Episódios
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Would we be talking about GI disease if we weren’t talking about intestinal foreign bodies?!
From strings to balls to bones to toys and pretty much everything in between, we’ve seen it all - and whilst most of these patients are pretty well on presentation, we know that foreign body patients aren’t always smooth sailing.
In episode 54 of the Medical Nursing Podcast, we’ll get stuck in to the common complications we see with GI foreign bodies, and I’ll share my top 4 tips for giving them great nursing care.
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📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Today, we’re talking about quite possibly the worst GI disease of them all - parvovirus.
Yep, these patients are often a winning combination of tiny, horrifically behind on fluids, poorly tolerant of nutrition and dealing with severe gastrointestinal signs. There’s a lot we need to do to support these patients, and we’re diving into all of it in this episode.
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📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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In episode 52 of the Medical Nursing Podcast we’re talking all about managing GI ulcers.
From simple NSAID overdoses to patients with nasty ulcerative chronic GI diseases, we see this disease more often than you might think - and in severe cases these patients can present with marked anaemia from GI blood loss, (even requiring transfusions) or gastrointestinal perforation and sepsis!
Today, we’re diving in to what causes GI ulceration, the impact it has on our patients, and the four things we can do to give great care to them as vet nurses.
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📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Gastric dilation-volvulus (GDV) patients are often a real challenge to nurse.
They’re often severely unwell on presentation and there is a high risk of postoperative complications. But there are also lots of skills we get to use when caring for these patients!
Giving them great care starts with understanding how GDVs occur and their impact on our patients, which is exactly what we’ll be diving into in this episode of the Medical Nursing Podcast.
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📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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In episode 50 of the Medical Nursing Podcast, we’re talking about one of the most challenging oesophageal disorders to manage - oesophageal foreign bodies.
Patients with oesophageal foreign bodies can vary from being well at the time of presentation to ones with significant, chronic obstructions where patients are significantly unwell at the time of presentation.
Removal is risky, and complications like pneumothorax are very real, but by understanding the primary considerations for these patients, we can start preparing for them, minimising complications, and giving even better care.
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📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Ever seen a megaoesophagus patient before?
These patients can be really tough to nurse - they’ve often got severe regurgitation and aspiration pneumonia, and alongside assisting with diagnosis and providing nutritional support, need intensive respiratory support too.
Giving great care to these patients starts with understanding what megaoesophagus is, the types we see, and how we treat and nurse these patients - which is exactly what we’re talking about in episode 49 of the Medical Nursing Podcast.
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📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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We know that gastrointestinal diseases are amongst the most common diseases we see in practice.
And giving great care to these patients starts with understanding how the GI tract works, which is precisely what we’re exploring in the first episode of our brand-new series on GI disease.
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📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Today is a first for the podcast - we’re using a case study to discuss how we can provide even better care to our haematology patients!
From performing initial diagnostic tests to running a blood donation and transfusion and everything in between, we’ll break it all down in this episode - so you can walk away and give confident care to your own haematology patients.
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📲 Read the ISFM feline transfusion guidelines:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1098612X211007071
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📲 Read the AVHTM transfusion reaction guidelines:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/vec.13043
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Let me ask you this.
Who does the blood transfusions in your practice? The vets? Or the nurses?
Yes, it will be us monitoring the patient and collecting the vitals, but who…
Calculates the blood?
Prepares it?
Performs the donations?
Cares for the donors?
If it’s not the nurses, I’m going to suggest it should be - because there’s no reason for us not to do all of these things (as long as we run our plan past the vets and ensure they agree before going ahead!)
In this episode of the Medical Nursing Podcast we’re taking the confusion out of transfusions, so you can confidently care for your haematology patients in practice.
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🎉 ENROL ON THE FOUNDATION AWARD IN MEDICAL NURSING NOW:
https://veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.thinkific.com/courses/foundation-award
---
📲 Read the transfusion reaction guidelines:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/vec.13043
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Anticoagulant rodenticide toxicity is one of the most common toxicities reported in dogs and can cause severe bleeding if not identified and managed quickly.
These patients often present as emergencies and can require intensive treatment and nursing care - and how to deliver that care is exactly what we’ll be diving into in this episode of the Medical Nursing Podcast.
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📲 Join the academy from October 21st, 2024! 🎉
http://www.medicalnursingacademy.com
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Got a young patient who just won’t stop bleeding from their microchip site, vaccine site, or gingiva after deciduous tooth loss? There’s a good chance they have a coagulopathy.
We see two types of coagulopathy in practice - congenital and acquired - and it’s those congenital ones we’re discussing today. It’s important we pick up on these as soon as possible in the patient’s life, to prevent severe haemorrhage at the time of neutering or during other procedures.
Identifying congenital coagulopathies starts with understanding what they are, and how they impact our patients - which is exactly what you’ll be able to do after this episode.
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---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Picture this: you’re on the admit shift on a Tuesday morning, and your next patient is a 6-month-old Doberman for routine neutering.
