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Washington University in St. Louis Nephrology Web Series
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Welcome to our first public web episode for distributing high quality nephrology education via RU-vid! Please subscribe to our channel to be notified when we upload a new video!
Today, Dr. Joseph Gaut, the section of head of nephropathology at Washington University in St. Louis guides Dr. Rajan, one of our renal fellows, and shows him what it takes to be a nephropathologist!

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9 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 42   
@KyrieW
@KyrieW 6 лет назад
I'm also an anatomical pathology resident. These videos are like attending rounds without leaving my home. Really appreciate them!!
@muhammedhadedy4570
@muhammedhadedy4570 7 лет назад
My name is Muhammed Elhadedy. I'm a nephrology specialist at the urology and nephrology center, Egypt. These series are the best series I've ever watched illustrating renal histopatholgy. Since i'm interested in kidney transplantation, i would like to ask you for series illustrating kidney graft pathologies such as graft rejections. Keep going guys, you are the best.
@thabisomasekophiri
@thabisomasekophiri 7 месяцев назад
I was looking for great step by step renal pathology tutorials. This is excellent! Thanks for taking the time to make these.
@Nanomachines5on
@Nanomachines5on 8 лет назад
Great video! I really enjoy this style of learning. It helps a lot to walk through cases with physicians.
@WashingtonUniversityinStLouisN
+Avinavi Thanks for the comment, I'm glad you found the format helpful!
@GeorgeN512
@GeorgeN512 7 лет назад
I've been a Nephrologist in practice over 23 years. Both the quality and style of the video are superb. I enjoyed watching and look forward to future topics. Well done!!
@Nadiadepeiza1
@Nadiadepeiza1 7 лет назад
I'm an Anatomical Pathology resident and this is great. Please keep up the good work. This was very helpful 🙂
@WashingtonUniversityinStLouisN
Thanks, glad you are enjoying them!
@adelel-hennawy769
@adelel-hennawy769 4 года назад
Now every day I watch this great educational tool for hours - I want to finish it all - it is excellent teaching tools - I was my weakest point and now I enjoy reading the renal pathology - it is unbelievable that something annoyed me for years be resolved effectively and nicely like that - Thanks a lot -
@ShimmyMD
@ShimmyMD 5 лет назад
As a renal fellow, this is a great tool to learn renal histopath, which is a daunting that you all make easier to understand. Thank you.
@kellycosta229
@kellycosta229 Год назад
Perfect explanation! Thank you from Brazil!
@markmassoud4624
@markmassoud4624 2 года назад
I can’t thank you enough. You helped me a lot. God bless
@zeinabvosough1791
@zeinabvosough1791 4 года назад
This video opens a new window for me in understanding nephropathology. Thanks
@ghanih
@ghanih 5 лет назад
This lecture is fantastic. I'm a PGY4 in Pathology, currently studying for Boards, and my institution outsources all of its medical renal, so we receive zero training in it. Again, love the lecture.
@1992deval
@1992deval 4 года назад
Wonderful simply wonderful video!! Keep up the good work!!
@WashingtonUniversityinStLouisN
Alexander, it depends on the # of glomeruli in the sample. If you have an inadequate biopsy, then the likelihood of missing an unsampled FSGS is higher. We will address this when we present an FSGS case.
@Pali1403
@Pali1403 8 лет назад
+Washington University in St. Louis Nephrology Web Series Ok thank you very much.
@Hello-mu6nq
@Hello-mu6nq 3 года назад
Really nice session! Enjoyed every bit of it.
@deepakk7067
@deepakk7067 8 лет назад
Thank you for sharing.
@yautt
@yautt 8 лет назад
+Deepak K Thanks for watching!
@adelel-hennawy769
@adelel-hennawy769 3 года назад
why did you stop the excellent series of kidney pathology ? I enjoyed and learned so much
@goplagadikota7865
@goplagadikota7865 2 года назад
Wish there is a session to learn differentiate stains . And special stains for special circumstances
@hammammahmoud2396
@hammammahmoud2396 3 года назад
Great job.. alot of nice info to learn
@dr.ayushiagarwal219
@dr.ayushiagarwal219 6 лет назад
Hi, i am anatomical pathologist with keen interest in renal pathology. Congratulations and thank you for interesting case discussions, also i would like to drop a suggestion if all the IF pictures can be shown in the cases as IF based subjectivity sometimes is difficult to resolve.
@umarnazar
@umarnazar 7 лет назад
Really really good teaching, hello from a trainee in histopathology from Manchester, UK
@WashingtonUniversityinStLouisN
Glad you enjoy them, so pleased we are reaching non-nephrologists as well. Best of luck in your path training!
@cristiveo1986
@cristiveo1986 6 лет назад
Thanks so much for doing this!!
@michaelperez4497
@michaelperez4497 7 лет назад
very useful and educational video. thank you
@oulfa8792
@oulfa8792 4 года назад
Very helpful!
@bharathijayanthi2759
@bharathijayanthi2759 4 года назад
very practical excellent
@FitsumTilahun
@FitsumTilahun 5 лет назад
love it!
@sujathabalija2254
@sujathabalija2254 4 года назад
Good cases thank you
@praveenmd6755
@praveenmd6755 7 лет назад
thanq sir, it's really helpful
@sofianebenchernine5644
@sofianebenchernine5644 8 месяцев назад
Hello, First case : at the end you have mentioned lupus , basis on the IF ( negative) , can we exclude lupus ?
@alvinkhangembam
@alvinkhangembam 4 года назад
💯💯💯
@Pali1403
@Pali1403 8 лет назад
Hello, i was wondering, the case is an adult with abrupt onset nephrotic syndrome (NS) with impaired renal function. The conclusion was MCD which is clear. But since the patient is an adult one and MCD in adults accounts for 10-15% of nephrotic syndrome, and "maybe" MCD is a spectrum of FSGS, and FSGS is at least 35% of NS in adults...should we be concern about the presence of undiagnosed FSGS in the patient, considering mainly prognosis? If so a biopsy should be perform again?
@Linkswhite
@Linkswhite 6 лет назад
Isn't there a fusion of foot processes in both Minimal change and FSGS, so how can that be what made you conclude with MC?
@WashingtonUniversityinStLouisN
No segmental scars were seen on light microscopy. Although this may represent a sampling error, with sufficient glomeruli, we can say with 90+% certainty that we didn't miss a focal segmental lesion.
@sheenasantos-alipio8267
@sheenasantos-alipio8267 6 лет назад
hi great videos! what references for review would you recommend for the nephrology fellowship exams?
@Anonymous-ij4id
@Anonymous-ij4id 6 лет назад
How van you tell this is PAS instead of HandE?
@ShimmyMD
@ShimmyMD 5 лет назад
I like to look at outline of Bownman's capsule. PAS stain outlines the BC well. There's also a nice webinar that Tim put together about this topic.
@CarlosGomz70
@CarlosGomz70 5 лет назад
I made the same question, perhaps It could be for many reason, Maybe he is not an anatomopathology resident (nephrology resident?) and of course he is not in familiarity with histological stains or maybe it was just his nerves. We do some stranger things when we have a camera in front of us. Nevertheless I think the resident did very well. Congratulations.
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