The last few weeks have been tough. For those in need of a light hearted thread, here’s a brand new 3rd #tweetorial in my extremes of #physiology series. What can the animal kingdom teach us about our physiology?

Buckle up for some fun animal pulmonary facts 🫁!
1/
CASE 1:
You are performing a bronchoscopy. Upon reaching the main carina instead of the usual TWO airways (right & left mainstem bronchi) you see THREE.

Your assistant says “Whoa! That’s weird”

You say no it’s totally normal because the patient is a:
2/
Answer: 🐖
In pigs, the RUL lobe bronchus originates from the supra-carinal trachea (e.g. before the R & L mainstream branches). The view from the trachea looks like this (see the tracheal bronchus on the right).

image source: casereports.bmj.com/content/12/5/e…
3/
Clinical 🥡:
~1% of humans have a tracheal bronchus as an anatomical variant (usually RUL).

This trachea bronchus can cause RUL collapse when intubated.

So if you have an intubated patient with unexplained RUL collapse always think - could this person have a 🐖 bronchus?
4/ Source: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0310057
Other answers:
🦒, 🐑, 🐐, 🐪, & 🐋 also have tracheal bronchi but I don’t think anyone has done a bronch on a 🦒!

It is possible to do bronchoscopy in 🐘 - though not easy! A trunk nerve block apparently works better than nasal lidocaine gel. 🐘 don’t have tracheal bronchi.
5/ Source: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/epidemiology
Case 2:
You have just placed a LEFT sided chest tube for a patient with large BILATERAL pneumothoraces. Your assistant asks you if you want to place a second tube on the RIGHT side.

You say no, the procedure is unnecessary because the patient is a:
6/
Answer: 🦬
The American Buffalo has a single pleural cavity. Despite its size (up to 2600 lbs) & speed (runs up to 40 mph) a single arrow can cause bilateral tension PTX, incapacitating the buffalo.

(Aside: note that the Plains bison has one of the best species names ever!)
7/
1st Clinical 🥡:
People who have had thoracic surgery that disrupts the pleura, may also have a single pleural space, just like a Buffalo.
(It can also occur rarely in the absence of thoracic surgery as an anatomical variant).
8/
Source: NEJM nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NE…
2nd Clinical 🥡:
This is why in lung transplant recipients a single transbronchial biopsy can cause bilateral PTX.
It's also why, in rare cases, a single chest tube may suffice to treat bilateral PTX.
9/
jhltonline.org/article/S1053-… pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16714521/
Other answers:
🐖 pleural anatomy is similar to humans, other than tracheal bronchi
🐘It’s impossible to place a chest tube in an elephant! (more on this later)
Some 🐍 also have one pleural space but for a very different reason: they only have one 🫁
vetexotic.theclinics.com/article/S1094-…
10/
CASE 3:
You are performing transbronchial biopsies when (oh no!) you realize that your last biopsy appears to have gotten a bite of pleura.
Horrified your assistant asks if you need a chest tube tray.
“No" you say reassuringly, it's unnecessary because the patient is a ___.
11/
Answer: 🐘 Elephant

