26:12 Hello, in the bootcamp "INBDE updates to mental dental videos" they mention that Trendelenburg position is no longer recommended for Syncope. So would "B" also be an acceptable answer to question 15?
Yeaaah! I was the first one to like the video!😃. Thank you Ryan! I keep going back and forth with all your videos. I started with Prostho, pause it in the minute 13, go to Patho, watch first video, jumped to Perio. It's hard to follow one subject with so much valuable information. It's like going to an amusement park and wanting to ride all the rides at the same time. Lol 😆
hai ryan, answer for the 15th question is B or D ?? I just confused becoz u said in slides vasovagal syncope can be treat with trendelenburg position and for pregnant women left lateral decubitus
Because the question is supposed to finish by saying “which of the following should you NOT do?” as I mentioned in the video! That is a correct thing to do for this patient.
Ok so I got 7 1/2 ( I changed my answer from Q13 last minute even though I was right so I count as half lol) But definitely learn a lot! Thank you for sharing.
I have swelling between cheeks and gums. Almost two weeks. Mushy and painful numb feeling. After extractions and alveoplasty. I feel like something stuck in throat.
Thanks Dr. for your videos, i studying for take my examen in august and your videos are very helpfully for me, please, can you tell what other things do you recommend for study?
Can you please help me in a question i had on an exam and i couldn't find an answer to it.. the question was.. 5year old child with multiple carious teeth presented to your clinic with severe pain.. which method is the most reliable to diagnose which tooth to blame.. A. Radiograph B. Percussion C. Electric pulp tester D. Child pointing out at the tooth
This is a difficult question to answer in the sense that the premise is ambiguous. What is the severe pain categorized as? I can tell you for certain the answer is not D because patients (especially children) can be very unreliable pointing to an area. Percussion can test for apical periodontitis, but that may not be the disease process going on here. EPT tests pulp vitality, but the pulp may not necessarily need to be dead for there to be severe pain. Since the question mentions caries, I would say radiographs are your best diagnostic tool to diagnose the problem area.
@@mentaldental thanks alot for your kind reply.. I actually sat for that exam twice.. and this question was repeated twice.. I was very much hesitant between radiograph, which was my answer the first time, and percussion, which was my asnwer the second time. By the way.. this was an exam for a job.. but i believe the questions were the style of the NDB... I got the first rank the first time.. but i applied again for another area but i got 4th rank the second time.. Finally, i would never be able to thank you because your videos were running all the time while i was studying... 🌹
Amazing videos! Thank you for this..really! Question tho, so for BSSO, because you sever the Inferior Alveolar Nerve/Artery, aren't you also cutting off blood/nerve supply to the mandibular teeth and therefore also de-vitalizing them?
i know its a question for doctor rayan but let me answer well first of all you need to know that nerve innervation isn't what determine teeth vitality, you can get a nerve injury and still have vital teeth that are normal and wouldn't need an endodonticc treatment what determine teeth vitality is blood supply, and with this, it is meant continuous blood supply is cut to the tooth= so it is necrosis. a major artery was cut in a surgery the complication is blood loss. and regarding the actual surgery, the nerves and arteries arent cut off. when an OMFS does the surgery the saw the superficial layer of the bone and then hammer it til there is a split. and then they would actually see the IAN but its the movement of the nerve that can cause the permanent damage sense it is a very sensitive tissue and even if a cut happen in surgery by accident they would call a neurosurgeon to suture it back.
thank you for your response. I understand what you are saying which is why I did say "artery/nerve" since they are bundled together in the mandibular canal. So if the inferior alveolar artery is severed, there are going to be other routes of blood supply for the tooth? if so where from? Or is it a matter of angiogenesis or healing of the inferior alveolar artery that will re-supply those teeth, thanks again :)
@@georgebush5894 the arteries arent severed or else its a very risky complication and if it was severed it would have been repaired in the surgery it is not severed and not meant to be because they split the bone by hammering it rather than sawing the bone through and through
With Question 1. Are there any ways to help me rule out the trigeminal nerve? I think that nerve is located in the same area 🤔 I thought it was the Trigeminal nerve.
Trigeminal also includes ophthalmic and mandibular branches which are quite away from TMJ, if specefically Maxillary branch of trigeminal was mentioned --- then I agree with you that it could have been a good trap.
As always excellent videos 🙌🏼 I can’t find the words to explain you how much I appreciate your Videos 🦷💪🏼Thank U! Can you verify me the order of Congenitally missing tooth? 3rd Molars first then Mandibular PM and last Maxillary Lateral Incisors, am I right? I appreciate your response 😉thank you!
