Home
Categories
EXPLORE
Technology
Comedy
News
Society & Culture
Sports
Business
History
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Loading...
0:00 / 0:00
Podjoint Logo
SI
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts221/v4/8a/45/54/8a455440-fcd0-cbe1-a49c-92cadb6665c4/mza_3730317853324804685.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Emergency Medicine Mnemonics
Aaron Tjomsland
63 episodes
1 week ago
Most podcasts are about understanding. This emergency medicine podcast is about knowledge recall. Active learning requires your brain to process actively. Can you withstand sitting with the discomfort of being asked a question until you can answer it easily and readily? I promise you won’t be comfortable listening to each episode, but after you withstand the discomfort, your ability to recall, will be far superior than any other passive, listening.
Show more...
Medicine
Health & Fitness
RSS
All content for Emergency Medicine Mnemonics is the property of Aaron Tjomsland and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Most podcasts are about understanding. This emergency medicine podcast is about knowledge recall. Active learning requires your brain to process actively. Can you withstand sitting with the discomfort of being asked a question until you can answer it easily and readily? I promise you won’t be comfortable listening to each episode, but after you withstand the discomfort, your ability to recall, will be far superior than any other passive, listening.
Show more...
Medicine
Health & Fitness
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/staging/podcast_uploaded_episode/38401215/38401215-1757631426968-5cadfab647935.jpg
Sick-Tachy or Tachy-sick: S.T.O.P. Secondary Compensations (Must-consider Differentials)
Emergency Medicine Mnemonics
40 minutes 13 seconds
3 weeks ago
Sick-Tachy or Tachy-sick: S.T.O.P. Secondary Compensations (Must-consider Differentials)

When the heart rate blasts past 150, our reflex is often to grab a syringe—diltiazem, metoprolol, something to slow things down.


But here’s the hard truth: if the patient is in sick-tachy—tachycardia as a secondary compensation—slamming them with rate control can be catastrophic.


That racing heart rate may be the only thing keeping them alive.


Pausing to ask “sick-tachy or tachy-sick?” is what separates the new learner from the confident emergency clinician.


This episode is all about STOP-ping before you treat the number.


STOP is your mnemonic for the must-consider secondary compensations that drive tachycardia in the ED.


Each of these can mimic or mask primary arrhythmias, and missing them can lead to disaster:


⸻


🛑 STOP Mnemonic


S – Sepsis

• Tachycardia is often the earliest sign of infection.

• Always check a lactate—“Lactic Acid” should be etched in your mind.

• Bundle: fluids + source control.

• Be cautious in elderly or vague abdominal presentations; tachycardia may be your only clue.


T – Thyroid Storm

• Look for agitation, fever, tremor, weight loss history.

• Order TSH/T3/T4.

• Treatment anchor: Beta-blockers (BB) are first-line for rate control here—unique compared to other scenarios.

• Missing thyroid storm means missing a reversible cause of near-fatal tachycardia.


O – HypOvolemia

• Think bleeding (low H/H), dehydration, or anemia.

• Visual: half water / half blood glass—“Fill the Tank.”

• Don’t just reach for meds—give fluids, transfuse, and stabilize volume first.

• Remember also anxiety/pain can amplify sympathetic tone.


P – Pulm/Cards (Cardiopulmonary)

• Pneumonia – fever, infiltrate, hypoxia.

• Pneumothorax – sudden pleuritic chest pain, absent breath sounds.

• PE – unexplained hypoxia, pleuritic pain, risk factors.

• CHF (low EF) – the most dangerous one to miss before you push AV nodal blockers.

• Workup tools: ABG, BNP, CTPA, CXR, POCUS.


⸻


🧠 Why This Matters

• Sinus tachycardia is often appropriate—but it can mask life-threatening systemic illness.

• Medicating away compensation without treating the cause can pull the plug on the patient’s only survival mechanism.

• STOP first before flipping to tachyarrhythmia algorithms (SVT, AFib w/ RVR, VT, Torsades, VF).


⸻


⚡ Clinical Pearls

• Always ask: Stable or unstable? Unstable → Shock immediately per ACLS.

• If stable → STOP. Consider secondary compensations before rhythm drugs.

• POCUS is your left-hand tool—look for low EF before you dare to push AV nodal blockers.

• Gradual vs sudden onset helps distinguish sick-tachy (gradual, compensatory) from tachy-sick (primary arrhythmia, often sudden).

• Repetition is your friend—STOP, STOP, STOP until it becomes second nature.


⸻


🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn how to build a jetpack framework for HR >150 that keeps you calm under pressure, helps you avoid rookie mistakes, and makes sure you never miss the underlying killer hiding beneath “just a fast heart rate.”


STOP first. Then treat.

Emergency Medicine Mnemonics
Most podcasts are about understanding. This emergency medicine podcast is about knowledge recall. Active learning requires your brain to process actively. Can you withstand sitting with the discomfort of being asked a question until you can answer it easily and readily? I promise you won’t be comfortable listening to each episode, but after you withstand the discomfort, your ability to recall, will be far superior than any other passive, listening.