-
What is Kidney Failure?
What is Kidney Failure and how and when does it occur? What are the signs and symptoms of kidney failure? What and how does dialysis occurs? Measure the signs of kidney failure by watching this animated explanation.
Support us and Sponsor us to Make Medical Education available to Every Human Being:
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Kidney Failure
Kidney failure happens when one or both kidney stops functioning normally. This could be due...
published: 18 Feb 2021
-
Chronic kidney disease - causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, pathology
What is chronic kidney disease (CKD)? Chronic kidney disease is described as any loss of kidney functioning that develops beyond a 3 month period. Find our full video library only on Osmosis: http://osms.it/more.
Join millions of current and future clinicians who learn by Osmosis, along with hundreds of universities around the world who partner with Osmosis from Elseiver to make medical and health education more engaging and efficient. We have unparalleled tools and materials to prepare you for success in school, on your board exams, and as a future clinician. Sign up for a free trial at http://osms.it/more. If you're interested in exploring an institutional partnership, visit osmosis.org/educators to request a personalized demo.
Follow us on social:
Facebook: http://osms.it/facebook
Tw...
published: 14 Jan 2019
-
Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease Patients: Who should/shouldn't & importance of protein
Episode 195:Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease Patients: Who should/shouldn't & importance of protein. Renal Dietitian Jen Hernandez discusses the Low Protein diet for kidney patients with a focus on who should follow the low protein diet and who shouldn't, as well as why a low protein diet is so important when it comes to CKD. Renal dietitian Jen Hernandez of Plant-Powered Kidneys makes learning about the important role of nutrition easy to understand.
⭐ Learn more at renal dietitian Jen Hernandez's "The Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease" blog https://www.plantpoweredkidneys.com/
Jen Hernandez's Mission 👉 To simplify the nutritional needs for individuals with kidney disease, and to decrease the prevalence of kidney disease by providing nutrition education including r...
published: 11 Jul 2021
-
Signs and Causes of Kidney Failure
Founded in 1950, our program was the first clinic in Boston devoted to the diagnosis and treatment of kidney disease and hypertension.
Learn more: https://bit.ly/2wvlMFy
published: 11 May 2018
-
Chronic Renal Failure (Kidney Disease) Nursing | End Stage Renal Disease Pathophysiology NCLEX
Chronic renal failure, also called chronic kidney disease, nursing NCLEX review lecture on the pathophysiology, symptoms, stages, and causes.
Chronic kidney disease is a significant decline in kidney function that happens over a long period of time that leads to the buildup of waste, water, and electrolyte imbalances in the body. CKD is irreversible.
There are various stages of chronic kidney disease and each stage is based on the patient's glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Stage 1 is kidney disease with normal renal function (GFR greater than 90 mL/min) and proteinuria for 3 months or more. Each stage progresses with a declining glomerular filtration rate until the GFR is 15 mL/min or less and this is known as end-stage renal disease, which is Stage 5.
In the severe stages of chronic...
published: 22 Jul 2017
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Stages of Kidney Disease
Kidney expert and nephrologist Danuta Trzebinska, MD, (http://health.ucsd.edu/nephrology) discusses how clinicians estimate kidney function and different stages of chronic kidney disease.
Learn more about kidney disease treatment at UC San Diego Health: http://health.ucsd.edu/nephrology.
Dr. Trzebinska - https://providers.ucsd.edu/details/12080/danuta-trzebinska-nephrology_kidney-la_jolla-san_diego
published: 01 Oct 2015
-
Living Well with Kidney Failure, Part 1: What is Kidney Failure?
Are you the 33%? https://www.MinuteForYourKidneys.org/?youtube
Donate to support our mission today: https://www.kidney.org/support?youtube
Subscribe to our YouTube channel: http://bit.ly/nkfyoutube
Learn about kidney health, kidney disease, and related conditions: https://www.kidney.org/atoz
About the National Kidney Foundation:
Fueled by passion and urgency, National Kidney Foundation is a lifeline for all people affected by kidney disease. As pioneers of scientific research and innovation, NKF focuses on the whole patient through the lens of kidney health. Relentless in our work, we enhance lives through action, education and accelerating change.
Follow NKF at:
https://www.instagram.com/nationalkidneyfoundation/
https://www.facebook.com/nationalkidneyfoundation/
https://twitte...
published: 27 Mar 2014
-
Chronic Kidney Disease, Animation
(USMLE topics) Pathology, causes, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of CKD.
Purchase a license to download a non-watermarked version of this video on AlilaMedicalMedia(dot)com
Check out our new Alila Academy - AlilaAcademy(dot)com - complete video courses with quizzes, PDFs, and downloadable images.
Voice by: Ashley Fleming
©Alila Medical Media. All rights reserved.
All images/videos by Alila Medical Media are for information purposes ONLY and are NOT intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
Chronic kidney disease, CKD, is a gradual loss of renal function, typically developing over the course of months or years. Many conditions, bot...
published: 03 Feb 2020
-
Intrarenal acute kidney injury (acute renal failure) - causes, symptoms & pathology
What is intrarenal acute kidney injury? Acute kidney injury (AKI) describes when the kidneys aren't functioning optimally, usually brought about within a few days. Find our full video library only on Osmosis: http://osms.it/more.
