"cardiac tamponade"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke and Michael Messer discussed ammunition and firearms availability during the December 2008 shortage, reporting on J&G Sales inventory and prices across multiple calibers. They covered medical training on protective mask maintenance and chest trauma treatment, including sucking chest wounds, pneumothorax, hemothorax, and cardiac tamponade. Michael also detailed a conversation with Representative Raul Grijalva regarding a Bipartisan Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction report and discussed concerns about government preparedness versus civilian protection.
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Mark Koernke discussed massive ammunition and firearms sales in the weeks following the 2008 election, emphasizing that the mainstream media was suppressing data on the scale of civilian purchases. He took caller reports on local gun shop inventory (including AR-15s and Mini-14s in Florida), then pivoted to an extended analysis of the JFK assassination, arguing that the official Lee Harvey Oswald narrative was implausible based on ballistics, weapon choice, and security protocol violations. He noted the Masonic symbolism of the route through Dealey Plaza and referenced suppressed photographic evidence. In the second hour, co-host Mike delivered medical instruction on chest injuries, hemothorax, pneumothorax, and cardiac tamponade, including procedures like chest tube insertion and pericardiocentesis.
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Mark Koernke and Michael Nasser discussed medical emergency response and shock treatment in the second hour of the show on October 14, 2008. The episode opened with commentary on the U.S. financial crisis, including claims about Chinese currency demands and impending martial law in February 2009, followed by an extended educational segment on treating hypovolemic shock, monitoring central venous pressure, catheterization, fracture immobilization, and the pathophysiology of shock at the cellular level. Michael emphasized that field medical knowledge is critical for survival when professional medical support is unavailable, covering classifications of shock including hypovolemic, endotoxic, cardiogenic, and neurogenic types.