oh my god! THANK YOU DIRTY! i literally have always struggled to understand and break these down and just brushed over them! this is incredible! Thank you so much!
Thank youuu ❤ btw if you are ever thinking of doing other lecture videos. maybe you could do topics on Burns and maybe the different type of shocks? but this is just an idea, looking forward to your other vids 🎉
“Some blood products use citrate as an anticoagulant and, when mixed with calcium, leads to the precipitation of calcium citrate, which may cause clotting and obstruction of the IV line. Patients can receive blood products and Ringer’s lactate simultaneously; however, not within the same line.” www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK500033/
From one of the greatest teachers of ALL TIMES 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
oh my god! THANK YOU DIRTY! i literally have always struggled to understand and break these down and just brushed over them! this is incredible! Thank you so much!
My exam is next week, and this is literally one of the topics I had marked for review! "Fluid Resuscitation!" Perfectly on time lol.
Good luck 🎉
Thank youuu ❤ btw if you are ever thinking of doing other lecture videos. maybe you could do topics on Burns and maybe the different type of shocks?
but this is just an idea, looking forward to your other vids 🎉
I already have a video on shock!
Great video! Could you make a video about electrolytes imbalance please? Thank you!!
Great presentation 👌
hey I'm not gay, but I love you man.
Can you please make a video explaining in which scenario you use each fluid. I always find that confusing. Thank you
Great summary.
Very good
Amazing 🎉thanks
Dirty! Can we please get a video on tuberculosis
Awesome 👏🏻
Thank you!!!
Love it
Colloids too plz
Awesome please do a video on how much ions like K, Na you would give?
8:11 Yo you can give them at the same time but not the same line? you better hope your veins don't count as a line.
“Some blood products use citrate as an anticoagulant and, when mixed with calcium, leads to the precipitation of calcium citrate, which may cause clotting and obstruction of the IV line. Patients can receive blood products and Ringer’s lactate simultaneously; however, not within the same line.”
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK500033/