🎓‼ Earn CE Credits for this lesson at ICU Advantage Academy: 👉🏼 adv.icu/academy 🤩🆕 NEW Beautifully Designed ECG Rhythm Interpretation Notes 👉🏼 adv.icu/notes-ecg-rhythms 📝 Older Style NOTES available to members! ► UA-cam: adv.icu/ym | ► Patreon: adv.icu/pm 💲 10% off Critical Care Academy (CCRN Review): 👉🏼adv.icu/cca (USE CODE "icuadv10")
I just got hired as a new grad and I wanna say thank you so much!❤ Your videos got me through nursing school and through ACLS training and more and now I just know I’m gonna be binging again since I was hired for step down ICU (new grad program)! ❤
I’m a MICU new grad at good sam/bumcp and the info I’ve learned from your videos has helped me impress my attendings!! I bought the membership just to support but I plan to study every single vid on this channel 👍
Congrats on the new position there. You will get a ton of experience and you get some real sickies there on the 5th floor. Lots of great nurses around you that I miss. Tell everyone I say hi. Working there was by far the best. Learn a lot and hopefully the videos can help along the way. Best of luck to you and thank you so much for your support with the membership!
Thank you so much for this video! I was wondering how does allowing the pericardial space to fill slowly so that we allow the pericardium to stretch less risk/help? I'm confused because how is that 'treating' the pericardial effusion? I understand observing the patient for symptoms is important to evaluate if the pericardial effusion is getting worse along with serial ECHOs. However, how is allowing this stretching helpful and ultimately treat the effusion? Thanks again!!
Hi 👋🏻 love the channel btw. I work in the OR and I am reviewing everything so I can get into ICU! I want to purchase the Academy membership and I was wondering how complicated would it be to have all the notes printed out for a binder. I love the digital but it also helps to have it on paper so I can make notes as I study. Any thoughts?
I don't know about a lot of pushback ;) but I get your point. Its a gray area for sure. I should have classified it as slightly modified transudative. My read on this is that the fluid accumulation is a transudative process, from which develops the inflammation as a result, adding the inflammatory markers and cells to the fluid and a slightly grayish appearance. But definitely something to look further into. I'd be curious as to your perspective.
🎓‼ Earn CE Credits for this lesson at ICU Advantage Academy: 👉🏼 adv.icu/academy
🤩🆕 NEW Beautifully Designed ECG Rhythm Interpretation Notes 👉🏼 adv.icu/notes-ecg-rhythms
📝 Older Style NOTES available to members! ► UA-cam: adv.icu/ym | ► Patreon: adv.icu/pm
💲 10% off Critical Care Academy (CCRN Review): 👉🏼adv.icu/cca (USE CODE "icuadv10")
I'm a seasoned nurse and just love this channel. Thx
Really glad the videos find a wide range audience! I love doing them for the learning I get as well!
I just got hired as a new grad and I wanna say thank you so much!❤
Your videos got me through nursing school and through ACLS training and more and now I just know I’m gonna be binging again since I was hired for step down ICU (new grad program)! ❤
I’m a MICU new grad at good sam/bumcp and the info I’ve learned from your videos has helped me impress my attendings!! I bought the membership just to support but I plan to study every single vid on this channel 👍
Congrats on the new position there. You will get a ton of experience and you get some real sickies there on the 5th floor. Lots of great nurses around you that I miss. Tell everyone I say hi. Working there was by far the best. Learn a lot and hopefully the videos can help along the way. Best of luck to you and thank you so much for your support with the membership!
I’m a new grad in a cardiac medsurg floor. I just discovered your channel and subscribed. I am definitely going to watch all of them!!
WHEN are you doing it on icp monitoring, impella, lvad and mechanical circulatory support thanks
Thank you so much for this video! I was wondering how does allowing the pericardial space to fill slowly so that we allow the pericardium to stretch less risk/help? I'm confused because how is that 'treating' the pericardial effusion? I understand observing the patient for symptoms is important to evaluate if the pericardial effusion is getting worse along with serial ECHOs. However, how is allowing this stretching helpful and ultimately treat the effusion?
Thanks again!!
Hi 👋🏻 love the channel btw. I work in the OR and I am reviewing everything so I can get into ICU! I want to purchase the Academy membership and I was wondering how complicated would it be to have all the notes printed out for a binder. I love the digital but it also helps to have it on paper so I can make notes as I study. Any thoughts?
I really need your lecture pdf how can I get them please?
Would they potentially do a pericardectomy or hemipericardectomy to treat this?
YEs coming from 🇯🇲
Very cool! Welcome!
🎉
Thank you!
I think you're going to get a lot of pushback on the fluid from uremic pericarditis being transudative. I could be wrong though.
Nah, you might be right actually. Uremia - increased cap permeability - higher proteins in fluid - etc. (but i am no expert)
I don't know about a lot of pushback ;) but I get your point. Its a gray area for sure. I should have classified it as slightly modified transudative. My read on this is that the fluid accumulation is a transudative process, from which develops the inflammation as a result, adding the inflammatory markers and cells to the fluid and a slightly grayish appearance. But definitely something to look further into. I'd be curious as to your perspective.
WIll, certainly not a clear cut classification for sure.