Join millions of current and future clinicians who learn by Osmosis, along with hundreds of universities around the world who partner with Osmosis from Elseiver to make medical and health education more engaging and efficient. We have unparalleled tools and materials to prepare you for success in school, on your board exams, and as a future clinician. Sign up for a free trial at http://osms.it/more. If you're interested in exploring an institutional partnership, visit osmosis.org/educators to request a personalized demo.
Follow us on social:
Facebook: http://os...
published: 19 Jul 2016
2:31
What is Kidney Failure?
What is Kidney Failure and how and when does it occur? What are the signs and symptoms of kidney failure? What and how does dialysis occurs? Measure the signs o...
What is Kidney Failure and how and when does it occur? What are the signs and symptoms of kidney failure? What and how does dialysis occurs? Measure the signs of kidney failure by watching this animated explanation.
Support us and Sponsor us to Make Medical Education available to Every Human Being:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTCEJCypL-cwp2EWlT5pmGg/join
One-time Contribution: https://fundrazr.com/FreeMededucation
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Follow us:
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Kidney Failure
Kidney failure happens when one or both kidney stops functioning normally. This could be due
to infection, shock or some accident. Wastes like urea, creatinine, uric acid and ammonium ions
remain in the blood system instead of being excreted. An accumulation of these substances is
toxic to the human system. If not treated in time, it could be fatal. The treatments available are
dialysis or a transplant.
Dialysis is also called haemodialysis or dialysis of the blood. It is a machine that eliminates
excess salts and nitrogenous wastes from blood by filteration. It does not absorb or secrete
anything. Transplantation is a major operation through which failed or dysfunctional kidney is
replaced with a healthy one.
During dialysis, the patient’s blood from the radial artery is passed into the machine and returned
to a vein in the same arm. The dialysis fluid is changed regularly to remove wastes and to
maintain a diffusion gradient between the patient’s blood and the dialysis fluid.
The dialysis machine contains the following parts; a steel tub with a filter filled with a warm
fluid set at 37 o C. As the dialysis fluid enters the blood stream directly, its temperature is
maintained at 37 o C in the tub, to suit the patient’s body temperature. The machine also has a
narrow tubular coil of cellophane with pores and a sterile dialysis fluid. The tubular coil of
cellophane is semi-permeable in nature, allows small molecules to pass through, prevents blood
cells and large proteins from leaving and provides large surface area for exchange of material.
The sterile dialysis fluid surrounds the cellophane tube and contains regulated amounts of
dissolved salts and sugars. This procedure has to be carried out until the kidney is replaced with a new one. Once a kidney fails, there are very rare chances of its healing.
Compared to dialysis, kidney transplant is associated with a better quality of life, lower risk of
death, fewer dietary restrictions and lower cost of treatment compared to a lifetime on dialysis.
You can keep your kidney healthy by keeping yourself active; maintain your weight, control
sugar level, blood pressure, avoiding over the counter pills, avoiding smoking and maintaining a
healthy fluid intake.
Support us and Sponsor us to Make Medical Education available to Every Human Being: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTCEJCypL-cwp2EWlT5pmGg/join
#FreeMedicalEducation #FME #KidneyFailure
Timestamp:
00:00 Why kidney failure happens
00:27 Treatment to kidney failure
00:31 Dialisis
01:45 Kidney transplant
02:03 How to keep our kidneys healthy
https://wn.com/What_Is_Kidney_Failure
What is Kidney Failure and how and when does it occur? What are the signs and symptoms of kidney failure? What and how does dialysis occurs? Measure the signs of kidney failure by watching this animated explanation.
Support us and Sponsor us to Make Medical Education available to Every Human Being:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTCEJCypL-cwp2EWlT5pmGg/join
One-time Contribution: https://fundrazr.com/FreeMededucation
Become Our Patron and Monthly Supporter: https://www.Patreon.com/FreeMedEducation
Follow us:
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FreeMedEducation
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreeMedEducation
Facebook Groups: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1162636387091983
Kidney Failure
Kidney failure happens when one or both kidney stops functioning normally. This could be due
to infection, shock or some accident. Wastes like urea, creatinine, uric acid and ammonium ions
remain in the blood system instead of being excreted. An accumulation of these substances is
toxic to the human system. If not treated in time, it could be fatal. The treatments available are
dialysis or a transplant.
Dialysis is also called haemodialysis or dialysis of the blood. It is a machine that eliminates
excess salts and nitrogenous wastes from blood by filteration. It does not absorb or secrete
anything. Transplantation is a major operation through which failed or dysfunctional kidney is
replaced with a healthy one.
During dialysis, the patient’s blood from the radial artery is passed into the machine and returned
to a vein in the same arm. The dialysis fluid is changed regularly to remove wastes and to
maintain a diffusion gradient between the patient’s blood and the dialysis fluid.
The dialysis machine contains the following parts; a steel tub with a filter filled with a warm
fluid set at 37 o C. As the dialysis fluid enters the blood stream directly, its temperature is
maintained at 37 o C in the tub, to suit the patient’s body temperature. The machine also has a
narrow tubular coil of cellophane with pores and a sterile dialysis fluid. The tubular coil of
cellophane is semi-permeable in nature, allows small molecules to pass through, prevents blood
cells and large proteins from leaving and provides large surface area for exchange of material.
