Very good series of vids on the topic. I am a physiotherapist in Australia, and we were taught this topic in undergrad years, but it decays in one's mind if you are only using it 3-4x a year. You also added clearer details than I was taught, which is helping it crystallize in my mind. Thanks again.
Thank you so much, Dr. Johns!! clear and concise, excellent presentation. I am a final year medical student from Pakistan and will recommend this channel to all my colleagues!!
Am a doctor in India and my clinical skills atleast in evaluating giddiness has vastly been improved in part through your videos....I would have gladly picked your brains to learn more if you were my mentor here!! Thankyou ....
@peter johns . Thank you! I did the Epley maneuver, and it cured my vertigo I started having after concussion due to a car accident. I got pretty sick and vomited afterwards, but it’s totally worth having it gone! Thank you so much. God bless! 🙏🏼
Thank you for all the information. There's been times that i observed horizontal rotatory beating towards the healthy ear while doing dixhallpike. So i'm wondering if that's also considered pcsc vppb.
Thank you for your amazing and thorough videos, really learned a lot. I have a small question for clarification however: how do we know which ear to test first? Also would we need to return the patient in the upright position before attempting to test the other ear?
I usually test the side opposite to the one the patient says that they get dizzy when they turn over in bed. Yes, must return the patient to upright for the other side Dix-Hallpike test. See this video. ua-cam.com/video/kvVnEsGVLUY/v-deo.html
@@PeterJohns Thank you! I did the Epley maneuver, and it cured my vertigo I started having after concussion due to a car accident. I got pretty sick and vomited afterwards, but it’s totally worth having it gone! Thank you so much. God bless! 🙏🏼
Great video! You are truly helping patients that you'll never see by educating others like this.
Very good series of vids on the topic.
I am a physiotherapist in Australia, and we were taught this topic in undergrad years, but it decays in one's mind if you are only using it 3-4x a year.
You also added clearer details than I was taught, which is helping it crystallize in my mind.
Thanks again.
Thank you very much Dr for such an informative video of patients with positive dix hallpike test!
Superb demonstration, yet again! Thank you very much, indeed!🙏
thank you Sir, you make vertigo looks so easy to understand!!!!!
Thank you so much sir. I'm a med student and I can't explain how helpful this video is to me!
Here you go sir . . . some more absolute pure gold . . . thank you for the examples
Thank you so much, Dr. Johns!! clear and concise, excellent presentation. I am a final year medical student from Pakistan and will recommend this channel to all my colleagues!!
Thank you so much! This video is really awesome! And thanks to the patients who allowed you to record them!
Have helped quite a few patients by watching your videos and thank you for that sir
Thanks, that’s the best compliment! I hope you have passed your knowledge on to other health care professionals as well.
Am a doctor in India and my clinical skills atleast in evaluating giddiness has vastly been improved in part through your videos....I would have gladly picked your brains to learn more if you were my mentor here!! Thankyou ....
And yes I do recommend your videos to people who I think will be helped by those
another beauty of a video! Love the large assortment of room-light nystagmus videos!
Excellent video, concise, informative
I want to thank you for explaining so easily and the case videos just solidifies the concepts. Thank you Sir. You are a hero.
I am glad you found it helpful, thanks for the compliment!
@@PeterJohns
Sir,can we have videos on CSOM,ASOM and Audiometry ?
Silky Bashir Sorry, but as an emergency physician my interest is in vertigo. I don’t much about CSOM/ASOM or audiometry.
@@PeterJohns No problem Sir. Thank you for your valuable time and responding to the query.
Super-clear! Thanks for showing this, especially the horizontal example.
Absolutely pure gold! Loved it.
Many thanks
Another great video i will use to teach students and residents.
Thank you so much professsor. I love your teachings and demonstrations .
Regards
B P, RPT
Fantastic video .. a treasure.. helps a lot! Thanks!!
@peter johns . Thank you! I did the Epley maneuver, and it cured my vertigo I started having after concussion due to a car accident. I got pretty sick and vomited afterwards, but it’s totally worth having it gone! Thank you so much. God bless! 🙏🏼
amazing video... really helpful for students stuck with online learning like me. thank you so much!!!
Thank you
great stuff many examples really helps.
Thank you for all the information. There's been times that i observed horizontal rotatory beating towards the healthy ear while doing dixhallpike. So i'm wondering if that's also considered pcsc vppb.
Watch my video on horizontal canal BPPV, and see if this answers your question. ua-cam.com/video/VRjRTnIw9YE/v-deo.html
Thank you for your amazing and thorough videos, really learned a lot. I have a small question for clarification however: how do we know which ear to test first? Also would we need to return the patient in the upright position before attempting to test the other ear?
I usually test the side opposite to the one the patient says that they get dizzy when they turn over in bed. Yes, must return the patient to upright for the other side Dix-Hallpike test. See this video. ua-cam.com/video/kvVnEsGVLUY/v-deo.html
@@PeterJohns Thank you dearly for the swift reply, all is clear now. Looking forward to your future videos and learning more from you.
@@PeterJohns Thank you! I did the Epley maneuver, and it cured my vertigo I started having after concussion due to a car accident. I got pretty sick and vomited afterwards, but it’s totally worth having it gone! Thank you so much. God bless! 🙏🏼
Woww excellent video! Thanks
Excellent
Excellent video, concise, informative, thank you so very much
thank you