Thank you so much for this video! I am a current SRNA preparing for thyroid cases tomorrow with NIMS tubes and this was so helpful to get a good overview of the neuromonitoring that will be going on so I don't feel lost tomorrow when having it explained to me or getting questioned on it! I appreciate your work.
Thank you! My favorite thing is knowing how and why! I knew i loved this channel! Also, showing us HOW they use it is the most beneficial thing you can show us. Then, for me personally, i have a better idea and can make absolutley sure i am testing it properly! ❤
Excellent video. One slight correction, though. The needles go into muscles of known nerve innervation. Not directly into the nerve, as that would cause excruciating pain, parasthesia and possible motor weakness when the patient wakes up.
I'm so sorry for all the comments, but i have a question. Is the simulator something that should be found with the unit? Or something i need to order for the Biomed shop? We have one of these in Sugery, and when i asked my guys what it is, no one knew, and they told me it was just electrical safety
A NIM has more than an electrical safety. The acquisition module needs to be tested and the only way to test is connection to the simulator. The simulator should be on or near the main unit because users are supposed to verify function before use. You can always ask the neuro surgery coordinator if they know where the NIM simulator is.
Thank you so much for this video! I am a current SRNA preparing for thyroid cases tomorrow with NIMS tubes and this was so helpful to get a good overview of the neuromonitoring that will be going on so I don't feel lost tomorrow when having it explained to me or getting questioned on it! I appreciate your work.
Thanks Caroline
Thank you! My favorite thing is knowing how and why! I knew i loved this channel! Also, showing us HOW they use it is the most beneficial thing you can show us. Then, for me personally, i have a better idea and can make absolutley sure i am testing it properly! ❤
❤thank you for this great explanation 👏
So cool! Idk how you learned all this stuff, but i intend to obsess over all of your videos until i know it too!
Thanks dude, you help us a lot!! Shout out from Windhoek Namibia!!
How very cool! I had to look it up to see where you're from. Thanks for writing!
Excellent video. One slight correction, though. The needles go into muscles of known nerve innervation. Not directly into the nerve, as that would cause excruciating pain, parasthesia and possible motor weakness when the patient wakes up.
Thanks for the video.
good job, thanx
Woah, nice intro. Also, this sounds a lot like an 8 channel microvolt oscilloscope.
Keep up the good work!
Thank you very much.
Are you going to explain the frequency and amplitude
Nope. I have many other things to cover
Question. Where is the white/read lead going into? Does the patient need to be grounded at all when using a monopolar stim probe?
There is a ground (common lead). A monopolar system means that an electrical signal needs to travel to a ground of some sort.
@@BetterBiomedChannel yes my question is which lead is the ground? White and red ?
I'm so sorry for all the comments, but i have a question. Is the simulator something that should be found with the unit? Or something i need to order for the Biomed shop? We have one of these in Sugery, and when i asked my guys what it is, no one knew, and they told me it was just electrical safety
A NIM has more than an electrical safety. The acquisition module needs to be tested and the only way to test is connection to the simulator. The simulator should be on or near the main unit because users are supposed to verify function before use.
You can always ask the neuro surgery coordinator if they know where the NIM simulator is.
@@BetterBiomedChannel thank you!