MRSA Pneumonia Explained Clearly by MedCram.com | Part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
  • Join Dr. Seheult of www.medcram.com/?Y...
    as he concisely explains and illustrates the key concepts of MRSA pneumonia (Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus). Understand the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and MRSA treatment guidelines.
    Course Highlights:
    - Review of the key differences between MSSA, MRSA, hospital acquired and community acquired MRSA.
    - Understand the risk factors for MRSA.
    - Virulence factors that typically make community-acquired MRSA worse than hospital-acquired pneumonia.
    - CXR (chest x-ray) and CT findings for MRSA pneumonia.
    - Clinical decision making and diagnosis of MRSA
    - Compare Vancomycin and Linezolid for primary treatment options of MRSA pneumonia.
    - Telavancin pros and cons and how efficacy compares with Vancomycin
    - Why a variety of medications may not be ready for primary consideration for MRSA
    - Specific treatment considerations for the virulent community-acquired MRSA.
    This is part 1 on Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus pneumonia. The remainder of this medical course (parts 2 - 4) is located at www.medcram.com/?Y...
    Visit www.medcram.com/?Y...
    for this entire course and over 100 free lectures. This is the home for ALL MedCram.com medical videos (many medical videos, medical lectures, and quizzes are not on RUclips).
    Speaker: Roger Seheult, MD
    Co-Founder of MedCram.com (www.medcram.com/?Y...)
    Clinical and Exam Preparation Instructor
    Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Pulmonary Disease, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine.
    MedCram: Medical education topics explained clearly including: Respiratory lectures such as Asthma and COPD. Renal lectures on Acute Renal Failure and Adrenal Gland. Internal medicine videos on Oxygen Hemoglobin Dissociation Curve and Medical Acid Base. A growing library on critical care topics such as Shock, Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA), and Mechanical Ventilation. Cardiology videos on Hypertension and heart failure. VQ Mismatch and Hyponatremia lectures have been popular among medical students. The Pulmonary Function Tests (PFTs) videos and Ventilator associated pneumonia bundles and lectures have been particularly popular with RTs. NPs and PAs have given great feedback on Pneumonia Treatment and Liver Function Tests among many others. Many nursing students have found the Asthma and shock lectures very helpful.
    New free medical education videos are released first at MedCram.com
    Visit MedCram.com for the full library of MedCram medical videos:www.medcram.com/?Y...
    Subscribe to the official MedCram.com RUclips Channel: ruclips.net/user/subscription_...
    Recommended Audience - Health care professionals and medical students: including physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses, respiratory therapists, EMT and paramedics, and many others. Review and test prep for USMLE, MCAT, PANCE, NCLEX, NAPLEX, NBDE, RN, RT, MD, DO, PA, NP school and board examinations.
    More from MedCram.com medical videos:
    MedCram Website: www.medcram.com/?Y...
    Facebook: / medcram
    Google+: plus.google.com/u/1/+Medcram
    Twitter: / medcramvideos
    Produced by Kyle Allred PA-C
    Please note: MedCram medical videos, medical lectures, medical illustrations, and medical animations are for medical educational and exam preparation purposes, and not intended to replace recommendations by your doctor or health care provider.

Комментарии • 25

  • @sarahsarahbby
    @sarahsarahbby 4 года назад +6

    Been dealing with mrsa and septic shock ( got to a point where I went into shock 3 times in 3 months and had to rush to ER monthly as my skin has been burning off for two years and I'd been referred to every doctor and specialist in my city (Savannah) for two years I was told it was just acne and was given all the wrong meds.
    This has been a possible life saver thank you so much for the education as the doctors around here have failed me and almost cost me my life. I am starting the last anti-biotic they can try on me today! Soz trying to make sure I do everything right!!! God bless

  • @sacrisanti2443
    @sacrisanti2443 7 лет назад +18

    thanks for the video- I'm not in med school, I'm an engineer/programmer, but i survived MRSA (cavitary) pneumonia (as well as going fully septic with it + the legions on the skin, almost lost my arm & foot), was treated w/vanco... just trying to understand what happened to me on a deeper level since my doctors don't explain it at a detail level that I want.

