Search

Home > Intensive Care Network Podcasts > SAH AI Pre-hospital ED Chaos Podcast
Podcast: Intensive Care Network Podcasts
Episode:

SAH AI Pre-hospital ED Chaos Podcast

Category: Science & Medicine
Duration: 00:26:17
Publish Date: 2026-04-30 04:10:00
Description:

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.

Total Play: 0