I was stabbed 7 times. I went under hemothorax surgery. I had tubes going out my mouth, tubes out my side. it's been 9 days today since this happened. I was released 4 days ago. I'm very blessed to be alive. Great explanation. thanks for taking the time to explain what somewhat happened to me. I know their are others. I lost half my blood. I'm one of the survivors. may God help you to help others....ty for letting me share.
nice video.i've been looking for such a video that can help me to understand the basics of chest drainage system and i finally got it.thank u so much for making this concept so clear and easy to understand
I was following your video until 16:35 when you state that there is actually water behind the front panel in the suction control chamber. However, this is a DRY suction set up-- meaning there is not water in the suction control chamber, correct? Isn't that the main difference between a WET and a DRY suction chest tube drainage system set up (whether or not there is water in the suction control chamber)?
This video is pretty good, but uses imprecise terminology and almost circular reasoning in some places. For example: "Systems flow from high to low pressure." What do you mean by "a system flows"? It's a fluid (gas or liquid) that flows, not a 'system'. But overall well done.
"Negative" pressure is a commonly-used but confusing idea. "Negative (air) pressure" means "SUBATMOSPHERIC" pressure, i.e. "the air pressure in area X is LOWER than atmospheric pressure'. "Positive" pressure means 'the air pressure in area X is higher than atmospheric pressure'. It can be a bit hard to visualize. 'Positive' pressure commonly exists where a fluid/gas/liquid is being compressed or squeezed (its container is exerting forces in the direction that tries to make the gas volume smaller), whereas negative pressure exists where the container is trying to pull outward on the gas, i.e. the container is trying to pull the gas into taking up a larger volume than its resting volume.
Best video. I wish there were more like this one. I finally understand something. Thank you.
I was stabbed 7 times. I went under hemothorax surgery. I had tubes going out my mouth, tubes out my side. it's been 9 days today since this happened. I was released 4 days ago. I'm very blessed to be alive. Great explanation. thanks for taking the time to explain what somewhat happened to me. I know their are others. I lost half my blood. I'm one of the survivors. may God help you to help others....ty for letting me share.
Bro God needs you
Amazing !
I'm searching for the second part , but can't find it !
A very informative video. Thanks!
Amazing explanation!
Great video! Very clear explanation of basic chest tube physiology
Great video. Was the second video in this series uploaded at some point? Unfortunately, I can't find it. Thanks.
nice video.i've been looking for such a video that can help me to understand the basics of chest drainage system and i finally got it.thank u so much for making this concept so clear and easy to understand
im half way through and just thought i should tell you," man!!! you rock"
is there a part 2? this was so helpful!
Beautifully explained !! Thanks for this video :)
Hi,
Thank you very much for thjs video. Please can you also create the part of this video: fundamentals of chest drain management.
Thank you
Thanks for the video! Is the second video available on the management of chest tubes? You mentioned it was a two part series. Just curious.
An excellent video - please make more!
Excellent lecture! Is there a video on chest tube management???
I was looking for one as well; since he mentioned it was a two part series :(.
This video is very easy to understand, thank u very much ... ❤
Fantastic video! Good shit edward Tomahawks on me lol
Great video✊🏾
Great video.
Outstanding!
Thank you..this is the best! Thanks
Great video!
Thanks allot sir 🙏
I was following your video until 16:35 when you state that there is actually water behind the front panel in the suction control chamber. However, this is a DRY suction set up-- meaning there is not water in the suction control chamber, correct? Isn't that the main difference between a WET and a DRY suction chest tube drainage system set up (whether or not there is water in the suction control chamber)?
Fantastic!
thank you so much for this
Very nice, simple. Thanks.
Helped me a lot! thx
Well done! Thank you 🙏🏼
this was so helpful! THANK YOU!
Where is the 2nd part? 😟
14:30 a single chest tube management system
excellent...
Where’s the second video?
Thank you TT^TT
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
This video is pretty good, but uses imprecise terminology and almost circular reasoning in some places. For example: "Systems flow from high to low pressure." What do you mean by "a system flows"? It's a fluid (gas or liquid) that flows, not a 'system'. But overall well done.
What exactly do you mean by negative and positive pressure?
"Negative" pressure is a commonly-used but confusing idea. "Negative (air) pressure" means "SUBATMOSPHERIC" pressure, i.e. "the air pressure in area X is LOWER than atmospheric pressure'. "Positive" pressure means 'the air pressure in area X is higher than atmospheric pressure'. It can be a bit hard to visualize. 'Positive' pressure commonly exists where a fluid/gas/liquid is being compressed or squeezed (its container is exerting forces in the direction that tries to make the gas volume smaller), whereas negative pressure exists where the container is trying to pull outward on the gas, i.e. the container is trying to pull the gas into taking up a larger volume than its resting volume.
@@ededitor3556 THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!
@@jasminejohnson2182 I'm glad you still found that useful (2 years later!)