- Wide Complex Tachycardia
In this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and Dr. T.R. Eckler, MD discuss the April 2026 Emergency Medicine Practice article, Wide Complex Tachycardia in the Emergency Department: An Updated Approach to Diagnosis and Management.
- Introduction – 0:11
- Article Overview – 2:02
- Top 5 Bedside Steps – 7:54
- Sodium Channel Blockade – 9:26
- Hyperkalemia – 11:53
- SVT with Aberrancy – 12:47
- WPW & Accessory Pathway – 13:34
- AFib with Accessory Pathway – 14:09
- Monomorphic VT – 19:01
- Polymorphic VT / Torsades – 20:08
- Bidirectional VT – 21:29
- Pacemaker-Mediated Tachycardia – 22:30
- Pre-Hospital Considerations – 24:52
- Stable vs. Unstable Assessment – 27:58
- Diagnostic Studies – 29:42
- Treatment – 38:00
- Risk Management Pitfalls – 44:49
- Wrap-Up – 49:44
Subscribers, take the CME test here.
Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]
27 April 2026, 8:48 pm - 19 minutes 10 secondsMedical AI with Jack TeitelIn this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD interviews Jack Teitel on the topic of AI in medicine.
- Introduction & Welcome — 0:17
- Jack's Background in Healthcare AI — 0:58
- Brief History of AI — 3:57
- The "Perfect Storm" That Created Modern AI — 5:48
- From General to Specialized: Fine-Tuning AI for Medicine — 7:04
- LLM Confidence & the Sycophancy Problem — 13:01
- The Benchmark Problem — 14:25
- Building Your Own Personal AI Benchmark — 17:44
- Can You "Turn Off" AI Sycophancy? — 20:00
- RAG Systems & How Specialty AI Tools Work — 22:09
- Choosing the Right AI Tool for Clinical Use — 26:18
- Why 95% of AI Pilots Fail in Deployment— 28:10
- How to Ask AI Questions Well (Prompt Quality) — 31:25
- Knowledge Base Currency & Sam's Drug Withdrawal Test — 35:06
- Closing & Contact Info — 37:12
10 April 2026, 5:17 pm - 22 minutes 31 secondsSevere Traumatic Brain Injury with Dr. Dana Klavansky
In this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and Dr. Dana Klavansky, MD discuss the March 2026 Emergency Medicine Practice article, Emergency Department Evaluation and Management of Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
- Introduction & Welcome (0:15)
- Guest Introduction (0:55)
- Epidemiology of Severe TBI (2:37)
- Pathophysiology: Primary vs. Secondary TBI (4:24)
- Types of Hemorrhage and Hematomas (5:25)
- Classification (7:31)
- Mild vs. Moderate vs. Severe TBI
- Impact Loading vs. Inertial Loading
- Differential Diagnosis (9:22)
- Prehospital Care (9:42)
- Emergency Department History (13:33)
- Diagnostics (15:13)
- CT Scan and the A-B-B-B-C Approach
- Repeat CT Timing
- Bedside Ultrasound for Optic Nerve Sheath Diameter
- Pupillometry
- Biomarkers
- Treatment (24:52)
- Airway Management
- Ventilation and CO2 Targets
- Hyperosmolar Therapy: Hypertonic Saline and Mannitol
- Cerebral Perfusion Pressure
- Blood Pressure Goals
- Temperature Management
- Coagulopathy Management
- Seizure Prophylaxis and EEG Monitoring
- Tiered ICP Management (35:29)
- Surgical Indications (38:40)
- Prognosis (40:33)
- Special Topics (41:30)
- Sports Injuries and CTE
- Tranexamic Acid (CRASH-3 Trial)
- Wrap-Up (43:46)
Subscribers, take the CME test here.
Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]
13 March 2026, 7:43 pm - 27 minutes 34 secondsAcute Coronary Occlusion
In this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and T.R. Eckler, MD discuss the February 2026 Emergency Medicine Practice article, Emergency Department Diagnosis and Management of Acute Coronary Occlusion
00:00 - Introduction & Welcome
01:21 - Episode Overview: Acute Coronary Occlusion
02:06 - Why This Topic Matters: Statistics & New Guidelines
03:35 - Nomenclature: ACO vs STEMI/NSTEMI
06:15 - Differential Diagnosis for STEMI
07:41 - Pre-Hospital Care & EMS Role
11:37 - Patient History & Presenting Symptoms
12:28 - Physical Examination Findings
14:54 - EKG: The Most Important Test
17:00 - STEMI Definition & Criteria
20:32 - STEMI Equivalents: Scarbosa Criteria
22:40 - Smith Modified Scarbosa Criteria
24:10 - Hyperacute T Waves
25:30 - Posterior STEMI
28:40 - De Winter Sign
29:38 - Non-STEMI EKG Findings
31:30 - AVR ST Elevation
32:47 - Wellens Syndrome
33:54 - Reciprocal ST Segment Changes
36:15 - Inferior MI Patterns
37:54 - Laboratory Testing
39:51 - Imaging: Chest X-Ray & Echocardiography
42:25 - Supplemental Oxygen: What the Evidence Shows
44:50 - Analgesia & Pain Management
46:35 - Pharmacotherapy: Aspirin & Antiplatelet Agents
49:18 - Reperfusion Therapies & Thrombolytics
53:05 - Cardiac Arrest in STEMI Patients
53:55 - Closing Remarks & CME Information
Subscribers, take the CME test here.Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]1 March 2026, 3:02 am - 24 minutes 5 secondsBeing A Pre-Litigation Expert with Jeff Willis, MDIn this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD interviews Jeff Willis, MD on the topic of pre-litigation review, being a medical expert, and common pitfalls leading to medical malpractice cases.
