Added: 4 years ago
From: Campbellteaching
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  • love the video man

  • Thank you! Excellent information and very easy to understand. Thank you for taking the time. Take care.

  • Great work and great video. You explain everything really well and I'm very happy that you have made videos because they are helping me a lot in my studies...I'm finally understanding. Keep the good work and I hope to see more videos to help medical, nursing and paramadic students.

  • really informative and interesting

  • This is really helpful. Thanks.

  • THANK YOU SO MUCHHHHHHHHH I LOVE ALL YOUR VIDEOS!

  • Thank you campbell I appreciate the work in these lectures it helped me a lot in my A&P tests.. including my final for A&P2 which is an accumilation of A&P1 and A&P2. Listening to your lectures and my professor (which he reads from a powerpoint and doesnt explain very well) you give out more information and also examples and explanations and doing some readings gave me an "A" on my FINAL.Thanks again this is very helpful

  • There are 9 morons who did not "like" this???!!!!!

  • ugh, fluid and electrolyte balance is so complicated!! why must it be so important to life?!

  • Thank you for these wonderful videos,I am a 3rd student nurse on a Renal/Dialysis ward at the moment and therefore as you can understand your videos are very useful.

    Do you have any videos in regard to renal system,haemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis?

    Thank you so much.

  • @BellaNapolimia wow! didnt you have to learn this in your second year? im a second year student, and we've got an exam coming up (care of the acutely ill adult module) in which we have an essay style exam, we've got to do an ABCDE assessment of an acutely ill adult, they'll give us options in the exam but one of them is likely to be on a condition that effects fluid balance

    its driving me nuts! i could so do with a renal unit placement right now!

  • @vicklryan yes I did it in my 2nd year,but being on a renal ward (ESRF,acute and chronic renal failure,renal transplant/HD,PD and so on ),the knowledge of electrolytes,fluid replacement,fluid balance and so on is more detailed and specific than what we have been taught in year 2....plus we have to do very detailed care plans ,linked to NSF,NICE guidelines,audit for renal ward,benchmarks and more,much more .....I have headache only thinking of it.

  • this guy is boring. he could be more excited about... electrolytes!

  • This helped me a lot with my a & p class for nursing school. My instructor is not helpful whatsoever and just confuses me further. Thank you!

  • Is it just me or is he about to start laughing before he says women have less water then men because their fatter? LOL

  • I'm in nursing school and this lecture was amazing and alot of help:) You say intracellular so cute too:D Thanks so much

  • I need to sell some books, please get your classmates to buy a Physiology book and a Pathophysiology book from

    campbellteaching.co.uk

    thanks, John

  • @Campbellteaching Talk to JCU Australia or better still immigrate and teach us. Our pracs were so crappy and irrelevant. The patho was very interesting, but they too lost the plot. Lecture here and make your book required reading

  • First of Assalam -O-Allaikum

    This video have been very helful.iam a part-2 trainee doing my postgraduation in Anaesthesia .This video has been very helful .I am very thankful to Mr Cambell for his extremly kidness for putting this video on the inter- net

    dr alirehman

    dralirehman@hotmail.com.

  • This video series has been extremely helpful! :) I am in nursing school and was a little confused about F&E but you have simplified it and made it very understandable!

  • I really enjoy your videos. So educational.

  • We were taught that extracellular fluid includes intravascular, interstitial, and transcellular. Transcellular, or fluid within cavities such as in the pleural cavity, wasn't mentioned here. Any reason why?

  • @lbwhite89 transcellular it's a very small amount, a couple of ml. And there's a 3rd space loss, which is always pathologic .

  • Most grateful for this clear and EXTREMELY helpful lecture. I truly appreciate you!

  • You are the best! Thank you for the good teaching!

  • Thank you..

  • Thank you so much, you've been very helpful. YOu've got such a calming way of explaining things.

  • Thank you very much for your videos!! I am a nursing student studying for my RN exam, and this is a great refresher :)

  • Thank you so much, you are really helping me on my journey to be a nurse!!

