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SAH AI Pre-hospital ED Chaos Podcast

Neuro Resus

Release Date: 04/30/2026

SAH AI Pre-hospital ED Chaos Podcast show art SAH AI Pre-hospital ED Chaos Podcast

Neuro Resus

Subarachnoid haemorrhage is one of the most time-critical and high-stakes emergencies in medicine. But in the real world, it rarely presents neatly. In this episode, Oli Flower is joined by two AI co-hosts — Simon (GPT-5.3) and Claude (Sonnet 4.6) — to work through the pre-hospital and emergency department management of SAH using a real-world scenario: a 42-year-old woman with a thunderclap headache, collapse, and reduced GCS. What follows is a mix of clinical reasoning, practical decision-making, and occasional AI overconfidence getting corrected in real time. What we cover: Airway...

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Vasospasm in aSAH - A Conversation with AI show art Vasospasm in aSAH - A Conversation with AI

Neuro Resus

This podcast episode features a conversation between Dr Oli Flower and his AI co-host, Simon (ChatGPT 4o), focusing on vasospasm and delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) in aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (aSAH). The discussion covers: The distinction between radiological vasospasm (imaging finding) and DCI (clinical syndrome). The evolution of understanding DCI’s multifactorial causes, beyond just vasospasm. Evidence and controversies around ICU management, including blood pressure targets, nimodipine use, and the role of other interventions. Screening and monitoring strategies:...

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EVD tips and tricks show art EVD tips and tricks

Neuro Resus

Catherine Bell takes us through how to troubleshoot problems commonly encountered when looking after patients who have an external ventricular drain (EVD) in situ. Issues with using brain tissue oxygen monitors are also discussed. A highly practical session aimed at bedside clinicians. This presentation was delivered by Catherine Bell at . Want more content about EVD? Visit  or  to be notified of new podcast releases via email. To express your interest in attending the 2024 Neuroresus live course, .   

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aSAH: Dilating the Dogma of Vasospasm show art aSAH: Dilating the Dogma of Vasospasm

Neuro Resus

Angiographic vasospasm and more accurately, delayed cerebral ischemia, continue to contribute to morbidity and mortality in patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). It is known that angiographic vasospasm is common after SAH, occurring in two-thirds of patients. This presentation was delivered by Rob Loch MacDonald at . Want more content about aSAH? Visit  or  to be notified of new podcast releases via email. To express your interest in attending the 2024 Neuroresus live course, . 

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Subarachnoid Haemorrhage: a patient and family experience show art Subarachnoid Haemorrhage: a patient and family experience

Neuro Resus

Lizzy suffered a substantial aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage that left her critically unwell, requiring a long stay in intensive care recovering from the consequences and complications of this devastating form of stroke. Now a couple of years after her haemorrhage, Lizzy has come so far. She and her husband Gordon describe their experiences, right from the day it all began and through those tumultuous first few weeks, to where she is today. This open and honest account gives us all invaluable insight into what it’s like to go through the subarachnoid haemorrhage journey from a patient...

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Brain Tissue Oxygen Monitoring - The Bonanza Trial (It’s Not What You’ve Got It’s What You Do With It) show art Brain Tissue Oxygen Monitoring - The Bonanza Trial (It’s Not What You’ve Got It’s What You Do With It)

Neuro Resus

Andrew Udy talks about the ongoing which is assessing whether an algorithm that incorporates both ICP and brain tissue oxygen (PbTO2) can improve outcomes after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Like with all monitoring, how the PbTO2 is interpreted and managed is critical and the devil is in the detail! This presentation was delivered by Andrew Udy at . Want more content about The Bonanza Trial? Visit  or  to be notified of new podcast releases via email. To express your interest in attending the 2024 Neuroresus live course, . 

