Imaging of Sinusitis (and other sinonasal disorders)

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  • Опубліковано 6 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 28

  • @baybars_0
    @baybars_0 22 дні тому +4

    This video we were waiting for after the video on anatomy of paranasal sinus!

  • @dr.miller20
    @dr.miller20 18 днів тому +2

    Thank you so much from Ukraine. This and other lectures very helpfull for young radioogists as me. So I reccomend your chanel for my colleagues. Дуже дякую💙💛

  • @hassanmagdy4726
    @hassanmagdy4726 13 днів тому +1

    Thank you very much dear professor for your great efforts.
    greetings from Egypt

  • @2328linda
    @2328linda 13 днів тому +1

    Thank you for doing this! I am grateful for this knowledge and I am sure many can benefit from this.

  • @Redphantom608
    @Redphantom608 23 дні тому +4

    Great to see you back. ❤

  • @MulaDraws
    @MulaDraws 22 дні тому +1

    Thanks so much for these lectures (fellow from USA)

  • @vajirawitradman8980
    @vajirawitradman8980 22 дні тому +1

    God’s strength lecture from Dr.Sven 😊 Thanks

  • @gabrielluiscinco1935
    @gabrielluiscinco1935 23 дні тому +3

    I was waiting for this!! 😊

  • @henrysara7716
    @henrysara7716 23 дні тому +3

    Thank you Doctor.

  • @Chocoshocko
    @Chocoshocko 23 дні тому +2

    Thank you so much for your work. It really helps
    Greetings from St. Petersburg

  • @hungbuitmh
    @hungbuitmh 23 дні тому +2

    great i have been waiting for it thank you so much

  • @toshi-mz3tk
    @toshi-mz3tk 22 дні тому +1

    WONDERFUL TEACHING
    One video on CNS manifestations of HIV

  • @NewStart-s9p
    @NewStart-s9p 22 дні тому +1

    Very useful thanks

  • @abebeborsamo1301
    @abebeborsamo1301 22 дні тому +1

    Thanks very much

  • @ManuelFelipePacheco
    @ManuelFelipePacheco 22 дні тому +1

    Thank you for you videos

  • @Ankus_01
    @Ankus_01 20 днів тому +1

    Love from Bihar india ❤❤❤❤❤ and I'll going to subscribe you

  • @АлександрА-б7ю8й
    @АлександрА-б7ю8й 22 дні тому +1

    Thank you

  • @stashunko
    @stashunko 19 днів тому +2

    Ah yes, Christmas came early this year!

  • @najlaaabdallah890ahmed5
    @najlaaabdallah890ahmed5 5 днів тому

    Alot of thaks It so informative if you dont minde we need the PDF for all vidoes

  • @Bilder2
    @Bilder2 23 дні тому +3

    Wuhu!

  • @YouGottaFeelYourLine
    @YouGottaFeelYourLine 2 дні тому

    So when it comes to fungal infection, which is a specific entity, can I use now the term "sinusitis" in my report?

  • @loyal4theway159
    @loyal4theway159 17 днів тому +1

    hello sir I'm a GP
    i want to become radiologist
    how is the lifestyle?

    • @theneuroradiologist
      @theneuroradiologist  17 днів тому +1

      there is not just one answer to that question, because there are so many career options in radiology, each with their own pros and cons.
      You can become a general radiologists in a "general" hospital, a private radiologist with his own practice mainly focusing on patients referred by GPs, an interventional radiologist treating strokes and acute hemorrhages, an academic radiologist in a large university center focusing on teaching and research, and so on...
      Interventional radiology means being on call a lot and sleepless nights, but high reward in terms of actually having a impact on people's lives; being an academic radiologist means doing lots of complicated cases and having the opportunity to teach and do research, but it also means chosing a subspecialty and losing out on other interesting areas of radiology. Being a private practice radiologist (in Belgium) means that the spectrum of pathology might not be that exciting, but you're a bit like a GP to the patients you're seeing and the area in radiology where you actually have a lot of interaction with patients (which can also be very rewarding, I've worked in private practices as well...). There are also a lot of differences between different countries, so as said, no easy answer to that question.
      All in all, the idea of radiology is being a specialty with an easy lifestyle is wrong imo. They day the radiologist was the guy (in those days it was generally a guy) who came to the hospital at 09 am, looked at about 20 cases and spent the afternoon on the golf course is completely outdated. Radiology is a very demanding field, the case load is very high and the demand for radiologists is increasing. Burn-out levels are also high, mainly due to the high workload. Despite all talk about AI going to make radiologists absolte, at the moment, the demand for radiologists is high and workload increasing. Your average radiologist has to work hard, real hard. Radiologists are probably one of the most called specialists when on call, so expect sleepless nights.
      As a general radiolgist, you have to know "something about everyhing", which imo is acutally more difficult and demanding than becoming an academic subspecialist (knowing almost everything about a very small field is not that difficult imo, it's way more difficult to be a general radiologist), but the advantage is it bringes a lot of diversity to the job...
      I'd suggest you'd do some soul searching what radiology lifestyle would suit you best, because there are a lot of options. Whatever you chose: if you want an easy lifestyle and a good night's sleep, dermatology, ophtalmology or pathology are probably better aeas to work in (with all respect for those colleagues, but they tell me themselves :)).

    • @loyal4theway159
      @loyal4theway159 16 днів тому +1

      @theneuroradiologist thanks i just arrived in Belgium I'll see how it goes

    • @theneuroradiologist
      @theneuroradiologist  16 днів тому

      @@loyal4theway159 good luck!

  • @najlaaabdallah890ahmed5
    @najlaaabdallah890ahmed5 5 днів тому

    Alot of thaks It so informative if you dont minde we need the PDF for all vidoes