The sterile dialysis fluid surrounds the cellophane tube and contains regulated amounts of
dissolved salts and sugars. This procedure has to be carried out until the kidney is replaced with a new one. Once a kidney fails, there are very rare chances of its healing.
Compared to dialysis, kidney transplant is associated with a better quality of life, lower risk of
death, fewer dietary restrictions and lower cost of treatment compared to a lifetime on dialysis.
You can keep your kidney healthy by keeping yourself active; maintain your weight, control
sugar level, blood pressure, avoiding over the counter pills, avoiding smoking and maintaining a
healthy fluid intake.
Support us and Sponsor us to Make Medical Education available to Every Human Being: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTCEJCypL-cwp2EWlT5pmGg/join
#FreeMedicalEducation #FME #KidneyFailure
Timestamp:
00:00 Why kidney failure happens
00:27 Treatment to kidney failure
00:31 Dialisis
01:45 Kidney transplant
02:03 How to keep our kidneys healthy
- published: 18 Feb 2021
- views: 457381
8:40
Chronic kidney disease - causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, pathology
What is chronic kidney disease (CKD)? Chronic kidney disease is described as any loss of kidney functioning that develops beyond a 3 month period. Find our full...
What is chronic kidney disease (CKD)? Chronic kidney disease is described as any loss of kidney functioning that develops beyond a 3 month period. Find our full video library only on Osmosis: http://osms.it/more.
Join millions of current and future clinicians who learn by Osmosis, along with hundreds of universities around the world who partner with Osmosis from Elseiver to make medical and health education more engaging and efficient. We have unparalleled tools and materials to prepare you for success in school, on your board exams, and as a future clinician. Sign up for a free trial at http://osms.it/more. If you're interested in exploring an institutional partnership, visit osmosis.org/educators to request a personalized demo.
Follow us on social:
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Our Vision: Everyone who cares for someone will learn by Osmosis.
Our Mission: To empower the world’s clinicians and caregivers with the best learning experience possible. Learn more here: http://osms.it/mission
Medical disclaimer: Osmosis from Elsevier does not provide medical advice. Osmosis from Elsevier and the content available on the Osmosis from Elsevier properties (Osmosis.org, YouTube, and other channels) do not provide a diagnosis or other recommendation for treatment and are not a substitute for the professional judgment of a healthcare professional in diagnosis and treatment of any person or animal. The determination of the need for medical services and the types of healthcare to be provided to a patient are decisions that should be made only by a physician or other licensed healthcare provider. Always seek the advice of a physician or other qualified healthcare professional with any questions you have regarding a medical condition.
© 2024 Elsevier. All rights reserved.
https://wn.com/Chronic_Kidney_Disease_Causes,_Symptoms,_Diagnosis,_Treatment,_Pathology
What is chronic kidney disease (CKD)? Chronic kidney disease is described as any loss of kidney functioning that develops beyond a 3 month period. Find our full video library only on Osmosis: http://osms.it/more.
Join millions of current and future clinicians who learn by Osmosis, along with hundreds of universities around the world who partner with Osmosis from Elseiver to make medical and health education more engaging and efficient. We have unparalleled tools and materials to prepare you for success in school, on your board exams, and as a future clinician. Sign up for a free trial at http://osms.it/more. If you're interested in exploring an institutional partnership, visit osmosis.org/educators to request a personalized demo.
Follow us on social:
Facebook: http://osms.it/facebook
Twitter: http://osms.it/twitter
Instagram for med: http://osms.it/instagram
Instagram for nursing: https://osms.it/ignursing
TikTok: https://osms.it/tiktok
Linkedin: https://osms.it/linkedin
Our Vision: Everyone who cares for someone will learn by Osmosis.
Our Mission: To empower the world’s clinicians and caregivers with the best learning experience possible. Learn more here: http://osms.it/mission
Medical disclaimer: Osmosis from Elsevier does not provide medical advice. Osmosis from Elsevier and the content available on the Osmosis from Elsevier properties (Osmosis.org, YouTube, and other channels) do not provide a diagnosis or other recommendation for treatment and are not a substitute for the professional judgment of a healthcare professional in diagnosis and treatment of any person or animal. The determination of the need for medical services and the types of healthcare to be provided to a patient are decisions that should be made only by a physician or other licensed healthcare provider. Always seek the advice of a physician or other qualified healthcare professional with any questions you have regarding a medical condition.
© 2024 Elsevier. All rights reserved.
- published: 14 Jan 2019
- views: 1692973
0:00
Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease Patients: Who should/shouldn't & importance of protein
Episode 195:Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease Patients: Who should/shouldn't & importance of protein. Renal Dietitian Jen Hernandez discusses the Low ...
Episode 195:Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease Patients: Who should/shouldn't & importance of protein. Renal Dietitian Jen Hernandez discusses the Low Protein diet for kidney patients with a focus on who should follow the low protein diet and who shouldn't, as well as why a low protein diet is so important when it comes to CKD. Renal dietitian Jen Hernandez of Plant-Powered Kidneys makes learning about the important role of nutrition easy to understand.
⭐ Learn more at renal dietitian Jen Hernandez's "The Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease" blog https://www.plantpoweredkidneys.com/
Jen Hernandez's Mission 👉 To simplify the nutritional needs for individuals with kidney disease, and to decrease the prevalence of kidney disease by providing nutrition education including realistic and wholesome lifestyle changes 🥗.
