ultrasound guided peripheral IV course by Siegfried Emme

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  • Опубліковано 15 лип 2024
  • A simple course to starting ultrasound peripheral IV's. This video is what you need to learn the basics with the ultrasound and has tips and tricks I have learned through the years. This video should meet the didactic requirements of most institutions.This is the same presentation I give when I am teaching this course live. I wrote a post on how to make a ultrasound model here bit.ly/21TmAub Siegfried Emme FNP
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 48

  • @naturalobserver
    @naturalobserver 6 років тому

    Many tips I had not heard before or perhaps not explained as well as you have done in this video. Super,thanks so much.

  • @jongaddis5821
    @jongaddis5821 6 років тому

    Outstanding video! I'm beginning to learn US for IV placement, and this has been a fantastic supplement to our training!

  • @erguy6319
    @erguy6319 9 років тому +1

    Very good video. Very appreciate that you share your experience with everyone.

  • @prestigenagpur
    @prestigenagpur 5 років тому

    Excellent learning tool USG guided IV technique. Fine points explained very well. Very good for beginners.

  • @alikilic1418
    @alikilic1418 7 років тому

    Great presentation about doppler. Thank you

  • @noluvap4139
    @noluvap4139 8 років тому

    Outstanding lecture and pearls.

  • @Azalro
    @Azalro 8 років тому

    very informative teaching video with very practical tips. Thanks a lot.

  • @forlinhtinhs
    @forlinhtinhs 7 років тому

    Great video. Thank you!

  • @pjay2727
    @pjay2727 4 роки тому

    An excellent presentation, thank you. I will share with my staff

  • @subrahmanyamgadhamsetty3933
    @subrahmanyamgadhamsetty3933 10 років тому

    Excellent demo, I love it, thanks

  • @JimmyGray
    @JimmyGray 5 років тому

    Greetings from an ER in NE Montana. Thanks for the vid!!

  • @wetelbow8738
    @wetelbow8738 10 років тому

    Very concise. Materials ordered. Good stuff😁

  • @antiatrophy72890
    @antiatrophy72890 8 років тому

    very nice of you! thank you!

  • @sa159753sa
    @sa159753sa 4 роки тому

    what a great illustration ! thank you very much

  • @ahmadelgohari7859
    @ahmadelgohari7859 8 років тому

    Great lecture (y)
    tq so much

  • @MrSg123sg
    @MrSg123sg 8 років тому

    Excellent video

  • @ssavkli
    @ssavkli 10 років тому +1

    awesome!

  • @benjaminbuor7489
    @benjaminbuor7489 5 років тому

    Thank you!

  • @amra2781
    @amra2781 10 років тому

    Thanks for the info.

  • @ChapmanManufacturing
    @ChapmanManufacturing 7 років тому

    I really enjoyed the video. I hope you do more of them. What is the process for the actual sticking of the pt. Do you wipe the gel off first? Do you search for valves? Would there be an advantage for using the deeper veins vs the peripheral? I would like to see the US used more in critical care... especially the difficult sticks. Great video.

  • @hassanturaihi1482
    @hassanturaihi1482 10 років тому

    your are really excellent

  • @ts440s
    @ts440s 4 роки тому

    Needle guides were made for a reason. I would use them on every brachial access.

  • @kwamezulushabazz
    @kwamezulushabazz 10 років тому

    Siegfried Emme! Blast from past (Crozier, I think)!

  • @wafaibrahim369
    @wafaibrahim369 4 роки тому

    Thanks

  • @wafaibrahim369
    @wafaibrahim369 4 роки тому

    👏👏👏👏👏

  • @charlenealmazan1815
    @charlenealmazan1815 6 років тому

    This was helpful! Big thanks from a Seattle ED RN!

  • @wafaibrahim369
    @wafaibrahim369 4 роки тому

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @mostafatejani
    @mostafatejani 4 роки тому

    Thank u very much

  • @Prnheart
    @Prnheart 8 років тому +1

    Thanks for the video! One quick question, what is the orientation of the US probe when you switch from short to long axis? I assume that the probe marker is facing towards you.

    • @Prnheart
      @Prnheart 8 років тому +1

      Disregard, I've found the answer in other videos. Yes the marker is facing you, for other viewers. Thanks again!

