Hi Dr. Bolin! I love your videos, I am a professor of nursing and I use your videos to prep for classes. Thank you for the great resource. Just FYI, you said 24 hours NPO before elective sx, I am sure you accidentally miss-spoke.. should be 6 NPO before elective sx in general, (may be special situations that fall outside of that) Thank you, Dr. sandy Langheld, DNP, MSN-ed, RN, RNCOB Ps.. don’t bash nursing students that cath you... lol, (joking, but both disciplines need each other!)I hope she didn’t trot in and she definitely should not have drained 1.6 liters at one time! That is not EBP, and can cause bladder damage. But thanks so much!! I love the videos and I aspire to make something like this for nursing student to view!!
isn't urine Na decreased in both dehydration and pre renal failure and isn't dehydration a cause of pre renal failure?? urine Na should be increased in Intra renal failure rather than pre renal failure ( according to your lectures on Nephrology ). please clear my confusion Paul. thanks for the video
Its not a "decrease" in Urine Na, rather retention of plasma Na. Kidney's concentrating function is still intact in prerenal failure. Less Na will reach the glomerulus, hence, the kidney will retain all the Na it can. Meanwhile, in intrarenal failure kidney's concentrating ability is decreased leading to loss of Na. :)
Hi Dr. Bolin! I love your videos, I am a professor of nursing and I use your videos to prep for classes. Thank you for the great resource.
Just FYI, you said 24 hours NPO before elective sx, I am sure you accidentally miss-spoke.. should be 6 NPO before elective sx in general, (may be special situations that fall outside of that)
Thank you, Dr. sandy Langheld, DNP, MSN-ed, RN, RNCOB
Ps.. don’t bash nursing students that cath you... lol, (joking, but both disciplines need each other!)I hope she didn’t trot in and she definitely should not have drained 1.6 liters at one time! That is not EBP, and can cause bladder damage. But thanks so much!! I love the videos and I aspire to make something like this for nursing student to view!!
We have been told both - 6h usually but some prefer 24h.
I think you meant 1ml/kg/hr for the adult patient (not per day). Thanks for the video
Yes. Thank you.
A wonderful lecture, thank you!
heparin can be given post-hip surgery I think. intertrochanteric fracture.
Thank you for sharing
Thank you! :)
Oh god 1.6L 😱😭😭 cant imagine the agony you mustve been in
Is this pre or pos operative
1ml/ k'g/ day !!!! ? I think it's wrong----> should be 0,24ml/K'g/hour for adults and 0,5ml/k"g/hour for children!
isn't urine Na decreased in both dehydration and pre renal failure and isn't dehydration a cause of pre renal failure?? urine Na should be increased in Intra renal failure rather than pre renal failure ( according to your lectures on Nephrology ). please clear my confusion Paul. thanks for the video
Its not a "decrease" in Urine Na, rather retention of plasma Na. Kidney's concentrating function is still intact in prerenal failure. Less Na will reach the glomerulus, hence, the kidney will retain all the Na it can. Meanwhile, in intrarenal failure kidney's concentrating ability is decreased leading to loss of Na. :)