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#physiopathologic
heardatmedschool · 17 days
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“When you know the patient’s history, and also know enough physiopathology, you rarely ever get surprised by radiological findings.”
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ellebi-studies · 2 years
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Hello everyone,
Today I had my cardiology exam, which I have to say was very satisfying. I want to share with you some tips that I used to prepare for this exam and learn how to give a medical report of an EKG.
First of all, I think classes are fundamental for this course. I loved cardiology since it is a conceptual subject rather than a mnemonic one. Try to understand the physiopathology of cardiovascular diseases from the beginning. You will spend time learning details later, but I think it is vital to keep up with the main concepts to understand the following and arrive at the end of lessons with solid fundamentals.
As for the EKGs, practice is essential so try to exercise every day, even for a few minutes. I found it very useful to study "Rapid Interpretation of EKGs" by Dubin and Dale, but "The only EKG book you'll ever need" by Thaler is a good source too.
Also, there are many helpful sites, such as this: https://www.skillstat.com/tools/ecg-simulator. Instagram pages with clinical cases are valid as well.
Try to understand what every wave and complex of the EKG means, and do not limit yourself to learning every pattern by heart.
Concerning the cardio surgery part, I had the opportunity to attend the operating theatre of cardiovascular surgery and Arithmology. Ask your teachers if you have this chance: you do not have anything to lose, and you may find an available professor who will teach you much more than a written book.
If you do not have this possibility, look for Youtube videos of the procedures.
Whatever you do, don't limit yourself to studying surgery only on written material: it will be difficult and frustrating.
Also, I found it essential to make schemes. I do not always do it because it is very time-expensive, but this time there was so much information that I felt the need to organise it. For each disease, identify the pathogenesis, the aetiology, the main findings at physical examination, the EKG pattern, the diagnostic test you should do and the therapy.
Last, I found vital to recall all the topics out loud many times, also inverting the order: it easier to remember the clinical manifestation of aortic stenosis if you just revised the patophysiology, but it might be more arduous to remember the EKG pattern first.
Basically, that's it. Cardiology was one of my favorite exam in my med school career so far, so let me know if you find these tips beneficial or if you would add anything.
And good luck to anyone for the exams! 🍀🍀
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kamyru · 1 year
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Could you do something for ukyo and kunihiro?
Hi, anon! Thank you for your ask. I hope you'll like what "something" I have written. Enjoy! ❤️
P.S. You won't believe me, but I started to answer my asks. I have no idea how long I'll last, but wish me good luck. (Wish me good luck on my exams too, because 26, 31, 3, 7, and 11 will be the death of me. Especially the first two: physiopathology and pharmacology.)
Cute moments they have with their wives in the office that are too wholesome to be interrupted (Ukyo Senkawa x MC; Kunihiro Kasai x MC)(Shorts)
Word counting: 355 + 500
Ukyo Senkawa
MC was on could seven when she found out that the next project wasn't only a big one but also a possibility to work with the famous Ukyo Senkawa aka her husband, again. It meant more time spent together and the opportunity to learn more from him.
So, on her way to the meeting room, MC wasn't walking - she was flying. Her mood got even better when she entered the room and saw Ukyo in there. The smile on her face reached its maximum broadness. She chose the sit near him and looked at him with big, expecting eyes. For a second, a tint of red appeared on Ukyo's face. He mirrored her smile and ruffled her hair. Of course, he was happy to work with his wife again.
"Are you excited?" Ukyo asked, already knowing the answer.
MC couldn't stop herself from showing him how happy she was. She nodded and clapped her hands a few times. This time, Ukyo chuckled, putting his hands over his wife's and calming her hyperactivity. But the smile on her husband's face made MC a little bit worried. His hands left his wife's, and he clapped them, repeating her move from earlier.
"Do you know it, the clapping game?" Ukyo asked, waiting to clap his hands with MC.
"Which one?" the woman asked, yet clapped her hands with his husband.
"The simple one, when you go faster and faster. Don't worry. I won't go hard on you."
MC rolled her eyes, knowing that Ukyo's obsession with games would stop him from playing the easy version. However, enjoyment started to run through her veins in seconds. The room got filled with claps, and contrary to MC's expectations, Ukyo gradually increased his speed, letting her adapt. When one of them missed the clap, someone from the direction of the door said:
"Who won? I couldn't quite see it."
"Friendship," Ukyo said and ruffled his wife's hair. "And Kuranosuke, don't make this face. We both know that you are jealous."