    • @Medcram
      @Medcram  7 лет назад +2

      +Sacri Santi wow. I hope you are better and I hope you got some good info here!

    • @nancejayneautry1890
      @nancejayneautry1890 5 лет назад

      Doctor do know but drug money is of the utmost important. See a naturalist instead.

    • @vas7009
      @vas7009 5 лет назад

      How much duration you have given antibiotics. What are your symptoms . Iam also suffering with the same. But doctors couldn't find out

    • @faybelle2991
      @faybelle2991 5 лет назад +1

      I'm there still, since 2014.

  • @Medcram
    @Medcram  7 лет назад

    See videos 2 through 4 of the MRSA Pneumonia series at www.MedCram.com
    Includes quizzes after each video

  • @rhondagoldberg533
    @rhondagoldberg533 4 года назад +4

    My father is presently hospitalized with MRSA pneumonia. He spent 7 weeks in an acute care facility post surgery. I hope MRSA patients can have improved outcomes through education. Thank you for your series.

  • @charlottewhite7065
    @charlottewhite7065 4 года назад +5

    excellent, clear, and detailed. thank you. best video on mssa mrsa camrsa etc....

  • @nunyaDbiz
    @nunyaDbiz 4 года назад +7

    I lost my right lung due to this. I was lucky to survive this, I was in a drug induced coma for 3 mos., was hospitalized several times, and several major surgeries to deal with complications.
    When they removed my lung, they removed 3 partial ribs.
    The pain is still unbearable two years on.
    I don't wish this on anyone!
    No antibiotics were effective, not even the ones which required additional data approval to use.

  • @castroashe8832
    @castroashe8832 4 года назад +3

    Thanks you perfectly explained,

    • @Medcram
      @Medcram  4 года назад +2

      You're welcome!

  • @jett8193
    @jett8193 5 лет назад +9

    Can this be acquired by dental surgery (removal of wisdom teeth)? My sister in law, currently staying in my home (but has been in hospital for about 2 days now due to blood poisoning & just diagnosed with an internal version of MRSA [?] & some sort of severe issue with her heart as well, requiring heart surgery). She had her wisdom teeth removed a few weeks ago. She'd been getting sicker & sicker, but finally taken to hospital against her will.

  • @williamwallace6193
    @williamwallace6193 2 года назад

    Do you have a hospital I can visit I’m going through this right now and the doctors seem to of skipped this part of schooling I think I have a peculiar version of this after acquiring it from a bjj gym

  • @jennieflinn5241
    @jennieflinn5241 4 года назад +2

    For a person who had MRSA pneumonia and nose would they be prone to the Coronavirus and MRSA to come back just curious

  • @JohnMakesFilm
    @JohnMakesFilm 5 лет назад +1

    If it resides in the nose, how come it doesn’t automatically make its way to the lungs?

  • @gagaplex
    @gagaplex 5 лет назад +1

    Note: MecA leads to Methicillin not being able to bind. It's NOT an inactivation of the drug.

  • @danieldreher6780
    @danieldreher6780 4 года назад +1

    The lack of guidance by the CDC and the Coronavirus has not released specific guidelines for treatment and more resistant strains of Coronavirus and a more resistant strain of hospital aquired MRSA will spread along with Coronavirus and tie up many hospitals especially the Methicillin resistant strain. This will lead to more general anti-biotic failure which will injure or kill immune deficient individuals1

  • @clemithadsouza7649
    @clemithadsouza7649 2 года назад

    My daughter 3 year old , happens to have MRSA in Sputum. I was curious to understand how she could have this in the lungs? She has been going to nursery, could it be from there ? I am awaiting her X-ray and really hope that it's not pneumonia. Could anyone throw light on high the community acquired MRSA in a child with good health and immunity.

  • @terriynjonez8295
    @terriynjonez8295 4 года назад +1

    👍🏾👍🏾😷👍🏾👍🏾

  • @amberblyledge7859
    @amberblyledge7859 4 года назад

    So... Golden grapes.

  • @devamme58
    @devamme58 6 лет назад +2

    Staphyle is greek not latin