Autonomic Dysreflexia for Nursing Students
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- Опубліковано 16 лип 2024
- This video provides an overview of the pathophysiology of autonomic dysreflexia and also includes the assessments and interventions for a patient with autonomic dysreflexia.
I am Gail L Lupica with over 20 years of experience teaching nursing at the pre-licensure level. I earned a Bachelor Science in Nursing at SUNY Binghamton in 1986, a Master's in Nursing Education in 1992 from New York University (NYU) and a PhD in Adult and Post-Secondary Education in 2011. I have many years of experience in NCLEX-RN test preparation and remediation.
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The most straight forward basic educational lecture I've listened too in such a long time.
Thank's so much
Gail, thank you for this video. This has always been a topic I couldn't entirely grasp. I am studying for my NCLEX and autonomic dysreflexia questions always freak me out. No one ever explained it the way you did. I've got it now. Thanks!!!!
I watched multiple videos trying to understand autonomic dysreflexia. I finally can say I got it. Thank you for your lecture!
Reviewing for my NCLEX and needed a short and simple video explaining this. Im glad I came across your video, thank you again!
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽awesome teaching !!!! Come be my professor !!!
What a wonderful, thorough explanation! Thank you! :)
This is perfect. Enough information without being too detailed. I'll check out more of your videos :)
very helpful, thank you! Your explanation of key knowledge and teaching style shows you are a great teacher!
This is great thank you! Love the white board with pictures and I love how interactive you are with your hands and speech.
When I look up info on UA-cam, there's a couple of videos but I will usually pick Gail's (if available) because she explains things well and gets straight to the point. 🙌🙌🙌
Perfect, Autonomic Dsyreflexia finally clicked for me! Thank you so much!
This is great! I understand and am interested to know even more. Thank you for making it so clear.
Beautiful explanation! Thank you.
Saved me a lot of reading!!! Thank you so much!!
Loved this, you explain things so well!
Excellent video! Thank you, ma'am!!!
Really helpful for my understanding for my exam. Thank you for the quick and detailed review!!
Reviewing stuff for my NCLEX and came across your video. Thank you for explaining this in such an easy to understand way and including patient teaching. I hear that’s important ;)
This was well taught.thank you
My teacher suggested this video for a clearer picture and that's exactly what I got!
Thank you!! Quick and very easy to understand!!
This was a great video!! Thank you!
please make more nursing videos, they are quick and to the point! thank you!!
This was extremely helpful. thank you!
oh my gosh you are lovely! thank you for sharing
This will be helpful for my exam. Thank you for explaining it well.
Awesome thank you Professor Lupica🤗🤗🤗 🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗
Great explanation 🙌🏼
Great explanation. Thanks
You are absolutely amazing
What a great video. I learned so much about the topic. You are a great instructor. Leave it to a nurse to be able to teach a difficult topic in easy-to-understand terms.
Burdette, Thank you so much for your feedback! I do these for my own PT students and I am tickled that they can help other students as well.
Really helpful! Thank you!
thank you for your help
So helpful! Thank you so much!
Thank you so much! 👍🏻
Omg the explanation of the ANS recognizing the stimulus starts the SNS but the inability of the baroreceptor response recognition was PERFECTION!!!! I had understood the over stimulation/exaggerated SNS response but I couldn't connect the pathophys beyond the severed cord but your mention of the baro's made the switch click for me! So many thanks again! Your rationale/pathophys explanations always help me!!! Thanks !
DebbieQ
Debbie, I'm soooo happy I could help!
Thank you so much for helpful video.
Great explanation
AmaZing!
I wish you were my professor for lecture! very clear
Wish I had watched your video first. Explained more better in less time. Thanks!
I believe the bradycardia is a reflexive bradycardia d/t the HTN caused by the SNS stimulation, rather than the stimulation of the vagus nerve.
Urinary Bladder stones can be the cause...can these stones be softened, rounded off, or at least prevented through diet or something?
Very helpful!!! ...thanks...my friend has this condition, and was advised he may have said stones in bladder.
I experience it right before finding out I have cellulitis in one if my legs. I've had cellulitis multiple times in the last 2 years, and we can't figure out why. But now I know if I feel these symptoms, to keep a look out on my legs.
Speaking from experience as a paraplegic it's not only bradycardia but tachycardia as well that happens with AD.
That's interesting. Is it a complete sever?
@@gaillupica9187 Complete T4
🙏❤❤❤❤❤
damn good video
at t6 and above now.
I have this?? in daily life I Just need to find a good GP in the UK that as a clue about this..
Please do a video on the types of shocks and MODS !
There is a video on shock types, called Shock overview (for nursing students).
What I take out of this video: Bladder is important!
If there is a noxious stimuli below the level of the injury (e.g. T7), and the cord is severed, how can the SNS detect and respond to this stimuli through vasoconstriction?
Arshia Beigi through the baroreceptors
I had the same doubt.
🇴🇲❤
Above the level of T 6 madam
Tolonglah dibuatkan subtitel nya dalam bahasa INDONESIA ya Bu. Terimakasih.
🤔 thought it was t5
Book says injury above T6 not T7
Autonomic dysreflexia (AD) is a potentially life-threatening medical emergency that affects people with spinal cord injuries at the T6 level or higher. Although rare, some people with T7 and T8 injuries can develop AD.
Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation. (2019). What is autonomic dysreflexia? Retrieved from christopher reeve.org/Datasets/NJ/501© 3