Simini Boards Cast

Chapter 120 - Part E: One Gland, Many Diseases, Same Survival Logic

21 min · 28 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Chapter 120 - Part E: One Gland, Many Diseases, Same Survival Logic

Descripción

In this BoardsCast episode, we finish Tobias Chapter 120 — Adrenal Glands by collapsing adrenal medicine into one usable framework: Students memorize Cushing’s, Addison’s, pheochromocytoma, and hyperaldosteronism like they’re separate disorders.  They’re not. Same gland. Same mission. Survival physiology gone sideways. We break the adrenal gland into its two command centers: * Cortex = long-game survival (cortisol + aldosterone)  * Medulla = immediate fight-or-flight (catecholamines)  Then we show how each “disease” is just one survival pathway stuck ON or deleted: * Cushing’s: chronic cortisol = “emergency generator running 24/7” → muscle wasting, poor healing, infections, hypercoagulability  * Addison’s: cortisol + aldosterone missing = “power grid off” → hypovolemia, hyperkalemia, collapse  * Pheochromocytoma: catecholamine surges = episodic sympathetic warfare → hypertension, arrhythmias, collapse, even retinal hemorrhage/blindness  * Hyperaldosteronism: aldosterone stuck ON = volume retention + potassium wasting → weakness (classic cats: ventroflexion)  We close by tying physiology to surgery: adrenalectomy is dangerous because it disrupts multiple survival systems simultaneously, often right next to (or invading) the vena cava.  Key takeaway: Stop memorizing diseases. Always ask: which survival pathway is malfunctioning? 🎁 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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episode Chapter 122 - Part E: Why Ear Surgery Works artwork

Chapter 122 - Part E: Why Ear Surgery Works

In this BoardsCast episode, we finish Tobias Chapter 122 — Pinna and External Ear Canal by delivering the blunt clinical truth behind every “why won’t this ear ever get better?” case: Medicine can control biology. It cannot fix broken anatomy. Chronic otitis becomes surgical when the ear can no longer meet the basic requirements of function:  ventilation, drainage, cerumen clearance, epithelial migration (“conveyor belt”), and access for medication. We walk through the predictable, irreversible progression that turns a reversible problem into a rigid, closed, bony tube:  hyperplasia → fibrosis → mineralization → stenosis/occlusion. And once the canal is structurally nonfunctional, the “infection” becomes secondary. Surgery isn’t about “removing bacteria.” It’s about removing the collapsed architecture that creates the swamp. You’ll learn the escalation ladder: * Lateral wall resection when the canal is still salvageable (improve ventilation/drainage + access)  * Vertical canal ablation when the vertical canal is irreversibly diseased but the horizontal canal is healthy  * TECA/LBO when the ear is end-stage: occluded/mineralized canal, neoplasia, failed prior surgery, or otitis media  Key takeaway: The indication for surgery is non-functional anatomy — not “infection.” 🎁 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

Ayer19 min
episode Chapter 122 - Part D: Different Masses, Same Obstruction artwork

Chapter 122 - Part D: Different Masses, Same Obstruction

In this BoardsCast episode, we continue Tobias Chapter 122 — Pinna and External Ear Canal with the board-level truth that instantly upgrades your diagnostic thinking: When you see a mass in the ear canal, the board doesn’t care what it is first.  It cares what it’s doing. And what it’s doing is blocking the system. Because the external ear is built on one requirement: stay open. Airflow, drainage, cerumen clearance, and epithelial “conveyor belt” migration only work if the canal stays patent.  So whether the lesion is: *  an inflammatory polyp coming from the middle ear,  *  a benign growth,  *  a malignant tumor (especially in cats),  * chronic hyperplastic stenosis from otitis,  * trauma-related scarring (pseudotympanic membrane/canal atresia),  *  or congenital atresia,  …the physiologic outcome is the same: obstruction → humidity + retained debris → opportunistic overgrowth → more inflammation → more obstruction. Key takeaway: The pathology matters. The physiology matters more. Fix the bottleneck, or you’ll chase “infection” forever. 🎁 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

