The PicPod

The PicPod

A Paediatric Intensive Care Podcast

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    PicPod 89: The Situation In Gaza

    We were able to have a short conversation with Dr Mohammed Abed, director of the only functioning PICU in Gaza, at the Al Nasser hospital in Khan Younis. His dignity, pride, and incredible efforts in the face of a humanitarian catastrophe was incredibly humbling. He describes three cohorts of patients: a large amount of trauma, especially shrapnel injuries from bombs, patients admitted, and dying, of malnutrition, and recently a surge of flaccid paralysis patients, whose aetiology is unclear (but may be due to enterovirus D68 due to poor sanitation). He is working without a blood gas machine, ultrasound, central lines, paediatric milk feeds, and even bandages. His team is running 9 beds at the moment, for a population where about 50% is paediatric. This was a very difficult conversation, hearing first hand about a situation which he described as catastrophic. Our thoughts are with everyone affected. He has sent a list of equipment, supplies, and medications which are urgently needed. If you can help, please get in touch via our bluesky (@picpod.bsky.social) and X (@picpod_podcast) accounts. The top urgent list is: EquipmentsSupplies and medicationsPediatric laryngoscope 2Pediatric central linesPortable ultrasound 1Pediasur milk formulaCPAP machine 2IVIGPulse oximetre 4Propfol IVBlood gas machine 1Midazolam  IV Fentanyl IV Succinaylcholin IV Phenobarbiton IV Levetracitam IV Phenytoin IV Pediatric PICC lines

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    PicPod 88: Pertussis with James Cherry

    PicPod 88 is all about Pertussis in Paediatric Critical Care. Malignant Pertussis is, for intensivists, one of the most terrible conditions to treat, with a dearth of evidence, and but plenty of evidence of death. For PicPod 88 we have spoken to James Cherry from UCLA. James Cherry is a medical institution. At 94 years old he is still going strong with an encyclopaedic knowledge of Paediatric Infectious Diseases, and is author of the seminal Feigin and Cherry’s Textbook of Pediatric Infectious Diseases. First we hear of the history of pertussis vaccine, and the debate and controversy of “vaccine encephalopathy” in the 70s and 80s. We then discuss the pathophysiology of malignant pertussis: is the problem the white cells themselves, or is there another mechanism? What is the role of coinfection, either bacterial or viral? We compare two papers: James Cherry’s paper from 2018, and the newly published 2025 UK paper from the 2024 outbreak in Archives of Disease in Childhood (conflict of interest alert ). What is the role of exchange transfusion? What is a reasonable threshold to do this? Does it work? Can we say it works, or is it a correlation only? When should we do an exchange transfusion: is it a number, a clinical state, a trajectory, or all three? Does vaccination work? What do the studies show on PICU admission, and PICU survival? Has Pertussis changed its phenotype in the past decades? Which antibodies are important, and in which ratio? How do we address vaccine conspiracy theories, or can we actually get past them? What’s the future for Pertussis vaccines? Pertussis comes around once every 3-10 years depending on vaccination rates. Be ready for the next one. Links to sources: Cherry et al: An Observational Study of Severe Pertussis in 100 Infants ≤120 Days of Age – PubMed Calley et al: Characteristics and outcomes of children admitted to paediatric intensive care units with life-threatening pertussis infection in Great Britain 2023–2024 | Archives of Disease in Childhood MAHA report: whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/MAHA-Report-The-White-House.pdf

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A Paediatric Intensive Care Podcast