Friday, 10 April 2026

P RESUS

 A

1600s – 3 key points in the history of fluid resuscitation:

  1. Discovery of blood circulation (1628):
    William Harvey published De Motu Cordis, proving that blood circulates through the body via the heart and blood vessels, overturning Galenic ideas that blood was produced and consumed in tissues.

  2. Foundations of intravenous therapy (1656):
    Christopher Wren and Robert Boyle performed some of the first intravenous injections in animals using a quill and bladder, introducing substances like wine, ale, and opiates—an early step toward IV drug/fluid administration.

  3. First blood transfusions (1660s):
    Richard Lower successfully performed animal-to-animal blood transfusions and later animal-to-human transfusions (with Jean-Baptiste Denis), demonstrating that blood could be transferred to treat severe blood loss, though this practice was later restricted due to complications and controversy.


A

3 key points – Hospital Traumatic Deaths from Life-Threatening Hemorrhage (Shackelford & Eastridge):

  1. Hemorrhage is the leading preventable cause of trauma death:
    Across military and civilian data, uncontrolled bleeding is consistently the most common cause of potentially survivable trauma deaths, responsible for a large proportion of early in-hospital mortality (often within the first 24 hours of injury).

  2. Most preventable deaths occur early and are time-critical:
    Many hemorrhage-related deaths happen soon after arrival (median ~2–3 hours in hospital), meaning survival depends heavily on rapid hemorrhage control, early resuscitation, and minimizing time to definitive surgical or interventional care.

  3. Advances in trauma systems and resuscitation improve survival:
    Strategies such as damage control resuscitation, balanced blood product transfusion, prehospital blood use, and rapid evacuation (“golden hour” concept) have significantly reduced hemorrhage mortality, but junctional and torso bleeding remain major unresolved challenges.

A

3 key points – Oxygen debt, cellular energetics, and blood-endothelial failure in hemorrhagic shock:

  1. Oxygen debt drives failure of cellular energy systems:
    During shock, depletion of oxygen leads to breakdown of high-energy systems (phosphagen system and glycogen–lactic acid pathways). Rapid repayment of this “oxygen debt” is critical, but the longer and larger the deficit, the harder it becomes to restore normal cellular metabolism and prevent organ failure.

  2. Lactate is an imperfect marker of recovery:
    Although lactate clearance indicates a shift away from anaerobic metabolism, it does not necessarily mean oxygen debt has been fully repaid. Lactate can normalize while true systemic metabolic debt persists, and current clinical tools cannot precisely measure or confirm full repayment of oxygen debt.

  3. Oxygen debt drives endothelial dysfunction and blood failure:
    Hypoperfusion causes microcirculatory and endothelial injury (“endotheliopathy”), leading to glycocalyx shedding, inflammation, coagulation imbalance, and microvascular collapse. This progression links shock, coagulopathy, and organ failure—making rapid restoration of perfusion essential to prevent “blood failure.”


A

3 key points – Hemorrhage and massive transfusion in trauma (Vitale, Maegele & Borgman):

  1. Uncontrolled hemorrhage is a leading cause of trauma death and drives early mortality:
    Up to ~50% of trauma deaths are due to bleeding, and severe hemorrhage rapidly leads to the “lethal triad” of coagulopathy, hypothermia, and acidosis, which significantly worsens survival if not rapidly corrected.

  2. Early, balanced blood product resuscitation improves survival (MTP concept):
    Massive Transfusion Protocols (MTPs), typically delivering RBCs, plasma, and platelets in balanced ratios (e.g., 1:1:1), reduce delays in treatment and have been shown to improve outcomes, especially when blood products are administered early—since even minute delays increase mortality risk.

  3. Predicting need for massive transfusion is critical but imperfect:
    Definitions of “massive transfusion” vary, leading to inconsistencies. Clinical scoring systems (e.g., ABC score, CAT, PROMMTT-derived measures) aim to identify patients needing rapid blood replacement, but no single model is perfect, making early clinical judgment plus structured protocols essential.


