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the County Consult

A Cook County Hospital Emergency Medicine Blog for up-to-date medicine and more.

Figure 1. Bedside renal ultrasound showing moderate right hydronephrosis

Consider the Probe: When It’s More Than Just a UTI, Imaging Dilemmas in Pregnancy

November 19, 2025

The patient was a 23-year-old G3P2 female, approximately 3 months and 12 days pregnant based on her last menstrual period, who presented to the Emergency Department with pelvic pain and vaginal bleeding, as well as dysuria and hematuria for three days. She had not yet established care with an obstetric provider.

Kelly Landry MD and Christine Jung MD

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In Renal, OB/GYN, Ultrasound Tags Ultrasound, Abdomen/GI
Comment

Consider the Probe: Ultrasound Guided Arthrocentesis

August 17, 2025

The patient is a 53-year-old man with a history of none who presented to the emergency department with an atraumatic painful and red left big toe for 3 days. The onset was slow and gradual, and limited to the left big toe. He had never had pain or redness like this before in his toes. He denied any trauma to the joint. No significant or debilitating pain with moving the joint, however mild pain noted.  He denied fever or chills, open wounds.

Priyanka Pradhan MD and Dave Murray MD

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In Ultrasound Tags Ultrasound
Comment

Figure 1. Point-of-care echocardiogram demonstrating the D-sign and a trace pericardial effusion.

Consider The Probe: ILD Sign

September 13, 2024

The Case:

The patient is a 64-year-old female with an unknown past medical history who presented to the ED with altered mental status. Her BP was 100/80 mmHg, HR 101 BPM, RR 21 bpm, SPO2 63% on room air, and T 36.8ºC (98.3ºF). The patient was placed on a non-rebreather mask at 15L, and her oxygen saturation improved to 97%. She was given sedatives for acute agitation and delirium. On exam, the patient was tachypneic and had bilateral crackles and decreased breath sounds throughout all lung fields. Her cardiac exam was notable for a regular rhythm without murmur. The remainder of the physical exam was unremarkable.

Michael Hohl, MD

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In Critical Care, Pulmonary, Ultrasound
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