Nephrology IM Board Review with Dr. Lederer
Dr. Eleanor Lederer presents a Nephrology Board Review for residents at the University of Louisville.
Some items in this lecture may have come from the lecturer’s personal academic files or have been cited in-line or at the end of the lecture. For more information, see our citation page.
Disclaimers
©2016 LouisvilleLectures.org
Get CME Credit:
cmetracker.net/ULOUCME/Login?...
SUBSCRIBE to LOUISVILLE LECTURES:
kzread.info/dron/bUJ.html...
VISIT OUR BLOG:
www.louisvillelectures.org/
We can teach the world medicine.
The Internal Medicine Lecture Series is a resident founded, resident run FOAMed (Free Open Access Medical Education) project by LouisvilleLectures.org, supported by the Internal Medicine Residency, Medicine Department and the University of Louisville. The content is free to all who wish to learn. For more information, visit our website below. Please view our full disclaimer on our website, as space limitations prohibit its posting here. All content is copyrighted by the University of Louisville.
Пікірлер: 15
these Louisville Lectures are incredible, thank you all so much
@alijaddoa5922
Жыл бұрын
What’s so incredible It’s for the mentally retarded only.
Thank you
Wow sooo great Learnt a lot especially her discussions Thanks so much Doc
Excellent teaching
great teaching tool!!! thank you!!! the case studies really put some teeth into the renal principles, which by the way, drive me absolutley crazy!!
@UofLIM
6 жыл бұрын
So glad it is helpful! Dr. Lederer makes some abstract principles really graspable.
iam impressed and humbled at the same time
The answer to case #5 is B, not D!
@zizizizi3213
Жыл бұрын
I you like the big guns/drugs, yes; otherwise, think she is right... reducing phosphorus in blood, reduces PTH
too bad the HTN guideline has changed...
@farrukh19
4 жыл бұрын
AHA guideline for HTN? It changes every year around August if I'm not wrong. But this lecture follows ACP guidelines for Boards.
Yes, you are doing an excellent job. But please, select only those speakers who have a total and whole grasp of the English language, preferably only native English speakers. The United States is a country of a little more than 331 million inhabitants, and among too many people, you must be able to find them. It is sad for us, nonnative speakers, who are learning English at the same time that we are learning medicine, to find out that some of your lecturers have serious problems with the English language (mainly pronunciation issues), contributing to deform the language that we all should protect, because some day it will become the most spoken language around the world, and maybe it already is. Hope you take this comment seriously.