- 0:15 Introduction
- 0:51 Guest Introduction
- 1:20 Jeff's Background
- 2:00 Current Work
- 3:37 How He Got Started
- 6:57 Pre-Litigation vs. Expert Witness
- 8:01 Four Components of Malpractice Cases
- 13:55 Case Review Statistics
- 17:11 When Cases Get Filed
- 18:58 Common Patterns in Cases
- 19:55 Documentation Best Practices
- 22:06 Shift Handoff Problems
- 25:56 Bounce Backs
- 27:25 Medical Record Volume
- 30:00 Audit Trails
- 32:53 Communication with Consultants
- 41:35 Conflicting Documentation
- 43:46 Getting Started in This Work
- 47:37 Closing
11 February 2026, 3:46 pm - 21 minutes 48 secondsSyphilis: The Great MasqueraderIn this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and T.R. Eckler, MD discuss the Januray 2026 Emergency Medicine Practice article, Emergency Department Diagnosis and Management of Patients With Syphilis
Syphilis cases have surged 42% in the US, making it critical for emergency physicians to recognize and treat this "great masquerader." In this episode, hosts Sam Ashoo and Dr. T.R. Eckler break down the January 2026 Emergency Medicine Practice article on syphilis diagnosis and management. They cover the rising prevalence in high-risk populations, the four clinical stages (primary, secondary, latent, and tertiary), special presentations like neurosyphilis and congenital syphilis, and practical diagnostic approaches. With a national penicillin shortage, they discuss alternative treatment options including doxycycline and post-exposure prophylaxis. The conversation also addresses the dark history of the Tuskegee Study and its lasting impact on medical ethics. Whether you're seeing more cases in your ED or want to sharpen your diagnostic skills, this episode provides actionable insights for frontline providers.
Timestamps[0:00] Opening/Introduction
[0:11] Host Welcome & Resources
[0:50] Episode Introduction
[1:30] Epidemiology & Rising Cases
[4:30] Risk Factors & Screening
[6:30] Pathophysiology & Transmission
[9:30] Primary Syphilis
[12:30] Secondary Syphilis
[15:30] Tertiary & Latent Syphilis
[18:30] Neurosyphilis
[22:30] Congenital Syphilis
[25:30] Ocular & Otic Syphilis
[28:30] Differential Diagnosis & Pre-hospital Care
[31:30] History & Physical Examination
[34:30] Diagnostic Testing Overview
[38:30] Testing Details & Titers
[41:30] Treatment: Penicillin & Alternatives
[43:30] Closing
Subscribers, take the CME test here.Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]30 January 2026, 4:57 pm - 20 minutes 46 secondsCannabis Related Emergencies
In this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and T.R. Eckler, MD discuss the December 2025 Emergency Medicine Practice article, Diagnosis and Management of Cannabis-Related Emergencies
Episode Outline:
- [0:00] Introduction
- Welcome and show overview by Sam Ashoo
- Mention of resources at ebmedicine.net
- [0:46] Episode Start
- Hosts introduce themselves: Sam Ashoo and Dr. T.R. Eckler
- Dr. Eckler’s background and experience with cannabis cases in Colorado
- [1:16] Topic Introduction
- Focus on diagnosis and management of cannabis-related emergencies
- Prevalence and importance in emergency medicine
- [1:34] Legal Landscape
- Overview of cannabis legality across states
- Medicinal vs. non-medicinal use
- [3:03] Increase in ED Visits
- Statistics: ~1 million cannabis-related ED visits annually
- Demographics: younger population most affected
- [3:52] Synthetics and Challenges
- Discussion of synthetic cannabinoids and their risks
- Issues with detection and legality
- [4:50] Clinical Spectrum
- Range of presentations: from nausea/vomiting to psychosis and seizures
- Impact on different age groups
- [6:34] FDA-Approved Uses
- Cannabis-derived products approved for specific medical conditions
- [7:20] Physiology and Pathophysiology
- Cannabinoid receptors (CB1 and CB2) and their effects
- Differences between plant-derived and synthetic cannabinoids
- [9:10] Chronic Use and Withdrawal
- Downregulation of receptors, withdrawal symptoms, and persistent nausea
- [10:20] Product Forms and Delivery Methods
- Smoking, edibles, oils, tinctures, suppositories, topicals, etc.
