The FlightBridgeED Podcast

Long Pause Media | FlightBridgeED

The FlightBridgeED Podcast provides convenient, easy-to-understand critical care medical education and current topics related to the air medical industry. Each topic builds on another and weaves together a solid foundation of emergency, critical care, and prehospital medicine.

  1. MDCAST: The Stubborn Lethality of Cardiogenic Shock

    1 DAY AGO

    MDCAST: The Stubborn Lethality of Cardiogenic Shock

    This episode provides an overview of cardiogenic shock and explains why it remains such a major problem despite decades of progress in treating acute coronary syndromes. Dr. Mike Lauria notes that while STEMI and other ACS outcomes have improved dramatically with better systems, PCI, and modern cardiac care, mortality from cardiogenic shock has stayed stubbornly high. A central theme is that cardiogenic shock is becoming more common, especially among more medically complex patients with chronic heart failure and prior cardiac disease, and that critical care transport teams are increasingly encountering these patients because so many require transfer to higher-level centers.  A major focus of the episode is the modern framework for thinking about shock, especially the SCAI stages A through E, which describe cardiogenic shock as a spectrum rather than a simple yes-or-no diagnosis. Dr. Lauria emphasizes that this shared language helps clinicians identify patients earlier, communicate severity more clearly, and escalate care before they progress into multi-organ failure. Dr. Lauria argues that early recognition, rapid team-based decision-making, and transfer to experienced shock centers are some of the most promising ways to improve outcomes, particularly because late interventions often fail once the patient has already tipped into severe end-organ injury.  From a transport perspective, the episode frames care around recognition, resuscitation, and retrieval. Clinicians are encouraged to identify deterioration early, support perfusion by maintaining MAP, optimize oxygenation and ventilation, think carefully about volume status, add inotropic support when needed, and pay close attention to whether existing mechanical circulatory support is truly sufficient. Just as importantly, Dr. Lauria stresses the logistical and systems side of transport: moving quickly but safely, anticipating equipment and oxygen needs, and advocating for the patient to reach the right destination the first time, especially if advanced support such as Impella or ECMO may soon be needed.  Key points  Cardiogenic shock remains a high-mortality condition even though outcomes for acute coronary syndromes have improved substantially.  It is increasingly common, especially among complex patients with chronic heart failure and prior cardiac disease.  The SCAI shock stages (A-E) provide a practical shared language for identifying severity and guiding escalation of care.  Early recognition, shock teams, and transfer to experienced cardiogenic shock centers may improve outcomes by preventing delayed intervention.  For transport teams, priorities include supporting MAP, optimizing oxygenation/ventilation, considering volume status and inotropy, checking device adequacy, and getting the patient to the right place quickly and safely.

    51 min
  2. MDCAST: Right Heart Failure: The Hidden Critical Care Problem

    1 DAY AGO

    MDCAST: Right Heart Failure: The Hidden Critical Care Problem

    This episode is an overview of acute right heart failure, with a strong emphasis on why the right ventricle is so vulnerable and why clinicians often miss its role in critically ill patients. Dr. Mike Lauria explains that, unlike the left ventricle, the RV is designed to pump against a low-pressure, high-compliance pulmonary circulation. That makes it especially sensitive to sudden increases in afterload, whether from pulmonary embolism, pulmonary hypertension, ARDS, sepsis, or other cardiopulmonary stressors. The result is that RV dysfunction can develop quickly and become a major driver of shock in transport, emergency, and ICU patients.  A major theme of the episode is the “RV spiral of death”: as RV afterload rises, the right ventricle dilates, pumps less effectively, and begins to impair left ventricular filling by bowing into the septum. This lowers cardiac output, worsens systemic perfusion, and reduces blood flow to the RV itself, which further weakens the ventricle and accelerates hemodynamic collapse. The transcript also reviews practical clues that can help identify RV failure, especially in transport, including CT evidence of an enlarged RV, bedside echo findings such as septal flattening, an increased RV:LV ratio, reduced TAPSE, tricuspid regurgitation, and a dilated vena cava.  Management is organized around a practical resuscitation framework: maintain systemic blood pressure, optimize preload, reduce RV afterload, improve contractility, and address the underlying cause. Dr. Lauria discusses norepinephrine as a first-line vasopressor, warns that extra fluid is often not helpful and may make things worse, and stresses the importance of correcting hypoxia and hypercapnia to reduce pulmonary vascular resistance. Inhaled pulmonary vasodilators, low-dose inotropes such as epinephrine or dobutamine, and avoiding unnecessary positive-pressure ventilation are all highlighted as useful strategies, while definitive therapy depends on the cause, such as thrombolysis for PE or disease-specific treatment for pulmonary hypertension.  Key points  The right ventricle is built for a low-pressure system and does not tolerate sudden increases in afterload well.  Acute RV failure is commonly triggered by PE, pulmonary hypertension, ARDS, sepsis, and other causes of increased pulmonary vascular resistance.  The RV spiral of death occurs when RV dilation, reduced LV filling, and worsening RV perfusion compound each other and drive shock.  Useful bedside clues include RV enlargement, septal flattening, abnormal RV:LV ratio, reduced TAPSE, tricuspid regurgitation, and a dilated IVC.  Management focuses on supporting MAP, being cautious with fluids, reducing RV afterload, adding inotropy when needed, and treating the underlying cause.

