This article covers the generic assessment and management of the pain with abdominal pain without shock.
This session covers the assessment and management of patients with acute liver failure.
Alcohol abuse is undoubtedly a huge social problem in the UK. It is responsible for many unnecessary attendances to Emergency departments (ED) and is an enormous burden on the NHS, which must treat the complications of alcohol abuse
This session covers the diagnosis, management and treatment of anorectal conditions that commonly present to the ED.
This session deals with the assessment and management of patients with appendicitis.
This session is about the evaluation of arterial blood gases in the emergency department.
Gall Bladder, specifically gallstone, disease is the commonest abdominal complaint causing hospital admission in the developed world.
Describing the natural history and aetiology of paediatric gastroenteritis
Patients frequently attend the emergency department (ED) with episodes of cutaneous and mucosal swelling.
Jaundice is a physical finding, which emergency physicians see in patients who may present with jaundice alone or with other complaints and symptoms.
This module will discuss the causes of lower gastrointestinal bleeding in children. It will consider how the causes can be differentiated by age, when to perform further investigations and basic management plans.
This session covers the assessment and management of lower gastrointestinal (GI) haemorrhage.
The pancreas is the largest gland in the body and is situated transversely across the posterior wall of the abdomen, at the back of the epigastric and left hypochondriac regions.
This is an up-to-date review of peptic ulcer disease pathophysiology, presentation, management and complications in the Emergency Department.
Patients who suffer from an acute upper gastrointestinal (GI) haemorrhage are a common reason for presentation to the ED in the UK