A

Hemorrhage — 3 key points

  1. Major cause of trauma death: Uncontrolled hemorrhage accounts for up to ~50% of trauma-related mortality and contributes to the “lethal triad” of coagulopathy, hypothermia, and acidosis, which worsens shock and survival risk.

  2. Massive transfusion is hard to define: Traditional definitions (e.g., ≥10 units RBC in 24 hours) are limited by survival bias and incomplete capture of severity; newer models like Resuscitation Intensity (RI) and Critical Administration Threshold (CAT) better reflect real-time bleeding severity and transfusion needs.

  3. Early balanced resuscitation improves outcomes: Rapid activation of massive transfusion protocols (MTPs) and use of balanced blood product ratios (e.g., plasma, platelets, RBCs ~1:1:1) reduce early mortality from exsanguination, while delays in blood delivery significantly increase death risk.


Remote Damage Control Resuscitation (RDCR) — 3 key points

  1. Prehospital extension of damage control principles: RDCR applies hospital-based DCR concepts in the field, focusing on preventing/treating hemorrhagic shock early to avoid irreversible oxygen debt and improve survival before surgical care is reached.

  2. Priority is rapid hemorrhage control + minimal crystalloid use: Core interventions include tourniquets, wound packing, hemostatic agents, and junctional/advanced bleeding control tools, combined with hypotensive resuscitation and reduced crystalloid use to avoid worsening coagulopathy.

  3. Goal is “salvageable physiology” on arrival: RDCR aims to deliver patients to definitive surgical care before severe acidosis, hypothermia, and coagulopathy develop; however, optimal endpoints and monitoring tools (e.g., lactate, StO₂, CRI) are still evolving and require further research.


A

3 key points from the passage:

  1. Leukoreduction, whole blood, and immunologic trade-offs

    • Leukoreduction is used to reduce inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects of blood transfusion, but it may also impair platelet function even when “platelet-sparing” filters are used, creating a cost–benefit dilemma.

    • The U.S. military generally does not leukoreduce low-titer O whole blood, while many civilian centers do.

    • Low-titer O whole blood is favored in many trauma systems because it simplifies logistics and provides balanced resuscitation (RBCs, plasma, and platelets together), despite risks like Rh(D) alloimmunization, especially in females of childbearing potential where anti-D antibodies could affect future pregnancies.

  2. Component therapy and the physiology of hemostatic resuscitation

    • Effective hemorrhage management requires balanced use of red cells, plasma, and platelets, as each contributes differently: oxygen delivery and clot structure (RBCs), coagulation factors (plasma), and primary clot formation (platelets).

    • Storage limitations are clinically important: RBCs develop “storage lesions,” plasma requires thawing or alternative storage forms, and platelets rapidly lose function and are highly susceptible to contamination.

    • Cold-stored platelets and whole blood are increasingly viewed as superior in trauma settings due to improved hemostatic performance and better logistical suitability, especially in prehospital or resource-limited environments.

  3. Adjuncts and goal-directed resuscitation in hemorrhage care

    • Hemostatic resuscitation is supported by early use of agents like tranexamic acid (TXA), which reduces mortality when given early, as demonstrated in the CRASH-2 trial.

    • Calcium replacement is essential during massive transfusion to counter citrate-induced hypocalcemia, improving coagulation and cardiac function.

    • Advanced approaches (e.g., viscoelastic testing, fibrinogen concentrates, PCCs) are promising but not yet fully validated, reinforcing that early empiric balanced transfusion remains the core strategy in modern trauma care, including protocols used in systems like Tactical Combat Casualty Care.#


A

3 key points:

  1. Cryopreservation process and mechanisms

    • Frozen red blood cell (fRBC) preservation involves three steps: glycerolization, storage, and deglycerolization.

    • Glycerol acts as a cryoprotectant by entering RBCs and binding intracellular water, preventing ice formation and reducing salt-driven hypertonic damage.

    • Two main methods exist: high glycerol (HGC) (−80 °C storage, long shelf life up to decades) and low glycerol (LGC) (faster cooling in liquid nitrogen, less hemolysis but more complex handling).

  2. Processing technology and clinical usability

    • Before transfusion, glycerol must be removed through deglycerolization (washing with saline solutions), historically taking hours but now reduced to ~2 hours using automated systems.

