all efforts are speechless to appreciate . in the the end the summary you gave was so awesome . the way you start is marvelous. thank you and your team ..
Hi, are you guys going to do an updated video on this, or is this still currently the recommended approach? The latest edition of Bates had mentioned the 'Vertical Strip Pattern' to be the best for detecting breast masses. As always, thanks for exceptional content!
in real life, must you always ensure a chaperone is present or would it be sufficient to offer one and let the patient decide (and is the answer different depending on whether you yourself are male or female)?
This depends on the policy at your hospital or place of medical practice. Generally the advice is to always have a chaperone present for the good of the patient and yourself. If a patient does not want a chaperone then you have to decide as a practitioner if you are happy to perform the examination and act accordingly.
It's a safe practice to have a chaperone for medicolegal reasons as well. Of course, this is assuming that your gender presentation is different from the gender presentation of the patient-a male doctor examining a male patient's breast or a female doctor examining a female patient's breast would not need a chaperone, but a male doctor palpating a female patient's chest (as in this video) and vice-versa always require a chaperone.
You have to check epi trochlear lymph node, lymphedema in the arm on the affacted side. Also check liver span and jaundice in eyes to rule out liver mets. And press at various points along spine to check for spinal tenderness in case of spinal mets.
Just a heads up.. My lecturers told us med students that we're not supposed to lift our hands off from the breast while palpating.. But excellent video anyways!
When talking with a patient it's often best to use terms that the patient understands (rather than medical jargon). The colloquial term in the UK for lymph nodes is glands, hence why this terminology is used when talking with the patient. Use what is appropriate for your patient.
lymphadeno - means lymph, adeno - gland. It's correct either way, they are just man-made terms. An example - Mycosis fungoides (fungus of fungus - thought to be a fungal disease of skin) but it is actually a cutaneous T cell lymphoma.
Final year medical student and now junior doctors. keep up the great videos
Thanks for non-profit efforts, it is a brilliant art what you are doing.
all efforts are speechless to appreciate . in the the end the summary you gave was so awesome . the way you start is marvelous. thank you and your team ..
it is good for learners.thank you.
Thnx for your amazing work!
I love all ur videos
Thanks for this amazing work 😊
Thanx doctors
Hello Geeky Medics . how is leonah doing now presently ?
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Hi, are you guys going to do an updated video on this, or is this still currently the recommended approach? The latest edition of Bates had mentioned the 'Vertical Strip Pattern' to be the best for detecting breast masses. As always, thanks for exceptional content!
Anyone else notice his full name at the end? Simon Sayers... :D
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Even as this is a beneficial video, the woman's privacy is still respected....as compared to the entertainment world we have today - sickening!
Very educational and professionally done
just an amazing video . it was the reason for getting a full mark in my exam😍😍😍 tnx
Fab video
in real life, must you always ensure a chaperone is present or would it be sufficient to offer one and let the patient decide (and is the answer different depending on whether you yourself are male or female)?
This depends on the policy at your hospital or place of medical practice. Generally the advice is to always have a chaperone present for the good of the patient and yourself. If a patient does not want a chaperone then you have to decide as a practitioner if you are happy to perform the examination and act accordingly.
always have a chaperone. dont ever trust your patients. you dont know what they are capable of.
It's a safe practice to have a chaperone for medicolegal reasons as well. Of course, this is assuming that your gender presentation is different from the gender presentation of the patient-a male doctor examining a male patient's breast or a female doctor examining a female patient's breast would not need a chaperone, but a male doctor palpating a female patient's chest (as in this video) and vice-versa always require a chaperone.
You have to check epi trochlear lymph node, lymphedema in the arm on the affacted side. Also check liver span and jaundice in eyes to rule out liver mets. And press at various points along spine to check for spinal tenderness in case of spinal mets.
Thanks for the educated video. 🚀
Everything is excellently done 👌🏻just to add on when palpating the contralateral breast should be covered for patients privacy and comfort 😃
sure, i think he didn't do it because he was palpating a maniquan. but True.
Thanks for the great video.
Keep it up Geeky medics.
Absolutely loved the video. In fact I have been watching your other videos and I am so impressed. Thank you so much.
Thank you so much 🙏
Great video, as usual Thanks for the effort
I love Geeky Medics ❤️
👍 classy explanation...👌
thank you for the awesome work you do.
Awesome work. He's loving every minute of it
thanks I truly learned a lot
you have assisted me, thanks
nice
Very Helpfull Video
Nice lecture
Thank you for this.
You guys are amazing
Thank u so so much
Thanks 😘😘
thanks
Thanks guys!
that was good
great help
Just a heads up.. My lecturers told us med students that we're not supposed to lift our hands off from the breast while palpating.. But excellent video anyways!
Your lecturers are wrong. The way they do it is the same way as described in Bates.
Another great video! Thanks.
amazing
Thank you so much
They're not glands!!! they are lymph nodes!
When talking with a patient it's often best to use terms that the patient understands (rather than medical jargon). The colloquial term in the UK for lymph nodes is glands, hence why this terminology is used when talking with the patient. Use what is appropriate for your patient.
lymphadeno - means lymph, adeno - gland. It's correct either way, they are just man-made terms. An example - Mycosis fungoides (fungus of fungus - thought to be a fungal disease of skin) but it is actually a cutaneous T cell lymphoma.