Episodios

  • Knowledge Gap in Osmolar Gap
    Nov 12 2025

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    Mr. Alexander Kole presents with alcohol intoxication. Odd lab value is noted that

    hides more than it reveals. In this episode, Dr. Kim and his Padawan Layla explore

    the clinical mystery of the osmolar gap — when numbers deceive and time

    unmasks the truth.

    Through humor, teaching, and reflection, this case shows how physiology, not

    formulas, saves the day.

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    13 m
  • The Kissing Disease
    Oct 31 2025

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    Infectious mononucleosis reminds us that medicine often lives in the space between certainty and curiosity.

    The tests help, but the story — the pattern of fatigue, fever, and swollen nodes — still matters most.

    Every patient teaches us that diagnosis is not a checkbox, but a dialogue between cells, science, and clinical sense.

    And sometimes, the most contagious thing in the room is curiosity itself.

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    13 m
  • Ninety Nine Toy Boat
    Oct 17 2025

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    In this episode, Dr. Kim and his Padawan, Nina, rediscover the forgotten art of the respiratory exam—from tactile fremitus to percussion, from the German for 99 to toy boat.

    Through etymology, history, and bedside humor, they explore how sound and touch connect anatomy, pathophysiology, and the human story behind every breath.

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    13 m
  • Celebrate Lactate
    Oct 1 2025

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    Three days of call. Three dozen consults. Three cups of coffee barely holding the Clinical Etymologist together.

    This is the story of what happens when exhaustion meets imagination — and a lactate lesson hidden inside a Matrix dream.

    In this episode of The Clinical Etymologist, we blur the lines between reality and dream, weaving medicine, etymology, and a touch of cinema into one teaching pearl.

    From Enterococcus articles to Neo’s slow-motion battles, from urine bottles in orbit to the hidden twists of D-lactate, join me as we discover how even fatigue can spark unforgettable teaching moments.


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    13 m
  • Pernicious Precision
    Sep 24 2025

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    The momentous discovery of Cobalamin 77 years ago made a macrocytic impact on medicine, saving millions of lives from their pernicious fate. In celebration, we take a subacute and combined degenerative dive into the world of Vitamin B12 deficiency.

    From raw liver cures to Nobel Prizes, from cobalt atoms to collapsed gait, this episode traces the fascinating history and clinical nuance of a vitamin that does far more than make red cells. Join Dr. Kim and a curious medical student as they unpack the story behind megaloblastic anemia, nerve damage without anemia, and why B12 is not just a number to tick off — but a diagnostic lens into aging, memory loss, and evolution itself.

    By the end of this episode, you’ll never look at falls, forgetfulness, or a “normal CBC” the same way again.

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    14 m
  • Only A Second Year Student
    Sep 4 2025

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    The previous episode Letting Go, Gently was a heartfelt reminder of the human side of medicine, a glimpse into one of those moments that shape us as not just health care providers but also healers.

    Sometimes, we need to pause to reflect as physicians.

    Today, we pivot back to the bedside, to the Emergency Room of a teaching hospital where a timid second-year student, a brand name, and a routine clinical checkbox unexpectedly converge into a tale that weaves pharmacology, etymology, and a dash of history — a story worth telling… and sharing.

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    15 m
  • Special Episode : Letting Go, Gently
    Aug 26 2025

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    So far, our beloved clinical etymologist, Dr. Kim, has explored the roots of medical language through history, etymology, and clinical reasoning.

    But today is different.

    Instead of tracing the origin of a word, he turns to the origin of something far more profound—the human moments that shape medicine itself.

    This special episode steps away from terminology and textbooks, and lingers instead on the quiet space between a mother and daughter, a physician and his patient, and the Act of Letting Go, Gently.

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    5 m
  • Cranial Nerves Were All "Normal"
    Aug 20 2025

    Today, we venture beyond the usual clinical vignettes and into the art of examination itself. In honor of Dr. Heinrich Quincke—who, in August 1891, performed the world’s first lumbar puncture in Kiel, Germany— we celebrate the neurological exam by revisiting a phrase uttered all too casually:

    “Cranial nerves were all normal.”

    But what do we really mean when we say that?


    To help us find out, I’m joined by my Padawan Donald—tall, confident, and emphatically surgical— whose certainty about cranial nerves rivals his enthusiasm for making things “great again.”


    Together, we’ll dissect the subtle clues, clinical pearls, and centuries-old history that make the cranial nerve exam so much more than a throwaway line on morning rounds.

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    19 m