- Risks associated with concentrated forms (e.g., wax, oils)
- [12:00] Clinical Effects by System
- Psychiatric: anxiety, psychosis, paranoia
- Cardiovascular: tachycardia, MI risk, QT prolongation
- Pulmonary, renal, metabolic, dental, and ocular effects
- [13:50] Cannabinoid Hyperemesis Syndrome (CHS)
- Phases: prodrome, hyperemesis, recovery
- Hot showers as a diagnostic clue
- [16:00] Withdrawal Syndrome
- Symptoms and timeline
- Exacerbation with synthetic cannabinoids
- [18:15] Counseling and Management
- Importance of cessation and patient education
- Timeline for symptom improvement
- [18:42] Differential Diagnosis
- Broad differential for persistent nausea/vomiting and abdominal pain
- Importance of considering other causes
- [20:55] Diagnostics and Testing
- Limitations of drug screens (false positives/negatives)
- Importance of EKG, labs, and imaging as indicated
- [23:10] Treatment Approaches
- First-line: benzodiazepines, antiemetics (ondansetron, metoclopramide)
- Second-line: butyrophenones (haloperidol, droperidol), olanzapine
- Capsaicin as adjunct therapy
- [29:50] Complications and Special Considerations
- Risks of undertreatment (e.g., Boerhaave syndrome, aspiration)
- Pediatric and pregnant populations: unique risks and reporting requirements
- [36:00] Five Practice-Changing Takeaways
- Elicit cannabis use history
- Know testing limitations
- Consider ECG and appropriate labs
- Use butyrophenones when indicated
- Admit if symptoms are refractory
- [39:00] Conclusion
Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]
28 December 2025, 10:56 pm - 34 minutes 30 secondsMeasles, Mumps, Rubella, and Varicella with Dr Tim Horeczko
In this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and Tim Horeczko, MD discuss the November 2025 Pediatric Emergency Medicine Practice article, Emergency Department Management of Measles, Mumps, Rubella, and Varicella in Pediatric Patients
00:00 Introduction to Emergency Medicine
00:21 Welcome and Holiday Greetings
01:16 Special Guest Introduction
01:41 Discussion on Pediatric Emergency Medicine
04:55 Epidemiology of Measles
08:16 Challenges in Diagnosing Measles
14:27 Mumps: Symptoms and Complications
27:36 Rubella: Risks and Symptoms
29:28 Varicella: Symptoms and Precautions
33:12 Differential Diagnosis and Conclusion
35:14 Using Inductive Reasoning in Medical Diagnosis
35:40 Recognizing Purpuric Rash and Its Implications
36:22 Guidance for EMS Colleagues on Handling Fever and Rash
37:14 Importance of Communication and Relationships with EMS
39:12 Decontamination and PPE Protocols for EMS
42:34 Detailed Patient Assessment in the ED
46:06 Diagnostic Testing and Clinical Diagnosis
49:20 Reporting Responsibilities and Treatment Protocols
01:01:19 Addressing Vaccine Controversies and Public Trust
01:06:25 Conclusion and Additional Resources
Check out Dr Horeczko's podcast - Pediatric Emergency Playbook
Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]
11 December 2025, 3:53 pm - 32 minutes 1 secondAlcohol Withdrawal
In this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and T.R. Eckler, MD discuss the November 2025 Emergency Medicine Practice article, Diagnosis and Management of Emergency Department Patients With Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome
- Epidemiology & Background
- Rising ED visits related to alcohol use.
- Mortality rates and spectrum of patient presentations.
- Importance of high suspicion and complexity of cases.
- Pathophysiology & Mechanisms
- Alcohol metabolism and neurochemical changes.
- Differential diagnosis: Conditions that mimic alcohol withdrawal.
- Prehospital & EMS Considerations
- Role of EMS in triage and initial management.
- Use of sobering centers vs. ED transport.
- Prehospital administration of benzodiazepines (IM midazolam).
- History & Risk Assessment
- Key questions to assess risk for alcohol withdrawal syndrome.
- Importance of patient history, medication use, and comorbidities.
- Discussion on patient honesty and rapport.
- Physical Exam & Scoring Systems
- DSM-5 criteria for alcohol withdrawal.
- Use of CIWA-AR, BAWS, and PAWSS scoring systems.
- Importance of objective measurement for monitoring and disposition.
- Complications & Special Presentations
- Complicated alcohol withdrawal: Hallucinosis, seizures, delirium tremens.
