CPD – MS104 – Current Concepts in Cardiology for Advanced Practitioners Mini Series course with special price just for you: $479 $114
£347.00 (+VAT)
12 months access to recordings and course materials is included. Please note that these are webinar recordings and not live events. Full details on how to access the Mini Series will be emailed to you.
This Mini Series is tailored towards Advanced Practitioners and those studying towards Advanced Practitioner status.
In recent years there have been important advances in the understanding of the electrophysiologic mechanisms underlying the development of a variety of cardiac arrhythmias in humans. These electrophysiologic mechanisms also appear to underlie the cardiac arrhythmias we encounter in canine and feline patients presenting for cardiac arrhythmia assessment. This session will provide a comprehensive overview of the basic mechanisms of cardiac arrhythmia i.e. enhanced or abnormal impulse formation (focal activity) and conduction disturbances (reentry). Importantly, this session will serve as the foundation for session 2 of this Mini Series.
Recent studies have shown that specific ECG criteria used routinely to help diagnose the more complex arrhythmias in humans are also applicable to our canine and feline patients. These surface ECG criteria can greatly assist the veterinary practitioner in the diagnosis of challenging arrhythmias, particularly supraventricular tachyarrhythmias, as well as guiding the choice of appropriate therapy. This session will be illustrated with lots of practical ECG examples.
At the end of Sessions 1 and 2 you will:
The use of loop diuretics to resolve fluid retention and congestion is a cornerstone of heart failure therapy in our canine and feline patients. In the treatment of more advanced stages of heart failure, diuretics may fail to control salt and water retention despite the use of appropriate doses. Resistance to loop diuretics is an under-recognised phenomenon in veterinary medicine that is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Treatment with a loop diuretic results in compensatory hypertrophy of epithelial cells downstream from the thick ascending limb and consequently its diuretic effect will be blunted. Ih this session we’ll discuss strategies to try to overcome diuretic resistance in canine and feline chronic heart failure patients.
At the end of this session you will be able to:
CPD|CPD – MS104 – Current Concepts in Cardiology for Advanced Practitioners Mini Series|MS104 – Current Concepts in Cardiology for Advanced Practitioners Mini Series