When radiologists take a selfie
Surgical Removal of Intestinal worms!
WARNING: Graphic Surgical Content!
Los Angeles-based photographer David Orr has been photographing skulls in the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia, then mirroring half of the image, with all of the skull’s oddities and history, to explore aesthetic and cultural ideals of perfection and symmetry.
The project is called Perfect Vessels.
Removing a HUGE kidney Stone!
When my fall risk patient assures me that they’ll hit the call button before getting up and then later I catch them in the bathroom unattended
Things we wish we could say sometimes.
This video shows cell apoptosis, or programmed cell death as seen under a microscope. First the nucleus and cytoplasm shrink, and then DNA and the cell starts to fragment. The cell may then be eaten or taken up by a phagocytic cell. (Video)
OH MY GOD THIS IS LOVE
Update:
AHHHHHHHHHH YASSSSSS
Of course someone needed medical attention on my flight.
Of course.
This is why I travel with my stethoscope.
The story is very simple, no epic “LAND THE PLANE” business.
Passenger hadn’t eaten or drank anything all day, got on the plane, decided to stand up too quickly, and boom. Vasovagal. Person passed out and recovered in seconds. I took his BP, felt his pulse, listened to his heart and lungs, checked his mental status. He sipped water and orange juice and got a free sandwich. I told them to give him liquids if he felt thirsty and an additional snack.
That’s how I doctor. Free snacks and auscultation.
Uremia
or uraemia can be translated as “urea in the blood”. Urea is one of the primary components of urine. It can be defined as an excess of amino acid and protein metabolism end products, such as urea and creatinine, in the blood that would be normally excreted in the urine. The Uremic Syndrome can be defined as the terminal clinical manifestation of kidney failure (also called renal failure).
It is the signs, symptoms and results from laboratory tests which result from inadequate excretory, regulatory and endocrine function of the kidneys.
Both uremia and the uremic syndrome have been used interchangeably to define a very high plasma urea concentration that is the result of renal failure.
#uremia #nephrology #usmle #doctordconline #doctor #nhs #usmlestep1 #usmlestep2 #nurse #nursing #hospital #patient #mbbs #md #pathology #medstudent #medicine #medlife @doctordconline
Gait Abnormalities
Gait abnormality is a deviation from normal walking (gait). Watching a patient walk is the most important part of the neurological examination. Normal gait requires that many systems, including strength, sensation and coordination, function in an integrated fashion. Many common problems in the nervous system and musculoskeletal system will show up in the way a person walks.
Persons suffering from peripheral neuropathy experience numbness and tingling in their hands and feet. This can cause ambulation impairment, such as trouble climbing stairs or maintaining balance. Gait abnormality is also common in persons with nervous system problems such as Multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, Myasthenia gravis, Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus, and Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease.
Orthopedic corrective treatments may also manifest into gait abnormality, such as lower extremity amputation, post-fracture, and arthroplasty (joint replacement). Difficulty in ambulation that results from chemotherapy is generally temporary in nature, though recovery times of six months to a year are common. Likewise, difficulty in walking due to arthritis or joint pains (antalgic gait) sometimes resolves spontaneously once the pain is gone. Hemiplegic persons have circumduction gait and those with cerebral palsy often have scissoring gait.
#gait #neurology #usmle #doctordconline #doctor #usmlestep1 #usmlestep2 #neuroscience #mbbs #md #nhs #nurse #nursing #hospital #patient #medstudent #medicine @doctordconline
Trying to pronounce the generic names of drugs.
I got to watch a cardiac catheterization in person for the very first time last week. This procedure is used to check the status of the arteries that supply the heart with oxygenated blood. The doctors pass a catheter through the femoral artery into the heart, pump a contrast in, which lets you visualize the flow of blood through the heart. IT IS SO COOL.
The human brain in cross section
Almost every nurse has that one smell that makes them...
What’s yours?
Trach. Sputum.
Necrotic diabetic foot ulceration…