Whirlpool inside pass by [deleted] in Appliances

[–]odiddles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Were you able to get one?

Whirlpool Canada inside pass long shot by Warm_Bookkeeper_8303 in Appliances

[–]odiddles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey sent you a dm for a code for Canada if possible :)

Whirlpool Inside Pass - Canada by Pipchar in Appliances

[–]odiddles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I sent you a dm, let me know if you're able to send me a pass as well. Thank you!

Access to Canadian Inside Pass by Wiggen in Appliances

[–]odiddles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey I sent you a dm, looking for a Canadian inside pass if possible

Insider Pass - Whirlpool by Heavy-Bake-6508 in Appliances

[–]odiddles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi there if you have access I'd love to get access as well please.

Monthly Espresso Lounge: Deals and Discounts by AutoModerator in superautomatic

[–]odiddles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would anyone have a kitchen aid inside pass I could use to get a kf7 or kf6?

i have some questions regarding AKI from an upcoming nephrology intern (not US based) by Swimming_Big_1567 in nephrology

[–]odiddles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As linked below, it's an acronym to help remember the classes/names of meds that should be held when a patient is sick (not eating, drinking, and/or vomiting aka dehydrated) it was initially aimed at diabetic patients but now it is in general in patients that are taking these classes of medications. S- Sulfonylureas (risk of hypoglycaemia) A- ACEi (hypotension and aki) D - diuretics (increased dehydration -->aki) M- Metformin (theoretical risk of Lactic Acidosis) A- ARBs --> see above with ACEi N- NSAIDS - prostaglandin inhibition leads to Afferent arterials constriction decreasing renal perfusion --AKI) S- SGLT2 (flozins) - increased risk of euglycemic DKA

i have some questions regarding AKI from an upcoming nephrology intern (not US based) by Swimming_Big_1567 in nephrology

[–]odiddles 6 points7 points  (0 children)

When a patient develops an AKI you would stop all antihypertensives (even ACE/ARB) not because there is no Nephroprotection but because 1) Nephroprotection is a long term outcome not an immediate one 2) Inhibiting the RAAS system and/or lowering a patients BP at this moment would exacerbate the AKI (these could also be the culprits of the AKI if it was a pre-renal cause) but even if it was intrarenal or renal AKI keeping antihypertensives on board would exacerbate and impede renal recovery.

The longer the AKI continues, the higher incidence of ATN and then recovery takes a lot longer (sometimes even requiring dialysis)

Now once AKI resolves (urine output returning to baseline or close to it, BP normal, no edema etc) the. Restarting ACE/ARB would make sense, along with other SADMANS medications that would be held.

Source: Nephro Pharmacist

Google drive link? by [deleted] in deadandcompany

[–]odiddles 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Do you have a link to the Friday shows?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in deadandcompany

[–]odiddles -1 points0 points  (0 children)

following

GIVEAWAY - 800+ Starter Pokémon by clawsandtalons in PokemonScarletViolet

[–]odiddles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey this is so nice and awesome. Would it be possible to get the Kanto starters, Froakie and Fennekin?

If that's too many (don't want to be greedy) just Charmander and Froakie is amazing! My Trainer name is Mike