Acute Kidney Injury and Electrolyte Emergencies: The Mechanism Framework
Acute kidney injury and electrolyte emergencies share a common thread: the pathophysiology is traceable from mechanism to lab finding to clinical consequence to intervention.…
Mechanism-first posts on what actually happens at the bedside — and the reasoning that gets you to the right move next time.
Acute kidney injury and electrolyte emergencies share a common thread: the pathophysiology is traceable from mechanism to lab finding to clinical consequence to intervention.…
DKA and hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS) are both complications of insufficient insulin activity, but they are physiologically distinct emergencies with different presentations, different risks,…
Stroke management is a race against two clocks simultaneously: the clock measuring how long brain tissue has been ischemic, and the clock measuring how…
Acute coronary syndrome is a spectrum, not a single diagnosis. Understanding where a patient sits on that spectrum determines the urgency, the workup sequence,…
Sepsis kills because it is misread at the edges. Not in the obvious presentation — the febrile patient with hypotension and a white count…
Rhythm recognition is not a memorization skill. It is an interpretive skill — one built on understanding what the waveforms represent physiologically and what…
Mechanical ventilation is not a set-and-forget intervention. It is a continuously active clinical decision — one that the nurse or transport clinician at the…
Intracranial pressure management is one of the highest-stakes decision sequences in critical care. It is also one of the most misunderstood. Most clinicians can…
Shock is not a diagnosis. It is a physiologic state — inadequate tissue oxygen delivery relative to demand — and the treatment depends entirely…
ABG interpretation is the skill most clinicians think they have and fewer actually do. Not because the mechanics are hard — the steps are…