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  • Diabetic Ketoacidosis: The storm inside
    2026/06/22

    Description:

    Experts: Dr. Bernard Mwesigye & Dr. Umarashid Guloba

    In this episode

    A young type 1 diabetic patient arrives with: Restlessness, agitation, confusion (GCS 9/15)·

    Vital signs: HR 146, RR 30, SpO₂ 89%, BP 186/89·

    Key finding: Vitiligo patches on skin — signaling autoimmune disease (type 1 diabetes)·

    History: Several days of vomiting/diarrhoea → couldn't keep food or insulin down

    · Labs: Glucose 19 mmol/L, HbA1c 14%, ketonuria 3+· Diagnosis: DKA precipitated by gastroenteritis.

    KEY DISCUSSION POINTS

    1. Diagnosis & Differentials

    · DKA confirmed (hyperglycaemia + ketones + acidosis)

    · HHS ruled out (significant ketones present)

    · Hypertension = symptom of metabolic crisis, not primary problem

    · Sepsis considered — gastroenteritis = trigger; antibiotics started

    2. The "Golden Rule" of DKA Management

    NEVER give insulin if potassium < 3.5 mmol/L

    · Insulin drives potassium into cells → can cause fatal arrhythmias

    · Sequence: Check K⁺ → Replace if low → THEN start insulin

    3. Four Treatment Pillars

    Fluids 5–6L deficit; switch to dextrose when glucose < 14

    Glucose Insulin 0.1 U/kg loading + infusion; reduce gradually

    Electrolytes Potassium first; monitor every 2–4 hours

    Acidosis Insulin stops ketones; bicarbonate almost never

    4. Critical Pitfalls to Avoid

    · Giving insulin before checking potassium

    · Dropping glucose too fast → cerebral oedema

    · Not treating the underlying trigger (infection)

    · Stopping monitoring too early — patients can deteriorate rapidly

    5. Euglycaemic DKA (Emerging Danger)

    · Seen with SGLT-2 inhibitors (empagliflozin, etc.)

    · Glucose may be normal despite full DKA

    · Always check ketones in sick patients on these drugs

    6. Uganda Context

    · Insulin access, cost, and cold chain are major challenges

    · Diagnosis possible with minimal resources: glucometer + urine dipstick + clinical exam

    · Family education on warning signs and adherence is essential to prevent recurrence

    Five Takeaways

    1. Examine the whole patient — vitiligo signaled autoimmune type 1 diabetes

    2. Four goals: Fluids → Glucose → Potassium → Acidosis

    3. Potassium rule: Replace if < 3.5 BEFORE insulin

    4. Find and treat the trigger — infections are the commonest cause5. Educate family — prevents the next admission

    Listen to learn. Share to save lives. Mastering Emergency Care

    Disclaimer: For Educational Purposes only, refer to guidelines for definitive management

    Show Notes & Resources:

    · Watch the Full Case Video: https://youtu.be/qZZ86tknD8k?si=Pczbbe-vqvcti80V

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    1 時間 3 分
  • Burning up (PART B)
    2026/05/19

    Description:

    In this episode, an 11-year-old boy arrives unconscious, seizing, with a temperature of 40°C and tea-coloured urine. He was treated for malaria for four days. Now his kidneys are failing, his pressure is dropping, and the clock is running out.

    In this real-life case review, Dr. Ann Kaguna Imelda (who managed the case) and Dr. Kenneth Bagonza (EM expert) walk through every critical decision—what worked, what didn’t, and why the child was unfortunate in the end.

    special credit: Dr Daniel Oriba Longoya

    Key points of discussion:

    · The red flag triad

    · Primary survey findings: threatened airway, shock, GCS 6

    · Why dextrose has no role in septic shock resuscitation

    · CSF Gram-positive diplococci = pneumococcal meningitis – treat immediately

    · Managing hyperkalemia + AKI in a crashing child

    · The 1-hour sepsis bundle (2026 guidelines)

    · qSOFA at the bedside: RR ≥22, altered mental state, SBP ≤100 – no equipment needed

    · Why “malaria not improving in 48 hours” demands a rethink

    · Final reflection: system failures, early recognition, and what we owe the next child

    Listen to learn. Share to save lives. Mastering Emergency Care

    Disclaimer: For Educational Purposes only, refer to guidelines for definitive management

    Show Notes & Resources:

    · Watch the Full Case Video: https://youtu.be/qZZ86tknD8k?si=Pczbbe-vqvcti80V

    · Rosen’s Emergency Medicine

    · Tintinalli’s Emergency Medicine

    · SSC 2026

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    31 分
  • Burning up - Brain Hustle (PART A)
    2026/05/01

    Description:

    In this episode, an 11-year-old boy arrives unconscious, seizing, with a temperature of 40°C and tea-coloured urine. He was treated for malaria for four days. Now his kidneys are failing, his pressure is dropping, and the clock is running out.

    In this real-life case review, Dr. Ann Kaguna Imelda (who managed the case) and Dr. Kenneth Bagonza (EM expert) walk through every critical decision—what worked, what didn’t, and why the child was unfortunate in the end.

    special credit: Dr Daniel Oriba Longoya

    Key points of discussion:

    · The red flag triad

    · Primary survey findings: threatened airway, shock, GCS 6

    · Why dextrose has no role in septic shock resuscitation

    · CSF Gram-positive diplococci = pneumococcal meningitis – treat immediately

    · Managing hyperkalemia + AKI in a crashing child

    · The 1-hour sepsis bundle (2026 guidelines)

    · qSOFA at the bedside: RR ≥22, altered mental state, SBP ≤100 – no equipment needed

    · Why “malaria not improving in 48 hours” demands a rethink

    · Final reflection: system failures, early recognition, and what we owe the next child

    Listen to learn. Share to save lives. Mastering Emergency Care

    Disclaimer: For Educational Purposes only, refer to guidelines for definitive management

    Show Notes & Resources:

    · Watch the Full Case Video: https://youtu.be/qZZ86tknD8k?si=Pczbbe-vqvcti80V

    · Rosen’s Emergency Medicine

    · Tintinalli’s Emergency Medicine

    · SSC 2026

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    38 分
  • The Unresponsive Patient: Altered Mental Status
    2026/04/02

    In this episode, we walk through a high-stakes emergency: a 53-year-old woman with known hypertension who collapses at home, seizes, and arrives at the ED with a GCS of 8 and a blood pressure of 209/120 mmHg.

    Join your hosts Dr Daniel Olinga and Dr Emmanuel David Okumu, along with special guests Dr. Brian Twinemastiko and Dr. Ruzige Bashir

    Rashid, as we explore the critical, real-world decisions made when the textbook meets

    reality.

    We Discuss

    · How to build and narrow a differential for altered mental status

    · Why dropping BP too fast can cause a stroke

    · The pathophysiology of PRES (Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome)

    · Practical management in a resource-limited setting like Uganda

    · Key pitfalls: oral antihypertensives, missed pulmonary edema, and nutrition neglect

    Tune in to learn how to manage Altered Mental Status secondary to Hypertensive Encephalopathy a pragmatic approach.

    Disclaimer: For Educational Purposes only, refer to guidelines for definitive management

    Show Notes & Resources:

    · Watch the Full Case Video: https://youtu.be/qZZ86tknD8k?si=Pczbbe-vqvcti80V

    · Rosen’s Emergency Medicine

    · Tintinalli’s Emergency Medicine

    · BMJ 2024: Evaluation and Management of Hypertensive Emergency

    · PubMed: 40818477, 10972386

    · NEJM: 1990;323(17):1178–1184

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    35 分