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EM Quick Hits 66 Pediatric Torticollis, Stable Wide Complex Tachydysrhythmias, Post-intubation Neurocritical Care, Hyponatremia Correction Rates, Paronychia Management, Women in EM Leader Series with Judith Tintinalli

Author
Dr. Anton Helman
Published
Tue 15 Jul 2025
Episode Link
https://emergencymedicinecases.com/em-quick-hits-july-2025/

Topics in this EM Quick Hits podcast

Deborah Schonfeld on pediatric torticollis (02:33)

Anand Swaminathan on stable wide-complex tachycardia (28:24)

Andrew Petrosoniak on post-intubation neurocritical care considerations (33:45)

Justin Morgenstern on correcting hyponatremia (42:39)

Andrew Tagg on paronychia management (53:09)

Victoria Myers and Judith Tintinalli on Women in EM leaders series (1:00:00)



Podcast production, editing and sound design by Anton Helman

Podcast content, written summary & blog post by Brandon Ng, edited by Anton Helman, July, 2025

Cite this podcast as: Helman, A. Schonfeld, D. Swaminathan, A. Petrosoniak, A. Morgenstern, J. Tagg, A. Myers, V. Tintinalli, J. EM Quick Hits 66 – Pediatric Torticollis, Stable Stable Wide Complex Tachydysrhythmias, Post-intubation Neurocritical Care, Hyponatremia Correction Rates, Paronychia Management, Women in EM Leader Series with Judith Tintinalli  https://emergencymedicinecases.com/em-quick-hits-july-2025/. Accessed September 14, 2025.

Pediatric torticollis: Not just muscular injury



Broad Categories in the differential diagnosis of pediatric torticollis





Muscular (SCM/trapezius): Most common; typically resolves within a week.





Atlantoaxial Subluxation: C1/2 instability due to ligamentous or osseous abnormalities.





Infectious:



Viral URTI/Pharyngitis → Referred pain, muscle spasm

Retropharyngeal Abscess (typically ages 2–4): Limited neck extension, fever, dysphagia, drooling, stridor

Osteomyelitis/Discitis: Cervical spine tenderness

Lemierre Syndrome: IJ thrombophlebitis post-oropharyngeal infection → SCM or jugular tenderness/swelling







CNS Lesion (typically painless):



Up to 20% of posterior fossa tumors present with torticollis

* 50% of pediatric malignant brain tumors are located in the posterior fossa

Clinical red flags: headache, vomiting, gait changes, ataxia, focal neuro deficits







Atlantoaxial Subluxation

Risk Factors for Atlantoaxial Subluxation



Ligamentous injury (more common than fracture in children)

Congenital hypermobility: Trisomy 21/Down syndrome, Marfan's Syndrome, Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis

Grisel Syndrome: Post head/neck surgery with local inflammation → ligament laxity



Physical exam pearl to distinguish atlatoaxial subluxation from muscular torticollis



Muscular torticollis: Head tilts toward spastic SCM

Subluxation: Tilts away from affected side



Imaging for suspected atlantoaxial subluxation





XR: Odontoid and lateral views; assess Atlantodental Interval (≤5 mm if 1 week or with neurological findings → Image to rule out subluxation, infection, or CNS lesion



Expand to view reference list



* McInerny, Thomas K, and American Academy of Pediatrics. American Academy of Pediatrics Textbook of Pediatric Care. Washington, D.C: American Academy of Pediatrics, 2009. Print.





Approach to Stable Wide-Complex Tachydysrhthmias

Regular, Wide, Fast Tachycardia? Assume VT.

Rhythms >120 bpm that are regular, wide, and fast are usually Ventricular Tachycardia (VT)—rarely SVT with aberr...

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