    32 min
  3. MDCAST: Pulmonary Artery Hypertension in the Critically Ill Patient

    21 APR

    MDCAST: Pulmonary Artery Hypertension in the Critically Ill Patient

    This episode focuses on the critically ill patient with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and explains why this subgroup is especially dangerous in emergency and transport medicine. Dr. Mike Lauria distinguishes PAH from the broader label of “pulmonary hypertension,” emphasizing that elevated pulmonary pressures can come from several very different disease processes, but group 1 PAH is a rare intrinsic disease of the pulmonary arteries that creates fixed resistance to blood flow. Over time, this chronic increase in pulmonary vascular resistance places an enormous burden on the right ventricle, which may initially compensate but can eventually dilate and fail, especially when stressed by infection, hypoxia, medication interruption, or other acute illness.  A major theme of the episode is that right ventricular failure is the central problem when these patients decompensate. Dr. Lauria reviews how rising RV afterload leads to RV dilation, reduced RV output, impaired LV filling, worsening cardiac output, and eventual shock. He also highlights an important practical pearl: many PAH patients depend on specialized outpatient therapies such as endothelin receptor antagonists, PDE-5 inhibitors, and especially continuous prostacyclin infusions like epoprostenol or treprostinil. Abrupt interruption of these medications can trigger rebound pulmonary hypertension and rapid deterioration, making continuation of home therapy a critical part of transport and ICU management.  Management is framed around supporting the failing RV while avoiding interventions that can worsen hemodynamics. The speaker recommends maintaining MAP, usually with norepinephrine, carefully managing preload, and recognizing that this is one of the few shock states where patients may need both vasopressors and diuresis. The episode strongly warns against aggressive fluid loading, stresses the importance of correcting hypoxia and hypercapnia, and supports use of inhaled pulmonary vasodilators such as nitric oxide or epoprostenol in the right setting. It also cautions that intubation is particularly dangerous in PAH because induction and positive-pressure ventilation can sharply worsen RV function and precipitate cardiovascular collapse.  Key points  The episode distinguishes group 1 pulmonary arterial hypertension from the broader and more nonspecific category of pulmonary hypertension.  PAH is dangerous because it creates fixed pulmonary vascular resistance, which can eventually cause right ventricular failure and shock. Medication interruption, especially stopping continuous prostacyclin infusions, can cause rebound pulmonary hypertension and sudden collapse.  Management focuses on supporting the RV: maintain MAP, avoid unnecessary fluids, optimize oxygenation and ventilation, and consider inhaled pulmonary vasodilators. Intubation is high risk in these patients because positive pressure and induction can worsen RV afterload and trigger hemodynamic collapse.

