Use of Thrombolytics with STEMI | June 17, 2024
Date of Presentation: June 17, 2024
Type: Past Presentation
Audience: Clinical
Program: Emergency Medicine with Rural and Indigenous Communities/IHS
Keywords: #emergency department #stemi #thrombolytics
In this session, Dr. Randall Ellis, EM physician at San Carlos Apache Healthcare and member of the IHS EM Chief Clinical Consultant Core Group, leads a discussion with Dr. Steve Humphrey, Cardiologist, focused on the use of thrombolytics with STEMI in the Emergency Department. They discuss thrombolytic agents available for use in STEMI and their mechanisms, indications for thrombolytic use in STEMI, absolute and relative contraindications for thrombolytics, reperfusion rhythms, post-thrombolytic care and possible complications and management.
Recording:
Presented by:
Randall Ellis, MD, MPH, MBA | Steve Humphrey, MD, FAAC
Randall Ellis, MD, MPH, MBA, is an EM physician at San Carlos Apache Healthcare in Arizona. He is a member of the IHS Emergency Medicine Chief Clinical Consultant Core Group. He is also Associate Director of Emergency Medicine Programs with Seed Global Health helping to promote emergency medicine development in Uganda.
Stephen H. Humphrey, MD, FACC, finished Davidson College in 1968, and graduated from Baylor College of Medicine in 1973. He trained in internal medicine at the Baylor Affiliated HospitaIs in Houston, and completed his training in cardiology at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio. He is board certified in Internal Medicine and Cardiovascular Disease. At the completion of his military service in 1981, he joined the faculty of the University of South Carolina School of Medicine as an associate professor of internal medicine and cardiology. He later entered private practice but until his retirement remained active as a clinical professor of cardiology teaching medical students, residents and cardiology fellows at USC. Since retiring from private practice in 2006, he and his wife and have served as physicians and volunteer faculty in the Niger Republic, Nicaragua, Ecuador, in Tanzania with the Global Health Service Partnership (Peace Corps), and in Uganda with Seed Global Health. He and his wife now reside in Traverse City, MI. His special interest in teaching has been finding ways to make cardiac pathophysiology and therapeutics understandable and enjoyable, helping primary care physicians become effective clinical cardiologists.
Resources Provided:
Date added: June 15, 2024