Ayer18 min
episode Chapter 122 - Part C: How a Reversible Problem Becomes an Irreversible One artwork

Chapter 122 - Part C: How a Reversible Problem Becomes an Irreversible One

In this BoardsCast episode, we continue Tobias Chapter 122 — Pinna and External Ear Canal with the most important shift in chronic otitis thinking: The infection didn’t destroy the ear. The inflammation did. Early otitis externa is a soft tissue problem—red, swollen, painful, but still structurally recoverable. But when the trigger persists (allergy, mites, foreign body, keratinization disorder), the ear doesn’t just stay inflamed. It remodels.  This episode walks through the irreversible sequence: Inflammation → swelling → hyperplasia → fibrosis → stenosis → mineralization And once you reach that point, the “bugs” are no longer the primary problem. The canal becomes a sealed, humid incubator that can’t ventilate, can’t drain, and can’t receive medication. At that stage, the anatomy itself is the perpetuating factor—often progressing to otitis media/interna and neurologic disease.  Key takeaway: When anatomy becomes the disease, medicine starts losing. 🎁 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

Ayer19 min
episode Chapter 122 - Part B: Different Causes, Same Disease: Otitis Externa artwork

Chapter 122 - Part B: Different Causes, Same Disease: Otitis Externa

In this BoardsCast episode, we continue Tobias Chapter 122 — Pinna and External Ear Canal with the key clinical truth that stops the endless “drops → better → relapse” cycle: Otitis externa is one disease with many triggers — and the trigger isn’t the same thing as the mechanism. The mechanism is always the same: The ear stops cleaning itself. Once airflow, drainage, and epithelial migration (the “conveyor belt”) fail, normal organisms become opportunists, inflammation amplifies, and the canal begins remodeling into stenosis, fibrosis, and mineralization.  This episode gives you the board's framework that makes chronic ear disease predictable: * Primary causes light the match (allergy, mites, foreign body, keratinization disorders)  * Predisposing factors pour gasoline (pendulous ears, narrow canals, hair, moisture)  * Perpetuating factors keep it burning (stenosis, fibrosis, mineralization, chronic infection)  Key takeaway: Cytology tells you who’s partying. Your job is figuring out why the building flooded. 🎁 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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episode Chapter 122 - Part A: The Ear Was Designed to Clean Itself artwork

Chapter 122 - Part A: The Ear Was Designed to Clean Itself

In this BoardsCast episode, we begin Tobias Chapter 122 — Pinna and External Ear Canal with a required mental reset: The ear is not supposed to be sterile. It’s supposed to be self-cleaning. Most chronic otitis failures come from treating the ear like a “sterile bucket”—spot a microbe, pour in antimicrobials, repeat. But the external ear canal is a curved, living ventilation + drainage system (vertical canal → sharp turn → horizontal canal), and health depends on keeping that environment functional. We break down the self-cleaning design: the ear canal epithelium behaves like a conveyor belt, migrating outward and carrying cerumen and debris with it. When swelling, stenosis, or environmental humidity shuts that conveyor belt down, “normal tenants” like bacteria and yeast can opportunistically overgrow. That’s why finding organisms is not the diagnosis—the diagnosis is why the ear stopped clearing itself. You’ll learn: *  The 4 pillars of a healthy ear environment: airflow, drainage, epithelial health, and clearance *  Why microbial presence ≠ disease (normal ears can culture organisms; the problem is overgrowth in a broken environment)  *  The board framework: primary causes (mites, foreign bodies, hypersensitivity, keratinization disorders) vs predisposing factors (pendulous ears, narrow canals, hair, moisture) vs perpetuating factors (fibrosis, stenosis, mineralization)  *  Why head shaking creates aural hematomas (shear forces tear vessels through foramina in the scapha → dead space fills with blood → fibrosis/cauliflower ear)  *  Why surgery is salvage, not a shortcut: TECA/LBO lives in millimeter territory near the facial nerve and parotid region  Key takeaway: Don’t chase microbes. Fix the environment—or the “infection” will keep coming back. 🎁 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

Ayer19 min