Dear sir, Your skills are trutely amazing. Never in my life and practice I have seen such a smooth and effective technique. I have done hundreds of epidurals but 99.9% in midline sitting position for lumbar epidurals. In my practice in a small rural hospital in North Dakota we rarely need thoracic epidurals, not more than 10 per year😔; those I perform in sitting paramedian approach. I am determined to learn the lateral paramedian technique. Your videos are a fantastic inspiration. Now, with Google Lens app translation is smooth and seamless. I wanted to ask you an important question : As a right-handed practitioner, when performing paramedian approache in LATERAL POSITION, on what side would YOU suggest to position the patient?t Left side down/head to YOUR left - or right side down/head to YOUR right? Do you have any articles published about your amazing lateral paramedian technique? Where do you practice? It would be a great honor to learn from you. Please continue posting your epidural videos. Asher
Thank you for watching my video. I am also an anesthetist in small hospital, so I posted it on UA-cam because there is no place to announce it. I can perform well on either the left or right side of the patient's position. The most important thing in the paramedian approach is to "always be aware of the position of the needle tip". There is Japanese proverb, "What one likes, one will do well." I like epidural anesthesia, so I got better.
I think the echo-guided blocks is a very effective technique, but I'm still a beginner. My friends often use echo. ua-cam.com/play/PLBq_umg-WWKmZafgbRtcVYV8CO0MmrxsZ.html
Dear sir,
Your skills are trutely amazing. Never in my life and practice I have seen such a smooth and effective technique.
I have done hundreds of epidurals but 99.9% in midline sitting position for lumbar epidurals. In my practice in a small rural hospital in North Dakota we rarely need thoracic epidurals, not more than 10 per year😔; those I perform in sitting paramedian approach.
I am determined to learn the lateral paramedian technique. Your videos are a fantastic inspiration. Now, with Google Lens app translation is smooth and seamless.
I wanted to ask you an important question :
As a right-handed practitioner, when performing paramedian approache in LATERAL POSITION, on what side would YOU suggest to position the patient?t
Left side down/head to YOUR left - or right side down/head to YOUR right?
Do you have any articles published about your amazing lateral paramedian technique?
Where do you practice? It would be a great honor to learn from you. Please continue posting your epidural videos.
Asher
Thank you for watching my video.
I am also an anesthetist in small hospital, so I posted it on UA-cam because there is no place to announce it.
I can perform well on either the left or right side of the patient's position.
The most important thing in the paramedian approach is to "always be aware of the position of the needle tip".
There is Japanese proverb, "What one likes, one will do well."
I like epidural anesthesia, so I got better.
Good Job god camara Excellent... thanks You
I saw your last two videos... what local anesthesia se use, concentración and of you see arterial hipotension?
0.75%Ropivacaine for epidural anesthesia and 0.375%Ropivacaine for nerve block.
Hello and now what do you thank of the eco-guided blocks? I like your epidurals anyway
I think the echo-guided blocks is a very effective technique, but I'm still a beginner.
My friends often use echo.
ua-cam.com/play/PLBq_umg-WWKmZafgbRtcVYV8CO0MmrxsZ.html
We didn't see any thing bad photo
newbee