CHF: Pathophysiology explains what goes wrong with the heart muscle, and how the kidneys and cardiovascular system attempt to compensate for the failing heart. www.sciencewithsusanna.com has diagrams, notes, and practice questions.
Amazing how I can pay a ton of money for my classes, yet I alwasy revert to RU-vid as my instructor. I learned more in this video than I have thus far in my class. Thanks for the great lesson! Needed it…
Thank you. 5 year medic here and I continue to get too comfortable and forget how to accurately describe disease process to Patients. thank you for the simplify this.
Thank you so much for making videos like these. You don't know how much it has helped me by feeling more confident about my knowledge in nursing school. Thank you so much!
I was really struggling to understand pathophysiology of HF before watching it.. YOu made it so much clear than my lecturer Thank YOU SOOOOOOOMUCH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I would like to express my admiration to the neatness of your work in making this subject very easy to understand . Keep up the good work and wish you all the best .
thank you so much for explaining this. I've been trying to understand this topic in google webs but thanks to u, I can understand this easily. Thank you so much
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right side failure is the backpressure into the venous system causing hepatosplenomegaly, ascites and oedema. Left side failure is the backpressure into the pulmonary venous system causing pulmonary oedema and reduced cardiac output.
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So does tht mean when someone experiences cardiac failure, he will experience ventricular dilation as well as oedema or dyspnea?? I mean how to know the structural changes made by the heart either dilate or hypertrophic?
So then does congestive heart failure lead to respiratory Acidosis due to lungs filling with excess fluids or Metabolic Acidosis due to renal failure? If anyone has a site to refer please let me know.
Jen Greathouse ummm that's a good question. I don't think it will be very severe because when you have APO you still breath in. but yes, I would say so. lets wait what susanneheize will say about that
sympathetic activation causing vasoconstriction which will help increasing cardiac output as compensatory mechanism. that's what I thought. wont vasodilation cause a drop in cardiac output and then reduce preload?? get back to me soon susannaheinze
So why is the human body so good at recognizing/compensating for it's short comings but incapable of initiating a repair/restoration process to FIX THE PROBLEM.