Kunihiro Kasai
With a coffee in his hands, Kasai passed by the office his wife was in, working hard on a new project while running on a four-hour-long sleep she had the night prior. She prompted her head on her hand. It was a comfortable position for her exhausted body, yet it wasn't for her eyes because the hair kept getting in her face, even if she tried her best to put it back.
Kasai displayed the biggest smile he could, even if MC was too busy to turn and watch him. She understood that he was there only after he put his cup at the edge of her desk. Cautiously, Mrs. Kasai moved it more to the middle so it wouldn't accidentally spill. Before she could turn back, MC felt her husband's soft fingers on her hair.
"I love your new shampoo. Your hair is so soft and smells so good that it made me give up on my plans and come see you," the executive said while hugging MC by her shoulders and resting his chin on her head. He looked through the plan she had on her screen and hummed in approval.
"Hiro, you're heavy," MC whispered, trying to change her position to get rid of the burden on top of her. Kunihiro kissed the top of her head and left his spot. However, a second later, MC felt his fingers in her hair. At first, she had no idea what he was doing, but then, by his moves, she understood that he was trying to braid her hair. He was sloppy and let go of the strands a few times, but the softness of his moves made shivers of pleasure run down her spine.
"To give you a tie?" MC asked when she felt him going down enough to reach the ends of her hair.
Kunihiro shook his head and let out a chuckle.
"Do you think that I got married to someone with long hair and didn't get a pack of ties?" with one hand on the end of her braid, to prevent it from loosening, he reached in his inner pocked for the secret hair tie he put in there every morning. The man admired his art, kissed his wife again, and let her continue her work.
MC didn't have enough time to thank him, but she touched the braid to understand what Kunihiro had done. At least it wasn't getting on her eyes.
"It looks awful," a husky voice said from her behind before she could fully concentrate on her work.
"I don't think I asked for your opinion," MC found herself defending her husband.
"Can you repeat yourself? I think I didn't hear you."
Only after the polite comeback MC understood whom she dissed. She turned to Togo to apologize before it escalated. However, instead of a grumpy face, she saw a nearly visible smile on his face. He shrugged his shoulders and left her, finally giving her the possibility to return to work.
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brunetteaura · 1 year
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i have to memorize 132 pages of physiopathology in one week…. i dont even know what to say at this point
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womanthreat · 2 years
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a fever cannot kill u. BUT. a heatstroke, which gives people fevers, is what can kill u. no fevers alone have ever killed anyone, there is always something added to it
yeah, which is what i said a couple times in that post. heatstroke is a different beast from a fever, it does cause a high temperature, but it's physiopathology is completely different.
also how high a fever goes has no correlation with how bad the underlying cause is, you could have a 40C fever for a run of the mill cold, or you could have no fever and suffer from a devastating meningitis.
it mostly baffles me that people are so set in this belief
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18-roses · 11 days
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Physiology of Iron Metabolism - PMC
Iron is a Detox.
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magnesium-depot · 17 days
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Why Is Magnesium Supplementation Essential For Women? - Magnesium Store
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Effect Of Magnesium On Women’s Health And Well-Being
In women, in particular, there are various physiopathological conditions that may increase magnesium requirements, useful for both disease prevention and treatment. Indeed magnesium is well recognized in obstetrics and gynecology area. Magnesium use in women, both in terms of prevention and treatment, is extended to many health issues from PCOS to pre-menstrual syndrome, from pregnancy to menopause, and beyond. – Debora Porri
Women’s nutritional needs change in response to physiological modifications throughout their lifespan, lower magnesium levels may be common throughout women’s lives and are associated with adverse health outcomes and reduced quality of life.
Magnesium plays a couple of extra roles in a woman’s body although this is important for both men and women. The fourth most plentiful mineral in the body is magnesium. It plays a number of important roles in your body and brain health.
