Thank you very kindly CTSnetwork! As a senior resident physician, I have used your wonderful video to learn about bronchoscopy! I have done several bronchoscopies the day after and was told that I knew to navigate very well and did it with ease. Thank you very much for this great, detailed instructive video. You have a wonderful systematic approach, you explain clearly and in enough detail, your video is concise enough that I could watch and re-watch it to get more in-depth understanding. Your coverage of the right lung is absolutely stellar. Whilst the left lung is described a little bit shorter, it is also extremely well taught. This has been my main go-to video to learn bronchoscopy navigation and I will share it with my colleagues. I especially like that you first go very slowly from the trachea to the two main bronchi, that you take your time when traveling from one landmark to the next, and most importantly, that you do not use any kind of editing which cuts of part of the journey from one landmark to the next, because that is what confused me as a beginner in other videos. Again, thank you very much. You've been a great help for me in a very difficult, logical and beautiful 3D subject.
My son has inhaled a microorganism and its lodged in his trachea, we need help fast. He cant stop VIOLENTLY caughing I'm scared he's going to make his throat bleed. It's been 3 days he's exhausted... The hospital here said they dont know what to do. He needs to be scoped and the splinterd object removed. Please guide me to where I can have this procedure done. But highest resolution is imperitive, the object is the size of a grain of sand and its black. It looks like something from a biology lab. Its creepy. Please help please respond. He's only 8 and I dont know where the best machines or doctors are that do this type of surgery.
I was on bronchoscopy and during the procedure after some point, I couldn't breath. At all. This was scary as shit and I started pulling the scope out fighting with the staff. Afterwards, I was getting what I later learned is called bronchospasms occasionally where my bronchi contracted so much that I could not breathe at all. This lasted for months and gradually went away.
You've made something that lasts decades.
Thank you so much.
Thank you very kindly CTSnetwork! As a senior resident physician, I have used your wonderful video to learn about bronchoscopy! I have done several bronchoscopies the day after and was told that I knew to navigate very well and did it with ease. Thank you very much for this great, detailed instructive video. You have a wonderful systematic approach, you explain clearly and in enough detail, your video is concise enough that I could watch and re-watch it to get more in-depth understanding. Your coverage of the right lung is absolutely stellar. Whilst the left lung is described a little bit shorter, it is also extremely well taught. This has been my main go-to video to learn bronchoscopy navigation and I will share it with my colleagues.
I especially like that you first go very slowly from the trachea to the two main bronchi, that you take your time when traveling from one landmark to the next, and most importantly, that you do not use any kind of editing which cuts of part of the journey from one landmark to the next, because that is what confused me as a beginner in other videos. Again, thank you very much. You've been a great help for me in a very difficult, logical and beautiful 3D subject.
My son has inhaled a microorganism and its lodged in his trachea, we need help fast. He cant stop VIOLENTLY caughing I'm scared he's going to make his throat bleed. It's been 3 days he's exhausted... The hospital here said they dont know what to do. He needs to be scoped and the splinterd object removed. Please guide me to where I can have this procedure done. But highest resolution is imperitive, the object is the size of a grain of sand and its black. It looks like something from a biology lab. Its creepy. Please help please respond. He's only 8 and I dont know where the best machines or doctors are that do this type of surgery.
Лучшее видео по ориентированию при бронхоскопии. Спасибо большое 🤝
Great didactics, that was helpful! Thanks
Very well made video. Thank you for sharing it
This video is amazing!! THANKS
Thank you, very informative
Excellent video.thank you sir.
Brilliant!!👏🏿👏🏿
Thanks a lot for that great work
Outstanding 🎉
I was on bronchoscopy and during the procedure after some point, I couldn't breath. At all. This was scary as shit and I started pulling the scope out fighting with the staff. Afterwards, I was getting what I later learned is called bronchospasms occasionally where my bronchi contracted so much that I could not breathe at all. This lasted for months and gradually went away.
Bronchoscopy risky? Or you can't breath problem
@@killer_style007 there is a risk for sure. What i experienced isn't common though
Thank you so much sir
Thank you
Thanks !! great video
Thanks for this amazing video!
excelenteeee gracias
Great content and indeed very helpful, thank you!
Thanks
great!
beautiful video sir, thanku
Great
Can Pulmonary embolism be a side effect of Bronchoscopy?
Thanks that’s very useful
the accent is really.....
Then look for English not bronchoscopy master class.. if you have useless comment .. keep it for yourself
great!