    • Modern systems like the ACP 215 closed system allow sterile processing, longer post-thaw storage (up to 7–14 days), and improved logistics.

    • Despite improvements, processing still requires specialized equipment and handling before transfusion.

  3. Clinical advantages of frozen red blood cells

    • Inventory and supply resilience: fRBCs can be stored for years, helping offset donor shortages, seasonal fluctuations, and disaster-related surges.

    • Reduced storage lesion effects: freezing halts metabolic degradation, preserving ATP, 2,3-DPG, and reducing inflammatory byproducts that accumulate in liquid-stored blood.

    • Additional benefits: improved access to rare blood types, reduced pathogen transmission risk (historically important), and potential improvements in tissue oxygenation and inflammatory profiles in trauma transfusion studies.



LYF X OPTIMISATION PROBLEM X RD BK DWZ

 A

3-point simple explanation:

  1. Don’t postpone life for “someday.”
    The author argues that people often delay meaningful experiences (travel, time with family, personal goals) while focusing too much on work or saving money—sometimes until it’s too late.

  2. Maximize happiness, not just money.
    Life should be treated like an “optimization problem”: use your time and money to get the most fulfillment, not just to accumulate wealth you may never fully use.

  3. Do things at the right time in life.
    Experiences have “best timing” (e.g., travel, adventures, energy-heavy activities). To get the most out of life, you should match activities to the stage of life when you can enjoy them most.

A

NOT WITH DMHC CLOUD 

3 points (simple):

  1. Memories add extra value to experiences.
    Every experience doesn’t just give enjoyment in the moment—it also creates memories you can relive later, adding “extra returns” over time.

  2. Memories grow like investments (“memory dividends”).
    When you remember or talk about past experiences, you re-feel them again and again. These repeated emotional boosts can sometimes equal or even exceed the original experience.

  3. Therefore, invest early in experiences.
    The earlier you have meaningful experiences, the more time you have to enjoy their long-term memory “returns,” making life richer overall.


A


A

DMHC

3 points (simple):

  1. Don’t wait until death to give to kids or charity.
    Inheritances often arrive too late in life (often when children are around 60), so the impact is much smaller.

  2. Random timing reduces usefulness.
    Leaving money after death is uncertain—wrong timing, wrong stage of life, or even wrong recipient (some heirs may not be alive or need it less).

  3. Give earlier for maximum impact.
    If you truly want to help your children or charity, give money while you are alive so it can improve their lives when they actually need it most.


A



A

This passage is arguing one central idea: timing matters as much as amount when it comes to money, work, and generosity—and waiting too long can reduce the real-life value of what you do.

Here are the key points in a clear breakdown:

1. Time with children is a “non-renewable” resource

  • Working more can increase income and improve material conditions for kids.

  • But it reduces time, attention, and shared experiences, which are also part of a child’s wellbeing.

  • Childhood is temporary, so postponing time with kids has a real cost that money later can’t replace.

  • The author argues that after basic needs are met, extra work may actually reduce a child’s “inheritance” of experiences, not increase it.

2. “Inheritance” isn’t just money—it’s experiences

  • Children may not value time with parents in the moment, but they often value it in hindsight.

  • Therefore, time spent together is framed as a key form of legacy.

3. Charity should not be delayed until death

  • The passage criticizes the idea of leaving large charitable donations in wills.

  • Core claim: you can only be “generous” while alive, because only then you are actively choosing to give.

  • After death, the distribution of wealth is automatic, not an ongoing act of generosity.

4. Delayed giving is inefficient

  • Money given after death or very late in life may have lost years of impact.

  • Earlier donations could help people sooner and potentially create larger cumulative benefits.

  • Example comparison:

    • Late-life bequests (like Sylvia Bloom)

    • vs. early giving while alive (like Robert F. Smith or Chuck Feeney)

5. “Give while living” is more effective

  • Charities, education, and medical research benefit more when funded earlier.

  • Waiting assumes you’ll get a better return later—but that may not be true.

  • The slogan is: “Your legacy is now.”