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leedsomics · 4 months
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Proteomics-based characterization of ribosome heterogeneity in adult mouse organs
While long thought to be invariable in all cellular organisms, evidence has emerged that the translation process, i.e. protein assembly from mRNA sequence decoding, is regulated by variable features of the translation machinery. Notably, ribosomes, the functional units of protein synthesis, display variations in their composition, depending on the developmental stage, cell type or physiopathological context, thus providing a new level of actionable regulation of gene expression. Yet, a comprehensive map of the heterogeneity of ribosome composition in ribosomal proteins (RPs) in different organs and tissues is not available. In this work, we explored tissue-specific ribosome heterogeneity using mass spectrometry-based quantitative proteomic characterization of ribosomal fractions purified from 14 adult mouse organs and tissues. We performed crossed clustering and statistical analyses of RP composition to highlight stable, variable and tissue-specific RPs across organs and tissues. Focusing on specific RPs, we validated their relative abundance with a targeted proteomic approach, which gave further insight into the tissue-specific ribosome RP signature. Finally, we investigated the origin of RP variations in ribosome fraction of the different tissues, by comparing RP relative abundances in our proteomic dataset and in three independent transcriptomic datasets. Interestingly, we found that, in some tissues, the RP abundance in purified ribosomes does not always correlate with the corresponding RP transcript level, arguing for a translational regulation of RP expression, and/or a regulated incorporation of RPs into ribosomes. Altogether, our data support the notion of a tissue-specific RP signature of ribosomes, which opens avenues to study how specific ribosomal composition provides an additional level of regulation to control gene expression in different tissues and organs. http://dlvr.it/T3D4yj
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mrsforgettablee · 6 months
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So, my perceptions have shifted. When I got into medschool, I envisioned being a surgeon. Now, having lived a bit more of medicine, I realize I was too quick to judge internal medicine.
Recently I have absolutely fallen in love with university. I feel that I finally got to the point in my life that 18 year old me dreamed off: studying real medicine, the physiopathology of it, the symptons, conducts. And I realized how majestic the investigational work is, how you glue physical exam, patient history and the science together so you can improve someone's life, perhaps even save it.
I have not gotten to surgery rotations yet, but moving forward, internal medicine is definitely something that I can say surprised me.
I also finished cardiology for this semester, and I have never worked or studied so much and so hard in my life for the sake of knowledge, and felt - tired, yes - happy during every second of it. Internal medicine could provide me the opportunity of being a cardiologist, perhaps even interventional cardiology (dream big or go home), and my heart (no pun intended) has an extrasystole every time I think of that. Who knows?
Overall, my priority changed. It is medicine now. I've been clearing out spaces in my life so I can fit in more study time. It's gone from being a athlete-student who exercised because they felt so lost and disoriented to being born and bred student-athlete who will do anything to be the best doctor they can be.
That extends to social life, in the beginning, I wanted to live all the typical early 20s experiences of having a lot of lovers, drinking, partying, having tons of friends. And I tried, maybe even got that a little, only to realize that the reason I didn't do it in high school was because I hated it! I much prefer to stick to my space, have my self care, organize my house and life and do my assignments promptly.
And then, of course, there is the fact that literally everyone I had in my life turned out to be a disappointment. This was a whole ordeal where I lost my friends one by one, and it left me feeling very hurt.
This is the last time I'll talk about this, because from now on it doesn't matter anymore, I am tired of living these experiences.
2024 will be a year of hard work. A year of self-isolation and personal and physical growth. This is sowing season.
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heardatmedschool · 5 months
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A quick guide on what different titles mean in my posts
(Since education AND healthcare systems vary around the world).
Medical Student (4.5-5 years)
You can get into medical school straight out of high school. College degrees do exist, but they are not the norm, not for medicine, and not for any career, tbh.
You fist 2-3 years are mostly theory. Calculus, chemistry, biology, anatomy, histology, embriology, physiology, pathology, physiopathology, microbiology, pharmacology…. That period end with semiology, and you get a Bachelor’s Degree in Medical Science.
Then, for the next 2 years, you have your clinicals, in which you spend half of the day in the hospital, with patients, and half the day in class, but definitely more focused on patient care and management.
Med student in clinicals = baby of the team (most of the time).
When you finish, you get your Academic Degree, Licenciate in Medicine.
Medical Intern (1.5-2 years)
No longer a student, you are now in your professional practice. Although you are technically still in med school in your university, you can say goodbye to classes, since you’re now a worker.
Probably bottom of the food chain, and probably does all the paperwork that nobody wants to do, but it’s a period where you gain a lot of independence and knowledge through work.
When you finish, you get your Professional Title, Médico Cirujano, but also need to pass a national test (EUNACOM) in order to be able to work.
Once you are a Doctor, you can work with that, or you can specialize.
Resident Doctor
A doctor, who is both working and studying towards a specialty.
Staff
Doctor who is on charge of a team. Tends to be an specialist.
Other titles that may cause confusion:
CNA: I use CNA to refer to TENS (Técnico de Enfermería de Nivel Superior). Technical degree (2.5 years). Takes care of patient’s basic needs, vital signs, may administer non-prescription medications.