Jen helps those with kidney disease find their best kidney-friendly diet 🥑 ! Jen's kidney warriors spend less time stressing over the "right" foods to eat 😓 and more time saving their kidney function and loving life 🙌 !
💚 Snag Jen's FREE 6-day Kidney Friendly Meal Plan, blog articles and more at: www.PlantPoweredKidneys.com
👍 Join the Plant-Powered Kidneys Facebook Community: www.facebook.com/groups/plantpoweredkidneys
🥬 Learn more about the Plant Powered Kidneys Signature 6-week Online Course and sign up for the waitlist here: www.plantpoweredkidneys.com/course/
📺 See more of Jen's informative videos: https://www.dadvicetv.com/jen-hernandez
✅ Learn more about James Fabin and Kidney Disease at: https://www.dadvicetv.com/
⚖️ FTC: We use income-earning auto-affiliate links: https://www.dadvicetv.com/disclaimer/
🍎 Chronometer Nutrition Tracking App: https://shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=766203&u=2032723&m=61121&urllink=&afftrack=
👕 Check out the Dadvice TV Amazon Store - https://amzn.to/3bCzxDu
🔔 Subscribe for LIVE EVENT ALERTS - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKh6qttlTi93HGCuGo8xN-A?sub_confirmation=1
❤️ Support Dadvice TV with a YouTube membership
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKh6qttlTi93HGCuGo8xN-A/join
🎥 My Equipment:
Canon M50 DSL Camera: https://amzn.to/32BBwE9
Sigma 16mm 1.4 Canon EF-M Lens: https://amzn.to/32BKaCs
SmallRig Cage for Canon EOS M50: https://amzn.to/3gEj6um
Feelworld FW279 HD Monitor: https://amzn.to/2QoP1o6
Elgato Stream Deck XL: https://amzn.to/3auJSBS
Elgato Multi Mount L (3x): https://amzn.to/3nnOwqB
Rodecaster Pro: https://amzn.to/2RRm6cx
Shure SM7B Microphone: https://amzn.to/3gvmkk3
Triton Audio Fethead in-line Mic Preamp: https://amzn.to/3gxifMk
InnoGear Mic Arm Stand: https://amzn.to/3xsdUQy
Dazzne Desk Mount LED Video Lights (2): https://amzn.to/3gEgNHI
GIJUANRING 2x36W Photography Dimmable LED Video Light: https://amzn.to/2PjBU7e
Neewer 10x12 Green Chromakey Fiber Backdrop: https://amzn.to/3sCyxFW
Neewer 10x8 Background Support Frame: https://amzn.to/3vhs3OB
27" iMac 3.6 Ghz 10-Core i9, 128GB Ram, 8TB SSD, 16GB 5700 XT
OWC ThunderBay 8 RAID 5 Edition 64TB 8-Bay External Drive: https://amzn.to/2RXDdcU
Dell S3221QS 32" Monitor: https://amzn.to/3vfEPNg
Apple AirPods Pro: https://amzn.to/3nbPIwU
CyberPower CP1500PFCLCD PFC Sinewave UPS System (4x): https://amzn.to/3xeklGG
IMPORTANT: Dadvice TV is NOT A DOCTOR. Patients should always be under the care of a physician and defer to their physician for any and all treatment decisions. This video is not meant to replace a physician's advice, supervision, and counsel. No information in the video should be construed as medical advice. All medical decisions should be made by the patient and a qualified physician. This video is for informational purposes only and DOES NOT CONSTITUTE THE PROVIDING OF MEDICAL ADVICE.
#DadviceTV #RenalDiet #KidneyDiet #kidneydisease #kidneyhealth #kidneyfailure #kidneys #chronickidneydisease #kidneywarrior #kidney
https://wn.com/Low_Protein_Diet_For_Chronic_Kidney_Disease_Patients_Who_Should_Shouldn't_Importance_Of_Protein
Episode 195:Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease Patients: Who should/shouldn't & importance of protein. Renal Dietitian Jen Hernandez discusses the Low Protein diet for kidney patients with a focus on who should follow the low protein diet and who shouldn't, as well as why a low protein diet is so important when it comes to CKD. Renal dietitian Jen Hernandez of Plant-Powered Kidneys makes learning about the important role of nutrition easy to understand.
⭐ Learn more at renal dietitian Jen Hernandez's "The Low Protein Diet for Chronic Kidney Disease" blog https://www.plantpoweredkidneys.com/
Jen Hernandez's Mission 👉 To simplify the nutritional needs for individuals with kidney disease, and to decrease the prevalence of kidney disease by providing nutrition education including realistic and wholesome lifestyle changes 🥗.
Jen helps those with kidney disease find their best kidney-friendly diet 🥑 ! Jen's kidney warriors spend less time stressing over the "right" foods to eat 😓 and more time saving their kidney function and loving life 🙌 !