- Diagnostic workup: Labs, imaging, and co-ingestions.
- Special populations: End-stage liver disease, pregnancy, intubated patients.
- Treatment Strategies
- Mainstay: Benzodiazepines (types, dosing, and protocols).
- Phenobarbital: Indications, dosing, and evidence.
- Adjunctive therapies: Thiamine, glucose, magnesium.
- Alternative/adjunct medications: Gabapentin, ketamine, dexmedetomidine, baclofen.
- Clinical Pearls & Practice Changes
- Early, aggressive therapy to prevent complications.
- Symptom-based vs. fixed-schedule treatment.
- Gabapentin as an alternative or adjunct.
- Anti-craving medications for relapse prevention.
- Disposition & Protocols
- Use of scoring systems for safe discharge, observation, or admission.
- Importance of protocolized approaches and community resources.
- Summary & Take-Home Points
- Five key practice-changing points.
- Clinical pathway.
Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]
21 November 2025, 4:17 pm - 20 minutes 44 secondsDiphtheria, Pertussis, and Tetanus with Dr Lara Zibners
In this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and Lara Zibners, MD discuss the August 2025 Pediatric Emergency Medicine Practice article, Diphtheria, Pertussis, and Tetanus: An Update of Evidence-Based Management of Pediatric Patients in the Emergency Department
- Introduction and guest background
- Host welcome, show context
- Dr. Lara Zibners’ credentials
- EB Medicine involvement
- Personal stories and clinical experience
- Memorable tetanus and pertussis cases
- Vaccine advocacy
- Rare disease encounters
- Diphtheria: overview, presentation, treatment
- Toxigenic vs. non-toxigenic, “bull neck”
- Cardiac, neurologic complications
- Antitoxin, antibiotics, public health
- Pertussis: symptoms, vaccine, treatment
- “100-day cough,” apnea in infants
- Waning immunity, boosters
- Azithromycin, treat contacts
- Tetanus: risk, presentation, management
- Clostridium ubiquity, no outbreaks
- Muscle spasms, autonomic instability
- Airway, sedation, antibiotics
- Key ED takeaways and pearls
- Early suspicion, isolation
- ICU admission for severe cases
- Vaccination, reporting
- Resources and article summary
- Appendix, clinical pathway
- ebmedicine.net reference
- CME, further reading
- Guest’s podcast plug and closing remarks
- “Unstable Vitals” podcast
- Where to listen
- Thank you, sign-off
Check out Dr Zibner's podcast Unstable Vitals
Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]
7 November 2025, 2:23 pm - 25 minutes 55 secondsAdrenal Insufficiency
In this episode, Sam Ashoo, MD and T.R. Eckler, MD discuss the October 2025 Emergency Medicine Practice article, Emergency Department Evaluation and Management of Patients With Adrenal Insufficiency
Introduction
- Welcome and host introductions
- Brief overview of the episode’s topic
- Resources and CME reminder
Article Overview
- Source: Emergency Medicine Practice, October 2025
- Authors: The Simcoes
- Importance of evidence-based review
Clinical Context & Epidemiology
- Frequency and rarity of adrenal insufficiency
- Diagnostic challenges and statistics
- Importance of recognizing adrenal crisis
Pathophysiology
- Primary, secondary, and tertiary adrenal insufficiency
- Causes and mechanisms
- Key anatomical and physiological concepts
Differential Diagnosis
- Overlap with other diseases (infections, autoimmune, endocrine, psychiatric, cardiac, GI, etc.)
- Importance of considering adrenal crisis in complex cases
Prehospital Care
- EMS recognition and limitations
- Importance of medication history and emergency kits
- Legal and logistical barriers to prehospital hydrocortisone
Emergency Department Evaluation
- Recognizing symptoms and prioritizing care
- Role of EMR and clinical decision support
- Key history and risk factors (medications, steroid use, opioid use, comorbidities)
Physical Examination
- Specific and nonspecific findings
- Cushingoid features vs. primary adrenal insufficiency signs
Diagnostic Workup
- Laboratory studies (cortisol, ACTH, renin, aldosterone, TSH, etc.)
- Imaging considerations
- Gold standard tests and their limitations in the ED
Treatment
- Immediate administration of hydrocortisone
- Dosing for adults and pediatrics
- Supportive care (fluids, glucose, treating underlying cause)
- Sick day dosing and home management
Special Populations
- Pregnancy considerations
- Septic shock and adrenal crisis
Common Pitfalls & Takeaways
- Delaying steroids for labs/diagnosis
- Importance of high suspicion and early treatment
- Key trivia and learning points
ClosingSummary and final thoughts
- Reminders for further reading and CME
- Farewell and next episode teaser
Emergency Medicine Residents, get your free subscription by writing [email protected]
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