Scrub tech: An specialized TENS. Takes care of the surgical instrumental and the sterile field in the OR.
Other TENS specializations: (that aren’t shared with other workers) Ambulance paramedic, anesthesia tech, trauma tech (takes care of plasters).
Medical Technologist: University degree (5Y). In charge of handling the machines and advanced technology equipment. They have 5 sub-specialties: ENT, ophthalmology, morphophysiopathology, blood bank and radiology.
Kinesiologist: University degree (5Y). They encapsulate both Physical Therapy and Respiratory Therapy.
Midwife: University Degree (5Y). Kind of like L&D nurses. Also in charge of reproductive health (i.e inserts IUDs, tests for STIs). Can assist births without a doctor if uncomplicated.
Other professionals that may not need further explanation:
Nurse.
Nutritionist.
Speech therapy.
Occupational therapy.
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insanejazmin · 7 months
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I swear what physiopathology is my favorite subject
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instantebookmart · 9 months
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Nursing Care and ECMO by Chirine Mossadegh, ISBN-13: 978-3319201009 [PDF eBook eTextbook] Publisher: ‎ Springer; 1st ed. 2017 edition (March 27, 2017) Language: ‎ English 133 pages ISBN-10: ‎ 331920100X ISBN-13: ‎ 978-3319201009 This book explores the unique aspects involved in the management of ECMO patients such as physiopathology and indications, setting up the device, monitoring ECMO and the patient, troubleshooting, ethical aspects and rehabilitation. For the past eight years, management of acute heart failure and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) patients has been improved by the development of short-term assistance devices, with ECMO as a first line treatment. This highly informative book provides essential insights for ICU nurses at ECMO centers around the world, who face the substantial challenges involved in the management of ECMO patients. Above all, it meets their training needs with regard to bedside monitoring for these patients, which has become a major issue. The editors and most of the contributors serve at La Pitié-Salpétrière ICU, France, which, in terms of the number of admissions and major publications produced, is one of the world’s leading authorities on ECMO. Chirine Mossadegh has been a registered nurse for the past ten years in the ICU at La Pitié-Salpetrière Hospital in Paris, France. She has been a member of the organizing committee of the annual international congress for the French ICU society from 2010 to 2014. She is the nurse’s program coordinator for the International Congress on ECMO and short term circulatory/respiratory support taking place every June in Paris for the past 5 years. She’s also teaching about nursing care and ECMO for the French university diploma on ECMO since its creation in 2012 and for the la Pitié Hospital International diploma in ECMO and short term respiratory/circulatory support since its creation in 2014. Prof. Alain Combes is currently Professor of Critical Care Medicine at, Hôpital Pitié-Salpétrière, Université de Paris 6 since 2007.His interest research are: Care of patients with severe/refractory cardiac and/or respiratory failure, Paris ECMO center- VA ECMO, LVADs, heart transplantation for end-stage cardiac failure- VV ECMO, ECCO2R for severe respiratory failure Primary investigator of 3 multicenter international randomized trial:- EOLIA, to test the impact of early ECMO treatment in severe ARDS- HEROICS, to test high volume hemofiltration in patients with complicated heart surgery- SUPERNOVA, ECCO2R for moderate to severe ARDS He is a regular reviewer for the following journals : – American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Circulation, JACC, Lancet respiratory, Critical Care Medicine, Chest, Cochrane library, Intensive Care Medicine, BMJ, Heart, Critical Care, Journal of Critical Care, Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy, La Presse Médicale. He has drafted 108 peer-reviewed articles. What makes us different? • Instant Download • Always Competitive Pricing • 100% Privacy • FREE Sample Available • 24-7 LIVE Customer Support
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royalebook · 11 months
