Respiratory Examination - Explanation
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- čas přidán 26. 05. 2012
- This is a detailed explanation of the Respiratory Examination illustrating technique and patient interaction.
The film was produced by practising clinicians to aid the teaching of clinical examination skills. It starts at the point when the clinician has finished taking the medical history and begins the clinical examination.
Presented by Dr Jonathan Bennett MD FRCP Consultant Respiratory Physician. Produced and Directed by Dr Irene Peat FRCR FRCP, Dr Nicholas Port MBChB BSc and Jon Shears.
More Clinical Examination materials can be found at; www2.le.ac.uk/departments/msce...
This examination coveres all the key basis examination requirements. Tactile vocal fremitus and pectoriliquey are additional elements but they are often done as standard. If you have percussed and auscultated the chest and found nothing, then it is unlikely that you will gather additional information by doing tactile vocal fremitus and pectoriliquey unless you are a skilled and experienced respiratory physician
The back of the chest, or as I like to call it “ the back “
Triangles
Thank you ....the best I have seen so far
What about vocal fremitus and pectoriliquey?
very well done and thorough
For percussion over the clavicle I thought we just have to percuss directly over the clavicle bone. ?
this is amazing thanka a lot !
Very good.
more realistic patient setting
Very useful. Thanks.
Very great sir.
thank you
thank you!
i love it. this is perfect for the clinical settings
thank you very much
well done dr thankz
inspect, palpate, percuss and auscultate - try saying that 10 times really fast
its good but allow for download
Thanks 🙏🏻🌸
where is the tactile vocal fremitus.please :(
SuperKay92 - Tactile fremitus or Vocal fremitus, which one do u want? Vocal fremitus is a vibration transmitted through the body. It refers to the assessment of the lungs by either the vibration intensity felt on the chest wall (tactile fremitus) and/or heard by a stethoscope on the chest wall with certain spoken words (vocal resonance).
can someone explain what does he mean when he says: Move down medial to the scapula???
+Profidelis
moving in an inferior direction (towards pelvis) and Towards spine (medial)
medial to scapula to avoid percussing on the scapula. you can alternatively ask then to cross arms in front of chest and then percussing at the back to take away the scapulae to sides.
I'm sorry, Mr. Jackson. I am for reeeeaaaal.
Neva meant to make ya daughter cry
@@2clean-558 i apologised a trillion times
Chevrolet, zebra, honesty.
Useful
Three words: nose hair trimmer.
Nice
جامعة الكوفة كلية الطب مرت من هنا
😊😊😊😊😊
0:38
La policía está deteniendo al señor
ΚΑΛΟ
Thank you very much for uploading this video...but I have a suggestion/doubt...You are an expert in medical field..ok..you are doing everything perfectly.. means you know everything..but the viewers (medical students/practitioners can't understand your diagnosis...so explain what is your findings/why this happens/then conclusion......If you are try to teach anything to us ,pls ....
More sandwich breath needed
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