Hyperkalemia Video Lecture made simple! HD
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- Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
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Hyperkalemia is elevated extracellular potasium level above 5.0 in the blood. it is a serious condition that can cause arrhythmia and ventricular fibrillation if untreated.
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Pls can you make video on hypokalemia. I look everywhere on your video page & could not not find one.
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Thank you for your videos!! They are very helpful and well explained! If a may suggests one thing, If you could maybe add more of the clinical manifestations and treatments. Thank you again!
Great video, thanks. One thing though... does insulin really bind directly to the Na+/K+ ATPase? Our lecture notes show it acting through its own receptor and says that the 2nd messenger system leading to stimulation of the pump isn't agreed upon...
Awesome lecture !? are you going to upload a video on hypokalemia ?
Thanks dude. Your explanation blew my instructors out of the water.
Great video with amazing explanation. Thanks for posting.
Insulin does not bind the Na/K-ATPase pump, it acts via its own receptor and a second messenger process.
Metabolic acidosis causes hyperkalemia due to buffering, not cell lysis.
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Hello Mr. Awesome :). Can you please make a video about Ischemia?
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Can anyone tell why does it happen usually in the morning or after exercising? and how does the cold make it worse? Thanks for the lecture
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Good videos. I have a question... You said Redistribution would be AIDS. You did not mentioned the "S". Please explain...
hi there, thanks so much for the lecture. it's really helpful. One question though, what does the 'S' in your mnemonic AIDS stand for?
😢
when you are talking about acidosis, cant there simply be a shift of hydrogen for potassium without lising having to occurr?
At 09:40: would a H+/K+ exchanger act first before the extent of cell lysis?
making everything so easier to understand. Thank you so much :)
Thank you for this video!!
What is your unit of measurement for potassium? You say a normal potassium range is 3.5 - 5.0 but that's not enough information. Is it 3.5 - 5.0 \ moles per liter?
+Kombat409 m mol/l
thanks a lot sir. you make it clearly!
Hypokalemia too please! Thank you for this video.
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Why is it that patients with hyperkalemia are told to eat more dairy products and increase the levels of glucose. What mechanism is involved here? Can you explain - even in another video. . . Thank you!
You are amazing!
DO you have about hypokalemia
What does "s" stands for when you refer to "AIDS".
Just awesome :D
Is there a part 2?
Where you able to find the part 2, I'm searching for it
Normal Potassium measurement = 3.5-5.0 mEq/L
thank you sir
My heart almost stopped when he mentioned AIDS.
Thank you so much! 1/8/2019 😁
Great help thank u
90% is kidney involved with hyperkalemia. Thank you. We know where to look first.
How leukocytosis and thrombocytosis causes hyperkalemia?
Leukocytosis occur in lekeumias u stable wbc breakdown so hyperkalemia....increase platelets predisposeto clotting when clotting occur they release potassium thus hyperkalemia
thanks
HAHA loved the beta blocker joke LOL
Other causes of Hyperkalemia are: ACE-inhibitors and Trimethoprim. Please, add these to your video.
we need more videos...
What does the S part of AIDS stand for??
syndrome
It's 3.5-5.5 Harrison 19 edi.
Sir hindi m transfer kr dijiye es class ko
S = succinylcholine
The black conrad fischer
Please
thislecture is not clear enough
You're awesome!