OMG! WTF!!!You nailed it Doctor John Campbell!! Thank you very much for this thorough very simple, understandable yet very informative explanation!!❤❤❤ Nothing in my nursing class had explained this very simply! Wish I had encountered your UA-cam earlier… My salute and bow down to you! Take care always!!
+Shaifa Farooqui It is so sad that many people die from untreated tension pneumothorax. It is relatively easy to treat if we think of it and take the time to treat it properly. Of course, this completely depends on an understanding of what is going on as a result of the trauma.
me (18) on october 20th of this year. I was at 80% in my left lung and it really changes your perspective on life. He should have also mentioned that it usually feels like muscle pain in the back for the patients perspective, my moms a doctor and has caught it a few times since by ask them that.
thanks for the great video! can i ask doctor, after inserting the cannula the top of lungs, is this only initial intervention, after which another insertion will be on the lower part of the lungs where chest tube will now be inserted? thanks for tour reply..
I love the video thank you so much. I am a paramedic student. I just have a question. I am confused about the intercostal spacing. Is the needle suppose to be placed in the second intercostal spacing which is between the 2 and 3rd rib?
Thank you for making things clear. I have a small doubt, while making a drainage for the air in the plural space is there any possibility of injuring the lung
Hello Dr.Campbell. Is it possible for close pneumothorax to become tension pneumothorax? Or its mechanism only associated with open pneumpthorax? If it is possible, which of 2 is more frequently leads to tehnsion pnmthrx? thank you
+umk3mafioso Yes, it is possible. This is because a 'valve flap' can still develop, allowing air into the pleura space, but not out again. In this case the air would derive from a lung injury, with the air coming from the alveoli or bronchial passage. However, it is much more common with an open 'sucking wound'.
why does he say "trah'key'a" but not "hee'art?" It's like nurses who say "sontimeters" which is NOT a real thing, as opposed to "centimeters" which is real. I guess to the rookie nurse or family or bystanders the nurse, especially OB nurses, wants bystanders or rookie nurse to think they are saying something exotic and is so smart, when we providers cringe every time we hear them say a fake, made-up word. I will say it; There is no such thing as sontimeters. Even people with think Southern accents don't say it like that.
OMG! WTF!!!You nailed it Doctor John Campbell!! Thank you very much for this thorough very simple, understandable yet very informative explanation!!❤❤❤ Nothing in my nursing class had explained this very simply! Wish I had encountered your UA-cam earlier… My salute and bow down to you! Take care always!!
This is an AMAZING video! I understand tension pneumothorax so much better now! Thank you so much!
just getting a better understanding for my first aid skills incase I ever need to help someone these are excellent
Dr. John Campbell is a great teacher!
i NEVER understood tension pneumo until i saw this vid! excellent!
this has been such a great addition to my WFR course, I am finally understanding obstructive shock!! Thank you so much!!
I'm am a nursing student with an exam in Respiratory conditions coming up, this may have just saved my life! Thanks so much :)
Thank you Dr. Campbell!
Thanks for taking the time to do this, it has been a great help
A very good educational video with clear explanation
Thank you, Dr. Campbell!
it's really good among all the vids about tension pneumothorax on youtube
Thanks, do give me likes on as many videos as you watch, this really helps the channel.
I realky wish I had Dr. C as my personal mentor. Fantastic vid.
"tray-keeya." sweet. great vid. thanks
ress-SPY-atory !!
Excellent, many thanks.
amazing video! thank you very much !
This video was so helpful! Thank you!
Thank you.
God bless you!
great video doctor , thank you very much
you rock.. thank u
great video Doc!
Thank You a lot.
Thank you for the info
thank you very much for your efforts to make these topics as clear as possible
Thanks for all the visuals, this was a great review!
+Shaifa Farooqui It is so sad that many people die from untreated tension pneumothorax. It is relatively easy to treat if we think of it and take the time to treat it properly. Of course, this completely depends on an understanding of what is going on as a result of the trauma.
well done doc!
The best and easiest to understand. Thank you sir.
Thank you. I had a light bulb moment watching this video
thanks for this ...
I love how you say Trachea. Great lecture too.
me (18) on october 20th of this year. I was at 80% in my left lung and it really changes your perspective on life. He should have also mentioned that it usually feels like muscle pain in the back for the patients perspective, my moms a doctor and has caught it a few times since by ask them that.
legend
Simple and efficient 👍✨
aaah thankyou so much sir! thankyou for your sharing this video, its very helpful, may God bless you ;)
thanks for the great video! can i ask doctor, after inserting the cannula the top of lungs, is this only initial intervention, after which another insertion will be on the lower part of the lungs where chest tube will now be inserted? thanks for tour reply..
Understood in the first minute. !
well done, very good
Solid.
very informative video thanks
I have a question ... why is then there fibrosis in pleurisy ?? Robbins pathology textbook mentioned it
Thank you sir, very helpful
Thank you, best video tension pneumothorax
thank you Sir, very clear ...
I love the video thank you so much. I am a paramedic student. I just have a question. I am confused about the intercostal spacing. Is the needle suppose to be placed in the second intercostal spacing which is between the 2 and 3rd rib?
Jennifer Kennon ok never mind it was my misunderstanding of the ribs that I was looking at. Thank you.
Why do we do thoracosintesis through the ICS 2 and WSD through ICS 5?
💙💙💙💙💙💙
What happens in case of bilateral tension pneumothorax ? In regards to emergency steps ..
Thank you for making things clear. I have a small doubt, while making a drainage for the air in the plural space is there any possibility of injuring the lung
It is unlikely, since the lung is colapsed and away from the chest wall.
It is likely but can be managed
Hello Dr.Campbell. Is it possible for close pneumothorax to become tension pneumothorax? Or its mechanism only associated with open pneumpthorax? If it is possible, which of 2 is more frequently leads to tehnsion pnmthrx? thank you
+umk3mafioso Yes, it is possible. This is because a 'valve flap' can still develop, allowing air into the pleura space, but not out again. In this case the air would derive from a lung injury, with the air coming from the alveoli or bronchial passage. However, it is much more common with an open 'sucking wound'.
Dr. John Campbell thank you very much, i got that
*your
why does he say "trah'key'a" but not "hee'art?" It's like nurses who say "sontimeters" which is NOT a real thing, as opposed to "centimeters" which is real. I guess to the rookie nurse or family or bystanders the nurse, especially OB nurses, wants bystanders or rookie nurse to think they are saying something exotic and is so smart, when we providers cringe every time we hear them say a fake, made-up word. I will say it; There is no such thing as sontimeters. Even people with think Southern accents don't say it like that.
See comments below.