What's New In Emergency Cardiology? -

Bedside cardiac ultrasound is essential for differentiating undifferentiated shock and identifying regional wall motion abnormalities. ⚡ Cardiac Arrest & Resuscitation

Continued debate between "rate vs. rhythm" control in the ED, with a growing trend toward early cardioversion for stable, recent-onset patients to reduce admissions. 🏥 New Technologies & Clinical Support What's New in Emergency Cardiology?

Artificial intelligence tools are increasingly used to detect subtle "Omi" (Occlusion Myocardial Infarction) patterns on EKGs that traditional criteria might miss. 🚑 Acute Coronary Syndromes (ACS) & Triage Use

is evolving rapidly, with 2025-2026 bringing significant shifts in how clinicians manage acute cardiac events. The focus has moved toward precision diagnostics, AI-driven triage, and more aggressive early interventions for refractory cases. 🚑 Acute Coronary Syndromes (ACS) & Triage recent-onset patients to reduce admissions.

Use of rapid "rule-out" protocols (e.g., 0-hour and 1-hour) is now standard for faster discharge of low-risk patients.

Clinicians are now interpreting data from patient smartwatches (rhythm strips) to diagnose paroxysmal arrhythmias.

Early aggressive use of nitroglycerin (often high-dose) for "SCAPE" (Sympathetic Crashing Acute Pulmonary Edema) cases to avoid intubation.