💚 Snag Jen's FREE 6-day Kidney Friendly Meal Plan, blog articles and more at: www.PlantPoweredKidneys.com
👍 Join the Plant-Powered Kidneys Facebook Community: www.facebook.com/groups/plantpoweredkidneys
🥬 Learn more about the Plant Powered Kidneys Signature 6-week Online Course and sign up for the waitlist here: www.plantpoweredkidneys.com/course/
📺 See more of Jen's informative videos: https://www.dadvicetv.com/jen-hernandez
✅ Learn more about James Fabin and Kidney Disease at: https://www.dadvicetv.com/
⚖️ FTC: We use income-earning auto-affiliate links: https://www.dadvicetv.com/disclaimer/
🍎 Chronometer Nutrition Tracking App: https://shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=766203&u=2032723&m=61121&urllink=&afftrack=
👕 Check out the Dadvice TV Amazon Store - https://amzn.to/3bCzxDu
🔔 Subscribe for LIVE EVENT ALERTS - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKh6qttlTi93HGCuGo8xN-A?sub_confirmation=1
❤️ Support Dadvice TV with a YouTube membership
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKh6qttlTi93HGCuGo8xN-A/join
🎥 My Equipment:
Canon M50 DSL Camera: https://amzn.to/32BBwE9
Sigma 16mm 1.4 Canon EF-M Lens: https://amzn.to/32BKaCs
SmallRig Cage for Canon EOS M50: https://amzn.to/3gEj6um
Feelworld FW279 HD Monitor: https://amzn.to/2QoP1o6
Elgato Stream Deck XL: https://amzn.to/3auJSBS
Elgato Multi Mount L (3x): https://amzn.to/3nnOwqB
Rodecaster Pro: https://amzn.to/2RRm6cx
Shure SM7B Microphone: https://amzn.to/3gvmkk3
Triton Audio Fethead in-line Mic Preamp: https://amzn.to/3gxifMk
InnoGear Mic Arm Stand: https://amzn.to/3xsdUQy
Dazzne Desk Mount LED Video Lights (2): https://amzn.to/3gEgNHI
GIJUANRING 2x36W Photography Dimmable LED Video Light: https://amzn.to/2PjBU7e
Neewer 10x12 Green Chromakey Fiber Backdrop: https://amzn.to/3sCyxFW
Neewer 10x8 Background Support Frame: https://amzn.to/3vhs3OB
27" iMac 3.6 Ghz 10-Core i9, 128GB Ram, 8TB SSD, 16GB 5700 XT
OWC ThunderBay 8 RAID 5 Edition 64TB 8-Bay External Drive: https://amzn.to/2RXDdcU
Dell S3221QS 32" Monitor: https://amzn.to/3vfEPNg
Apple AirPods Pro: https://amzn.to/3nbPIwU
CyberPower CP1500PFCLCD PFC Sinewave UPS System (4x): https://amzn.to/3xeklGG
IMPORTANT: Dadvice TV is NOT A DOCTOR. Patients should always be under the care of a physician and defer to their physician for any and all treatment decisions. This video is not meant to replace a physician's advice, supervision, and counsel. No information in the video should be construed as medical advice. All medical decisions should be made by the patient and a qualified physician. This video is for informational purposes only and DOES NOT CONSTITUTE THE PROVIDING OF MEDICAL ADVICE.
#DadviceTV #RenalDiet #KidneyDiet #kidneydisease #kidneyhealth #kidneyfailure #kidneys #chronickidneydisease #kidneywarrior #kidney
- published: 11 Jul 2021
- views: 0
0:41
Signs and Causes of Kidney Failure
Founded in 1950, our program was the first clinic in Boston devoted to the diagnosis and treatment of kidney disease and hypertension.
Learn more: https://bit....
Founded in 1950, our program was the first clinic in Boston devoted to the diagnosis and treatment of kidney disease and hypertension.
Learn more: https://bit.ly/2wvlMFy
https://wn.com/Signs_And_Causes_Of_Kidney_Failure
Founded in 1950, our program was the first clinic in Boston devoted to the diagnosis and treatment of kidney disease and hypertension.
Learn more: https://bit.ly/2wvlMFy
- published: 11 May 2018
- views: 286272
29:32
Chronic Renal Failure (Kidney Disease) Nursing | End Stage Renal Disease Pathophysiology NCLEX
Chronic renal failure, also called chronic kidney disease, nursing NCLEX review lecture on the pathophysiology, symptoms, stages, and causes.
Chronic kidney di...
Chronic renal failure, also called chronic kidney disease, nursing NCLEX review lecture on the pathophysiology, symptoms, stages, and causes.
Chronic kidney disease is a significant decline in kidney function that happens over a long period of time that leads to the buildup of waste, water, and electrolyte imbalances in the body. CKD is irreversible.
There are various stages of chronic kidney disease and each stage is based on the patient's glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Stage 1 is kidney disease with normal renal function (GFR greater than 90 mL/min) and proteinuria for 3 months or more. Each stage progresses with a declining glomerular filtration rate until the GFR is 15 mL/min or less and this is known as end-stage renal disease, which is Stage 5.
In the severe stages of chronic renal failure, the GFR is dramatically decreased and this leads to the following signs and symptoms of chronic kidney disease: increased BUN and creatinine levels, hypervolemia, electrolyte imbalances (hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, hypocalcemia, hypermagnesemia, oliguira or anuria, metabolic acidosis, and proteinuria/hematuria).
In addition, the kidneys are no longer producing hormones, such as EPO (erythopoietin) or renin. This leads to anemia and more hypertension. Furthermore, the kidneys are failing to activate vitamin, which leads to more hypocalcemia.
