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Emergency Medicine Mnemonics
Aaron Tjomsland
63 episodes
4 days 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.
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Medicine
Health & Fitness
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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
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Normocytic Anemia in the ED: Mind Palace for Emergency Medicine Rapid Recall (part 2)
Emergency Medicine Mnemonics
1 hour 14 minutes 31 seconds
3 months ago
Normocytic Anemia in the ED: Mind Palace for Emergency Medicine Rapid Recall (part 2)

Step aboard the Anemia Train and enter the Normocytic Skeleton Car—the middle car of your anemia mind palace—designed specifically for busy ED clinicians who need fast recall without flipping through textbooks.


In this episode, you’ll:

• 🧠 Visualize the Normocytic Train Car: Skeleton passengers holding reticulocyte balloons, split by a divider wall between low retic (front) and high retic (back).

• 🎈 Lock in Retic Logic for the ED:

• Low retic = Hypoproliferative (CKD with low EPO / Aplastic with high EPO but no marrow response)

• High retic = Hyperproliferative (Hemolysis vs. Acute Blood Loss)

• 🩸 Master Key ED Presentations:

• CKD skeleton with sagging balloon (↓EPO), struggling for signal on a dead cell phone

• Aplastic skeleton with a ringing phone he can’t answer, sitting on a frying pan (pancytopenia)

• Hemolytic skeleton with bursting balloons, a Reuben sandwich with a lemon (↑LDH), stepping on a smiley‑face sticker (↓haptoglobin)

• Acute Blood Loss skeleton in a puddle of blood, holding a GBS ping‑pong paddle (Glasgow‑Blatchford), with a soft BP cuff falling off his arm reminding you to check code status and be MTP ready

• 🧳 Tour the Hemolytic Suitcases (final segment):

1. TTP/HUS VW suitcase with 5 bullet holes and brown diarrhea door → plasmapheresis + fluids

2. Autoimmune suitcase: Warm IGG sun w/ spleen & butterfly, Cold IGM iceberg with blue hand → consult heme

3. G6PD suitcase: G6 Police Dept badge, fava beans, Heinz ketchup bite cap, “Radical” free radical sticker → stop offending agents

4. Medical Sales suitcase: Heart valve + ECMO plush lungs, cola urine bottle, business card for cardiology → check hemolysis panel & hemodynamics


⸻


Why It Matters in the ED

• 🚨 Rapid Retic Check = Life‑Saving Triage: Quickly determine production vs. destruction vs. loss

• ⚡ Know When to Act:

• Hyperproliferative side = ED danger zone (hemolysis & acute blood loss)

• Hypoproliferative side = usually outpatient follow‑up unless profoundly symptomatic or pancytopenic

• 💉 Immediate Actions:

• Transfuse if symptomatic or unstable

• Initiate MTP for massive GI bleeds

• Call heme or GI early for high‑risk or crashing patients

• 📊 ED Labs to Prioritize: CBC w/ indices + retic, hemolysis panel, type & screen, stool/urine checks as indicated


⸻


Disclaimer:

This podcast is for educational purposes only. Always check local ED protocols and consult specialists for patient‑specific management.

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.