Elephants are the *ONLY* mammal that does not have a pleural space. In utero their visceral & parietal pleura fuse, obliterating the pleural space with dense connective tissue.
Thus elephants can’t develop PTX (and its impossible to place a chest tube)!
12/
But *WHY* are 🐘's pleural cavities unique?
The answer is that elephants snorkel to cross deep water. This creates massive negative intra-pleural pressure, which would in another species cause massive fluid transudation. 🐘 natural pleurodesis enables them to tolerate this.
13/
I *HIGHLY* recommend reading this excellent article by West about the unique physiologic adaptations that enable elephant snorkeling 🐘🤿
Another fun fact: their diaphragms are 3 cm thick (10x ours), enabling them to pull negative pressure underwater
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11311306/
14/
Clinical 🥡:
Humans who undergo pleurodesis are protected against pneumothorax; in some cases this is why the procedure is performed. In one case series of patients with primary spontaneous PTX, talc pleurodesis prevented recurrent PTX in 95% of them.
erj.ersjournals.com/content/29/4/7…
15/
Other answers:
🐃 Buffalo - PTX are a huge deal in buffalos because they are always bilateral! (see case 2)
🐪 & 🦏 can also develop PTX
Cetacean lungs have abnormally high compliance so they can take *HUGE* tidal volumes (a🐬's TV is 55 ml/kg); even🐬 can develop PTX rarely
14/
CASE 4:
You are called from the PFT lab about an abnormal CPET result: VO2max 255 ml/kg·min
The technicians says this calculation can’t possibly be right. You tell them it’s expected because the patient is a ____
15/
Wrong answers first:
🥇 The highest recorded human VO2max was 97.5 mL/kg/min (set by 🇳🇴 cyclist Oskar Svedsen in 2012)
For comparison, the average in a sedentary non-professional athlete is about 30-40 mL/kg/min (men) and 27-35 mL/kg/min (women).
16/
🐎 Thoroughbred horses running on an inclined treadmill averaged 194 mL/kg/min after 18 weeks of high intensity training (yes horses do HIT classes!)
According to a colleague, the sound made by a horse’s hooves running on a treadmill was deafening!
physoc.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.11…
17/
Huskies from a champion dogsled team have demonstrated VO2max as high as 240 ml/kg/min.
The dogs who run the 938 mile Iditerod in just 8 days are perhaps the best endurance athletes in the world.
news.cornell.edu/stories/1996/1…
18/
🐁 The tiny 10 gm Pygmy Mouse achieves an incredible VO2max >250 ml/kg/min.
This is a great demonstration of allometric scaling laws at work: smaller animals have much denser mitochondria enabling greater VO2; this is also why they have higher BMR/mass
general.utpb.edu/fac/eldridge_j…
19/
Answer: 🐦
The real champion is the 4 gm hummingbird, with a VO2max of >660 ml/kg/min.
This is close to the theoretical limit of what is possible (e.g. their muscle cells are so dense that adding more mitochondria would take away sarcomeres!)
pnas.org/content/88/11/…
20/
If you are wondering *HOW* they measure the VO2max of a 4 gm hummingbird, they get the birds to insert their beak into a feeder while hovering and measure the CO2 and O2 concentration.
utsc.utoronto.ca/news-events/br…
21/
If you like this, I highly recommend reading this amazingly detailed Quora thread. Just fantastic.

Highlights: hummingbirds VO2max is >1000 ml/kg/min if they fly in thin air (He/O2 mix); IMO this is cheating, like hitting golf balls on the moon.

quora.com/Whats-the-high…
22/
Clinical 🥡:
Elite athletes can have a VO2max that’s ~3x “average.” When evaluating for change in exercise tolerance it’s important to think about what their baseline was; e.g. going from 60 to 40 could be a big drop but still be “normal” range.

Also we got nothing on 🐦!
23/
Hope you’ve enjoyed the 3️⃣rd installment in this series. Hopefully you’ve learned something that will make you a better doctor, or at least increase your enjoyment of the discovery channel.

For earlier installments see:
1️⃣
2️⃣
24/

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More from @nickmmark

1 Sep
The #COVBARRIER RCT now published @LancetRespirMed & it looks like we have a new COVID tx: Baricitinib
-n=1525 hospitalized COVID pts not on IMV
-lower mortality w/ Bari compared to placebo (10% vs 15%) (NNT = 20) & larger benefit in sicker pts!
-bit.ly/3yDmJ9r
1/
COV-BARRIER was a 101 site, double blind RCT performed in 11 countries.

It enrolled hospitalized COVID patients who were hypoxemic (but not on IMV) and had evidence of inflammation.

It had many exclusion criteria including monoclonals, immunesuppression. This is a🔑 point.
2/
The intervention was 4mg of baricitinib, an orally available JAK1/2 inhibitor, dosed once daily for 14 days or until hospital d/c. (It can be crushed and given by FT).

