Thanks for putting all these medications in perspective. I just graduated from Nursing School and was looking a medication up online and found your videos. These are great! I kept watching one after the other.
I love the way you teach because it leads to retention of nursing knowledge! Thank you! Could you do a video explaining the difference between cholinergic and anticholinergic?
The full video is on our website. RUclips only has 20% of our video library posted. Join our full library with 1,200+ videos, 900+ study guides & a customizable quiz bank with detailed rationales! If you want to try it for FREE first, you can head to this link here: bit.ly/3urJSzi
Hey Mike. Being that Dopamine is a vasopressor, does it also cause arterial constriction? Im understand it compressing the veins (increasing venous return). Thanks man.
You say Dopamine and Epinephrine has the same effect. But is maybe the big difference between the 2 that Dopamine has more effect on the brain and Epinephrine has more effect on the body? Because i know that Dopamine is produced in the brain and Epinephrine is produced in the Adrenal gland on the kidney's.
lol, ha ha, I love it. Well first off, I hate nursing school... & I hate "traditional Nursing Instructors" So unless, i make my own college, well see :)
you told us here that epinephrine is +ve ino and b-blockers have no effect on ino, right ?? what i know that epinephrine has it's +ve ino effect through stimulation of B1-receptors so B-blockers which blocks B-receptors should have the opposite effect of epinephrine and so should become -ve ino ??????
i know that dopamine converts to epinephrine during a perceived threat, but does it also do it naturally on a smaller scale? please help haha, but this video does clear up a lot of the questions i was having. I'm trying to understand the process of conversion from L-phenalynanine to L-tyrosine, then L-Dopa to Adrenaline, Noradrenaline, and Dopamine. Also what exactly is the role of noradrenaline?
This videos helped me so much when I was in nursing school - it was a nice refresh to see it again over 10 years later!
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Thanks for putting all these medications in perspective. I just graduated from Nursing School and was looking a medication up online and found your videos. These are great! I kept watching one after the other.
hi! still using your videos to get through nursing school here in 2019. thank you for breaking everything down in a way i can actually understand it!
If you are not already a Nurse Instructor, that is the life path for you, You are good at this and not boring.
Wow. Good looking, well spoken, and intelligent. Nice. Thanks, I will do way better in nursing school because of you. Thank you.
I love the way you teach because it leads to retention of nursing knowledge! Thank you! Could you do a video explaining the difference between cholinergic and anticholinergic?
Mike,
thank you thank you thank you!!! you have helped me tremendously with the cardiac drugs and EKG readings.... much love!!
As always.....God Bless you Micheal!
that was very educative. Well taught. thanks
Excellent, thank you. I love the mnemonics :)
Is EPI a positive DROMOTROPE?..
Where can I find part 1 of this where you go over the first drugs
The full video is on our website. RUclips only has 20% of our video library posted. Join our full library with 1,200+ videos, 900+ study guides & a customizable quiz bank with detailed rationales! If you want to try it for FREE first, you can head to this link here: bit.ly/3urJSzi
Hey Mike. Being that Dopamine is a vasopressor, does it also cause arterial constriction? Im understand it compressing the veins (increasing venous return). Thanks man.
can we use an epipen epinephrin auto injector to get an adrenaline rush?
Anyone has a link on Part 1?
You say Dopamine and Epinephrine has the same effect. But is maybe the big difference between the 2 that Dopamine has more effect on the brain and Epinephrine has more effect on the body? Because i know that Dopamine is produced in the brain and Epinephrine is produced in the Adrenal gland on the kidney's.
I signed up on the website and can't find these videos pleas help
Great news! We have updated this video series with our new animation :) Search “intropic” in the search bar :)
@@SimpleNursing Thank you!
If o2 is the currency, then adenosine tri phosphate,went under recession0.o
lol, ha ha, I love it. Well first off, I hate nursing school... & I hate "traditional Nursing Instructors"
So unless, i make my own college, well see :)
you told us here that epinephrine is +ve ino
and b-blockers have no effect on ino, right ??
what i know that epinephrine has it's +ve ino effect through stimulation of B1-receptors
so B-blockers which blocks B-receptors should have the opposite effect of epinephrine and so should become -ve ino ??????
You're amazing! Btw this might sound insanely stupid (still in high-school k), but is dopamine neurotransmitter, hormone, drug or all of the above?
Thank you so much!!
Love you, you are awesome ! :)
You are awesome!!!
Where is part 1??
See all videos in our membership ! shorturl.at/tlolX
ha ha "your not going to make it" thats hilarious im sorry
i know that dopamine converts to epinephrine during a perceived threat, but does it also do it naturally on a smaller scale? please help haha, but this video does clear up a lot of the questions i was having. I'm trying to understand the process of conversion from L-phenalynanine to L-tyrosine, then L-Dopa to Adrenaline, Noradrenaline, and Dopamine. Also what exactly is the role of noradrenaline?
lovelyt
gud
Dopamine isn’t a “drug” it’s a neurotransmitter. And the static sound in the back is incredibly annoying lol
It is absolutely a medication.
Iknowwwtropic lol
that was very educative. Well taught. thanks