Rhabdomyolysis
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 มิ.ย. 2024
- Official Ninja Nerd Website: ninjanerd.org
You can find the NOTES and ILLUSTRATIONS for this lecture on our website at:
www.ninjanerd.org/lecture/rha...
Ninja Nerds!
In this lecture Professor Kristin Beach, MSN, BSN, RN will be discussing Rhabdomyolysis. Rhabdomyolysis (often called rhabdo) is a serious medical condition that can be fatal or result in permanent disability. Rhabdo occurs when damaged muscle tissue releases its proteins and electrolytes into the blood. These substances can damage the heart and kidneys and cause permanent disability or even death. We hope you enjoy this lecture and be sure to support us below!
Table of Contents:
0:00 Lab
0:07 Rhabdomyolysis Introduction
0:46 Causes
6:43 Pathophysiology
12:15 Mechanism of Rhabdomyolysis
16:55 Signs & Symptoms
19:44 Diagnostics
27:02 Nursing Interventions
32:05 Comment, Like, SUBSCRIBE!
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#ninjanerd #Rhabdo #Rhabdomyolysis
Great video. I just came home from a 6 day hospital stay with Rhabdo. My CK levels were over 50k for more than 3 days even after the iv started. The numbers started falling 2 days ago and I ended up going through 27 bags of saline. Thank you for helping me understand this better.
yo dude, I feel you. Same here. What did you do, run a marathon?
you are amazing. first time i've found a nursing youtube channel that feels better than one of my old university lectures. i'm someone who needs to know the deep in's and outs and can't get away with just knowing the hard and fast facts. this was perfectly intricate while still being kept brief.
as a new nurse in pediatrics, i send you a huge thank you!!
I admitted myself into the hospital the other day because my heart rate wouldn't slow down even after taking my anxiety medication (I thought It was just a panic attack) so I Asked my mom to drive me to the ER around 1 AM. My blood pressure was way too high and so they drew up several labs, took a chest x-ray, EKG etc. After they gave me different medications and hooked me up to an IV, they sent me to a room and I remember convulsing on the table. It came and went. Waves of being able to talk then my muscles tightening all at once and at some point my heart rate was 117 BPM. They diagnosed me with both hypotension and rhabdomyolysis (had NO idea what that was before this).
I will say I've done various sports over the course of my 23 year old life. It started in the gym running on a treadmill when my ankle had a sudden searing pain. Thought nothing of it then got worse...
Great job on this subject! Great explanations!
You have help so much in explaining this. Thank you
Fabulous and easy to understand. Thank you.❤
Love these videos. Thanks!
Thank you for breaking the word down
Great video as always nurse and future NP it was great seeing a nurse presenting
thank you. I like the short focused lecture for nurses.
Love this. Thanks!
This was a phenomenal video thank you so much
Thank you for answering the questions that I had & even the ones that I think I was going to have. The "ATP" part was a key that I was missing
Re: podcast - Yes, please keep it up!
I like the way you explain and also your nice printing. Subscribed.
Great explanation
I think I kinda fell in...😍 Thank you for this thorough explanation of something so unfamiliar.
Excellent!
I was recently diagnosed with rhabdo. Hadn’t exercised , no accidents. Only symptom was a muscle spasm two days before then I went to the er the 3rd night and then the icu
Tattoos?
Great teaching.thank u
Thanks 🙏
I love you 😍 💗 💛 I'm benefiting a lot from these videos
So happy to hear it! 💙
I love trying to watch these videos at one and a half or two times speed
Lol 😂
Who hurt you? 😂
thank u soo much
Hi, couple of questions please. You showed the process of reduced ATP production at cellular level but what happens with cell wall damage and how exactly does it occur, I know it said trauma, but what is the exact process. Are there any other videos that might show this. Sorry if I've missed something really obvious
Nice!
Is it possible for quizzes to be created for these videos? Perhaps as a subscription service even? If necessary.
I LOVEEEE😍😍😍
I love your videos💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖😃
Thank you! 💙
Are you a Nurse Practitioner?
You know so much details by heart, you don't use a notes or a cheat-chart. You know in detail much more than most nurses.
If you are not a N.P., I encourage you to consider entering such a program. We need medical staff who are midway between nurse and doctor.
I was just released from a 6 day ICU with exercise-induced rhabdo, CK (creatine kinase) was above 14000, but in Canada, they don't tell you the exact number fsr. 3 consecutive nights of really intense exercise that was not usual and I couldn't even move my legs the third day. Brown urine - straight to the ER.
I since wondered why? Why me? This video answers many questions.
Thank you, ninja.
What was really intense? Sets/ reps and exercises performed. Duration of your routine?
@@TheRealStraw Both. Unusually high amount of reps over three days was too much for me at 39 y.o. To be honest I didn't have a core exercise routine going until after this happened, could've been better prepared, though, to be fair, out of 46 people my results were in the top 10. In addition, I did not hydrate as well as one should in these circumstances.
Guess should add this was during training for the army, so they give everyone the same treatment, as in the amount of crap for our transgressions against their time. XD
Ah. That makes sense. Thanks. I got rhabdo, but it was from a 30 min workout. The doctors say that should not happen. Therefore, something else is suspected to have made me more prone to rhabdo. I'll probably end up getting a muscle biopsy done at a later date.
23600 CK btw
@@TheRealStraw Well, the army doctor confirmed what I was reading about this insidious condition, that marihuana , which I am quite fond of, could have had something to do. Been burning for 20 years.
Also, from my research, cocaine and alcohol for many years will do that, actually read about a patient who got rhabdo 8 times because of those substances.
I have it from a kid, is genetic. Everywhere I go I always make sure I have water and something to eat or energy snacks
Amazing than u🤩🤩🤩
Rhabdo causing kidney failure/ can kidney failure cause rhabdo