5 • 643 Ratings
🗓️ 1 September 2017
⏱️ 42 minutes
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Today we talk to Stefano Cortellini, lecturer in emergency and critical care here at the RVC about an approach to the bleeding patient. Where do you start, what you should be thinking and what investigations can you do. We hope it clarifies your approach.
Pet blood bank has lots of information on how to choose the right products and FAQs
https://www.petbloodbankuk.org
Suggested reading:
http://www.cuvs.org/pdf/article-bleeding-disorders-diagnostic-approach.pdf
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0:59.6 | Today we're going to talk to talk to dr. Stephano Cortlini about an approach to bleeding disorders or approach to animals with bleeding disorders |
1:04.7 | so thank you dr. Cortolini for coming along thank you Don for inviting again |
1:09.3 | again thank you no no pressure or anything like that. |
1:12.3 | No. I won't be tested. Absolutely. So these are the ideas that do you have a general approach |
1:19.9 | if a patient comes in that has bleeding as part of its problem list? Like do you have general approach that you think about these cases in general? |
1:31.1 | I guess the first question I always ask myself, which may not necessarily be the right way of doing, |
1:38.3 | but is this bleeding spontaneous or traumatic? So is this patient abnormally bleeding or is there a reason why he is bleeding? |
1:47.0 | So, for example, a patient with epistaxis. Is he bleeding because he's got a coagulopathy |
1:52.0 | or is he bleeding because it's got a mass that is bleeding? Same thing, hymo abdomen. |
1:57.0 | Patient with hymobdeme, is he coagulopathicic or he or she coagulopathic or is this a |
2:03.3 | spontaneous bleeding because of a mass that has ruptured or is it because of trauma because i think |
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