  • i am a clinical instructor in a nursing school..and i did appreciate this videos..part 1 to 3. these are very helpful..thank you very much.

  • I am a nursing student and these are excellent!! Thank you so much :) I could listen to you ALL day long :)

  • I am always looking for resources to reinforce classroom lecture content for my nursing students. Fluids, electrolytes, acid-base balance,osmosis, diffusion and active transport seem to be especially challenging areas for beginning students. Your lectures here are very clear and helpful. Thanks so much for posting these lectures.

  • I'm glad I found this. Really helpful :-)

  • thank you so much Mr. Campbell.. this helps me a lot. GodBless You and Young Family

  • dude you are great. Thank you very much.

  • This man makes me wish I were gay.

  • well done presentation

  • hes hot!

  • i wish that you are my lecturer.......I'll never fall asleep in his class... n_n

  • i love you!

  • thank you for the great explanation :)

  • you explained this so well ^^ thank you for posting your videos they are very helpful for review !!!

  • This would be fun if it had images, footage and music, I wouldnt mind watching it instead of trash tv. good info

  • Question:

    If someone gives 1 Litre of water to a normal person. How much goes to ECF and how much goes to ICF? Will appreciate anyones response.

  • @kenyanmuslim

    HI

    The answer is simple. after a NORMAL person drinks one litre of water most of it gets absorbed and enters ECF. from there as per the requirement of ICF it gets into it. Rest of the extra water is excreted out through kidneys within 30-50 minutes. The mechanism is HOMEOSTASIS ( MAINTAINING THE INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT NEARLY CONSTANT) REF: GUYTON AND HALL'S TEXTBOOK OF HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY,11 EDITION . hope this information is helpful.

  • thank you so much.. you're a great help. i totally understand it now.

  • I want to order more DVDs, but the email keep getting bounced back as undeliverable. Anybody know what's going on? Is he still in business?

    jc

  • How can I thank you!!!!!! Keep up this amazingly wonderful work that helps so many!

  • whats the difference b/w ADH and aldosterone?

  • ADH regulates water balance while aldosterone regulates sodium, John

  • is confusion a sign of hypovolemia or hypervolemia?

  • its more of ,hypovolemia..hypovolemia my result ina decrease perfusion in the brain..

  • then dont watch it... It's helpful for people who care to learn about it... However, if you plan to work in the fast food industries (you seem to be a candidate), I can see where this video would be a tad inappropriate in your future studies. Good luck to you, and hopefully age will provide you with a better understanding on the importance of showing respect to others... Especially to people who have a knowledge base adequate enough to save lives.

  • thanks for the reply john :) hmm.. is there an electrolytes iiii video?

  • thank you very much! this is very helpful for me. i'm in med school and we have this Problem Based Learning program. thank you very much really!! by the way, are you the authors of campbell biology? because that used to be our textbook in my undergraduate course and i really loved that book! it's still useful even now that i'm already in med school. :)

  • Ive written a couple of books but not that one, Ive written Campbell`s Physiology Notes and another one called Campbell`s Pathophysiology Notes. Im glad you found the program helpful,

    John

  • do you have a video on chemical bonding?

  • this was very helpfull as i prepare to take the NCLEX. thank you very much

  • very informative!thanks a lot mr. campbell-peps from Philippines

  • I have actually send the all these links to my uni group when we all qualify in 3 years we know who to thank : )

  • all these videos are helping me understand all my lectures!

  • Excellent, Im glad they are helping,

    John

  • hey, it's me again....sorry, but i was hoping in lameman's terms you could explain in lame man's terms what exactly is osmotic pressure? I've been looking for a definition, but can't find one i can understand

  • Osmosis is like a water fall it waters down, through a semi-permeable membrane. Water moves from watery areas to less watery areas.Water moves from areas of low solute concentrations to areas of high solute concentrations.

    Any help?

    John

  • I think so...lol, i'm already gratefull you have these online, it's going to help me a lot with my nursung career.

  • This video closely follows our nursing lecture on electrolytes. its certainly worth viewing. not very exciting but the content is very helpful and is consistent with our classes teaching curriculum.

  • interesante

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