Howdy, Current nursing student here This is awesome! thank you! i enjoyed the fact that you provided with the interventions on what a nurse should start thinking about it. great way to start teaching us critical thinking. :)
I loved this video, I actually had an MH reaction during my 3rd knee surgery (no family history and no prior history for myself) the only symptom I didn't have was muscle rigidity and the first symptom I had was the high temperature of 105 followed by tachycardia and increase CO2 I wasn't given a triggering agent that day for surgery (no inhaled anesthetic and no succinylcholine) and I also wasn't given Dantrolene either (which all still confuses the doctors to this day, to the point that my case was brought up at medical conferences!) I had an excellent team, and they were able to cool down my body and kept me in ICU. I recently got a muscle biopsy done to test for MH (which the doctors were expecting to come back negative because I didn't receive Dantrolene/triggering agents and came out of it after a few hours with cooling blankets and cooling IVs) I got my results back the same day and they were 5 times the normal amount they should be for both Halothane and Caffeine. I've had 6 more surgeries since that day and I always tell them about MH and they make sure to do everything possible to make sure it doesn't happen again (special carbon filters, no triggering anesthetics, first surgery of the day, no surgery centers only hospitals, etc). This video was so good at explaining everything that happened to me during surgery and actually seeing it on a white board really helped me understand. Thank you so much for taking the time to explain this mutation so thoroughly! Also, I LOVE your handwriting!
Great info, thanks. Would be great if we could routinely test for the RyR1 mutation in hospitals. But I guess that's currently too expensive and too slow
Howdy, Current nursing student here
This is awesome! thank you! i enjoyed the fact that you provided with the interventions on what a nurse should start thinking about it. great way to start teaching us critical thinking. :)
Thank you so much for saying that! 🫶🏼💕🥹 I really do hope it helped and good luck with school! You’ve got this!!!
Now this lecture will help me during my anesthesia practice.. Love nd blessings from 🇵🇰... ❤❤❤
EXCELLENT PRESENTATION!! Making something complex easy to understand!!! FABULOUS CONTENT and notes!!!
Well explained!👏🏻 thanks!♡
Thank you so much for this informative video; Keep it up!
I loved this video, I actually had an MH reaction during my 3rd knee surgery (no family history and no prior history for myself) the only symptom I didn't have was muscle rigidity and the first symptom I had was the high temperature of 105 followed by tachycardia and increase CO2 I wasn't given a triggering agent that day for surgery (no inhaled anesthetic and no succinylcholine) and I also wasn't given Dantrolene either (which all still confuses the doctors to this day, to the point that my case was brought up at medical conferences!) I had an excellent team, and they were able to cool down my body and kept me in ICU. I recently got a muscle biopsy done to test for MH (which the doctors were expecting to come back negative because I didn't receive Dantrolene/triggering agents and came out of it after a few hours with cooling blankets and cooling IVs) I got my results back the same day and they were 5 times the normal amount they should be for both Halothane and Caffeine. I've had 6 more surgeries since that day and I always tell them about MH and they make sure to do everything possible to make sure it doesn't happen again (special carbon filters, no triggering anesthetics, first surgery of the day, no surgery centers only hospitals, etc). This video was so good at explaining everything that happened to me during surgery and actually seeing it on a white board really helped me understand. Thank you so much for taking the time to explain this mutation so thoroughly! Also, I LOVE your handwriting!
Thank you for the informational video. 😊
your graphics and colors are soooo satisfying
Thank you so much for saying that! This is by far my favorite comment 🥰
Great info, thanks. Would be great if we could routinely test for the RyR1 mutation in hospitals. But I guess that's currently too expensive and too slow
Thanks for this
My pleasure! ✨
I had no choice but to subscribe. You are good
You’re a star
Exellent madam
شكرًا لكِ
Lovely 🌹
you are great
I had Malignant Hyperthermia
Just double checking. Why is it metabolic acidosis and not respiratory acidosis if it is due to CO2 buildup?
Because it is not from ventilation problem.
Thanks for asking i wondered this also. And thank you for the answer
Because of lactic acidosis
Buddy lungs are not compromised it is due to the hypermetabolic state
should I be watching the topic or the teacher hehehe
I have Malignant Hyperthermia
And you are still alive?
I'm only here because I have it