Bari is an FDA approved treatment for RA. It costs ~$50-75 per pill (thus a 14 day course is ~$700-1000).
3/
Read 12 tweets
25 Aug
As the evidence supporting ivermectin as COVID treatment collapses, you might expect *less* certainty from the drug’s evangelists.

Instead they’ve doubled down on ivermectin.

It’s worth reading this passage from Festinger’s Theory of Cognitive Dissonance to understand:
1/
For context, Festinger & colleagues joined a cult (“The Seekers”) who believed the world would end on December 21, 1954 & that true believers would be rescued by a UFO

The researchers wondered how the Seekers would react to “disconfirmation” when this didn’t happen.
2/
As the date approached, the researchers watched many “Seekers” take irrevocable steps because of their belief: they quit their jobs, severed ties to loved ones, & disposed of possessions.

What would happen when their beliefs were discredited?
3/
Read 16 tweets
20 Aug
.@PierreKory

First off, I’m sorry that you got COVID and I’m glad you recovered. I respect that you have the integrity to admit that ivermectin wasn’t able to prevent your illness.
1/
I’ve read the same studies & I disagree with your assessment of IVM; A few small methodologically flawed studies are just not compelling in light of negative results from large high quality RCTs.
@cochranecollab & many experts have likewise concluded that IVM is ineffective
2/
What I find alarming is your failure to use your platform to advocate for vaccination. You claim to follow the evidence. Do you really think there is more evidence for daily mouthwash use than for vaccination to prevent COVID?

3/
Read 9 tweets
9 Aug
A few weeks ago I tweeted about the rising cases due to #DeltaVariant. I was surprised by the number of people who replied saying essentially “they did this to themselves.”

A short 🧵about why we ought to look at this situation differently
1/
Seeing the #DeltaSurge among the un-vaccinated, I'm reminded of an adage I learned in my residency: “The trauma ICU is filled by man’s cruelty to man & the medical ICU by man’s cruelty to himself.”
2/
It’s true.

Without tobacco, alcohol, & opioids, there would be less COPD, cirrhosis, & endocarditis.

Without dietary indiscretions & "noncompliance”, we would not see fewer complications of DM or exacerbations of chronic illness.

But it's also not so simple.
3/
Read 16 tweets
1 Aug
Soo NEJM has an educational COVID critical care “game.” Obviously I had to play on expert.

First off let’s talk about the name: Bagel Mage?!?

I’m not one to criticize - my name is just two synonymous verbs - but Bagel Mage 🥯 🧙‍♀️ sounds like the lamest D&D character ever.

1/
Bagel’s hypotensive with sats in the mid 80s, better do a quick assessment & start someO2.

“May I ask about your goals in the event of a cardiac or respiratory arrest?”
- maybe the worst possible way to ask this but here it goes…

…Ok I guess he’s an everything bagel.
2/
No POCUS - guess I’ll do an exam & order some tests: ABG, basic labs, procalcitonin, CXR, some cultures, & a COVID test (you know “trust but verify”)

While I’m waiting I’ll order APAP, HFNC

Ugh oh. I guess im trouble for not coding enough. Damn this simulation is realistic!
3/
Read 24 tweets
25 Jul
Pre-print of the #COVIDSTEROID2 RCT comparing dexamethasone 6mg vs 12mg in hospitalized patients on high flow O2 or MV:
- no difference in survival or days free of MV with higher dose dex but…
- interesting “trend towards benefit” w/ higher dose dex
📄medrxiv.org/content/10.110…
1/ ImageImageImageImage
🔑 Question: we know from #RECOVERY that steroids are beneficial in severe COVID, but what’s the ideal dose?

#COVIDSTEROID2 was a large DB multi center RCT to answer this. It randomized patients on high flow O2 or MV to either 6mg or 12mg of dexamethasone for up to 10 days.
2/ ImageImageImageImage
The 1° endpoint was days alive free of lifesupport (MV, ECMO, RRT). 2° endpoints included 28 day mortality.

Based on prior studies, they powered for a 15% relative mortality reduction (ARR ~4.5%) combined w/ a 10% reduction in life support duration.

This is pretty ambitious.
3/ ImageImage
Read 13 tweets

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