Simini Boards Cast

Chapter 125 - Part E: Tissue Dies on a Clock

20 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Chapter 125 - Part E: Tissue Dies on a Clock

Descripción

In this BoardsCast episode, we finish Tobias with Chapter 125 — Emergency Ophthalmic Surgery — the final chapter of Tobias and the final episode in this textbook series. And we end with the one mental model that upgrades how you triage every eye emergency: The eye is not waiting. The clock is already running. Some ophthalmic problems aren’t “diagnose then schedule.” They’re active tissue-destruction events where the eye gets worse while you’re deciding what to do. This episode ties everything in Chapter 125 together through two mantras: * Time is tissue. * The most dangerous eye problems get worse while you are thinking. We walk through the clocks that kill vision: * Melting ulcers (enzymatic stromal digestion) and why a descemetocele is a structural red alert  * Anterior lens luxation as a pressure/uveitis emergency (delay → glaucoma + retinal detachment risk)  * Acute glaucoma as a crushing injury to retinal ganglion cells—and why decompression must be controlled  * Proptosis as an ischemic countdown on the optic nerve and extraocular muscles  * Open-globe lacerations and the 12-hour iris prolapse contamination rule Key takeaway: Urgency isn’t based on how scary it looks. Urgency is based on how fast the tissue is dying. 🎁 Simini Bonus Claim your free sample of Simini Protect Lavage (just cover shipping): https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit [https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit] Listen On: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon Music

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263 episodios

Portada del episodio Chapter 125 - Part E: Tissue Dies on a Clock

Chapter 125 - Part E: Tissue Dies on a Clock

In this BoardsCast episode, we finish Tobias with Chapter 125 — Emergency Ophthalmic Surgery — the final chapter of Tobias and the final episode in this textbook series. And we end with the one mental model that upgrades how you triage every eye emergency: The eye is not waiting. The clock is already running. Some ophthalmic problems aren’t “diagnose then schedule.” They’re active tissue-destruction events where the eye gets worse while you’re deciding what to do. This episode ties everything in Chapter 125 together through two mantras: * Time is tissue. * The most dangerous eye problems get worse while you are thinking. We walk through the clocks that kill vision: * Melting ulcers (enzymatic stromal digestion) and why a descemetocele is a structural red alert  * Anterior lens luxation as a pressure/uveitis emergency (delay → glaucoma + retinal detachment risk)  * Acute glaucoma as a crushing injury to retinal ganglion cells—and why decompression must be controlled  * Proptosis as an ischemic countdown on the optic nerve and extraocular muscles  * Open-globe lacerations and the 12-hour iris prolapse contamination rule Key takeaway: Urgency isn’t based on how scary it looks. Urgency is based on how fast the tissue is dying. 🎁 Simini Bonus Claim your free sample of Simini Protect Lavage (just cover shipping): https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit [https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit] Listen On: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon Music

Ayer20 min
Portada del episodio Chapter 125 - Part D: The Eye Is an Optical Alignment System

Chapter 125 - Part D: The Eye Is an Optical Alignment System

In this BoardsCast episode, we continue Tobias Chapter 125 — Emergency Ophthalmic Surgery with the mental model that turns “random eye emergencies” into predictable mechanics: The eye is not just living tissue. It’s an optical alignment system. You can have a clear lens, a viable retina, and an intact cornea… and still have a nonfunctional eye—because the parts are in the wrong place. This episode installs the mantra that governs ocular trauma: Location determines function. And the corollary the boards love: a healthy structure in the wrong place becomes a disease. We walk through high-yield alignment failures that create emergency physiology: *  Eyelid margin lacerations: why meibomian gland openings are your alignment landmarks—and why misalignment creates entropion/abrasion ulcers  *  Medial canthus injuries: why the canaliculi must be stented to preserve tear drainage and prevent chronic epiphora  *  Open-globe repair: why you close the limbus first (restore the eye’s geometric reference point before finishing the wall)  *  Anterior lens luxation: why it’s an emergency even when the lens is “perfectly healthy” (pupillary block → glaucoma) and how couching + latanoprost can be a temporary lifesaving move  *  Proptosis: why the goal is reduction + temporary tarsorrhaphy—put the globe back where it belongs and hold it there while swelling resolves  Key takeaway: In eye emergencies, restoring anatomy restores function. 🎁 Simini Bonus Claim your free sample of Simini Protect Lavage (just cover shipping): https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit [https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit] Listen On: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon Music