Treatment for chronic renal failure includes dialysis, medications, and kidney transplant.
Nursing interventions for chronic renal failure include diet implementation, monitoring fluid status, vital signs, administering medications per physician order, monitoring electrolyte levels etc.
Quiz on Chronic Kidney Disease: http://www.registerednursern.com/chronic-kidney-disease-nclex-practice-questions/
Notes: http://www.registerednursern.com/chronic-kidney-disease-nclex-review/
More Renal Lectures: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQrdx7rRsKfXkfh1nWrtxLcRTrohj41su
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Nursing School Supplies: http://www.registerednursern.com/the-ultimate-list-of-nursing-medical-supplies-and-items-a-new-nurse-student-nurse-needs-to-buy/
Visit our website RegisteredNurseRN.com for free quizzes, nursing care plans, salary information, job search, and much more: http://www.registerednursern.com
Check out other Videos: https://www.youtube.com/user/RegisteredNurseRN/videos
All of our videos in a playlist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAhHxt663pU&list=PLQrdx7rRsKfXMveRcN4df0bad3ugEaQnk
https://wn.com/Chronic_Renal_Failure_(Kidney_Disease)_Nursing_|_End_Stage_Renal_Disease_Pathophysiology_Nclex
Chronic renal failure, also called chronic kidney disease, nursing NCLEX review lecture on the pathophysiology, symptoms, stages, and causes.
Chronic kidney disease is a significant decline in kidney function that happens over a long period of time that leads to the buildup of waste, water, and electrolyte imbalances in the body. CKD is irreversible.
There are various stages of chronic kidney disease and each stage is based on the patient's glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Stage 1 is kidney disease with normal renal function (GFR greater than 90 mL/min) and proteinuria for 3 months or more. Each stage progresses with a declining glomerular filtration rate until the GFR is 15 mL/min or less and this is known as end-stage renal disease, which is Stage 5.
In the severe stages of chronic renal failure, the GFR is dramatically decreased and this leads to the following signs and symptoms of chronic kidney disease: increased BUN and creatinine levels, hypervolemia, electrolyte imbalances (hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, hypocalcemia, hypermagnesemia, oliguira or anuria, metabolic acidosis, and proteinuria/hematuria).
In addition, the kidneys are no longer producing hormones, such as EPO (erythopoietin) or renin. This leads to anemia and more hypertension. Furthermore, the kidneys are failing to activate vitamin, which leads to more hypocalcemia.
Treatment for chronic renal failure includes dialysis, medications, and kidney transplant.
Nursing interventions for chronic renal failure include diet implementation, monitoring fluid status, vital signs, administering medications per physician order, monitoring electrolyte levels etc.
Quiz on Chronic Kidney Disease: http://www.registerednursern.com/chronic-kidney-disease-nclex-practice-questions/
Notes: http://www.registerednursern.com/chronic-kidney-disease-nclex-review/
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- published: 22 Jul 2017
- views: 1628751
6:58
Stages of Kidney Disease
Kidney expert and nephrologist Danuta Trzebinska, MD, (http://health.ucsd.edu/nephrology) discusses how clinicians estimate kidney function and different stages...
Kidney expert and nephrologist Danuta Trzebinska, MD, (http://health.ucsd.edu/nephrology) discusses how clinicians estimate kidney function and different stages of chronic kidney disease.
Learn more about kidney disease treatment at UC San Diego Health: http://health.ucsd.edu/nephrology.
Dr. Trzebinska - https://providers.ucsd.edu/details/12080/danuta-trzebinska-nephrology_kidney-la_jolla-san_diego
https://wn.com/Stages_Of_Kidney_Disease
Kidney expert and nephrologist Danuta Trzebinska, MD, (http://health.ucsd.edu/nephrology) discusses how clinicians estimate kidney function and different stages of chronic kidney disease.
Learn more about kidney disease treatment at UC San Diego Health: http://health.ucsd.edu/nephrology.
Dr. Trzebinska - https://providers.ucsd.edu/details/12080/danuta-trzebinska-nephrology_kidney-la_jolla-san_diego
- published: 01 Oct 2015
- views: 1063323
7:09
Living Well with Kidney Failure, Part 1: What is Kidney Failure?
Are you the 33%? https://www.MinuteForYourKidneys.org/?youtube
Donate to support our mission today: https://www.kidney.org/support?youtube
Subscribe to our Yo...
Are you the 33%? https://www.MinuteForYourKidneys.org/?youtube
Donate to support our mission today: https://www.kidney.org/support?youtube
Subscribe to our YouTube channel: http://bit.ly/nkfyoutube
Learn about kidney health, kidney disease, and related conditions: https://www.kidney.org/atoz
About the National Kidney Foundation:
Fueled by passion and urgency, National Kidney Foundation is a lifeline for all people affected by kidney disease. As pioneers of scientific research and innovation, NKF focuses on the whole patient through the lens of kidney health. Relentless in our work, we enhance lives through action, education and accelerating change.