  • @mikesliff
    @mikesliff 11 років тому

    This is a great video, do you have a download link for the powerpoint? I would really like to present it to the educators in my Emergency Dept as right now I am the only one in the department utilizing utz to start lines. Thanks!

  • @dinare1
    @dinare1 4 роки тому

    Great tutorial

  • @SiegfriedEmme
    @SiegfriedEmme  7 років тому +2

    HI, someone from Frontier Nursing University wrote me for permission to use my videos. I am a graduate of that school and please feel free to use my video and contact me for any addition information you need.

  • @gbates106
    @gbates106 4 роки тому

    Great job. Were you really at Crozer? Mark the great US tech originally taught me. I was looking for some tips on getting a good sagittal view, which always seems a struggle.

  • @wafaibrahim369
    @wafaibrahim369 4 роки тому

    🤝🤝🤝👏👏👏

  • @ld8562
    @ld8562 8 років тому

    Hi there, thanks for your videos. That helps me a whole lot and saves a lot of unnecessary stick for my patients. Please post any other great videos for nurses.

  • @alissahope6466
    @alissahope6466 7 років тому

    I was trained to follow the tip of the needle in all the way....meaning I cannulate the entire length of the vein with the need in place while following the tip with the probe ensuring it stays in the center of the vein. Have you used this technique? Also, I find I am more successful using this technique. Do you have any evidence that one way is more effective than the other?

    • @SiegfriedEmme
      @SiegfriedEmme  7 років тому

      never lose the tip is the bottom line. Once I see the tip in the center of the vein I thread the catheter.

  • @SiegfriedEmme
    @SiegfriedEmme  8 років тому

    I wrote a post on how to make a ultrasound model here bit.ly/21TmAub Siegfried Emme FNP

  • @wimrawe2343
    @wimrawe2343 8 років тому +2

    Your video is great. Pretty much shows how we do it with the except that our USs can be set at 2cm depth, and because of our high proportion of chemo and transplant patients, we have better success by following our needle all the way to the hub because of failures that occur when the cannula is advanced too soon through tough skin, or because the veins patients who have been on prednisone long term are friable). Anyway, We were recently discussing whether one can visualize valves with the transverse view. Our team does something like 1200 IVs a month, many of which are US guided. Sometimes we see whitish ghosts within the lumen and have had patients report pain as the cannula is advanced through these ghosts. we have also have had catheters fail to flush after clean insertions, seemingly because the tip is against a valve. Any thoughts about that? it does appear that valves are obvious via the sagittal view, but only on the internets, rather than in real bedside assessments. Finally, it might be helpful to do a video on vein selection on small kids and infants. Thanks.

  • @rtexmx
    @rtexmx 8 років тому +1

    We're living in a parallel universe. Your lecture is virtually identical to mine (Yours was developed first BTW). Items like the tegaderm probe cover/ sterile gel and aligning the patient/needle/ US machine I picked up over the years, this is the only online course I've seen that mentions them. I have not put together a slide/video presentation like yours as yet. But it appears I won't have re-invent the wheel. Thanks!
    We may want to incorporate this in to our institution's program. We'd like permission to do so from you. One minor point for floor patients in particular: most have been stuck multiple times prior to use of an US guided IV. I advocate local anesthesia for this population. Also helps with initial sticks in the ED when large bore catheters are required and the patient is not in extremis.(e.g. GI bleeds that haven't crashed). They tend to stay still, making the procedure easier for both the operator and patient. Especially since with the US technique needle movement tends to be a tad slower than a quick surface vein technique.

    • @SiegfriedEmme
      @SiegfriedEmme  8 років тому +3

      +Robert Molyneaux
      Feel free to use whatever you would like. My lecture is being used all over the world already to teach people which was my purpose.

    • @rtexmx
      @rtexmx 8 років тому

      Thanks!

  • @aaronfiacconi1700
    @aaronfiacconi1700 4 роки тому

    Overall good presentation. I don't know why you recommend the "wiggle test" when you could just move the probe back and forth to verify the presence of the "Hyperechoic" metallic needle tip. Wiggling the needle around in a small vein is not sound technique.