HI in your video you said 3rd molars, Max.lateral incisor, and mand.premolar. as the Order of congenitally missing teeth. her question is stating a different order and you responded as the correct order. now I'm confuse of what is the correct order. can you clarify? thank you
No, it is 0.2mm. There are multiple studies on this topic: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4170845/ www.researchgate.net/publication/11443484_The_Causes_of_Early_Implant_Bone_Loss_Myth_or_Science
Hello sir.. i have a question ..can we extract a tooth when theres periapical infection or should we put the patient on medication and wait till the infection is gone.. it might sound stupid but i have this in my head
That is an age-old debate in the world of dentistry! You certainly can, but it may be much more challenging to get the patient numb if there is significant active infection present.
Thanks for watching! For more high yield dental content, subscribe to Mental Dental today: ua-cam.com/users/mentaldental
I got my PASS yesterday!! Used your videos and the app, thank you so much!!!
I'm so glad! Congratulations! 😁
Which app ?can you tell me please ?
What app?
@@kk-kk352 Probably the NBDE II Dental Boards Mastery app
26:12 Hello, in the bootcamp "INBDE updates to mental dental videos" they mention that Trendelenburg position is no longer recommended for Syncope. So would "B" also be an acceptable answer to question 15?
Thanks dr Ryan for this useful series ❤️
Yeaaah! I was the first one to like the video!😃. Thank you Ryan! I keep going back and forth with all your videos. I started with Prostho, pause it in the minute 13, go to Patho, watch first video, jumped to Perio. It's hard to follow one subject with so much valuable information. It's like going to an amusement park and wanting to ride all the rides at the same time. Lol 😆
Thank you so much for this practice questions!
It was exhausting but so so helpful! Thanks a lot dr!
Thanks Ryan , I love you ♥️
such a great work, Thanks DR. Ryan.
Thank you!!
Thank you Ryan , your videos have been very helpful for me
thank you dr ryan
thank you so much for allllllllllllllll your videos, god bless you
Thank you.
Very useful .. thank u sooooo much🌹👍👍👍
You’re very welcome!
Great series!! Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
hai ryan, answer for the 15th question is B or D ?? I just confused becoz u said in slides vasovagal syncope can be treat with trendelenburg position and for pregnant women left lateral decubitus
Because the question is supposed to finish by saying “which of the following should you NOT do?” as I mentioned in the video! That is a correct thing to do for this patient.
thanks
Ok so I got 7 1/2 ( I changed my answer from Q13 last minute even though I was right so I count as half lol)
But definitely learn a lot! Thank you for sharing.
Great! You're very welcome 😁
There is Lefort IV which is Lefort III and frontal bone fracture
You are the best
Thank you Dr Ryan for this series!! It was very informative! Moving on to pedodontics.
I have swelling between cheeks and gums. Almost two weeks. Mushy and painful numb feeling. After extractions and alveoplasty. I feel like something stuck in throat.
Hello Dr Ryan. Can you please upload videos related to all the pre-clinical subjects ??
What subjects in particular are you looking for?
@@mentaldental I m looking for biochemistry and pharmacology in particular.
I also want assistance in learning community health dentistry Dr .Ryan.
Isn't the minimum thickness required for an implant is 1.5 on all sides?
1.5 reqired between implant and the natural tooth on any side (mesial or distal)
Hi Dr Ryan, do we need practice on surgery DD as well? Cuz I’ve frequently seen people use DD(specially part2) for INBDE!!
I actually checked the Surgery DD, there are many things that I haven’t faced before.🥲
Thanks Dr. for your videos, i studying for take my examen in august and your videos are very helpfully for me, please, can you tell what other things do you recommend for study?
Which app plz tell me
Why is NBDE parte II, is there part I?
There is a Part 1! It covers basic clinical sciences like microbiology and pathology-however it is being discontinued fairly soon.
Mental Dental thank you so much for your response.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge. May GOD bless you more and more each day.
Can you please help me in a question i had on an exam and i couldn't find an answer to it.. the question was..
5year old child with multiple carious teeth presented to your clinic with severe pain.. which method is the most reliable to diagnose which tooth to blame..
