My Favorite Learners Podcast

Chloe Gomez

My Favorite Learners is a pharmacology podcast for SRNAs, CRNAs, and anesthesia learners. Hosted by Dr. Chloe G, CRNA + DNP + pharmacology professor, this show breaks down anesthesia drugs, mechanisms of action, MAC values, and NBCRNA exam prep. Episodes cover propofol, ketamine, Precedex, NMBAs, inhaled agents, and more - through solo teaching and expert CRNA interviews. Whether you're studying for boards or brushing up on clinical pharmacology, this podcast makes complex topics simple and fun.

  1. 12/29/2025

    Antihypertensives & Anesthesia: The Meds That Love to Mess with Your Hemodynamics with Chloe Gomez, DNP, CRNA

    Antihypertensive medications don’t have to feel overwhelming or memorization-heavy. In this solo lecture, Chloe Gomez, DNP, CRNA breaks down antihypertensive pharmacology through physiology, mechanisms of action, and real-world anesthesia implications - exactly what SRNAs, CRNAs, and anesthesia providers need for boards and the operating room. This episode walks through the major classes of antihypertensives, focusing on how each drug lowers blood pressure rather than relying on disconnected lists. You’ll learn how antihypertensives interact with preload, afterload, heart rate, contractility, and systemic vascular resistance, and why those effects matter during induction, maintenance, and emergence from anesthesia. Key topics covered include: Beta blockers (β₁ vs β₂ effects, perioperative continuation, blunted sympathetic response) ACE inhibitors (ACE-Is) & ARBs: RAAS physiology, vasodilation, and refractory hypotension Calcium channel blockers (DHP vs non-DHP): vascular vs nodal effects Alpha agonists and antagonists How antihypertensives alter MAP, CO, SVR, and reflex tachycardia Why certain antihypertensives increase the risk of induction hypotension What to hold, continue, or anticipate on the day of surgery Throughout the episode, complex pharmacology is tied directly to: Hemodynamic management in anesthesia Common board scenarios and NBCRNA-style reasoning Vasopressor choice and response Drug interactions with propofol, volatile agents, opioids, and neuraxial anesthesia This lecture emphasizes understanding over memorization, helping anesthesia learners build a framework they can use in high-stakes clinical moments - not just exam day. 🎧 Antihypertensives explained for anesthesia learners - fewer flashcards, more confidence, safer patients.

    28 min
  2. 12/29/2025

    Calm the Rhythm, Save the Patient: Antiarrhythmics You’ll Never Forget with Chloe Gomez, DNP, CRNA

    Antiarrhythmics don’t have to feel like chaos. In this solo lecture, CRNA educator Chloe Gomez, DNP, CRNA breaks down antiarrhythmic pharmacology using clear physiology, memorable frameworks, and anesthesia-specific clinical relevance - perfect for SRNAs, CRNAs, and anesthesia providers preparing for boards and clinical practice. This episode walks step-by-step through the Vaughan Williams classification system (Class I–IV) and explains why these drugs work, not just what list they belong to. You’ll learn how antiarrhythmics interact with sodium, potassium, calcium channels, and beta receptors, and how those effects translate to changes in phase 0 depolarization, action potential duration, refractory periods, and conduction velocity. Key topics covered include: Class I sodium channel blockers (IA, IB, IC): how they alter phase 0, QRS width, and conduction Class II beta blockers: AV node effects, rate control, and anesthesia considerations Class III potassium channel blockers: action potential prolongation, QT interval risk, and torsades Class IV calcium channel blockers: nodal suppression and hemodynamic effects Why electrolytes (K⁺, Mg²⁺) matter when using antiarrhythmics How antiarrhythmics can become pro-arrhythmic What anesthesia providers must watch for in the OR, ICU, and PACU This lecture emphasizes mechanism-based understanding, tying pharmacology directly to: ECG changes Perioperative risk stratification Volatile anesthetics and arrhythmia risk Drug interactions common in anesthesia practice Board-style clinical reasoning for the NBCRNA NCE If you’ve ever memorized the Vaughan Williams classes and immediately forgotten them, this episode is designed to finally make antiarrhythmics stick - so you can reason through arrhythmias with confidence instead of panic. 🎧 Antiarrhythmics decoded for anesthesia learners - fewer tables, more understanding, safer practice.

