Make sure you don’t miss the Wonderful story of Chain 124 and the National Kidney Registry form Sunday’s New York Times.
She came from a land down under…
Today I had a new patient from Australia, she came in with a few years worth of laboratory results all in SI units.
I knew how to convert mmol/L of creatinine to mg/dl: divide by 88. But converting mmoles/L of urea to BUN? No idea. Converting nmol/L of vitamin D to ng/ml? Stumped.
Thank the maker for Dr. Google.
- To convert from creatinine mmol/L to mg/dL divide by 88
- To convert from mmol/l Urea to mg/dL BUN multiply by 2.8
- To convert nmol/L 25 OH Vitamin D to ng/ml divide by 2.496
- To convert mmol of creatinine to mg of creatinine (needed to interpret a 24-hour urine) multiply by the molecular weight, 113
Useful online tool: PDF2JPG
Convert PDFs to a series of JPGs with this free online tool. Cleverly called PDF2JPG.
Kidometer is creeping up on one point oh!
If you are interested in testing out the beta of Kidometer for iPhone please drop me a line. We are up to 0.6x and are recruiting a beta army. Check out the teaser page: kidometer.com.
Metabolic Alkalosis: the lecture. Updated
Apple predictions for 2011. How did I do?
April 27th the white iPhone 4 is released
Pessimist. Apple sold 93 million iPhones in 2011. I can’t believe they moved nearly a 100 million phones.
My iPhone score card looks like this:
- iPhone 5 in June/July No
- Same form factor Yes
- faster Yes
- better battery Yes
- better cameras Yes on back / no on front
- price remains the same Yes
- Verizon iPhone Yes
- Verizon with iPhone 5 No
- White as iPhone 5 No
- NFC No
- Memory remains the same No
- 65 million phone No
Pretty much nailed it, except the movies and TV shows.
Nailed it
Voice did debut but it was an iPhone 4s feature not a general feature of iOS. Also it’s a private API that only Apple can access so no public APIs for developers to hook into.
I also missed iMessage.
Not yet. I will include this as one of my 2012 predictions.
Yup
Yup
Yup
Nope, not in 2011 and I lost hope and did not include it in my 2012 predictions and then Apple introduces iBook Author. So I had the right prediction but I was early by a couple of weeks.
Nope. None of the iPods, not the classic, not the Touch or Nano saw any meaningful upgrade.
This looks like a 2012 prediction rather than 2011.
Yup
In 2011 Apple purchased the 3-D mapping company C3 Technologies for 267 million and the Israeli flash memory company Anobit for 390 million dollars. The Anobit purchase was the second biggest purchase in Apple’s history (only NeXT was bigger). I guess this counts as big but I was thinking of a purchase in the billions, like a Yahoo! or other frontline consumer facing company. So I am going to give me a “Yup” for this one too.
Yup.
Year-end price of 405.00, with a high of 426.70. Missed it by just 2.6% and 2.2%.
I’m reading the Disappearing Spoon, It’s Nerdtastic
From The Dynamic Periodic Table |
Acid Base for Med Students, a free iBook. Updated x2
Back in August of 2010 I begged for a content creation system for the iPad and last week Apple delivered iBooks Author.
- You can only use the iBook on an iPad
- The iPad must have at least iBooks 2.0 to load the book
- The file can be downloaded to a computer and side loaded to the iPad through iTunes, but that seems overly complex compared to just downloading it right from the web sight right on an iPad
Update 2: version of 1.5 is now live with added interactivity.
New Lecture: Initiation of Dialysis
This is a fellow level lecture. I built it off an old lecture from 2003 or 2004. It is remarkable how much data has emerged since then. Of coarse the IDEAL Trial has put a dagger in the heart of early initiation but the observational data in agreement with abandoning early initiation has also turned.
To fortify this lecture it needs the data on nursing home residents and dialysis outcomes and I’d like to add the recent data on dialysis mortality after the week-end.
All-in-all, its a good foundation.
Crowd sourcing nephrology and IgA resources
I received this letter:
Hi,
I am a patient with IgA nephropathy, (current serum creatinine around 3.7, eGFR around 18ish). I also have an MD from the University of Washington in seattle.I love your blog. I was wondering if you could recommend books or review-type journal articles on two topics of interest to me. With my MD background I can read fairly technical material, although sometimes get a bit lost in some journal articles. Wanting some overview material to bone up on a few topics.
I just haven’t been able to find book titles that seem spot-on. I have a great nephrologist here in Seattle who is very busy at the moment and I can’t seem to get his attention via email, etc. to provide these kinds of recommendations. I thought you might be able to help.
- 1. IgA nephropathy – overview of pathological mechanism, current research areas, etc.
- 2. A good article/book on reading kidney biopsy results.
Any information would be very much appreciated.
I didn’t have anything to suggest. Anyone have any good sources to recommend?