Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) - Medical-Surgical - Renal System |
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- čas přidán 7. 08. 2024
- Underlying causes of AKI, including: prerenal AKI, intrarenal AKI, and postrenal AKI. The 4 phases of Acute Kidney Injury and the signs/symptoms associated with this disorder. The abnormal lab values that will be present with AKI, along with treatment and nursing care of patients with AKI.
Cathy Parkes BSN, RN, CWCN, PHN covers acute Kidney Injury (AKI). The Medical-Surgical (Med-Surg) - Renal System video tutorial series is intended to help RN and PN nursing students study for your nursing school exams, including the ATI, HESI and NCLEX.
#NCLEX #HESI #Kaplan #ATI #NursingSchool #NursingStudent #Nurse #RN #PN #Education #LVN #LPN #Renal #aki
0:00 What to Expect with acute Kidney Injury
0:29 Acute Kidney Injury
0:47 Causes of acute Kidney Injury
1:56 Phases of acute Kidney Injury
3:37 Lab Abnormalities
4:24 Treatments for acute Kidney Injury
4:59 Nursing Care
5:28 Quiz Time!
6:32 What’s Next?
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All of the nurses at Level Up RN are here to help! Cathy Parkes started helping her fellow classmates back when she was in nursing school, tutoring so they could pass their exams and graduate. After she got her BSN and started working as an RN at Scripps Encinitas Hospital, she started this CZcams channel to help nursing students around the world. Since then she has built a team of top-notch dedicated nurses and nurse educators who are focused on improving nursing education and supporting career advancement for nurses everywhere. With flashcards, videos, courses, organizational tools and more, we are singularly focused on helping students and nurses Level Up on their exams and nursing careers.
Thank you!!
Very welcome!
Seizure precautions due to hyponatremia make perfect sense, wouldn't have made the connection without your video. Thanks Level Up RN.
Thank you so much for watching! 😊
Thank you, Dr. Cathy.
thank you so much your videos have saved me so many times!
3:51's subtitle. It is hypocalcemia, not hypercalcemia. Thank you
Thank you! I've submitted a request to have that caption changed! --Meris for Level Up RN
you are preparing me for my presentation tomorrow, thank you!
You are so welcome! Best of luck
Thank you
Thank you!
You bet!
Thanks ❤
Thanks for watching! Please feel free to share a link to our channel with your classmates and friends in nursing school. ❤️
Thank you💜
You are so welcome!
Why decrease sodium when they’re deficient in sodium? Thanks for all your videos!
Edit- wait, maybe restrict sodium because sodium makes you retain fluid???
I think that’s exactly why. I was wondering why there would be hyponatremia if we’re not peeing. Wouldn’t it be hypernatremia and excess water? But then again potassium shares an inverse relationship with sodium
Can you do a video on CAD please?
Thank you for the useful video, I also have some kidney disease
So glad it was helpful!
It's helpful
Happy to hear!
I had an ETV brain surgery and ended up with Cerebral salt eating syndrome and AKI stage 2.
I have damage to kidneys from cyanide.
Help
Mem pkd cure till when is possible what reasearch is telling 🤔
I need some clarification. In abnormal labs you mentioned hypercalcemia. In nursing care you mention low calcium.
She said hypocalcemia in abnormal labs, but the subtitles picked up the wrong word. I had to replay that too.
There is a new clinical trial for AKI
AKI labs hyperkalemia, hyponatremia why nursing care should decrease sodium, phosphate, magnesium?
If the patient has hyponatremia why would we decrease there intake of sodium ?
That’s what I would like to know as well…..
Wait, I was just thinking about it and sodium makes you retain fluid and they have issues with fluid because kidneys aren’t excreting a lot of fluid so maybe that’s why? I’m watching her chronic kidney disease video now and she’s also saying to restrict sodium so I’m guessing it’s not an error when she says to do that.
And now I actually googled it and it said it can cause HTN (forgot about that one) and they can have HTN with acute and chronic kidney disease. But I guess now I’m confused how we increase the sodium levels since they’re at risk for seizures and confusion and stuff with low sodium…?
because sodium makes you retain fluid, therefore it must be restricted or moderated
You can correct the sodium level and then maintain it by restricting sodium in the diet. Most foods nowadays are LOADED with additional sodium that we don’t need and it will add to their problems
Hii
Correction, low calcium was mentioned in the quiz.
Sodium is increased not decreased. The body is retaining more fluid and more electrolytes, including sodium
it decreases. sodium is being diluted due to excessive fluid retention
Thank you!
Welcome!