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Podcast From St Mungo's
Eoghan Colgan
80 episodes
9 months ago
Medical researcher and scientific author, Estrelita van Rensburg, explains how bad science and misinformation leads us down the road to insulin-resistance, the precursor of illness and chronic disease. Her book will shake the foundations of standard nutritional advice and demonstrate how this leads to lifestyle diseases such as obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, dementia and cancer.
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Science
Medicine
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Medical researcher and scientific author, Estrelita van Rensburg, explains how bad science and misinformation leads us down the road to insulin-resistance, the precursor of illness and chronic disease. Her book will shake the foundations of standard nutritional advice and demonstrate how this leads to lifestyle diseases such as obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, dementia and cancer.
Show more...
Science
Medicine
Episodes (20/80)
Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 80: Eat Well or Die Slowly
Medical researcher and scientific author, Estrelita van Rensburg, explains how bad science and misinformation leads us down the road to insulin-resistance, the precursor of illness and chronic disease. Her book will shake the foundations of standard nutritional advice and demonstrate how this leads to lifestyle diseases such as obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, dementia and cancer.
Show more...
2 years ago
55 minutes 27 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 79: Disaster Management and Preparedness
Climate change is a risk multiplier for disasters. Disasters cause multi billion dollars worth of damage worldwide therefore, prevention should be the aim. Paradigm shift from disaster response to disaster risk reduction, hazard to community resilience. Disasters have immediate, short term and long term impacts on health and clinical practice.
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2 years ago
32 minutes 56 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 78: Superior Vena Cava Syndrome
Superior Vena Cava syndrome (SVC) may be the first presentation of a cancer and therefore not suspected. The most common symptoms are facial edema, distended neck and/or chest veins, cough and dyspnea. Acute life-threatening symptoms such as airway obstruction from laryngeal edema, cerebral edema, hypotension and coma are possible, but fortunately rare. Over 60% of SVC syndromes are malignant in etiology, with 85% of those due to either lung cancer or lymphoma. Tumors can invade or compress the vessel and predispose to thrombus formation. Benign etiologies are rising in number, and mostly due to intravascular devices, which are often present in cancer patients as well. Diagnosis is dependent on having the clinical suspicion then confirming the diagnosis with imaging, preferably CT chest with contrast or angiogram. Management urgency is based on grading. Grade 4 represents life threatening symptoms requiring emergent intervention with stenting, thrombolysis or angioplasty. Lower grades allow for tissue diagnosis to tailor more definitive therapy to the cancer type: chemotherapy versus radiation therapy. Because SVC syndrome is often found in the later stages of cancer with less than 6 months survival and goals of care should be addressed. However, prognosis is dependent on tumor type. Readily curable cancers such as lymphoma and germ cell tumors long-term survival are expected despite SVC syndrome. In sum, the emergency physician needs to maintain a high level of suspicion when presented with classic symptoms of SVC syndrome, confirm the diagnosis with contrast chest CT and plan for advanced management with cardiology, interventional radiology, oncology or radiation oncology, which may necessitate transfer to a hospital with these capabilities.
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2 years ago
27 minutes 26 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 77: CCB and BB Toxicity
Calcium channel blockers and beta blockers are potentially devastating ingestions. This is a targeted review of the mechanisms behind toxicity and the rationale behind various management options available during resuscitation.
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2 years ago
34 minutes 12 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 76: Neutropenic Fever
Neutropenic fever is an oncologic emergency that carries high morbidity and mortality and is a common condition seen in the Emergency Department. This lecture provides a concise and condensed overview of the definitions, etiology, workup, and up to date treatment strategies to manage neutropenic fever. Ultimately, the aim of this lecture is to make practitioners feel more comfortable managing neutropenic fever in their current practice environments.
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2 years ago
34 minutes 12 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 75: Pulmonary Hypertension & RV Failure
Right heart failure is often misunderstood and underappreciated. It is more common than we think and presents in a number of common conditions such as sepsis. Using anatomic principles, this talk demystifies RV Failure and applies some basic principles to guide practice.
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2 years ago
32 minutes 27 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 74: Skin and Soft Tissue Infections
Skin infections are a common presenting complaint to the emergency department. This talk provides an overview of animal bites, other infected skin infections, abccesses and necrotising facsciitis.
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2 years ago
44 minutes 57 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 73: The Basic Approach to Asthma Management
Asthma management is a critical skill for ED clinicians. Rapid assessment and application of appropriate interventions can quickly improve patient status. The key is in understanding where on the spectrum of disease the patient lies and, whatinterventions are appropriate based on disease severity. In this talk, we will review the presentation of mild, moderate and severe asthma and focus on the interventions that have benefit depending on the patient's severity.
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2 years ago
22 minutes 30 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 72: Trauma Resuscitation
A review of key literature and best practice in trauma management, with tips and pearls from Chris Colwell.
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2 years ago
43 minutes 10 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 71: Mind, Body & Spirit
Finbar McGrady is a Northern Irish GP, Skin Specialist, international triathlon champion with a passion for wellness. In this episode we discuss mind, body and spirit and the need to address each of these to achieve effective and lasting contentment.
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2 years ago
28 minutes 38 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 70: Acute Kidney Injury
Acute kidney injury is a common finding in patients in the emergency department. The vast majoreity of these can be reversed by a foley catheter and a bag or two of crystalloids, however understanding what to do for the remainder is an important and often confusing topic. Dr. Topf boils down the science to present acute kidney injury with a practical bent. He covers the common causes as well as the less common diagnosis with an emphasis of what to look for in order to dig deeper, rather than presenting a comprehensive diagnostic algorithm. He also discusses the recent data of the treatment of metabolic acidosis, the initiation of dialysis and how to use and interpret the furosemide stress test.
