DrugDetectives.com

Pharmacy in Space: Donuts, Floating Bottles, and Antenna Dilemmas!

6 min · 27. dec. 2024
episode Pharmacy in Space: Donuts, Floating Bottles, and Antenna Dilemmas! cover

Beskrivelse

Welcome to the year 2500, where humanity has conquered Mars, but some things never change—like itchy antennas and floating medicine bottles. In this hilariously absurd episode, Dr. Bosnak and his overly enthusiastic intern Ron navigate the daily chaos of running the first-ever Mars Space Pharmacy. From free-floating antibiotic bottles with attitude problems to donuts defying gravity and Martian customers confused about their antennas, nothing goes as planned in this microgravity wonderland. Buckle up for 30 minutes of laughter, bizarre encounters, and a gentle reminder: On Mars, even a donut isn’t free! 🎧 Tune in, and prepare for an intergalactic dose of comedy and chaos!

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af DrugDetectives.com-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

2 måneder kun 19 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

11 episoder

episode Episode 56 – The Taletrectinib Trace cover

Episode 56 – The Taletrectinib Trace

In Episode 56, The Taletrectinib Trace, the Drug Detectives are called to Manhattan Medical Center at 4:11 AM, where a ROS1-positive patient on taletrectinib suffers an unexpected cardiac arrest. Despite rapid intervention, the monitor fades into a flatline. Dr. Ethan “Rick” Ricketts enters the silent room and begins asking the only question that matters: What did we miss? The early clues paint a subtle but dangerous picture. The patient’s taletrectinib level is elevated—but not in the toxic range. Liver enzymes are mildly increased. More importantly, potassium and magnesium levels sit at the lower edge of safety, creating a fragile electrophysiologic environment. A nurse mentions a mysterious “pink homemade juice.” A chromatogram later reveals what the juice contained: furanocoumarins—the CYP3A4-inhibiting compounds found in grapefruit and bergamot. These compounds quietly increase taletrectinib exposure. In the autopsy room, the findings are minimal yet meaningful: mild myocardial edema and focal necrosis. Nothing dramatic. Nothing obvious. But enough to suggest an electrically unstable heart. The digital chart adds more pieces: two doses of ondansetron, a canceled ketoconazole order, and a low-priority EMR alert that should have warned the team about QT prolongation risk. Instead, it flickered silently in gray—barely noticeable on a busy shift. The detectives reconstruct the timeline: • 07:25 – Citrus juice • 07:40 – Yogurt • 08:00 – Taletrectinib • Ondansetron doses: late morning & night • Electrolytes never corrected • Furanocoumarins active for hours • QT peak after each ondansetron dose A perfect storm forms: – CYP3A4 inhibition from furanocoumarins – Persistent hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia – Additive QT effects from ondansetron Individually mild. Together lethal. By the end of the investigation, the team reaches a sobering realization: the patient did not die from a single catastrophic error but from a quiet alignment of small, ordinary details—electrolytes slightly low, a harmless-looking juice, a routine antiemetic, and a silenced alert. Rick captures it best: “Sometimes three notes played together make dissonance. K, Mg, and grapefruit… a silent chord.”

19. nov. 202511 min