motor vehicle collision with complaints of chest pain.

2-6

A patient presents to the ED with trauma and after several hours is given a follow up CT exam.

2-7

Wrist injury status post fall.

2-8

A 43-year-old presents with abdominal pain.

2-9

Trauma.

2-10

Assault.

3-1

A 56-year-old female presents to the ED with acute shortness of breath.

3-2

Right lower quadrant pain, rule out appendicitis.

3-3

Hearing loss.

3-4

Pain status post punching injury.

3-5

A child with seizures is discovered by parents upon return from a night out.

3-6

A 76-year-old presents with lower abdominal pain.

3-7

A 47-year-old male with a 20 pack-year history of smoking presents to the ED status post motor vehicle collision with shortness of breath. No fever or cough.

3-8

Motor vehicle collision with head trauma.

3-9

Right hip pain training for a marathon.

3-10

34-year-old female with a pathologic fracture of L4 and bilateral psoas fluid collections being treated for active TB.

4-1

A 75-year-old female presents with 2 days of nausea and vomiting.

4-2

A 23-year old female is admitted to the ED with shortness of breath and a history of asthma.

4-3

Atraumatic right hip pain and fever.

4-4

Sudden-onset of “worst headache of life” while driving followed by motor vehicle collision.

4-5

A 70-year-old male presents with a history of psoriasis currently admitted with miliary tuberculosis.

4-6

History of severe headaches when awakening from sleep; hypertension; and migraine.

4-7

A 70-year-old female presents with abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting for 3 days.

4-8

A 66-year-old patient presents to the ED with complaints of weight loss, chest pain, cough, and shortness of breath.

4-9

Patient fell off bike this morning.

4-10

A 27-year-old male presents with a sore throat for 3 days and bilateral tonsillar exudate on physical exam.

5-1

A 25-year-old male pedestrian was struck by a vehicle on the left side.

5-2

A 24-year-old female presents with a history of shortness of breath, generalized malaise, and fatigue.

5-3

Patient fell 2 days ago with a twisting injury to the foot.

5-4

A 59-year-old male presents with one day of severe abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting.

5-5

A 32-year-old male presents to the ED with shortness of breath; he reports a cough for some time and a history of weight loss.

5-6

A 69-year-old female presents with one day of severe abdominal pain.

5-7

Right foot pain when walking. Status post ankle twisting injury.

5-8

Newborn preterm (33 weeks) male.

5-9

Still's disease, atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome, worsening hypertension, and concern for seizures.

5-10

Trauma.

Suggested Reading

Course Evaluation

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