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2 years ago
24 minutes 11 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 69: Frailty In The ED
This talk will serve as an introduction to the term "frailty" and how the assessment of frailty is an underutilized and important part of acute care medicine. The increased adverse outcomes associated with increased frailty will be discussed, and the differentiation between advanced age and frailty will be highlighted. There are many existing tools for frailty assessment, so after a brief overview of their historical roots, notable and well-studied assessment tools for the emergency department will be presented. The lecture concludes with implementation ideas and initial steps for investing in frailty-aware care.
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2 years ago
22 minutes 25 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 68: Traumatic Brain Injury
This talk explores the acute management of traumatic brain injury (TBI) with a focus on severe traumatic brain injured patients. We review the global burden of TBI and societal impact. We discuss characterizing TBI severity. We review the imaging to obtain based on various factors related to the injury. We discuss the critical role of the provider in preventing secondary injury in brain injured patients and how to manage a brain injured patient in the acute setting. Throughout the presentation, we review evidence-based guidance.
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2 years ago
49 minutes 49 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 67:Status Epilepticus
Status epilepticus is a life-threatening emergency. However, there are different forms of status epilepticus: focal to bilateral tonic-clonic status epilepticus and focal status epilepticus. Focal status epilepticus may have prominent motor symptoms, often with impaired awareness, or may be nonconvulsive. The implications of this are important: the treatment of focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures requires immediate action. Evidence for first-line therapy is clear that benzodiazepines should be administered in adequate doses we will review those studies. New evidence for second-line treatment has emerged, as well. In those with focal status epilepticus, urgent treatment is still indicated but the approach is more nuanced and less likely to require an escalation to third-line agents, such as anesthetics. We review these concepts and provide some guidance for clinical practice.
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2 years ago
46 minutes 26 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 66: O2: Oxygenation & Optimisation
A review of oxygenation in the context of critical illness and Rapid Sequence Intubation. What are the historical recommendations, how has this changed over time, and what does the evidence support currently?
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2 years ago
22 minutes 24 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 65: Inherited Bleeding Disorders
This talk goes over the most common causes of inhirted bleeding disorders. There are two major types of hemophilia – deficiency in factor VIII and IX – which predominant occur in men. Hemophilia A is deficiency of factor VIII and is the most common form of hemophilia treated with factor concentrate. Hemophilia B is less common but treatment principles are the same. There are multiple types of von Willebrand Disease as this is a complex molecular that both carries factor VIII and forms large multimers essential for platelet function. Mild forms of vWD can be treated by desmopressin but von Willebrand factor is needed for more severe types.
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2 years ago
28 minutes 12 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 64: Pain Management In The Emergency Department
Pain is one of the most common reasons for patients to visit the emergency department and other acute care settings. Due to the extensive number of visits related to pain, ED clinicians across the globe and should be aware of the various therapeutic options available to them to treat patients with a variety of acute and chronic painful syndromes. With a huge improvement in understanding of the neurobiological aspect of pain by utilizing channels/enzymes/receptors concept, ED clinicians should consider patient-centered, pain syndrome-specific approach by using multimodal approach that include non-pharmacological modalities and pharmacological ones that include non-opioid and opioid analgesics. Additionally, availability and cost -effectiveness of analgesics need to be factored in treatment plan across the globe.
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3 years ago
34 minutes 52 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 63: The Head CT
This talk highlights how a quick scroll through a non contrasted head CT can provide important information about the severity of illness. We review normal anatomy and easily recognized distorsions of neuroanatomy that suggest severe brain injury and impending herniation. The talk focuses on how these brain injured patients can be managed to prevent further injury and how simple bedside exams findings coupled with neuroradiologic findings can guide bedside management.
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3 years ago
27 minutes 47 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 62: Defining Airway Management Success
Airway management in the ED and other acute care settings has followed the ‘ABC’ priority paradigm. Open the airway, apply oxygen then support oxygenation and ventilation with a ‘definitive’ airway A.K.A a tracheal tube. The challenge and focus of airway management in emergencies has been on the technical imperative of laryngoscopy and intubation and therefor success is usually referenced by correct placement of the tube. First pass success (FPS) has been the primary outcome in a majority of publications examining airway management. This reverse rationalization is supported by numerous publications in every setting demonstrating an association between increasing number of attempts and patient morbidity and mortality. The focus of airway management is to support oxygenation and ventilation while maintaining physiologic homeostasis. The tube provides neither benefit nor harm airway management and success should therefor, be defined by a broader contextual surrogate for patient outcomes. Clinicians should strive for FPS rates >90%, without critical hypoxemia or hypotension performed in a timely manner.
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3 years ago
22 minutes 16 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Episode 61: Dilemmas in fluid resuscitation in sepsis
Eoghan and Alasdair discuss the current dilemmas in fluid resuscitation in septic patients. Despite many research studies over the past 15 years, many questions still exist: what are the ideal endpoints for volume resuscitation?; what are the best fluids to give?; and when and how to start vasopressors?. Alasdair covers what we know and what we don’t, and how we might get the right answers.
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4 years ago
34 minutes 19 seconds

Podcast From St Mungo's
Medical researcher and scientific author, Estrelita van Rensburg, explains how bad science and misinformation leads us down the road to insulin-resistance, the precursor of illness and chronic disease. Her book will shake the foundations of standard nutritional advice and demonstrate how this leads to lifestyle diseases such as obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, dementia and cancer.