Follow NKF at:
https://www.instagram.com/nationalkidneyfoundation/
https://www.facebook.com/nationalkidneyfoundation/
https://twitter.com/nkf
#kidneys #kidneystrong #kidneyhealth #heartyourkidneys #mykidneysmylife
https://wn.com/Living_Well_With_Kidney_Failure,_Part_1_What_Is_Kidney_Failure
Are you the 33%? https://www.MinuteForYourKidneys.org/?youtube
Donate to support our mission today: https://www.kidney.org/support?youtube
Subscribe to our YouTube channel: http://bit.ly/nkfyoutube
Learn about kidney health, kidney disease, and related conditions: https://www.kidney.org/atoz
About the National Kidney Foundation:
Fueled by passion and urgency, National Kidney Foundation is a lifeline for all people affected by kidney disease. As pioneers of scientific research and innovation, NKF focuses on the whole patient through the lens of kidney health. Relentless in our work, we enhance lives through action, education and accelerating change.
Follow NKF at:
https://www.instagram.com/nationalkidneyfoundation/
https://www.facebook.com/nationalkidneyfoundation/
https://twitter.com/nkf
#kidneys #kidneystrong #kidneyhealth #heartyourkidneys #mykidneysmylife
- published: 27 Mar 2014
- views: 62833
4:26
Chronic Kidney Disease, Animation
(USMLE topics) Pathology, causes, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of CKD.
Purchase a license to download a non-watermarked version of this video on AlilaMe...
(USMLE topics) Pathology, causes, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of CKD.
Purchase a license to download a non-watermarked version of this video on AlilaMedicalMedia(dot)com
Check out our new Alila Academy - AlilaAcademy(dot)com - complete video courses with quizzes, PDFs, and downloadable images.
Voice by: Ashley Fleming
©Alila Medical Media. All rights reserved.
All images/videos by Alila Medical Media are for information purposes ONLY and are NOT intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
Chronic kidney disease, CKD, is a gradual loss of renal function, typically developing over the course of months or years. Many conditions, both within and outside the kidneys, can cause progressive damage to the kidneys over time, leading to CKD. Of these, most common are diabetes and hypertension, both of which directly damage blood vessels within the kidney, destroying renal tissue. An acute kidney injury, if not completely resolved, may also become chronic kidney disease.
The severity of renal disease is evaluated based on glomerular filtration rate, GFR, an indicator of how well the blood is filtered by the kidneys. GFR is calculated as a function of serum creatinine, a waste product that accumulates in blood plasma when renal function declines. The calculation takes into account the patient’s age, gender and race.
Symptoms develop slowly over time, progressing from renal insufficiency to end-stage renal failure. Often, initial loss of renal tissue does not produce any symptoms, because the remaining healthy tissue becomes more active and can temporarily compensate for the loss, a phenomenon known as renal adaptation. Symptoms appear when a significant portion of kidney function is already lost. The ability to concentrate urine is usually the first to be impaired, resulting in frequent trips to the bathroom, especially at night. Other early signs include fatigue, loss of appetite, and decreased mental ability.
Because the kidneys remove metabolic wastes, control blood pH and fluid/electrolyte balance, as well as produce several hormones, loss of kidney function may result in a number of complications:
- Accumulation of toxic nitrogenous wastes can cause a range of symptoms, from nausea, vomiting to confusion and seizures.
- Reduced excretion of hydrogen ions leads to increased blood acidity, or metabolic acidosis.
- Reduced excretion of potassium results in potassium overload in the blood, or hyperkalemia, which may cause cardiac arrhythmias. Hyperkalemia usually occurs only in advanced stage, but excessive potassium intake or use of drugs that prevent potassium excretion, may precipitate the condition in earlier stages.
- Decreased excretion of phosphate results in hyperphosphatemia.
- Reduced renal production of calcitriol, an active form of vitamin D, contributes to low blood calcium level, or hypocalcemia. Low blood calcium stimulates production of parathyroid hormone, PTH, by the parathyroid gland. PTH promotes calcium release from bones in an attempt to raise blood calcium. This sequence eventually leads to an overactive parathyroid gland, or secondary hyperparathyroidism, which can develop before hypocalcemia occurs. As the bones continuously lose calcium to the blood, they become thin and weakened, a condition known as renal osteodystrophy. Symptoms include bone and joint pain, and increased risks of fractures.
- Reduced renal secretion of erythropoietin, a stimulating factor for red blood cell formation, can lead to anemia.
Diagnosis is based on renal function tests, which include blood and urine analysis. Ultrasound is performed to detect renal obstruction. It may also help in distinguishing chronic kidney disease from acute kidney injury based on kidney size.
Treatments aim to control the underlying condition, address the complications, and involve certain nutrition supplements and restrictions. End-stage kidney disease requires dialysis or kidney transplantation.
https://wn.com/Chronic_Kidney_Disease,_Animation
(USMLE topics) Pathology, causes, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of CKD.
Purchase a license to download a non-watermarked version of this video on AlilaMedicalMedia(dot)com
Check out our new Alila Academy - AlilaAcademy(dot)com - complete video courses with quizzes, PDFs, and downloadable images.
Voice by: Ashley Fleming
©Alila Medical Media. All rights reserved.
All images/videos by Alila Medical Media are for information purposes ONLY and are NOT intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
Chronic kidney disease, CKD, is a gradual loss of renal function, typically developing over the course of months or years. Many conditions, both within and outside the kidneys, can cause progressive damage to the kidneys over time, leading to CKD. Of these, most common are diabetes and hypertension, both of which directly damage blood vessels within the kidney, destroying renal tissue. An acute kidney injury, if not completely resolved, may also become chronic kidney disease.
