Whole chapter of AKI is explained in a video instead of a 10-hour lecture where the professors simply read from the slides. You are the best teacher ever. Thank you for your professionalism and enthusiasm !
Our college tuition should be going to these amazing people. I learn more from them than I'll ever do from all my college professors. He explains all of these concepts so well, making it SO easy for us to understand. Big thanks to you Mr. Ninja Nerd!
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are frequently associated with AIN. I took care of a teenage girl in the ER who took ibuprofen for migraine daily for 3 weeks. After H&P and labs, I diagnosed her clinically with AIN and she was admitted to peds. Later that week, a renal biopsy was performed and confirmed AIN. So, be careful with ibuprofen!
I had my neurology exam today and your words were literally echoing in my mind like the components of limbic system and various nuclei of hypothalamus and their functions... you person are the saviour of my grades. May God bless you. Lots of love from Pakistan!!!!
Ok, Mr. Nerd Ninja I would like to say thanks. I am an IMG working as a PA in a hospital with many interns and this concept and approach to the kidney is by far the best in the game. I will be sending this to everyone I know and modifying my Step study to include your lectures in the subject that I am weak in. It is one thing to understand it in paper but your detailed info make these concept that look hard to manage easy to understand. It is safe to say that you have gone above and beyond with this AKI lecture.
Seeing such a hardworking person & the happiness you deliver in every course you share is priceless God bless you ; keep it up bro❤️ May Allah show you the right path..Ameen✨️❤️❤️
Excellent. Thank you so much. My sister just died September 12 2022 from ATN-AKI confirmed on biopsy. Was in metabolic acidosis never showed signs of volume overload instead was dehydrated 2 days after discharge from hospital. Labs and BP were improving prior to discharge so I was told they didn't feel the need for dialysis. I still think a temporary course of dialysis may have saved her life. She had a Hgb of 8 at discharge, creatinine and BUN were only slightly elevated and K+ was 5.2. She had labs drawn the morning b4 she died and was not notified of any abn, but at the time of blood drawn was told she was dehydrated bc they had a hard time getting blood. I noticed watery loose stools in her toilet the night she died. She'd had a short run of V'tach in the hospital and chronic A-fib x 2 years. She called 911 c/o SOB and they found her face down in her apt and unresponsive. This video helped me a lot. I still believe dialysis should have been tried.
I just wanna say thankyou for always explaining the basics and then covering the concept. Your channel is truly a gift to the medical community. You describe everything related to the topic, never leave even the smallest things.. that's what i love about you. Much love, keep up the good work. May your channel grow more and more.
I’m a 48 year old man just diagnosed with renal kidney failure and am deep diving in to my own journey through you! Thank you for providing intelligence and masterful communication! I am understanding what my doctors are attempting to communicate. Thank you, Anthony
omgosh im so stoked on these videos. You are truly a gifted teacher. I work at University and this blows other classes out of the water, even using the phrase "peeing outta your butt"....
I’m a nursing student who loves all of your content. I am someone who needs to know how things are connected, and you do a great job of providing clear visuals and descriptions. I just finished your lecture in CKD. I knew I wanted to do AKI next, and there it was in my suggested videos. The only words I have for you: thank you!
You are an amazing teacher! Thank you for doing these videos! Can you please please do a video on fluids and electrolytes pathophysiology? 🙈Some ninja nerds will be so very grateful for it😃
content is awesome, just a little note, at around min. 7.46 when he describes nephrotic syndrome he is describing characteristics of nephritic syndrome (hematuria, hypertension and lipiduria)
GOAT, man such thorough detailed lessons. I never understood some complications or side effects, but the way you explain it I think I will not forget. Thank you very much to you and your team.
Thank u soo much sir, urr lectures r Allah's gift for me, my exams r coming ahead, nd im piled up with medicine, surgery, paeds gynae obs😑 and ur lectures specially this medicine series is really helping me out, keep the good work 😇
This is usually a topic that I despise studying because I struggle so much differentiating the casues of AKI, but I always come back to your videos. Thank you so much for your passion in explaining and making it easy for us to understand
I will now forever associate AKI not by the aetiology of the reduced eGFR - no, never again - but a by new criteria for a new age: whether tubular cells are all jacked up or not. We love you, Ninja Nerd Team. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts, may God bless you.
first off this guy is such an amazing teacher and has so much enthusiasm for what he does i love IT! truly has been a life saver through nursing school.. I gotta admit though I laughed out loud @10:46 when he so casually said "peeing out your butthole" LOL
I’ve watched almost all videos of ninja nerds but I can’t buy the subscription due to some financial issues….can someone share notes and illustrations with me…helping a doctor is saving lives of many people.thank you.
