The Pulmonary Exam / Lung Sounds (Strong Exam)

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  • Опубліковано 26 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 51

  • @canas_fe4815
    @canas_fe4815 10 місяців тому +16

    Regardless of how much attention this series gets, I hope you will continue. This material is GOLD. I'm sharing these videos with all my fellow med students, and everyone appreciates them SO much. Thanks again from all of us!! 🙏

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  10 місяців тому +7

      I'm very glad you've found them to be helpful! There are more of this series on the way. 10 more videos have already been filmed, it's just a matter of finding the time to edit them.

    • @AllThingsToeseen
      @AllThingsToeseen 10 місяців тому

      I agree, I'm a pgy-1 and I still find myself referring to Dr Strong's videos many many times.

  • @TheMaddijoy
    @TheMaddijoy 10 місяців тому +3

    thank you so much for this! I'm a soon-to-be RN and i've always struggled with the front respiratory exam on people with breasts, this was super helpful.

  • @sivajinidarmendra2250
    @sivajinidarmendra2250 Рік тому +4

    It is such a wonderful gift to us to learn from a great educator. These golden educational videos and your kindness....Thanks a million, dear Dr Strong.

  • @krystenme6841
    @krystenme6841 Рік тому +4

    This lessons are so good!!! My father had COPD with emphysema and clubbing fingers, his doctor said it was cause he was eating a lot of pasta and he was becoming coeliac . It took my father 3 months to convince him to do a thorax Xray and then another 3 months to get the blood test to confirm lung cancer. At the hospital they told him, sorry if we only had found about this 6 months ago maybe we could have done something, now it's too late....maybe if that doctor had known or made the association of cold and clubbing finger my father would have lived a few extra years...

    • @warbler1984
      @warbler1984 10 місяців тому

      That's terrible sorry to hear about your father's case

  • @fantasticweb6384
    @fantasticweb6384 10 місяців тому +1

    this is Gold for me ! Thank You all and really appreciate your work ♥️

  • @fakhrizaidan6718
    @fakhrizaidan6718 Рік тому +7

    great video as always

  • @T2HI
    @T2HI Рік тому +1

    I think adding the key words like "respiratory system", "clinical examination", "OSCE" might help with getting a lot more engagement with the content.
    Thank you for the generous contribution, Dr. Strong!
    Looking forward to more lectures.
    From an avid follower

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Рік тому +7

      Thanks for the suggestion. I'm a little conflicted about too explicitly attaching this series to "OSCEs" because by design, the series will teach a different exam (i.e. one that is fully grounded in evidence and practicality) than what is usually expected on an OSCE (i.e. an exam that is based on the outdated notion of what an exam is "supposed" to include - according to a bunch of old men from the 1950s.). I'll think this over more before posting the CV and abdominal exams...

    • @T2HI
      @T2HI Рік тому

      Great to hear that, Doc! Even though the term OSCE isn't necessary, I believe "Clinical examination", "respiratory system" would be better terms to include since most of the other available videos on YT and the searches for them use the same keywords.@@StrongMed

  • @psydocthepsyduck8382
    @psydocthepsyduck8382 Рік тому +1

    Thank you from a medical student in Canada

  • @waelfadlallah8939
    @waelfadlallah8939 Рік тому +1

    Our favorite practitioner ❤

  • @fastmohawk3903
    @fastmohawk3903 Рік тому

    thanks for the valuable ,detailed presentation!!!
    prolonged expiration is also observed in pulmonary edema

  • @aishab9286
    @aishab9286 7 місяців тому

    AMAZING
    Waiting for the rest of body systems

  • @ksaianirudh9449
    @ksaianirudh9449 Рік тому +2

    Thank u for creating great content ❤

  • @mrng245
    @mrng245 Рік тому +1

    Great content! I hope You cover all the systems

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Рік тому +6

      That's the plan. I've filmed the pulm, CV, and abdominal exams so far. Unfortunately, our simulation center (where these are filmed) and standardized patient program have since gone back to mandatory face masks for all activities - meaning that I may need to defer filming more systems until after flu season is over (i.e. April at the earliest). I'll still be rolling out what I've already filmed from now through February.