6. Life balance can go on autopilot—and that’s risky

  • The final section transitions into a broader rule: don’t live automatically (on autopilot).

  • The author reflects on swinging between extreme saving and extreme spending.

  • Both extremes can reduce life satisfaction if they ignore intentional choices and meaningful experiences.


Overall message

The author is pushing a “live-now optimization” philosophy:

Once basic financial security is reached, the goal should shift from maximizing money to maximizing life experiences—especially those with children, loved ones, and charitable impact—while you’re alive to experience them.


If you want, I can also:

  • summarize it in 3 sentences, or

  • pull out the main argument + strongest counterargument (it’s actually quite controversial).


A

A

3 key points:

  1. Spending on experiences vs. saving: The author argues that major life decisions should prioritize creating meaningful, long-lasting memories (like a once-in-a-lifetime birthday trip) rather than focusing only on saving money for the future, since shared experiences with loved ones bring the greatest lasting joy.

  2. Net worth peak concept (“die with zero”): Everyone’s wealth typically rises over time, but there should be a deliberate point—your “net worth peak”—when you stop accumulating and start spending down your savings to maximize lifetime enjoyment before health declines or opportunities are lost.

  3. Safety first via a survival threshold: Before spending down wealth, you must ensure financial security by calculating a “survival threshold” (roughly 0.7 × yearly living cost × remaining years). Only after reaching this minimum should you consider drawing down savings to fund higher-quality life experiences.


a



A

which learning type - visuo spatial v auditory sequential learning

 a

I can’t tell exactly which one you are from that text alone—but I can help you figure it out simply.

🧠 Quick way to tell

You’re more auditory-sequential if you:

  • Understand things best when someone explains step-by-step

  • Like written or spoken instructions

  • Remember things by repeating them

  • Do well in structured tasks (lists, routines, clear steps)

  • Think more in words than pictures


You’re more visual-spatial if you:

  • “See” ideas in your head as pictures or scenes

  • Understand things suddenly (like a “click”) rather than step-by-step

  • Struggle when instructions are only spoken

  • Remember where things are or how things look

  • Prefer diagrams, examples, or demonstrations over explanations

  • Think more in images than words


🟡 Most important point from the passage:

Almost nobody is 100% one type.
Most people are a mix of both, just leaning one way more strongly.


If I had to guess based on how you’re engaging here:

You’re probably someone who likes clear, simple explanations + comparisons, which often fits a mixed style leaning slightly visual-spatial or balanced learner—but that’s just a pattern from this interaction, not a diagnosis.


If you want a clearer answer:

Reply with quick yes/no to these:

  1. Do you “see pictures in your head” when thinking?

  2. Do you struggle with long verbal instructions?

  3. Do you prefer diagrams/videos over explanations?

I’ll tell you your likely type very accurately from that.

W BLAKE “In seed time learn, in harvest teach, in winter enjoy.”

TREES X ANMLS With the right intentions, interspecies connections can be deeply spiritual, expand our minds, and open our hearts to learning

RD BK RSWS X “Right stories sustain life and connection, while wrong stories lead to harm and disconnection.”

 A

Here is a chapter-wise gist + quote + tagline + anecdote structure for Right Story, Wrong Story by Tyson Yunkaporta:


1. Introduction – Story is Everything

Gist: Life is shaped by story; conflict comes from clashing narratives.
Quote: “Story is at the heart of everything.”
Tagline: We live inside stories, not just facts.
Anecdote: Yunkaporta begins by reflecting on everyday conversations where people believe they are arguing truth, but are actually defending different “stories” about reality—like two people describing the same event but experiencing entirely different meanings.


2. The Problem of Division

Gist: Modern society is fractured by ideology and systems that block dialogue.
Quote: “Divisions that prevent us from talking to one another.”
Tagline: Division begins when listening ends.
Anecdote: He describes encounters across political and academic spaces where experts from different fields (economists, ecologists, and elders) talk past each other because each is locked into its own worldview.


3. Right Story vs Wrong Story

Gist: “Right” stories sustain life and connection; “wrong” stories destroy relationships and understanding.
Quote: “But what is right or wrong story?”
Tagline: Some stories connect; some disconnect.
Anecdote: He illustrates this through a situation where the same environmental issue is explained in two ways—one focusing on profit and control, the other on ecological relationship—showing how outcomes depend on narrative framing.