    15 min
  3. 12/29/2025

    Blood, Guts, and How not to Cause a Spinal Hematoma with Chloe Gomez, DNP, CRNA

    Anticoagulants don’t have to feel overwhelming. In this solo episode, CRNA educator Chloe Gomez, DNP, CRNA breaks down the coagulation cascade and anticoagulant pharmacology in a clear, intuitive way designed for SRNAs, CRNAs, and anesthesia providers preparing for boards and real-world clinical practice. We start with a simple, step-by-step walkthrough of the intrinsic, extrinsic, and common pathways, then connect that physiology directly to how commonly used anticoagulants work — including unfractionated heparin (UFH), low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH), warfarin (Coumadin), and direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs). This episode goes beyond memorization and focuses on mechanism-based understanding, explaining: Why heparin potentiates antithrombin III and primarily inhibits factor IIa (thrombin) and factor Xa Why PT/INR rises first with warfarin due to factor VII’s short half-life — not because warfarin “blocks the extrinsic pathway” How DOACs selectively target factor Xa or thrombin Which labs actually reflect drug effect (aPTT, PT/INR, ACT, anti-Xa) How electrolyte imbalances can turn anticoagulants into pro-arrhythmics or bleeding risks We also cover high-yield anesthesia considerations, including: Neuraxial anesthesia timing and safety ASRA-aligned anticoagulant hold times Reversal agents (protamine, vitamin K, PCCs, andexanet alfa, idarucizumab) Practical OR case scenarios you are likely to see in real practice If you’re studying for the NBCRNA NCE, teaching anesthesia pharmacology, or just want anticoagulants to finally make sense, this episode is designed to help you stop memorizing tables - and start building safe anesthetic plans. 🎧 Educational, board-relevant, and clinically grounded - this is anticoagulation for anesthesia providers who want to truly understand the “why.”

    27 min
  4. 12/29/2025

    From Alveoli to Beta-2: What Anesthesia Providers Need to Know About Respiratory Pharmacology

    Respiratory pharmacology can feel deceptively simple — until you’re managing bronchospasm, hypoxia, or an unstable airway in the OR. In this solo episode of My Favorite Learners, CRNA and clinical faculty Chloe Gomez, DNP, CRNA breaks down respiratory physiology and pharmacology in a way that actually makes sense for boards, anesthesia practice, and real-time decision making. In this episode, we cover: Beta-2 agonists and how they work at the molecular level The Gs → adenylyl cyclase → cAMP → PKA pathway explained without memorization Why epinephrine works in severe bronchospasm The difference between bronchodilation, airway inflammation, and mucus plugging Where steroids (like methylprednisolone) actually fit — and where they don’t Common board traps and anesthesia-specific clinical pearls 🧠 Key focus: understanding why these drugs work - not just when to give them. If you’ve ever memorized respiratory drugs without fully trusting yourself to manage a crashing airway, this episode is for you. We connect physiology to pharmacology, pharmacology to practice, and practice to patient safety — so you can stop data-dumping and start thinking like an anesthesia provider. Perfect for: SRNAs and nurse anesthesia students CRNAs teaching or precepting learners ICU nurses transitioning to anesthesia Anyone who wants respiratory concepts to finally click As always, this episode is about clarity, confidence, and keeping patients safe - one breath at a time.

    37 min
  5. Pumps, Pressors, and Pressure: Making Sense of Vasopressors and Inotropes with Zafar Anwar, DNP, CRNA

    12/12/2025

    Pumps, Pressors, and Pressure: Making Sense of Vasopressors and Inotropes with Zafar Anwar, DNP, CRNA

    In this episode of My Favorite Learners, Dr. Chloe Gomez, DNP, CRNA sits down with Dr. Zafar Anwar, DNP, CRNA of NewYork-Presbyterian Weill Cornell for a high-yield, clinically grounded deep dive into vasopressors and hemodynamic management. Together, they break down the pipes and the pump approach to understanding vasopressors - covering alpha, beta, and dopamine receptor physiology, selectivity, and how common agents like phenylephrine, ephedrine, norepinephrine, epinephrine, dopamine, dobutamine, milrinone, and vasopressin work at the molecular and organ-system level. You’ll hear practical clinical pearls on:• Choosing the right vasopressor for hypotension under spinal anesthesia• Dopamine vs. dobutamine on boards and in the OR• Why phenylephrine is now preferred for parturients• How tachyphylaxis develops with ephedrine• Managing cardiogenic shock, vasoplegia, and refractory hypotension• Linking ACLS concepts (H’s & T’s, end-tidal CO₂) to anesthesia practice Dr. Anwar also shares his path into academia, the power of mentorship, and advice for SRNAs and ICU nurses transitioning into anesthesia training. This episode is perfect for SRNAs, CRNAs, anesthesia residents, ICU nurses, and anyone looking to strengthen their anesthesia pharmacology and vasopressor decision-making. Keywords: CRNA, SRNA, vasopressors, anesthesia pharmacology, hemodynamics, phenylephrine vs ephedrine, dopamine vs dobutamine, vasopressin, vasoplegic syndrome, nurse anesthesia education, anesthesia podcast, My Favorite Learners.

    1h 4m

Ratings & Reviews

4.9
out of 5
14 Ratings

About

My Favorite Learners is a pharmacology podcast for SRNAs, CRNAs, and anesthesia learners. Hosted by Dr. Chloe G, CRNA + DNP + pharmacology professor, this show breaks down anesthesia drugs, mechanisms of action, MAC values, and NBCRNA exam prep. Episodes cover propofol, ketamine, Precedex, NMBAs, inhaled agents, and more - through solo teaching and expert CRNA interviews. Whether you're studying for boards or brushing up on clinical pharmacology, this podcast makes complex topics simple and fun.

You Might Also Like