    • @AhsanKhan1998
      @AhsanKhan1998 Рік тому

      ​@@StrongMedI seriously can't wait for all the videos. Thank you so much.

  • @MikiyasMersha-x3u
    @MikiyasMersha-x3u 5 днів тому

    Thank you Dr.

  • @courtneypope3863
    @courtneypope3863 6 місяців тому +1

    With Atelectasis, can it last for years following a surgery? And only be felt in morning when first waking? Ex: since c-section in 2018, periodically when first waking, I feel vibrating/cracking at the end of deep breath. Gone after one or two deep breathes. Then clear. Doctors just say atelecstasis but do no tests. It is very hard to research wheezing that makes no noise but you feel it. Like fluid or mucus that goes away. Very deep.

  • @ShadiFSharqawi
    @ShadiFSharqawi Рік тому +1

    I so appreciate your work in recording these videos.
    I wonder which book do you recommend to follow with your videos rather than references?
    Bate's, Talley and O'Conner's, or others?!

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Рік тому +5

      I honestly don't think there is a perfect book to use for learning the physical exam, which was part of the motivation for this series. Evidence-based Physical Diagnosis by McGee does the best job with discussing the evidence supporting (or refuting) the use of specific maneuvers, but it doesn't do as well with teaching the maneuvers themselves (i.e. relatively few diagrams of patients actually being examined). Talley and O'Connor is ok, but I think it may actually be too comprehensive. By not highlighting or separating out what's actually important from findings and maneuvers that are more esoteric, it can seem overwhelming for the learner. There is also a lot of discussion of maneuvers in the "textbook exam" only (i.e. things that have no evidence in favor of them, and which clinicians generally don't do in actual practice).
      I actively dislike Bates - it is the most beholden of all texts and references to the historic relic of the "textbook exam", and it is not as comprehensive as Talley and O'Connor. Because of its popularity, it has probably actively harmed medical education by continuing to promote an exam not grounded in reality to multiple generations of learners.

    • @ShadiFSharqawi
      @ShadiFSharqawi Рік тому

      Great answer as expected. Thank you doctor!

  • @sinclair657
    @sinclair657 13 днів тому

    Thank you

  • @Hector-ec6fu
    @Hector-ec6fu Рік тому +2

    What would be the best way to describe the snoring/gurgling + mucus sound produced often in those with COPD exacerbations instead of rhonchi in the clinical setting?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Рік тому +4

      That's a great question. I document such sounds similarly to this: "Both lungs with prominent gurgling sounds throughout the respiratory cycle consistent with excessive airway secretions, mucus and/or recent aspiration"

  • @drrehmanvlog7487
    @drrehmanvlog7487 8 місяців тому +1

    Sir pdf of these examination videos??

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  8 місяців тому

      Sorry, there aren't any.

  • @nathanmurage
    @nathanmurage Рік тому

    Loved this!

  • @loving60s
    @loving60s 3 місяці тому

    Dr Strong, could you please clarify whether inspiratory phase is longer or shorter than expiratory? Your video says that the I:E ratio is 1:2 but am finding conflicting info online

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  3 місяці тому

      Expiration is longer than inspiration. If in doubt, you can either just watch someone breathing when they don't realize their being observed, or you can try to breath with an inverse ratio yourself (i.e. spending more time in inspiration and expiration) and you'll soon see how odd it feels. (If you start feeling lightheaded while consciously attempting inverse ratio respiration, stop doing it!)
      You might be referred to sources that are specifically talking about the auscultation of vesicular breath sounds, in which the duration of inspiratory sounds lasts longer than expiatory sounds, but that's just the sounds not the actual phases of respiration (i.e. vesicular sounds end quickly during expiration because the majority of air has already been expelled from the distal-most airways).