Ayer20 min
Portada del episodio Chapter 125 - Part C: The Outside Protects the Inside

Chapter 125 - Part C: The Outside Protects the Inside

In this BoardsCast episode, we continue Tobias Chapter 125 — Emergency Ophthalmic Surgery by ignoring the inside of the eye on purpose. Because none of it matters if the defenses fail.  This episode installs one core mental model: The ocular surface survives only when its protective structures remain functional; the outside protects the inside. We break down the “castle wall” system—eyelids, conjunctiva, and third eyelid—and why these tissues are not cosmetic. They’re the defense system that preserves tear film, prevents exposure, and stops ulcers from destroying an otherwise perfectly healthy retina and optic nerve.  You’ll learn: *  Why eyelid trauma must trigger a mandatory globe inspection first *  Why eyelid debridement is usually the wrong instinct (vascular redundancy means “ugly tissue” often survives)  *  The non-negotiables of eyelid repair: two-layer closure, no conjunctival penetration, and meticulous margin alignment using meibomian orifices as landmarks  *  How a 1 mm error becomes a corneal ulcer (entropion/ectropion mechanics + suture abrasion)  *  Corner-case rules: lateral canthus technique changes; medial canthus injuries can silently destroy the tear drainage system (stenting for canalicular repair)  *  Why conjunctival grafts aren’t “patches”—they’re biologic rescue crews that bring blood supply and anti-protease defenses to a melting cornea  Key takeaway: If the protective system fails, vision fails—even when the inside is perfect. 🎁 Simini Bonus Claim your free sample of Simini Protect Lavage (just cover shipping): https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit [https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit] Listen On: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon Music

Ayer17 min
Portada del episodio Chapter 125 - Part B: Save the Wall Before You Save the Vision

Chapter 125 - Part B: Save the Wall Before You Save the Vision

In this BoardsCast episode, we continue Tobias Chapter 125 — Emergency Ophthalmic Surgery with the single mindset shift that saves globes: Stop thinking like a photographer fixing a lens. Start thinking like a structural engineer stabilizing a collapsing wall. A melting corneal ulcer isn’t a “vision problem.” It’s a structural failure in progress. The stroma (the load-bearing collagen wall) is being enzymatically digested in real time. And once the wall fails, there’s no eye left to see with.  You’ll learn: *  What a melting ulcer really is (MMPs/serine proteases digesting stromal collagen)  *  Why a descemetocele is an imminent rupture warning (Descemet’s membrane bulging under pressure)  *  Why medical therapy can slow the melting but cannot restore tectonic strength *  Why conjunctival pedicle grafts work (not a “patch” — a living repair crew with blood supply)  *  The #1 technical failure: dehiscence from poor ulcer bed prep (epithelium blocks graft adhesion)  *  How defect size/location determines the build:  *  Pedicle graft (most small/moderate defects)  *  Corneo-conjunctival transposition (selected central lesions ≤5 mm)  *  ECM/corneal allograft for massive defects/perforations (then often layered with conjunctiva)  Key takeaway: Structure first. Vision second. 🎁 Simini Bonus Claim your free sample of Simini Protect Lavage (just cover shipping): https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit [https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit] Listen On: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon Music

Ayer20 min
Portada del episodio Chapter 125 - Part A: The Eye Is a Machine Under Pressure

Chapter 125 - Part A: The Eye Is a Machine Under Pressure

In this BoardsCast episode, we begin Tobias Chapter 125 — Emergency Ophthalmic Surgery with the single mental model that decides outcomes in ocular trauma: The eye is a sealed pressure vessel. You can have a clear cornea, an attached retina, and an intact optic nerve… and still have a blind eye—because the container failed. This episode reframes acute vision loss as a mechanical problem first: if the globe cannot hold pressure, vision is physically impossible. We cover: *  Why normal vision is a hydraulic/structural achievement before it’s a neurologic one  *  Blunt vs sharp trauma as two different physics problems—same end result: pressure escape *  The board pearl that saves eyes: occult scleral rupture can hide under intact conjunctiva, and low IOP is the giveaway  *  Prognosis logic: why corneal lacerations often recover better than postlimbal scleral ruptures *  Emergency repair principles: limbus-first closure, reinflation “stress test,” air bubble surface-tension rescue, and when the prolapsed iris must be excised  Key takeaway: Before you save vision, you must save the container. 🎁 Simini Bonus Claim your free sample of Simini Protect Lavage (just cover shipping): https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit [https://www.simini.com/evaluation-kit] Listen On: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon Music

Ayer20 min