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Ketamine for Brain Injury show art Ketamine for Brain Injury

Neuro Resus

Historically, when it came to brain injury, ketamine had a bad rap. Much of that dogma was dispelled in the last 20 years, and ketamine is now frequently used as an induction agent in acute brain injury, especially traumatic brain injury, partially due to the favorable effects on haemodynamics.  However a new application of ketamine is now being explored - whether ketamine may be able to reduce secondary brain injury. In this talk Toby Jeffcote initially takes us through all the sedatives currently used in brain injury and the evidence to support their use. He then covers the history of...

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Cortical Spreading Depolarisation in Neurological Disease - An Introduction show art Cortical Spreading Depolarisation in Neurological Disease - An Introduction

Neuro Resus

Cortical spreading depolarization (CSD) is a spreading loss of ion homeostasis, altered vascular response, change in synaptic architecture, and subsequent depression in electrical activity following an inciting neurological injury. This presentation was delivered by Toby Jeffcote at . Want more content about CSD? Visit  or  to be notified of new podcast releases via email. To express your interest in attending the 2024 Neuroresus live course, . 

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There is no such thing as mild, moderate and severe TBI show art There is no such thing as mild, moderate and severe TBI

Neuro Resus

Andrew Chow vs Andrew Udy  This debate was set up to discuss the issues with categorising traumatic brain injury (TBI). The current system using GCS to divide patients into mild, moderate and severe has been criticised in recent times, with calls for a more nuanced approach. The debate was a just bit of fun but does highlight the key issues. Chowie didn’t get to choose which side to argue for :) Andrew Chow, Intensivist with a neurosurgical background, argues that the current categorisation system for TBI works, and makes sense! He tackles us through the history of this system, and why...

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TBI: when to stop and when to give time show art TBI: when to stop and when to give time

Neuro Resus

Dr Nick Little is an experienced Neurosurgeon who's looked after patients with traumatic brain injury for his whole career. Here he discusses the difficulties of prognostication following traumatic brain injury (TBI).  This podcast was recorded at the Brain Symposium which took place in March 2023. For more talks and content like this, visit  or  to be notified of new podcast releases via email. To express your interest in attending the 2024 Neuroresus live course, . 

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More Episodes

Subarachnoid haemorrhage is one of the most time-critical and high-stakes emergencies in medicine. But in the real world, it rarely presents neatly.

In this episode, Oli Flower is joined by two AI co-hosts — Simon (GPT-5.3) and Claude (Sonnet 4.6) — to work through the pre-hospital and emergency department management of SAH using a real-world scenario: a 42-year-old woman with a thunderclap headache, collapse, and reduced GCS.

What follows is a mix of clinical reasoning, practical decision-making, and occasional AI overconfidence getting corrected in real time.


What we cover:

  • Airway decisions in SAH: Is GCS 8 an automatic intubation?
  • Pre-hospital priorities and seizure management
  • Blood pressure targets: physiology vs reality
  • ED workflow: stabilise first or scan first?
  • Hyperventilation and ICP: when it helps and when it harms
  • Communicating with neurosurgery (and what actually matters)
  • Nimodipine: what the evidence really says (and doesn’t say)

Why listen:

This is not a guideline recitation. It’s a practical, frontline discussion of how SAH actually presents and how decisions get made under pressure — including where the evidence is thin, debated, or misunderstood.

Along the way:

  • Dogma gets challenged
  • Nuance matters
  • And one AI model learns, the hard way, what happens when you misquote trials

Key takeaways:

  • SAH management is a balance between competing risks: perfusion vs rebleeding
  • Early decisions in airway, blood pressure, and transport matter
  • Much of what we do is still based on physiology and consensus, not definitive trials
  • And yes — sometimes you’re managing a brain with “buggered autoregulation”

🎧 If you work in emergency medicine, ICU, anaesthesia, or pre-hospital care, this episode will sharpen how you think about SAH from the moment the patient hits the floor to the CT scanner.

📍 ISAH 2026 — Sydney, 17–20 November
Where these debates happen for real, with real humans.