ResusX:Podcast

Haney Mallemat

Welcome to the ResusX:Podcast. Each episode features an amazing talk from the ResusX conference. This is a podcast dedicated to your sickest patients, and it'll all FOAMed. For more great content including our monthly grand rounds, newsletters and more go to www.ResusX.com now.

  1. Diuretic resistance in cardiorenal syndrome: mechanisms, monitoring and phenotype-tailored management

    FEB 4

    Diuretic resistance in cardiorenal syndrome: mechanisms, monitoring and phenotype-tailored management

    Can we break the cycle of Diuretic Resistance? What do you do when the "gold standard" treatment for your congested patient simply stops working? Diuretic resistance (DR) affects up to one-third of patients with heart failure, turning a routine clinical task into a high-stakes battle against prolonged hospitalization and mortality. In this episode, we dive into a comprehensive narrative review that moves beyond simple drug escalation to offer a sophisticated, phenotype-driven roadmap for the modern clinician. The authors synthesize data from nearly 100 pivotal studies to dismantle the "one-size-fits-all" approach to decongestion. We explore the multifactorial drivers of resistance—from chloride depletion and neurohormonal "braking" to the structural remodeling of the nephron itself. Rather than just pushing more furosemide, the study highlights how early monitoring of urinary sodium and the use of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) can identify failure before it becomes entrenched. The real "so what" for your next shift lies in the study’s focus on four challenging phenotypes: Right Heart Failure, advanced CKD, Obesity, and Frailty. We discuss why chloride repletion might be your secret weapon, how metabolic therapies like GLP-1 RAs are changing the game for obese patients, and why a small rise in creatinine shouldn't always scare you away from aggressive diuresis. Tune in to learn how to tailor your decongestion strategy to the patient in front of you and finally get ahead of the curve on diuretic resistance.

    18 min
  2. Efficacy and safety of anticoagulant therapy in sepsis: A systematic review and meta-analysis

    JAN 29

    Efficacy and safety of anticoagulant therapy in sepsis: A systematic review and meta-analysis

    Sepsis and Coagulation: Is It Time to Put the Heparin Away? Is "thinning the blood" the missing piece in the sepsis puzzle, or just a recipe for disaster? Sepsis triggers a deadly cascade of inflammation and clotting, yet the debate over therapeutic anticoagulation has left ICU clinicians caught between the potential for organ salvage and the perilous risk of hemorrhage. In this episode, we break down a 2026 systematic review and meta-analysis from the *Journal of International Medical Research*. The investigators pooled data from 10 major studies—including 8 randomized controlled trials—covering nearly 7,500 adult patients to determine if agents like heparin, antithrombin III, or recombinant thrombomodulin actually save lives. The verdict? We discuss why the data shows that routine anticoagulation in unselected sepsis patients offers **no significant mortality benefit** and trends toward a higher risk of major bleeding. We also unpack a critical discrepancy: while observational studies suggested a survival advantage, the rigorous RCTs flatly contradicted this, exposing the dangers of selection bias. Join us as we explore why the "one-size-fits-all" approach to sepsis anticoagulation is officially dead and why future hopes now rest entirely on high-risk subgroups like those with disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Tune in to get the evidence you need to make safer decisions at the bedside.

    18 min
  3. Balanced crystalloids versus normal saline for trauma resuscitation: A systematic review and meta-analysis

    JAN 6

    Balanced crystalloids versus normal saline for trauma resuscitation: A systematic review and meta-analysis

    Is the reign of "Normal" Saline over, or is the classic bag of salt water actually the hero of the trauma bay? For years, the critical care community has debated whether we should abandon 0.9% sodium chloride in favor of balanced crystalloids like Lactated Ringer’s or Plasma-Lyte to protect the kidneys and prevent acidosis. But a new study suggests we might be writing off saline too soon—especially when the brain is involved.  In this episode, we break down a 2026 systematic review and meta-analysis from the American Journal of Emergency Medicine .  The researchers pooled data from six randomized controlled trials involving nearly 2,000 trauma patients to compare efficacy and safety . The results might surprise proponents of balanced fluids. While there was no significant difference in acute kidney injury or general mortality for non-head trauma, the data revealed a vital signal for Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI).  In TBI patients, Normal Saline was actually associated with lower mortality and more ventilator-free days compared to balanced solutions . So, what does this mean for your next trauma alert?  It suggests that the slight hypertonicity of saline might be protective against cerebral edema, making it a potentially superior choice for head-injured patients . Tune in as we dissect the pathophysiology, the "chloride load" myth, and why Normal Saline remains a safe, standard option for undifferentiated trauma resuscitation.

    14 min
5
out of 5
12 Ratings

About

Welcome to the ResusX:Podcast. Each episode features an amazing talk from the ResusX conference. This is a podcast dedicated to your sickest patients, and it'll all FOAMed. For more great content including our monthly grand rounds, newsletters and more go to www.ResusX.com now.

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