I am a recently graduated medical student preparing for intern year. This lecture series on AKI (along with all other content on Strong Medicine) is a phenomenal way to refresh concepts taught in early medical school. It is concise, comprehensive, and most importantly provides actionable information for house-staff working up patients with acute kidney injury. Thanks Dr. Strong.
I'm so glad to see more videos being published! I'm in year 3 of med in Australia and these are far and away the most helpful and systematic resources I've used for hospital medicine. - I'm looking forward to checking these new topics out.
Great one !! most appropriate and utmost essential information for audience. I have a request.. is it possible to have another one talk about RRT and CRT in details.
Thanks for watching! A detailed video on RRT is on my long list of topics to cover, but unfortunately, I probably won't get to it for a long time. Too many competing requests...
Great video as usual. I came across this article from EB Medicine’s Hospital Medicine Practice "Recognizing, Treating, And Preventing Acute Kidney Injury In Hospitalized Patients" and thought it was a great complementary read for this series on AKI, although it appears that this journal isn't active anymore. That being said, Dr Eric, what are your go-to resources when you need to read an overview on a topic or just doing a quick review? Thanks again for the videos and can't wait for the upcoming ones.
My go-to resource for most topics, particularly specific diseases, is UpToDate. It's not perfect, and often goes into way more detail than I'm looking for, but it's uncommon for it to not have the info I'm looking for. If I'm looking for info on the physical exam, by go-to resources are JAMA's The Rational Clinical Exam, and Steve McGee's Evidence-Based Physical Diagnosis - unless I'm looking for something really esoteric, in which case Sapira's Art and Science of Bedside Diagnosis or Jules Constant's Bedside Cardiology. My wife is an electrophysiologist, so if I'm looking for ECG or arrhythmia/pacemaker-related info, I either grab one of her textbooks, or more often just ask her...
Very helpful and interesting videos ,Although my first language is French but i understand a lot of mechanism so it's a good refresh the only issue is that sometimes the abbreviations I can't understand them..
Hi, I'm having a bit of trouble with this question: "A 73 year old man presents to the pre op clinic for total hip replacement. He is on furosemide for hypertension. This are his investigations: serum Na- 120 Urine sodium- 10 (low) Serum osmolality- 280 (normal) What is the cause of this patient's hyponatremia?" The answer is hypotonic hypovolemic hyponatremia. If you don't mind could you help explain why that's the answer. Sorry to bother you, hope you can help, thanks!
I am a recently graduated medical student preparing for intern year. This lecture series on AKI (along with all other content on Strong Medicine) is a phenomenal way to refresh concepts taught in early medical school. It is concise, comprehensive, and most importantly provides actionable information for house-staff working up patients with acute kidney injury. Thanks Dr. Strong.
I'm so glad to see more videos being published! I'm in year 3 of med in Australia and these are far and away the most helpful and systematic resources I've used for hospital medicine. - I'm looking forward to checking these new topics out.
Thanks!
Ευχαριστούμε!
Παρακαλώ!
its nicely elaborated. Please make a video on "Pain management in Cirrhosis of Liver patient"
Thank you sir, very helpful.
Very beautifully and clearly explained presentation! Thank you for making me understand better! Thank you so much from Malaysia 🇲🇾 7/8/2019
Thank you very much Dr. Please do you have any plan on uploading CKD lectures soon?
Great one !! most appropriate and utmost essential information for audience. I have a request.. is it possible to have another one talk about RRT and CRT in details.
Thanks for watching! A detailed video on RRT is on my long list of topics to cover, but unfortunately, I probably won't get to it for a long time. Too many competing requests...
Very helpful, thanks!
Thank you very much Dr Strong
Excellent Job
Great video as usual. I came across this article from EB Medicine’s Hospital Medicine Practice "Recognizing, Treating, And Preventing Acute Kidney Injury In Hospitalized Patients" and thought it was a great complementary read for this series on AKI, although it appears that this journal isn't active anymore.
That being said, Dr Eric, what are your go-to resources when you need to read an overview on a topic or just doing a quick review?
Thanks again for the videos and can't wait for the upcoming ones.
My go-to resource for most topics, particularly specific diseases, is UpToDate. It's not perfect, and often goes into way more detail than I'm looking for, but it's uncommon for it to not have the info I'm looking for. If I'm looking for info on the physical exam, by go-to resources are JAMA's The Rational Clinical Exam, and Steve McGee's Evidence-Based Physical Diagnosis - unless I'm looking for something really esoteric, in which case Sapira's Art and Science of Bedside Diagnosis or Jules Constant's Bedside Cardiology. My wife is an electrophysiologist, so if I'm looking for ECG or arrhythmia/pacemaker-related info, I either grab one of her textbooks, or more often just ask her...
speaking on cardiology- any fullfiling of the ecg videos on the horrizon? :)
Do a ultrasound course please
Simply Great... It helped me reading Harrison easily... Thank you sir...
beautiful lecture
Thanks Doctor Strong
Very helpful thanks
Thank you so much
Great work
Always love your videos!!! Thanks.😊 critical care NP
thank you
Very helpful and interesting videos ,Although my first language is French but i understand a lot of mechanism so it's a good refresh the only issue is that sometimes the abbreviations I can't understand them..
really an amazing video. thank you!
Hi, I'm having a bit of trouble with this question:
"A 73 year old man presents to the pre op clinic for total hip replacement. He is on furosemide for hypertension. This are his investigations:
serum Na- 120
Urine sodium- 10 (low)
Serum osmolality- 280 (normal)
What is the cause of this patient's hyponatremia?"
The answer is hypotonic hypovolemic hyponatremia. If you don't mind could you help explain why that's the answer. Sorry to bother you, hope you can help, thanks!
Hi I just want you know thank tyyytttttrdt ty for the surgery I am