A. Radiograph
B. Percussion
C. Electric pulp tester
D. Child pointing out at the tooth
This is a difficult question to answer in the sense that the premise is ambiguous. What is the severe pain categorized as? I can tell you for certain the answer is not D because patients (especially children) can be very unreliable pointing to an area. Percussion can test for apical periodontitis, but that may not be the disease process going on here. EPT tests pulp vitality, but the pulp may not necessarily need to be dead for there to be severe pain. Since the question mentions caries, I would say radiographs are your best diagnostic tool to diagnose the problem area.
@@mentaldental thanks alot for your kind reply..
I actually sat for that exam twice.. and this question was repeated twice..
I was very much hesitant between radiograph, which was my answer the first time, and percussion, which was my asnwer the second time. By the way.. this was an exam for a job.. but i believe the questions were the style of the NDB...
I got the first rank the first time.. but i applied again for another area but i got 4th rank the second time..
Finally, i would never be able to thank you because your videos were running all the time while i was studying... 🌹
Amazing videos! Thank you for this..really! Question tho, so for BSSO, because you sever the Inferior Alveolar Nerve/Artery, aren't you also cutting off blood/nerve supply to the mandibular teeth and therefore also de-vitalizing them?
i know its a question for doctor rayan but let me answer
well first of all you need to know that nerve innervation isn't what determine teeth vitality, you can get a nerve injury and still have vital teeth that are normal and wouldn't need an endodonticc treatment
what determine teeth vitality is blood supply, and with this, it is meant continuous blood supply is cut to the tooth= so it is necrosis. a major artery was cut in a surgery the complication is blood loss.
and regarding the actual surgery, the nerves and arteries arent cut off.
when an OMFS does the surgery the saw the superficial layer of the bone and then hammer it til there is a split. and then they would actually see the IAN
but its the movement of the nerve that can cause the permanent damage sense it is a very sensitive tissue
and even if a cut happen in surgery by accident they would call a neurosurgeon to suture it back.
thank you for your response. I understand what you are saying which is why I did say "artery/nerve" since they are bundled together in the mandibular canal. So if the inferior alveolar artery is severed, there are going to be other routes of blood supply for the tooth? if so where from? Or is it a matter of angiogenesis or healing of the inferior alveolar artery that will re-supply those teeth, thanks again :)
@@georgebush5894 the arteries arent severed or else its a very risky complication
and if it was severed it would have been repaired in the surgery
it is not severed and not meant to be because they split the bone by hammering it rather than sawing the bone through and through
With Question 1. Are there any ways to help me rule out the trigeminal nerve? I think that nerve is located in the same area 🤔 I thought it was the Trigeminal nerve.
Trigeminal also includes ophthalmic and mandibular branches which are quite away from TMJ, if specefically Maxillary branch of trigeminal was mentioned --- then I agree with you that it could have been a good trap.
The last question is about the vaso vagal syncope not about anaphylactic shock. So I answered it (trendelnburg position)
dr Ryan is the superhero of this exam, soo.. is there a superhero for all other exams...? Curious
As always excellent videos 🙌🏼 I can’t find the words to explain you how much I appreciate your Videos 🦷💪🏼Thank U!
Can you verify me the order of Congenitally missing tooth?
3rd Molars first then Mandibular PM and last Maxillary Lateral Incisors, am I right? I appreciate your response 😉thank you!
You're very welcome! And yes, that is the correct order 😊
HI in your video you said 3rd molars, Max.lateral incisor, and mand.premolar. as the Order of congenitally missing teeth. her question is stating a different order and you responded as the correct order. now I'm confuse of what is the correct order.
can you clarify? thank you
Tnx dr, but in the dd resorption of bone around imp after first year should be 0.02 mm not 0.2
No, it is 0.2mm. There are multiple studies on this topic: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4170845/
www.researchgate.net/publication/11443484_The_Causes_of_Early_Implant_Bone_Loss_Myth_or_Science
Hello sir.. i have a question ..can we extract a tooth when theres periapical infection or should we put the patient on medication and wait till the infection is gone.. it might sound stupid but i have this in my head
That is an age-old debate in the world of dentistry! You certainly can, but it may be much more challenging to get the patient numb if there is significant active infection present.
Is this oral surgery video enough for inbde too??
Yes, but I recommend watching the entire series to get the most out of the videos!
@@mentaldental thank u so much🙂
I need help with question number 3. I don't understand why the answer "Surgical Reposition and Not Anterior maxillary Osteotomy?
😢 Please help 😭
🤨 Why tf would you do osteotomy
Subir mas preguntas de practica' buen trabajo ,sigue asi👍.....
Great...
the audio is to weak
12
Thank You.