OPHTHALMOLOGY Emergencies for Healthcare Students (Case Based!)
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- čas přidán 21. 07. 2024
- To celebrate almost 300 subscribers on CZcams (!!) and 100 on Instagram, I decided to make this a special video by making it totally case based! Also.... NEW INTRO!!!!
This will allow you to retrieve your existing knowledge and build on it.
In this video you will revise:
Orbital cellulitis (Vs Preseptal Cellulitis)
Alkali Burns
Retrobulbar Haemorrhage (/Trauma to the Eye)
Acute Glaucoma (Open Angle vs Closed Angle)
Central Retinal Artery Occlusion (Vs Central Retinal Vein Occlusion)
Temporal Arteritis (See Stroke/TIA video for more!!)
Bacterial Keratitis (+ Other causes of Hypopyon)
This video was made using NICE guidelines, CKS, Statmed.org, Oxford Clinical Handbook of Medicine and Patient.info. I also used NHS Moorfields guide for Primary Care physicians.
Disclaimer: this video is purely for educational purposes, and does not substitute professional medical advice or consultations with healthcare professionals.
This is really really good. I don't understand why it doesn't have many more viewers. Hopefully you will make more good videos like this. Thanks for making this video anyway!!!
Dear Jade
Thank you for your excellent video. I used it during one of my classes with your credentials.
I'd like to add a few comments though on the topic at certain time points.
3:20 min - is not glaucoma, rather elevated IOP
5:39 min - is not glaucoma, rather acute angle closure (without the term glaucoma)
7:44 min - there's a typo and verbal typo: not trabelectomy but trabeculectomy. But I'd discourage doing trabeculectomy in acute angle closure since it has a high risk of subsequent aqueous misdirection syndrome (AMS), if conservative treatment fails I'd recommend doing phaco alone first (if synechial closure in the angle is less than 180 degrees)
11:10 - in my opinion the diagnosis is not bacterial keratitis (I'd expect a white area on the cornea), I think the patient has had a previous trabeculectomy and is having a blebitis (infection of the bleb - see white area between 12 and 1 o'clock) resulting in hypopyon. I'd examine the patient to rule out endophthalmitis and treat accordingly
I congratulate you again to this great collection and presentation of cases, please continue on making them :)
Regards
Aron Szabo
Ophthalmic surgeon and glaucoma specialist
University of Szeged, Hungary
(ps: I'm using my fiancee's account because I can't seem to log out of hers and log into mine)
Thank you! This is very useful.
Thanks, this is very helpful.
Excellent video!
Greeeat explanation!! want another ophthalmology videos
Amazing video!
Love your all explanations ❤❤❤❤
New sub here, just came from the pewdiepie live stream and this is right up my alley!
Loved the video
Thanks
You're viedo was awesome. I learnt more in 14 minutes watching it than in 3 months doing an emergency course in Auckland uni in nz. Thank you
Hello, the video is great, I wish to have heard also the management of occlusion of central retinal artery.
❤
AMAZING
Came from pewds livestream. Subbed.
AMAZING 🤍💘