A 67-year-old lady presents to the ED with mild wheeze, frontal headache, fever and vomiting. She is hypotensive and tachycardic. You arrange to see her in Resus.
A 15-year-old male presents to the ED complaining of blurred vision in the right eye, floaters, and mild headache.
A 40-year-old female presents to the Emergency Department feeling lethargic for 24 hours.
A 3-year-old boy presents with a 6-day history of vomiting and stillness.
A 77-year-old gentleman presents to the ED five days after his endoscopic endonasal transsphenoid resection of his pituitary adenoma with a severe frontal headache, fever and multiple episodes of vomiting.
A 43-year-old female presents with blurred vision following a fall.
A 71-year-old female with recurrent dizzy episodes over the past 2 years.
A 36-year-old male presents to the ED with left eye pain and redness for one day, especially uncomfortable in bright light. He also reports blurred vision and floaters.
A patient books in stating that his heart is beating fast. Your receptionist thinks he doesnt look right and brings him through to you in the main department.
A 5-month-old boy is brought to the Childrens Emergency Department with a red, swollen scrotum.
A man with weight loss, abdominal pain and fevers attends your ED. He has HIV and is on antiretroviral therapy.
A 5-week-old baby presents with persistent watery pus-like discharge from both eyes.
An elderly gentleman presents to the ED with increasing frequency of nocturnal enuresis.
What do you do if you dont see P waves on an ECG?
A 2-year-old female presents to your Emergency Department after biting into a liquid detergent capsule
A 27-year-old male presents with sudden onset of L-eye redness.
A 25-year-old obese female, who is 1-week post-partum, presents with worsening shortness of breath on minimal exertion, orthopnoea, pedal oedema and a dry cough.
A 63-year-old male presents with acute painful and red left eye.
A 45-year-old female attended the ED after taking an intentional antifreeze overdose.
A 24-year-old farmer presents to the ED with vomiting, diarrhoea and neck fasciculations.
A woman presents with an unusual cause of ophthalmic symptoms.
A 16-day-old baby, who has had an uneventful antenatal period, presents with coryza, with some blood streaking in this. His symptoms progress over the coming days to uncover another more subtle diagnosis that may not be considered without a thorough and detailed assessment.
A 22-year-old female wakes up with photophobia, pain and irritation in the right eye.
A 72-year-old gentleman, who has not seen a doctor in decades, presents with dyspnoea and acidosis with increased work of breathing.