    38 min
  4. MDCAST: High-Risk PE: Inside the New Guidelines

    21 APR

    MDCAST: High-Risk PE: Inside the New Guidelines

    This episode reviews the newly released 2026 pulmonary embolism guidelines with an emphasis on what matters most for critical care and transport clinicians: identifying the sickest PE patients early and recognizing how quickly they can deteriorate. Dr. Michael Lauria stresses that although pulmonary embolism is common, the subset with hemodynamic instability carries very high mortality and often requires transfer for advanced therapies such as ECMO, catheter-based intervention, or surgery.  A major focus is the new classification system, which replaces the older “massive” and “submassive” terminology with categories A through E. Instead of emphasizing clot size, the new framework centers on clinical severity, especially hypotension, end-organ hypoperfusion, and progression toward cardiopulmonary failure. The episode also highlights that severe PE is fundamentally a problem of right ventricular failure: as pulmonary vascular resistance rises, the RV dilates, perfusion worsens, LV filling drops, and the patient can spiral into shock.  Management is therefore framed around supporting the failing RV while moving toward definitive reperfusion. The speaker recommends maintaining perfusion pressure, avoiding aggressive fluids, optimizing oxygenation, reducing RV afterload, and using inotropic support when needed, while also warning that intubation and positive pressure can worsen hemodynamics in these patients. For the sickest patients, especially category D and E PE, systemic thrombolysis is presented as the main reperfusion option available in many settings, though it remains underused and carries meaningful bleeding risk, including intracranial hemorrhage.  Key points  The episode centers on the new 2026 PE guidelines and their practical relevance for emergency, ICU, and transport care.  The old “massive/submassive” terms are replaced by categories A through E, with D and E representing the highest-risk patients.  Severe PE is dangerous primarily because of right ventricular failure and shock, not just hypoxia.  Initial treatment focuses on supporting the RV: maintain MAP, avoid excess fluids, improve oxygenation, reduce RV afterload, and add inotropy when needed. Systemic thrombolysis is a key reperfusion therapy for the sickest patients, but it is underused and has significant bleeding risks.

    42 min
  5. MDCast: DKA in Disguise | What Pregnancy Symptoms Hide

    8 JAN

    MDCast: DKA in Disguise | What Pregnancy Symptoms Hide

    In this episode of the FlightBridgeED OB Critical Care Transport series, Dr. Mike Lauria is joined by maternal-fetal medicine specialist Dr. Liz Gartner to tackle one of the most commonly missed and dangerous metabolic emergencies in pregnancy: diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA). While DKA is familiar to most clinicians, pregnancy dramatically alters its presentation—often masking it behind symptoms that look indistinguishable from “normal” pregnancy complaints like nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, fatigue, and polyuria. The conversation breaks down the unique physiology of pregnancy that predisposes patients to DKA at much lower glucose levels than expected. Progressive insulin resistance, hemodilution, increased renal glucose losses, accelerated starvation, and baseline respiratory alkalosis combine to create a perfect storm where euglycemic or near-euglycemic DKA can develop. The result is a high-risk condition that is easy to dismiss unless providers intentionally look for it—especially in patients with type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes, or gestational diabetes. From a transport and critical care perspective, the episode emphasizes early recognition, appropriate lab interpretation, and aggressive maternal resuscitation as the cornerstone of treatment. The hosts clarify that management principles remain largely unchanged from non-pregnant patients—fluids first, electrolytes (especially potassium), then insulin—while highlighting pregnancy-specific lab pitfalls and why delivery is not the treatment for DKA. Ultimately, stabilizing the mother is the most effective way to protect the fetus. Key takeaways DKA can look like normal pregnancy: Nausea, vomiting, fatigue, abdominal pain, and polyuria should not be dismissed in pregnant patients with diabetes.Don’t be reassured by a glucose of ~200: Up to 30% of DKA cases in pregnancy are euglycemic.Pregnancy changes the labs: Baseline bicarbonate is lower, and a pH around 7.30 may represent severe acidosis.Beta-hydroxybutyrate is the gold standard for diagnosing ketosis; urine ketones and anion gap alone can miss cases.Fluids and electrolytes come first: Aggressive volume resuscitation and potassium correction are critical before insulin.Resuscitate mom to save baby: Delivery is not indicated for DKA alone and may worsen outcomes.High fetal risk: While maternal mortality is low, fetal mortality remains significant—making early recognition essential.

    35 min

About

The FlightBridgeED Podcast provides convenient, easy-to-understand critical care medical education and current topics related to the air medical industry. Each topic builds on another and weaves together a solid foundation of emergency, critical care, and prehospital medicine.

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