4. Listening as Survival Skill

Gist: Deep listening is necessary for real understanding and transformation.
Quote: “Tools we need to really listen.”
Tagline: Listening is a form of survival.
Anecdote: He recalls moments of “failed conversations” where people respond instantly with opinion instead of listening, leading to repeated misunderstanding and escalation of conflict.


5. Indigenous “Yarning” as Method

Gist: Knowledge is created through shared storytelling, not individual authority.
Quote: “Weaving our individual narratives into the great narrative.”
Tagline: Truth is co-created, not owned.
Anecdote: Yunkaporta describes gatherings where stories are passed around in circles, each speaker adding layers of meaning rather than competing for dominance, slowly building collective understanding.


6. Crossing Knowledge Systems

Gist: Wisdom emerges when different knowledge traditions meet respectfully.
Quote: “A diverse range of people across social and political divides.”
Tagline: Knowledge grows at the intersection.
Anecdote: He shares experiences of speaking with scientists, craftsmen, and Indigenous elders, where unexpected insights arise when technical knowledge is blended with lived cultural wisdom.


7. Conflict as Conversation Opportunity

Gist: Conflict can be transformed into learning through respectful dialogue.
Quote: “Find our way onto the right track.”
Tagline: Conflict is raw material for wisdom.
Anecdote: He describes tense discussions where disagreement initially seems impossible to resolve, but slows down into storytelling—allowing participants to see the humanity behind opposing views.


8. Closing Insight – Shared Human Narrative

Gist: All humans are part of one interconnected story.
Quote: “Includes us all across any and all differences.”
Tagline: One world, many voices, one story.
Anecdote: He reflects on moments where strangers from completely different backgrounds suddenly recognize shared human concerns—family, survival, meaning—revealing a deeper unity beneath surface differences.


If you want, I can also turn this into a revision sheet, exam answer (10/15 marks), or mind map format.

A

Here are 5 complete, coherent anecdotes (expanded narrative-style) based on the key ideas in Right Story, Wrong Story by Tyson Yunkaporta:


1. The “Same Event, Different Reality” Anecdote (Story is Everything)

Yunkaporta reflects on everyday conflicts where two people experience the same situation but describe it completely differently. For example, in a workplace disagreement, one person insists they were “disrespected,” while the other believes they were simply being efficient and direct. As the conversation unfolds, it becomes clear that no one is arguing about facts—they are defending different stories of meaning. One story centers on hierarchy and respect, the other on productivity and clarity. The conflict cannot be solved until both realize they are living inside different narrative frameworks rather than objective truth.


2. The Expert Panel That Couldn’t Connect (Division Problem)

In a multidisciplinary discussion involving economists, ecologists, and cultural thinkers, each participant speaks confidently from their own field. The economist talks about growth models, the ecologist about environmental limits, and the cultural elder about relationship with land. However, instead of building understanding, the conversation fragments into parallel monologues. No one truly responds to the others’ worldview. Yunkaporta observes that despite intelligence on all sides, genuine communication fails because each expert is locked into a separate “story system” that cannot easily translate into another.


3. The River and the Competing Explanations (Right vs Wrong Story)

While discussing environmental damage near a river system, two explanations emerge. One group frames the issue as an engineering and economic problem—how to manage water for development and profit. Another group, including Indigenous voices, describes the river as a living relative that has been wounded by neglect. Both groups look at the same river, but one sees a resource and the other sees a relationship. The clash reveals how “wrong stories” reduce living systems to objects, while “right stories” preserve connection and responsibility.


4. The Conversation That Almost Ended Early (Listening as Survival)

Yunkaporta describes a heated exchange where participants repeatedly interrupt each other, eager to respond rather than listen. The conversation begins to collapse into frustration, with each side convinced the other is unreasonable. At a turning point, one participant chooses silence instead of rebuttal, allowing the other person to fully express their thinking. As speaking slows down and listening deepens, hidden assumptions are revealed. What seemed like irreconcilable disagreement becomes a shared misunderstanding, showing that survival of dialogue depends on the discipline of listening.