The severity of renal disease is evaluated based on glomerular filtration rate, GFR, an indicator of how well the blood is filtered by the kidneys. GFR is calculated as a function of serum creatinine, a waste product that accumulates in blood plasma when renal function declines. The calculation takes into account the patient’s age, gender and race.
Symptoms develop slowly over time, progressing from renal insufficiency to end-stage renal failure. Often, initial loss of renal tissue does not produce any symptoms, because the remaining healthy tissue becomes more active and can temporarily compensate for the loss, a phenomenon known as renal adaptation. Symptoms appear when a significant portion of kidney function is already lost. The ability to concentrate urine is usually the first to be impaired, resulting in frequent trips to the bathroom, especially at night. Other early signs include fatigue, loss of appetite, and decreased mental ability.
Because the kidneys remove metabolic wastes, control blood pH and fluid/electrolyte balance, as well as produce several hormones, loss of kidney function may result in a number of complications:
- Accumulation of toxic nitrogenous wastes can cause a range of symptoms, from nausea, vomiting to confusion and seizures.
- Reduced excretion of hydrogen ions leads to increased blood acidity, or metabolic acidosis.
- Reduced excretion of potassium results in potassium overload in the blood, or hyperkalemia, which may cause cardiac arrhythmias. Hyperkalemia usually occurs only in advanced stage, but excessive potassium intake or use of drugs that prevent potassium excretion, may precipitate the condition in earlier stages.
- Decreased excretion of phosphate results in hyperphosphatemia.
- Reduced renal production of calcitriol, an active form of vitamin D, contributes to low blood calcium level, or hypocalcemia. Low blood calcium stimulates production of parathyroid hormone, PTH, by the parathyroid gland. PTH promotes calcium release from bones in an attempt to raise blood calcium. This sequence eventually leads to an overactive parathyroid gland, or secondary hyperparathyroidism, which can develop before hypocalcemia occurs. As the bones continuously lose calcium to the blood, they become thin and weakened, a condition known as renal osteodystrophy. Symptoms include bone and joint pain, and increased risks of fractures.
- Reduced renal secretion of erythropoietin, a stimulating factor for red blood cell formation, can lead to anemia.
Diagnosis is based on renal function tests, which include blood and urine analysis. Ultrasound is performed to detect renal obstruction. It may also help in distinguishing chronic kidney disease from acute kidney injury based on kidney size.
Treatments aim to control the underlying condition, address the complications, and involve certain nutrition supplements and restrictions. End-stage kidney disease requires dialysis or kidney transplantation.
- published: 03 Feb 2020
- views: 248777
9:34
Intrarenal acute kidney injury (acute renal failure) - causes, symptoms & pathology
What is intrarenal acute kidney injury? Acute kidney injury (AKI) describes when the kidneys aren't functioning optimally, usually brought about within a few da...
What is intrarenal acute kidney injury? Acute kidney injury (AKI) describes when the kidneys aren't functioning optimally, usually brought about within a few days. Find our full video library only on Osmosis: http://osms.it/more.
Join millions of current and future clinicians who learn by Osmosis, along with hundreds of universities around the world who partner with Osmosis from Elseiver to make medical and health education more engaging and efficient. We have unparalleled tools and materials to prepare you for success in school, on your board exams, and as a future clinician. Sign up for a free trial at http://osms.it/more. If you're interested in exploring an institutional partnership, visit osmosis.org/educators to request a personalized demo.
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© 2024 Elsevier. All rights reserved.
https://wn.com/Intrarenal_Acute_Kidney_Injury_(Acute_Renal_Failure)_Causes,_Symptoms_Pathology
What is intrarenal acute kidney injury? Acute kidney injury (AKI) describes when the kidneys aren't functioning optimally, usually brought about within a few days. Find our full video library only on Osmosis: http://osms.it/more.
Join millions of current and future clinicians who learn by Osmosis, along with hundreds of universities around the world who partner with Osmosis from Elseiver to make medical and health education more engaging and efficient. We have unparalleled tools and materials to prepare you for success in school, on your board exams, and as a future clinician. Sign up for a free trial at http://osms.it/more. If you're interested in exploring an institutional partnership, visit osmosis.org/educators to request a personalized demo.
Follow us on social:
Facebook: http://osms.it/facebook
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Our Vision: Everyone who cares for someone will learn by Osmosis.
Our Mission: To empower the world’s clinicians and caregivers with the best learning experience possible. Learn more here: http://osms.it/mission
Medical disclaimer: Osmosis from Elsevier does not provide medical advice. Osmosis from Elsevier and the content available on the Osmosis from Elsevier properties (Osmosis.org, YouTube, and other channels) do not provide a diagnosis or other recommendation for treatment and are not a substitute for the professional judgment of a healthcare professional in diagnosis and treatment of any person or animal. The determination of the need for medical services and the types of healthcare to be provided to a patient are decisions that should be made only by a physician or other licensed healthcare provider. Always seek the advice of a physician or other qualified healthcare professional with any questions you have regarding a medical condition.
© 2024 Elsevier. All rights reserved.
- published: 19 Jul 2016
- views: 566769