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Nursing Care and ECMO by Chirine Mossadegh, ISBN-13: 978-3319201009 [PDF eBook eTextbook] Publisher: ‎ Springer; 1st ed. 2017 edition (March 27, 2017) Language: ‎ English 133 pages ISBN-10: ‎ 331920100X ISBN-13: ‎ 978-3319201009 This book explores the unique aspects involved in the management of ECMO patients such as physiopathology and indications, setting up the device, monitoring ECMO and the patient, troubleshooting, ethical aspects and rehabilitation. For the past eight years, management of acute heart failure and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) patients has been improved by the development of short-term assistance devices, with ECMO as a first line treatment. This highly informative book provides essential insights for ICU nurses at ECMO centers around the world, who face the substantial challenges involved in the management of ECMO patients. Above all, it meets their training needs with regard to bedside monitoring for these patients, which has become a major issue. The editors and most of the contributors serve at La Pitié-Salpétrière ICU, France, which, in terms of the number of admissions and major publications produced, is one of the world’s leading authorities on ECMO. Chirine Mossadegh has been a registered nurse for the past ten years in the ICU at La Pitié-Salpetrière Hospital in Paris, France. She has been a member of the organizing committee of the annual international congress for the French ICU society from 2010 to 2014. She is the nurse’s program coordinator for the International Congress on ECMO and short term circulatory/respiratory support taking place every June in Paris for the past 5 years. She’s also teaching about nursing care and ECMO for the French university diploma on ECMO since its creation in 2012 and for the la Pitié Hospital International diploma in ECMO and short term respiratory/circulatory support since its creation in 2014. Prof. Alain Combes is currently Professor of Critical Care Medicine at, Hôpital Pitié-Salpétrière, Université de Paris 6 since 2007.His interest research are: Care of patients with severe/refractory cardiac and/or respiratory failure, Paris ECMO center- VA ECMO, LVADs, heart transplantation for end-stage cardiac failure- VV ECMO, ECCO2R for severe respiratory failure Primary investigator of 3 multicenter international randomized trial:- EOLIA, to test the impact of early ECMO treatment in severe ARDS- HEROICS, to test high volume hemofiltration in patients with complicated heart surgery- SUPERNOVA, ECCO2R for moderate to severe ARDS He is a regular reviewer for the following journals : – American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Circulation, JACC, Lancet respiratory, Critical Care Medicine, Chest, Cochrane library, Intensive Care Medicine, BMJ, Heart, Critical Care, Journal of Critical Care, Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy, La Presse Médicale. He has drafted 108 peer-reviewed articles. What makes us different? • Instant Download • Always Competitive Pricing • 100% Privacy • FREE Sample Available • 24-7 LIVE Customer Support
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kamyru · 1 year
Text
Voltage Inc characters as strange things me and my friends have ever said. Part 1
Part 2
Her Love in the Force version
Oops! I Said Yes?! version
Romance MD: Always on Call version
Irresistible Mistakes version
Games: Her Love in the Force, Irresistible Mistakes, Oops! I Said Yes?!, Romance MD: Always on Call, Tokyo Love Hustle
Hosho: I can see how you and Kasumi stare at each other during his classes. Ekuni: The first to blink has to buy a Littman stethoscope for the other one.
Kasumi: No one gets my jokes. Takado: Have you ever thought that you are the problem? Kasumi: Never.
MC in Ayumu's route: I can't see peaches anymore. I see pain.
MC: I can write books about you. Taro: Physiopathology books?
Kuranosuke: I am not sure if I love you 100% of the time or just 99%. MC: I think it's 20%.
MC: Shun is coming. Natsume: You call him Shun? Yuiko: No, we call him "Daddy".
MC: I can't think while I'm working.
MC, while cooking with Taro: How is it called the thing out of which the dough is made? Taro: Dough.
MC: Can you imagine how cute it is that Kasumi's nickname is Toshi? Sen: I don't usually think about this while watching NinjaNerd.
MC in Ayumu's route: The sex process in loading 99%. What if he says: "I don't actually like sex"?
Hosho: Tell me what disease you have, and I'll tell you how much paracetamol to take.
Shu: In a world full of Narutos and Sasukes, I'm not even Tobi. I'm Kisame because I'm a freak show.
MC: Would you love me more if I were a cat? Kuranosuke: You would love me less.
MC: Do you want to watch plumber porn? Shu: Plumber hentai.
Kaga's sister: This is a gift for you. MC: But you gave us some cake and sake earlier. Kaga's sister: It wasn't for you. It was for the entire family. MC: Entire family? But Kaga had both of them.
Suzumu: I would have bought a lollipop in the form of a boob if it were bigger. MC: How big do you want it to be, insatiable?
Toshiaki's brother: Toshiaki looks like he's ready to tell you about the best loan offer.
*Togo is transferred abroad* Kunihiro, aware of his crush on MC: There's "Spider-Man, no way home", and here's "Daimon Togo, no way she'll wait for you".
MC, after being scolded by Jun, Kuranosuke, Kaga, Ishigami, Ayumu, Takado, or Togo: I knew I was dumb, but thought it wasn't so obvious.
