I'm in my adults rotation and during our lecture today, were were differentiating between "glomerulonephritis, and pyelonephritis." We need to know what each is (pathophysiology) , risks factors/causes, acute/chronic symptons, diagnosis, and interventions for both. There is an overwhelming amout of information relating to these two that our instructor has given us. Each of these kidney disorders has an overwhelming amount of info. for all of the above facts we need to know about these 2. Does anyone have any suggestions on how to study for this? There is some overlapping in terms of diagnosis/interventions/acute and chronic symptoms. I guess I'm just trying to figure out how NOT to confuse the 2.
twinjeep97
89 Posts
I'm in my adults rotation and during our lecture today, were were differentiating between "glomerulonephritis, and pyelonephritis." We need to know what each is (pathophysiology) , risks factors/causes, acute/chronic symptons, diagnosis, and interventions for both. There is an overwhelming amout of information relating to these two that our instructor has given us. Each of these kidney disorders has an overwhelming amount of info. for all of the above facts we need to know about these 2. Does anyone have any suggestions on how to study for this? There is some overlapping in terms of diagnosis/interventions/acute and chronic symptoms. I guess I'm just trying to figure out how NOT to confuse the 2.
Thanks for your time,
Brandon