Thank you very much Sir for a great series. I literally started from zero and now I can read almost any chest x ray without a difficulty. Never seen a more informative series anywhere. I pray to Allah that He guide you, me and everyone to the straight path Love and respect from Pakistan.
Tank you for this great presentation. I have started a intensive care sub specialty program at NE University Meram Medical school which is a brand new sub specialty of anaesthesia in Turkey. I am in pulminology rotation now (education programs may be somewhat different in Turkey ,6 years medical school, 5 years Anaesthesia and 3 years intensive care ) and this lectures are really helpful for me.
congrats on your baby. I am currently doing clinical electives in radiology, this clip is incredibly helpful. Thanks a lot! looking forward to more videos from you.
Unless a patient has an immediate/emergent need for those EKG leads, the tech can easily and temporarily unclip those. I ALWAYS take an image as if I’m going to interpret it as a radiologist.
Eric, isn't the auscultation after air insufflation is satisfactory enough to check position of nasogastric tube ? Do we always need to get the Xray done ??
Although still frequently done, auscultation during air insufflation is not recommended as a sole means to check NG tube placement, and I would always confirm with X-ray. For more info: Simons SR, Abdallah LM. Bedside assessment of enteral tube placement: aligning practice with evidence. Am J Nurs. 2012 Feb;112(2):40-6. PMID: 22261653.
Thank you very much Sir for a great series. I literally started from zero and now I can read almost any chest x ray without a difficulty. Never seen a more informative series anywhere. I pray to Allah that He guide you, me and everyone to the straight path
Love and respect from Pakistan.
I've binged watch all this series of videos, they're incredible. Thank you so very much!
Tank you for this great presentation. I have started a intensive care sub specialty program at NE University Meram Medical school which is a brand new sub specialty of anaesthesia in Turkey. I am in pulminology rotation now (education programs may be somewhat different in Turkey ,6 years medical school, 5 years Anaesthesia and 3 years intensive care ) and this lectures are really helpful for me.
Congrats on the new child! Thanks for a great series!
Sir, please continue to make these videos.These are very helpful .
congrats on your baby. I am currently doing clinical electives in radiology, this clip is incredibly helpful. Thanks a lot! looking forward to more videos from you.
Unless a patient has an immediate/emergent need for those EKG leads, the tech can easily and temporarily unclip those. I ALWAYS take an image as if I’m going to interpret it as a radiologist.
These videos are great! Thank you for sharing them.
thank you sooooo much for this!! I wish my tuition would come to you!
You're very welcome. Sharing with your classmates the videos you've found helpful is payment enough!
For atelectasis the noun ektasi can also translate to dilatation. So it means incomplete dilatation which makes more sense to me. Just a small detail!
Thank you very much for the incredible work.
Thanks a lot Doc. I've shared ur x-ray vids with my colleagues.
Thank you for sharing these videos! They are very helpful!
Thank you so much for these videos!
Thank you sir.It is hugely helpful..congratulations and best of luck with the baby:)
awesome loved all ur lessons
Eric, you hero.
Hi! Thanks.😊 You made it a bit easier for me. And that line about the blackberry cracked me up.😂 Thanks again!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Thank you Dr.
Thank you so very much!
Thank you
Thanks for the videos, very helpful
A more accurate translation of the world "ektasis" in this context would be "expansion". Great lessons!
Eric, isn't the auscultation after air insufflation is satisfactory enough to check position of nasogastric tube ? Do we always need to get the Xray done ??
Although still frequently done, auscultation during air insufflation is not recommended as a sole means to check NG tube placement, and I would always confirm with X-ray. For more info: Simons SR, Abdallah LM. Bedside assessment of enteral tube placement: aligning practice with evidence. Am J Nurs. 2012 Feb;112(2):40-6. PMID: 22261653.
simply you are the best
Thank you Eric for sharing your knowledge. Merry christmas!
Can you explain the chest tube image? there is still a large right pneumothorax so is the CT outside the cavity or in that particular lobe?
Plzz sir in x-ray film u identify the deformity by pencil or pen ....most of the x-ray film the deformity is not identify...
Amazing Job.
Person inhaled his blackberry haha. Great lectures!
Great job! Thank u a lot for all the videos,they all very helpful to me..kisses to your baby..Merry christmas :)
Nice
Great...
ty ty ty!
Hgh
A USB thumbdrive I fell over laughing this man can teach and make me laugh so hard thank you!! Inhaled a blackberry