I only studied a lot when i went for the first time last year at but the second time was so easy, all thanks to my aunt who introduced me to Mrs brenda am really grateful
I have bipolar and use quetiapine xr 450 dosage. My blood pressure did go up however my doctor says not to worry. I do sweat a lot more as well but besides that I feel fine. I've been taking this medication for about a year. Would I already have gotten neuroleptic malignant syndrome by now or can it happen anytime? I do also take bupropion 150 in the morning. Medication and therapy really did help enormously and I can say I'm not the same person as I used to be in a good way.
Hi I have a question. One of the first thing to do if a patient has malignant neuroleptic syndrome is to stop the medication... but what if the patient had an injection of the medication... how do you stop the medication and how the syndrome could possibly resolve in such a situation ? Is it fair to say that neuroleptic malignant syndrome is harder to treat if a patient had an injection ? Are there different survival rates ( oral prescriptions vs injections ) ?
Yes you can't really stop an injection unless it's a med with an antidote, but not all meds have that. Now this doesn't usually happen immediately with 1 dose so likely we'll be able to catch it quickly. I'm not aware of any stats on survival rates but I can check.
I have never heard of that happening, typically with treatment people fully recover. They may have issues due to the high fever but that usually depends on how high for how long.
My 13 year old grandson was in ICU he now has serotonin syndrome and nms now he on blood thinners for blood clots and gotta go to pt and ot this is serious 🥺🥺🙄🙄🙄
It would seem that you should go ahead and just poison them if you were going to put them back on something that's running their blood pressure is through the roof and could cause a heart attack any minute.
Unfortunately people with psychiatric or psychotic episodes, are very I’ll people, their quality of life is very low, and they are at high risk of suicide … a slow taper up is indicated.
@@joniatoms9798 is there a long-term syndrome or set of symptoms that goes with this like if a person had signs of neuroleptic malignant syndrome in the past was there anything that you should go towards a future with?
@@joniatoms9798 if you were given large doses and had high blood pressure from them would there be any long term effects? If you had the muscular rigidity and quit the neuroleptics would you still tend towards the muscular rigidity for a while afterwards or would it go away immediately? Would this person tend to have the same kind of reaction again ?
@@markmcgoveran6811 well, I hope would be that after stopping the medicine, the syndrome would resolve, go away entirely. High blood pressure generally causes kidney damage, but if it only lasts a few hours or a few days, the damage is not likely to be significant long-term to kidneys. As far as muscle rigidity, that too can also be on a spectrum related to dose. It’s possible to forever have to deal with the symptoms. I do highly recommend that you are in contact with your physician. If you’re still dealing with symptoms, at least once a week to let them know what’s going on. They may want to check electrolytes or magnesium levels. In addition to medication levels. I hope that helps. I’m just a nurse not a physician. 💜💜💜
What Psychiatric disorders would you like me to cover?
Thank you for awesome videos again. Maybe panic attack? We see lots of patients with panic attack/panic disorder in ER
@@alperen3157 Great suggestion
Malignant catatonia. My son was diagnosed with MC back in November 2023. And is still in a catatonic state and not able to get ECT ...Help!!!
Beauty and brains! Awesome video plus the bonus of NMS vs Malignant hyperthermia is really informative. Thank u!
They say third times a charm, am officially a nurse 🎉🎉 for all my repeat test takers don't give up and don't be discouraged.
You will pass everyone has their own season, just keep going pray and believe you will recieve
I failed 3 times, i lost money to scams and reviews that never helped but the major thing is that I've not lost hope
@sorry about your plight my friend but i was once in your shoes before i was recommended to Mrs Brenda Gomez and thats how i passed Nclex
I used some Uworld, some Remar, and read a lil saunders. I did 3 nurse achieve exams and my result came back failed
I only studied a lot when i went for the first time last year at but the second time was so easy, all thanks to my aunt who introduced me to Mrs brenda am really grateful
VERY THOROUGH AND DETAILED EXPLANATION. THANK YOU!
I have bipolar and use quetiapine xr 450 dosage. My blood pressure did go up however my doctor says not to worry. I do sweat a lot more as well but besides that I feel fine. I've been taking this medication for about a year. Would I already have gotten neuroleptic malignant syndrome by now or can it happen anytime? I do also take bupropion 150 in the morning. Medication and therapy really did help enormously and I can say I'm not the same person as I used to be in a good way.
Typically this happens early on with medication therapy. I am happy that it's helping you.
Is there any long-term prognosis related to the neuroleptic malignant syndrome?
Very helpful thank you 😊
Thank you for this! New subscriber here ❤️ Blessings!
Very good
Hi I have a question. One of the first thing to do if a patient has malignant neuroleptic syndrome is to stop the medication... but what if the patient had an injection of the medication... how do you stop the medication and how the syndrome could possibly resolve in such a situation ? Is it fair to say that neuroleptic malignant syndrome is harder to treat if a patient had an injection ? Are there different survival rates ( oral prescriptions vs injections ) ?
Yes you can't really stop an injection unless it's a med with an antidote, but not all meds have that. Now this doesn't usually happen immediately with 1 dose so likely we'll be able to catch it quickly. I'm not aware of any stats on survival rates but I can check.
@@thatnursingprof2661 thank you for your answer :)
@@thatnursingprof2661 im asking because I am considering taking this medication but I am just scared to die...
@@Cryptogab94 understandable, you need to make the best decision for you, knowing the benefits and risks.
Could this cause all major receptors to never function normally again? Can receptors be unblocked?
I have never heard of that happening, typically with treatment people fully recover. They may have issues due to the high fever but that usually depends on how high for how long.
Leukocytosis? Isn’t that increase in white cells? Not low BP?
Well done
Thank you so much.
]
My 13 year old grandson was in ICU he now has serotonin syndrome and nms now he on blood thinners for blood clots and gotta go to pt and ot this is serious 🥺🥺🙄🙄🙄
Oh no! I hope he gets better soon.
Been a long recovery only he can't remember memory loss thank you for the comment😊
Thanks. Rare syndrome with cute presentation
❤
Got this on the NCLEX multiple times 🙄
It would seem that you should go ahead and just poison them if you were going to put them back on something that's running their blood pressure is through the roof and could cause a heart attack any minute.
Unfortunately people with psychiatric or psychotic episodes, are very I’ll people, their quality of life is very low, and they are at high risk of suicide … a slow taper up is indicated.
@@joniatoms9798 is there a long-term syndrome or set of symptoms that goes with this like if a person had signs of neuroleptic malignant syndrome in the past was there anything that you should go towards a future with?
@@markmcgoveran6811 I’m not sure what you’re asking… Can you clarify?
@@joniatoms9798 if you were given large doses and had high blood pressure from them would there be any long term effects? If you had the muscular rigidity and quit the neuroleptics would you still tend towards the muscular rigidity for a while afterwards or would it go away immediately? Would this person tend to have the same kind of reaction again ?
@@markmcgoveran6811 well, I hope would be that after stopping the medicine, the syndrome would resolve, go away entirely. High blood pressure generally causes kidney damage, but if it only lasts a few hours or a few days, the damage is not likely to be significant long-term to kidneys. As far as muscle rigidity, that too can also be on a spectrum related to dose. It’s possible to forever have to deal with the symptoms. I do highly recommend that you are in contact with your physician. If you’re still dealing with symptoms, at least once a week to let them know what’s going on. They may want to check electrolytes or magnesium levels. In addition to medication levels. I hope that helps. I’m just a nurse not a physician. 💜💜💜