Eiji, after he let the twins paint his nails: I look like a monster. I have never in my life loved myself as much as do right now. This is the hottest I have ever been.
MC: I don't think someone has seen me talking with Tsugaru. Momose: It will come as a surprise for you, but Tsugaru did.
MC: I actually would like someone to tell me: "show me your little donut".
The self-conscious MC, in every single route: Your ding ding dong is out of my tummy tummy league.
Kurasosuke & Jun: What's with this vomit of a project?
Kaga: The only thing you're good at is reeking because it doesn't need your active implication.
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greatebookstoreblog · 11 months
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Nursing Care and ECMO by Chirine Mossadegh, ISBN-13: 978-3319201009 [PDF eBook eTextbook] Publisher: ‎ Springer; 1st ed. 2017 edition (March 27, 2017) Language: ‎ English 133 pages ISBN-10: ‎ 331920100X ISBN-13: ‎ 978-3319201009 This book explores the unique aspects involved in the management of ECMO patients such as physiopathology and indications, setting up the device, monitoring ECMO and the patient, troubleshooting, ethical aspects and rehabilitation. For the past eight years, management of acute heart failure and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) patients has been improved by the development of short-term assistance devices, with ECMO as a first line treatment. This highly informative book provides essential insights for ICU nurses at ECMO centers around the world, who face the substantial challenges involved in the management of ECMO patients. Above all, it meets their training needs with regard to bedside monitoring for these patients, which has become a major issue. The editors and most of the contributors serve at La Pitié-Salpétrière ICU, France, which, in terms of the number of admissions and major publications produced, is one of the world’s leading authorities on ECMO. Chirine Mossadegh has been a registered nurse for the past ten years in the ICU at La Pitié-Salpetrière Hospital in Paris, France. She has been a member of the organizing committee of the annual international congress for the French ICU society from 2010 to 2014. She is the nurse’s program coordinator for the International Congress on ECMO and short term circulatory/respiratory support taking place every June in Paris for the past 5 years. She’s also teaching about nursing care and ECMO for the French university diploma on ECMO since its creation in 2012 and for the la Pitié Hospital International diploma in ECMO and short term respiratory/circulatory support since its creation in 2014. Prof. Alain Combes is currently Professor of Critical Care Medicine at, Hôpital Pitié-Salpétrière, Université de Paris 6 since 2007.His interest research are: Care of patients with severe/refractory cardiac and/or respiratory failure, Paris ECMO center- VA ECMO, LVADs, heart transplantation for end-stage cardiac failure- VV ECMO, ECCO2R for severe respiratory failure Primary investigator of 3 multicenter international randomized trial:- EOLIA, to test the impact of early ECMO treatment in severe ARDS- HEROICS, to test high volume hemofiltration in patients with complicated heart surgery- SUPERNOVA, ECCO2R for moderate to severe ARDS He is a regular reviewer for the following journals : – American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Circulation, JACC, Lancet respiratory, Critical Care Medicine, Chest, Cochrane library, Intensive Care Medicine, BMJ, Heart, Critical Care, Journal of Critical Care, Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy, La Presse Médicale. He has published 108 peer-reviewed articles. What makes us different? • Instant Download • Always Competitive Pricing • 100% Privacy • FREE Sample Available • 24-7 LIVE Customer Support
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deinheilpraktiker · 1 year
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Studie zeigt die schützende Wirkung von Polyphenolen auf die kardiovaskuläre Gesundheit von Jugendlichen Der Verzehr von Polyphenolen bei Jugendlichen ist laut einer Verbundforschungsstudie, an der die Universität Barcelona, ​​das Hospital Clínic-IDIBAPS, das Physiopathology of Obesity and Nutrition Networking Biomedical Research Center (CIBEROBN) beteiligt sind, mit einer besseren kardiovaskulären Gesundheit verbunden. das spanische Netzwerk für kardiovaskuläre Forschung (CIBERCV) und die SHE-Stiftung. Die Studie, die mit Mitteln der La Caixa Foundation und La Marató de... #Antioxidans #Antiphlogistikum #Apotheke #Ausbildung #BLUT #Blutdruck #Body_Mass_Index #Cholesterin #Diät #Ernährung #essen #Fettleibigkeit #Forschung #Frucht #Gemüse #Glucose #Herz #Jugendliche #Kinder #Krankenhaus #Lebensmittelsicherheit #Medizin #Olivenöl #Physische_Aktivität #Polyphenol #Rauchen
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