An elderly man self-presents with two weeks of increasing nausea, weakness and urinary frequency. Observations: HR 98/min, BP 105/80 mmHg, afebrile, RR 22/min and SpO2 100% on room air.
The junior doctor shows you the venous blood gas and renal POCUS images.
Renal and bladder POCUS.
What is your initial treatment, including doses?
(Marked out of 6.0)
/ 6
List your initial ED investigations other than bedside renal ultrasound and provide a rationale for each.
(Marked out of 4.0)
| Parameter |
Result |
Reference range |
| pH |
7.10 |
7.30-7.40 |
| pCO2 |
32 mmHg |
40-50 |
| pO2 |
61 mmHg |
– |
| HCO3 |
16 mmol/L |
22-26 |
| Sodium |
133 mmol/L |
136-146 |
| Potassium |
7.8 mmol/L |
3.7-4.7 |
| Glucose |
5.3 mmol/L |
3.5-5.4 |
| Lactate |
2.5 mmol/L |
<2 |
| Creatinine |
682 micromol/L |
60-110 |
| ED investigation |
Rationale |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/ 4
What is your interpretation of the POCUS?
(Marked out of 2.0)
/ 2
What are your next management steps?
(Marked out of 3.0)
/ 3
Total Score: 0 / 15
Percentage: 0%
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