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The Resus Room

Sickle Cell Disease; Roadside to Resus

The Resus Room

Simon Laing

Medicine, Science, Health & Fitness

4.9 • 708 Ratings

🗓️ 15 September 2025

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

a focus on its acute presentations and the care we can deliver to improve outcomes for our patients.

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a lifelong inherited blood disorder that affects over 15,000 people in the UK, and millions worldwide. It's caused by the production of abnormal haemoglobin molecules, which distort red blood cells into a crescent, or "sickle," shape. These rigid cells can block small blood vessels, leading to painful vaso-occlusive crises and organ damage.

While the condition has long been most prevalent in parts of Africa, the Middle East, the Mediterranean and India, today it's a global health issue, and one we encounter regularly in UK emergency care. Tragically, failings in care have too often led to avoidable harm. The 2021 parliamentary report "No One's Listening" laid bare some of these cases, highlighting missed opportunities, poor awareness, and systemic issues that cost lives, such as the death of Evan Nathan Smith.

So why are we revisiting this now? In 2024, RCEM published new Best Practice Guidelines on managing sickle cell disease in the ED. These provide clear, evidence-based standards for recognition, triage, analgesia, infection control, and safe discharge. In this episode, we take you through the key elements;

  • Pathophysiology – how a genetic mutation drives sickling, vaso-occlusion and inflammation.
  • Clinical presentations – from painful crises and acute chest syndrome, to stroke, anaemia, infection, priapism and pregnancy-related complications.
  • Recognition and triage – why timely pain control within 30 minutes is a must, and how to spot red flags.
  • Investigations and treatment – including the role of reticulocytes, the importance of knowing a patient's baseline haemoglobin, and principles of analgesia, transfusion, oxygen, and supportive care.
  • Discharge and ongoing care – ensuring safe, joined-up planning, and involving haematology and specialist pathways wherever possible.

The take-home message? Every sickle cell crisis is a medical emergency. We need to listen to patients, escalate early, involve haematology, and deliver care that meets the standards they deserve.

Once again we'd love to hear any thoughts or feedback either on the website or via X @TheResusRoom!

Simon, Rob & James

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the recess room podcast.

0:03.5

Five, four, three, two, one, fire.

0:12.2

So hi, and welcome back to the recess room podcast.

0:15.4

I'm Simon Lang.

0:16.8

I'm Rob Fenwick.

0:18.0

And I'm James AIDS.

0:19.2

And we're back together after actually quite a long break the summer has gone it's been three months since we're all sat together around these microphones and we're back with the roadside to recess on sickle cell disease yes as they say absence makes the heart grow fonder not in this case obviously, obviously, but... The baseline's low. Isn't it just? I don't think people will notice any difference. I mean, the shakedown we've had off air, you know, everything was absolutely smooth. It all went fine, so this is going to be grand. I'm looking forward to it. Yeah, it is. And how the seasons have changed. We're now back to that awkward conversation at the school gates.

0:54.8

We're washing off the muddy paws after the walk of the dogs, that is.

0:58.7

And now I'm sat in a study with the heating on, absolutely sweltering.

1:03.3

Yes, absolutely.

1:04.9

The absolute look of glee and the skipping across the playground of those parents returning home

1:09.8

after their children have been dropped off is always a joy to see, always a joy to see, isn't it?

1:15.0

It is nearly as joyful as the topic that we've got on Sickle Cell for you today, but hold

1:19.5

that thought for a moment, because before we get into it, a huge thanks to Zol Medical Corporation

1:25.1

for collaborating with us on the podcast and making this all free,

1:28.8

open access and available to you.

1:31.5

And it's only three weeks until we'll be seeing some of you at the Roadside to Recess

1:35.8

Live in London.

1:36.8

So we're looking forward to that as well.

1:39.0

So without further ado, let's crack into the episode.

1:45.5

Right, well, welcome back after your summer break team.

1:48.5

Hope everyone is well rested and ready for the autumn and winter that will be shortly

...

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