Is there anything you’d be particularly worried about before surgery? Is there anything you’d discuss with the client or any tests you’d speak to your vet about?
Dobermans are a classic breed affected by von Willebrand’s disease, which is a disease that sits somewhere between thrombocytopenia and coagulopathy. If they have it, bleeding is a very real risk.
Thankfully, if we know beforehand, we can implement strategies to manage the patient’s disease and prevent severe haemorrhage. That starts with understanding von Willebrand’s disease and how it works, which is exactly what we’re covering in this episode of the Medical Nursing Podcast.
---
📣 ACCESS THE FREE WEBINAR
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Picture this.
You’re working the Saturday morning shift, you’re wrapping things up ready to close, and your vet brings through a patient from consults.
The patient is a 6-year-old cocker spaniel, and they’ve got a history of lethargy and exercise intolerance, progressing to melena, haematuria and bruising in the last 2 days. You examine them with the vet and find they’re dull, tachycardic and have bounding pulses.
What’s going on, and most importantly, what are you going to do about it? Well - they have some kind of bleeding disorder, and based on these signs, there’s a good chance they have very low platelet levels.
But why does this happen, and how can we support these patients? We’ll dive into all of that in this episode.
---
📣 ACCESS THE FREE WEBINAR
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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When I say ‘IMHA’, what comes to mind?
For me, it’s the most challenging case I have ever cared for: a patient who had such severe anaemia that their jaundice made them neurological, earning them a few days on a propofol CRI due to seizures.
Whilst not every IMHA case is like this—thankfully—these patients do need intensive nursing care and monitoring, and with this, there are many skills we can use when caring for them.
But to do that, we first need to understand IMHA, how it affects our patients, and how we manage it—exactly what we’re covering in this episode.
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Anaemia is probably the most common haematologic disease that we see - so it’s vital we understand why it occurs, how it affects our patients, and what we need to do when nursing these patients.
In episode 40 of the Medical Nursing Podcast, we’re chatting all about what causes anaema, how we classify it, what changes we see in our results, and how we treat these patients - so that you can provide the best possible nursing care.
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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How often do you look at blood smears in practice - and how confident do you feel looking at what you see?
Blood smears are an excellent skill for us to learn as nurses - there’s no reason we can’t look at these, identify normal and abnormal cells, and perform cell counts!
It’s not ‘just a vet’s job’, and the only way to feel more confident knowing what you’re looking at is to look at more and more smears and get comfortable with what’s normal and what isn’t.
But before we start looking at smears, we need to know what cells we’re looking at and refresh ourselves on what they do - exactly what we’re covering in this episode of the Medical Nursing Podcast.
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📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Ever seen a patient present with collapse, disorientation and seizures which resolves almost immediately? There’s a good chance they could have insulinoma - a pancreatic tumour causing sudden hypoglycaemia.
So how do we treat and nurse these patients - and what complications do we run into during and after surgery? We’re discussing it all in episode 38 of the Medical Nursing Podcast.
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Ever heard of a pheochromocytoma before?
Nor had I before I walked into referral… but in all honesty, they’re some of the riskiest cases we see. These can be scary, as they randomly secrete sometimes large volumes of adrenaline and noradrenaline - causing life-threatening tachycardia and hypertension.
They’re especially challenging cases when it comes to surgery - and we’ll chat all about why that is, and how we manage these cases, in this episode of the Medical Nursing Podcast.
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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Today on the medical nursing podcast, we’re talking all about parathyroid disorders - diseases of the parathyroid gland affecting calcium balance within the body.
Though we don’t see these as commonly as other endocrine diseases, it’s still really important we understand these disorders - especially hypoparathyroidism, which can cause life-threatening hypocalcaemia. By the end of this episode, you’ll feel more confident caring for these patients.
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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If I say ‘hypothyroid’, what comes to mind?
For me, it’s a vision of a quiet little mini schnauzer, with hair loss and awful skin - but the reality is hypothyroidism causes a LOT more changes for our patients.
To understand how we treat and nurse our hypothyroid dogs, we first need to understand hypothyroidism and its impact on our patients—which is exactly what you’ll find waiting for you in this episode of the Medical Nursing Podcast.
---
📲 Grab the show notes and references from today’s episode:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com/podcast
---
🖥️ Learn more about medical nursing:
http://www.veterinaryinternalmedicinenursing.com
---📲 Follow me on Instagram:
http://www.instagram.com/vetinternalmedicinenursing
---
🎶 Get Free by Hotham https://soundcloud.com/hothammusic
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
🎨 Cover art: @amyfarmerdigitalartist
---
This podcast does not replace a veterinary surgeon's advice, and the content within it is provided for information only. All conditions must be diagnosed by a veterinary surgeon, and veterinary nurses and technicians must always ensure they are working within local legislation and regulating body guidelines. Any products or treatments discussed are for information only and do not constitute endorsements of products or services.
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