  • @ΆγιοςΧίλαριος
    @ΆγιοςΧίλαριος Рік тому

    Any intent for POCUS ?

  • @abdullahrahmanzai7210
    @abdullahrahmanzai7210 Рік тому +1

    Great

  • @anilkarameti484
    @anilkarameti484 Рік тому

    Finally!! 😊😊
    Doctor, can i ask you what kind of stethoscope do you use? 🙂

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Рік тому +3

      For years, my "walking around" stethoscope was a Littmann Cardiology III. Then I lost it. So for now am borrowing my wife's Littmann Master Cardiology, which is good. The recordings for this video were made with a Thinklabs One digital stethoscope - I used to be a huge fan (and even posted a spontaneous review of it on the channel), but have since become more lukewarm on it.

    • @anilkarameti484
      @anilkarameti484 Рік тому

      ​@@StrongMedI want to buy Littman Cardiology IV since i've read a lot of good reviews about it, but i don't know if it's really worth the money. Or maybe a Litmann Classic III would do the job just as good?

  • @ragediraqi
    @ragediraqi Рік тому

    How to differentiate snoring, stertor from stridor?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Рік тому

      Snoring is typically more prominent during expiration and relatively low pitched. Stridor is typically more prominent during inspiration and relatively high pitched. As an adult internist in the US, I have literally never heard or read a colleague use the term stertor, and would advise against its use for the same reason I advise against using "rhonchi" in adult medicine - it's too likely to be misunderstood. The term stertor is occasionally used in pediatrics and veterinary medicine, and would defer to those fields for a definition and description.

    • @ragediraqi
      @ragediraqi Рік тому

      Thank you very much for clarification

  • @musataz
    @musataz 11 місяців тому

    Dr Strong, do you have videos on blood products and blood transfusion? Studying a topic without your video doesn't feel right XD

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  11 місяців тому +1

      I've a whole series on thrombosis, one on anemia, and one on blood types, but unfortunately none of them are focused on blood products and transfusion per se.

  • @sebastian-sec
    @sebastian-sec Рік тому

    amazing...

  • @5omethingsBetterThanNothing
    @5omethingsBetterThanNothing Рік тому +4

    dr strong consider collaborating with amboss to create a clinical / evidence based exam subsection and get further credit

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Рік тому +30

      Thanks for the suggestion. However, while I certainly don't turn down the occasional (and much appreciated) donation, this channel has always been focused on providing free education focused predominantly on clinical skills and patient care. No disrespect to Amboss intended, but a collaboration would necessarily take time away from that primary mission.

    • @5omethingsBetterThanNothing
      @5omethingsBetterThanNothing Рік тому +2

      @@StrongMed agreed and much respect to you and your mission!

    • @AhsanKhan1998
      @AhsanKhan1998 Рік тому +1

      ​@@StrongMedThanks Dr. Strong, this is the reason I have so much respect for you and your selfless work. Amboss is a good resource but for people outside of the western countries (especially so for developing countries) it is just too expensive for only study material.

  • @zuhairyassin505
    @zuhairyassin505 Рік тому +1

    can we auscultate with the patients clothes on ?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Рік тому +4

      It's not recommended and I personally avoid doing it if at all possible, but that's primarily because it's a missed opportunity to inspect the skin, and because the movement of fabric/cloth under the stethoscope head could potentially introduce artificial adventitious sounds (e.g. crackles). However, if the clothing is thin (i.e. a T-shirt or hospital gown) and firm pressure is applied with the stethoscope to minimize movement of the underlying clothing, it probably has relatively mild impact on the quality of auscultation itself. In other words, the impact on sound transmission by 0.1cm of cotton is trivial compared to the underlying 3+ cm of fat, muscle, bone, and subcutaneous tissue. Physical exam purists freak out on this point, but it's supported by the only available study on the issue: karger.com/res/article/75/1/85/289069/Transmission-of-Lung-Sounds-through-Light-Clothing

    • @zuhairyassin505
      @zuhairyassin505 Рік тому

      @@StrongMed thanks a million doc