Chest X Ray Interpretation Explained Clearly - How to read a chest Xray
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- čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
- Chest XRay interpretation and a straightforward approach with illustrations by Roger Seheult, MD of www.medcram.com/?Y...
Understand the basics of how chest films are attained, the appearance of a normal chest Xray, visible anatomy on a chest x-ray, a systematic approach to reading a CXR, and several examples of abnormal chest X-Ray findings including: pneumonia, atelectasis, pneumothorax, plural effusion, heart failure, and pulmonary edema.
This video is part of the "MedCram Remastered" series: A video we've re-edited & sped up to make learning even more efficient.
View videos 2 and 3 of this course at www.medcram.com/?Y...
MedCram.com is the home for ALL MedCram medical videos (Most of our medical lectures and quizzes are not on CZcams). Get clarity from over 100 concise and high yield videos.
Speaker: Roger Seheult, MD
Co-Founder of MedCram.com
Clinical and Exam Preparation Instructor
Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Pulmonary Disease, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine.
MedCram = More understanding in less time
MedCram: Medical education topics explained clearly including: Respiratory lectures such as Asthma and COPD. Renal lectures on Acute Renal Failure and Adrenal Gland. Internal medicine videos on Oxygen Hemoglobin Dissociation Curve / Oxyhemoglobin Curve and Medical Acid Base. A growing library on critical care topics such as Shock, Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA), aortic stenosis, and Mechanical Ventilation. Cardiology videos on Hypertension, ECG / EKG Interpretation, and heart failure. VQ Mismatch and Hyponatremia lectures have been popular among medical students and physicians. The Pulmonary Function Tests (PFTs) videos and Ventilator-associated pneumonia lectures have been particularly popular with RTs. NPs and PAs have provided great feedback on Pneumonia Treatment and Liver Function Tests among many others. Mechanical ventilation for nursing and the emergency & critical care RN course is available at MedCram.com. Dr. Jacquet teaches our FAST exam tutorial & bedside ultrasound courses. Many nursing students have found the Asthma and shock lectures very helpful. We're starting a new course series on clinical ultrasound & ultrasound medical imaging in addition to other radiology lectures.
Recommended Audience - Medical professionals and medical students: including physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses, respiratory therapists, EMT and paramedics, and many others. Review and test prep for USMLE, MCAT, PANCE, NCLEX, NAPLEX, NBDE, RN, RT, MD, DO, PA, NP school and board examinations.
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Produced by Kyle Allred PA-C
#MedCram #CXR #XRay
Please note: MedCram medical videos, medical lectures, medical illustrations, and medical animations are for medical education and exam preparation purposes, and not intended to replace recommendations by your doctor or health care provider.
thank you, Im a family nurse practitioner student and need to learn this all next year and will be watching more of your videos
Absolutely love this channel!! Thank you so much for teaching us!! Together we are better and together we work to be better in service to the sick and suffering in our care .
I’m not even a medical student, but I can appreciate the protocol
This is a great resource and refresher to analyze CXRs.
Amazing channel, you easily deserve millions more subscribers
1 minute through the video and I'm already learning.. Thank you 🙏🏾
Love this video!! Where can I watch the second part??
THANK YOU FOR EXPLAINING THIS SO AWESOME!!!!!
Really valuable
Could you please upload the remaining parts?
Thanks a bunch! 🎉 informative and educational
Great explanation Sir. I am not a medical student, but I understood well and appreciate the way you explained it.
Well done on the 'plain English' explanation.😉I'm not in the medical field, however thrilled to get an understanding of image analysis.
great video but where is the 2nd part? would love to see it
Wow!! That's very very useful for Medical students..Thanks a lot 😀
Where is the second video explaining cardiac? I'd like to see it
thank u so much for the video, were can i find the next part?
Is there a continuation of this series?
I can't find another 2 parts of interpretation
Malkeet ghuman im searching on it too. I even went to the website, i guess we have to pay for the all access course
It would be more useful if you actually showed the issues mentioned instead of just drawing them.
Someone please link here the following 2 parts of this topic, somehow I can't find them! Thank you!!!
Where can I get the next part?
Very well explained. Thanks. Which program did you use for annotations?
Sequential video pls
Where is the other part ..? Someone plzz send me link
Sir, I have gone to take medical to go abroad..When they take chest x-ray they found a problem and now I am having 2 tablets.They wrote it " Left apical." .Can you plz tell me what is it and is it curable.
Thank you sir
Where is part 2?
Thanks for the vedio, it is easy to follow. where can I find the second part of hte vedio ?
Hello sir how can i see part 2 of this vedio ? I need so much 😢
where's the part 2?
who's scrolling thorough other Medcram videos for relief after the latest corona video
Hey I can't find the 2nd lecture of chest x ray
Link to follow up videos please
Question... why is it that with pedia patients, the order is an AP view instead of a PA one?
maycouchpotato pediatric patients cannot stand on own (usually laying in the supine position in case of infants and toddlers) therefore the anterior to posterior (AP) method is used. Please correct or addendum my comment. Thank you.
Would help if we could SEE the x-ray!
What is the meaning of CARDIOMEGALLY LV
My new lung doctor said hyperinflation is normal 🧐because when you breathe in it made it look like my lungs have hyperinflation. Is he correct ? He also said the lungs cannot affect the stomach
What do you mean by regressing pulmonary tuberculosis
IS there an Arabic translation for the video?
Pliz use technical terms like cassette not board it makes learning more interesting
cassette is old technology only used in low income hospitals or clinic , now and days every modern hospital uses digital image receptors to capture the image, in other words he should call it the image receptor or IR for short.
The country I come from is
Did anyone else just get a chest X-ray?
It’s weird because I’ve been having chest aches.. I’m not even sick.. no common cold or anything. It’s a consistent ache on my left side chest :( I’m going to the hospital tomorrow, I honestly waited because I thought it would go away
Mohammad Albadri thank you for the reply. That sounds scary.. I’ve been so scared to go to the hospital:( and yes it could be my heart since it’s on the left side.. I’ll update you when I find out what it is. Thanks 😔
you should not start taking medication by your own before seeing a doctor. if nsaids dont help with the pain, ypu should seek for a doctor inmediately
ale it’s kind of hard to explain.. it’s not like a sharp pain, or a pain at all.. it’s more of an ache.. not when I breathe.. it’s a consistent discomfort... I thought it would go away on its own like usually happens when people leave the window open and get pains in the rear lung and chest, but it’s a constant ache.. not painful just uncomfortable on the left side
Consult a doctor before taking any kind of medication like nitroglycerine. Every chest pain need not be angina. The chest ache you have could be either due to gastritis or costochondritis. But to quell your fears, it's better to see a doctor and get your ECG done. Take care.
@@ardnaxelaprincess19 Actually, it would be more helpful if he _did_ take medication. If something like acetaminophen relieves the pain then you obviously discard things like heart problems.
sub-cutaneous infections should have been mentioned. One second to look at soft tissues
Bruhh how did i even reach here ....
I searched "can your lungs explode if you breathe too much air?" And for some reason ...google showed up a condition named pneumothorax
And then i looked the images up and i was really confused cuz i didn't understand a thing then i went ahead and searched normal chest x ray and oh boy i really couldn't differentiate between the two
And now here i am
no part2
3.6 ROENTGEN
Where is part 2?