I am JUST now seeing this after I took my exam of off this subject 😭😭 I love how you explain the diseases. But thanks for this video! Will be helpful for my final ❤️
@@apostolismoschopoulos1876 knowledge is better then a piece of degree .yes I know the degree is also must be in your hand but if you haven't knowledge then fire this degree .
@@rameezsuleman8784 unfortunately I cannot relate to this argument. I have seen people with less knowledge get better position and social status just because of appearance. We are not directly rewarded by our knowledge but more like by the way we present that knowledge to others.
I am watching all these lectures like a TV series , kind of waiting when next video will be released , Hi Zack Could you please do more videos on psychology , Gyn and Obstetric please , Humble request 😻 more videos on Anatomy and physiology too thnks
I have CHF, and about everything your teaching... My liver and kidneys are fried too. Mam I'm to young to die. Bacteria in the blood and heart can't pump my blood. My whole body is messing up Edema, hair is all falling out.. I stay super thirsty all the time. sores in my mouth. depression is getting me down.. boils won't go after 4 rounds of antibiotics. Doc gave mew diabetics. Been coughing up blood. Burning down stairs. Bleeding skin, and the hair even falling out there too. Right side of my vageegee is baled. I have a growth on one kidney. Started having a strange cough. Sounds like a demon screaming, that's coming from deep in my lungs. So much serious stuff that I would be here all night to list it all. arteries are jacked up. Shrinking. This is a slow horrid way to go. IDK witch one will it be that gets the win. Where do I fight. My doctor scratches his head when he see' s me coming. My liver is shot. I need a TIPS procedure. Fatty liver on top of Hep C damage... Should I just let nature take me out? IDK what to do.
Ah how I found out I had goodpastures syndrome.. by the time I found out (which happened fast) I was already end stage and initialting plasmapheresis and dialysis 😬😭
Recently I was trying to work a idea that could it be possible blood coming in contact with oxygen collapses into a fluid? Outside the atmosphere of the bloodstream or its environment , same with other fluids. Looking at it in another way oxygen administered in low dose intramuscular or venous could cause minor damage in micrograms or there would be micrograms at the head of a nail or macro the regenerating and immune system deals with, so if a tiny bit of oxygen intramuscular whatever it comes in contact with it causes it to collapse into water not effected by gravity of a different environment dealt with by the GITract
Thank you for making this video. As an ER Nurse we see, we treat, we either d/c or admit. We leave it up the NP,PA,MD to figure out what's going on with the patient. After a while you start to ask deeper questions as to why this was ordered and why that was ordered. Thanks for explaining AKI. Now I know why the U/S are ordered after the chemistry and u/a comes back. Now everything is CT scans but I always wondered why the U/S order but was too busy to ask.
Zach sir I'd just like to request that it would be cooler if you could divide one huge video into two or three parts, like your previous older content, so that it becomes easier for us. Otherwise, i just love you and ninjanerd!!
I like it when u say "I don't want u guys to spend too much time thinking about it" , until I hv a patient with the same condition or i get asked about it during ward rounds 😭😭... Otherwise, you're @ explaining clearly. Thank you!
Man!!!!!!!....... you and a man from india named ranveer allahbadia look the same.... He is an youtuber you can search beerbiceps or ranveer allahbadia....damn Man u both look like twins
You're videos are amazing!! thank you for doing this. I'm a registered vet tech and am brushing up on everything and you're videos are so informative and easy to follow!
Great lecture thanks. I'm confused on one point. Can anyone help?... For inter renal AKI it says reduced urine but then says high H2O, Urea and Na in urine. Isn't that increased urination?
I might be wrong but I think that the reduced urine output is the overall consequence as it progressively worsens since they stage it based on urine output. So those values probably refer to what it is initially since this is an acute injury plus by stage 3 they'll be pretty much anuric and if you have no urine you can't measure what's in it.
I don't get one thing, in the intrarenal AKI pathophysiology, if there's a decreased GFR, doesn't that mean more Na will be in the blood, why would it be excreted out?
Thank you so much...nursing student here, I wish professors could break it down like you do but unfortunately that's not the case, thank god for you! 🙏