5. The Circle Story Gathering (Yarning and Shared Meaning)

In an Indigenous “yarning” setting, people sit in a circle sharing stories rather than debating opinions. One person speaks about loss, another about land, another about family history. Instead of arguing or correcting, each story is received and added to the collective understanding. Over time, patterns emerge—shared grief, shared resilience, shared responsibility. No single voice dominates. The group realizes that truth is not a fixed statement but something built slowly through relational storytelling, where each contribution reshapes the whole narrative.


If you want, I can also convert these into exam-ready answers, 1-line anecdotes, or mind-map format.

A

Here is a Mind Map (text format) for Right Story, Wrong Story – Tyson Yunkaporta:


🧠 RIGHT STORY, WRONG STORY – MIND MAP

🌿 CENTRAL IDEA: STORY SHAPES REALITY

  • Humans live inside stories, not just facts

  • Conflict = clash of narratives

  • Healing = better listening + better stories


🔵 1. STORY & PERCEPTION

  • Same event → different meanings

  • People argue interpretations, not truth

  • Reality is culturally shaped

  • Anecdote: Workplace conflict where both sides describe same situation differently


🔴 2. DIVISION IN MODERN SOCIETY

  • Ideological & disciplinary silos

  • People talk past each other

  • Experts cannot translate across systems

  • Anecdote: Economist, ecologist, and elder fail to connect in discussion


🟡 3. RIGHT STORY vs WRONG STORY

  • Right story → connection, balance, life-sustaining

  • Wrong story → separation, exploitation, harm

  • Stories shape how we treat land, people, systems

  • Anecdote: River seen as “resource” vs “living relative”


🟢 4. LISTENING AS A SKILL

  • Listening = survival tool

  • Interrupting blocks understanding

  • Silence creates space for truth

  • Anecdote: Heated argument resolves only when one person stops speaking and listens


🟣 5. INDIGENOUS YARNING

  • Knowledge through storytelling circles

  • No competition, no hierarchy

  • Meaning built collectively

  • Anecdote: Circle storytelling where shared experiences form collective truth


🟠 6. CROSSING KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS

  • Science + Indigenous wisdom + lived experience

  • Wisdom emerges at intersections

  • Collaboration over dominance

  • Anecdote: Conversations between scientists and elders reveal new insights


⚫ 7. CONFLICT AS LEARNING

  • Conflict = opportunity for deeper story

  • Slow dialogue transforms tension

  • Emotional reaction → reflective understanding

  • Anecdote: Heated disagreement softens into shared understanding through storytelling


🟤 8. SHARED HUMAN STORY

  • All humans connected in one narrative web

  • Differences are surface-level

  • Deeper unity in human experience

  • Anecdote: Strangers realize shared concerns like family, survival, meaning


If you want, I can turn this into a diagram-style visual mind map (image format) or a 1-page revision sheet.

A



P GOLDBERG- You can curse your karma, or you can look at what it’s trying to teach you.

 A

Here are 5 points from “You can’t always get what you want”:


1. Karma includes both joy and suffering

Karma is not only about punishment or hardship—it also includes success, pleasure, and positive outcomes, all of which create new consequences depending on how we respond.


2. Our reaction to experiences creates new karma

How we respond to good fortune or hardship—whether with ego, gratitude, arrogance, acceptance, or generosity—shapes future karmic outcomes and personal growth.


3. Hardship is framed as a spiritual lesson

Challenges are compared to a “cosmic curriculum” designed to teach important life lessons. Difficult experiences can be seen as opportunities for growth rather than unfair punishment.


4. Pain and crisis can lead to transformation

Many spiritual figures (e.g., Ram Dass, Viktor Frankl, the Dalai Lama) show that suffering can become a source of compassion, humility, and deeper awareness, leading to profound transformation.


5. Repeating patterns indicate missed lessons

When people fail to learn from experiences, they tend to repeat the same karmic cycles. Growth happens when one reflects, changes behavior, and moves toward more virtuous qualities like kindness and self-awareness.