Airway disease versus alveolar disease
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 22 ก.ค. 2024
- By the end of the lesson, you will understand key observations pertinent to managing ventilated patients with airway disease and/or alveolar disease.
This video was taken from our CME-accredited Mechanical Ventilation Essentials course taught by Josh Cosa, Manager of Education at
Long Beach Memorial Medical Center, California, USA.
📘 Discover the First Chapter Free: bit.ly/Mechanical-Ventilation...
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Outstanding presentations and greatly helpful.
this was amazingly efficient and understandable
This video is phenomenal, it is broken down so well into palatable chunks!
this video is great. thank you!!
Terrific explanation, thank you
I hope you people will make more videos like this.
Thank you, this video is so helpful🌹
Beautiful playlist
Very informative. Thanks.
Outstanding presentation 👏
Very great information thanks sir. Keep it up.
I love this video thank you!
Wow. Thank you.
Excellent
I just got diagnosed with small airway disease and copd stage 2 it’s sucks
Proper easy wonderful vdo
Very nice
Thank u sir
Restrictive disease make ventilation problem also because of mismatch gas exhange i mean not hust oxygeneation proble as you said
Can a patient have both? If so, what are the unique markers for a patient with both airways and alveolar dysfunction? Is there a name for this type of condition?
Love
kick ass video
I have an airway disease and almost had a heart attack after having a breathing treatment
What breathing treatment can you please share? I’m going through something similar
I don’t look forward to that
1
Your video helped, thank you! But, I don't understand the pursing lips example. Why do you purse your lips on exhalation, and not on inspiration. It is not like your bronchioles dilate during inspiration, and constrict during exhalation. Would it not be breathing in through pursed lips, and breathing out through pursed lips? I understand this may just be an example of what happens in our body, but anatomically it does not translate because, I believe, you'd just need pursed lips the entire time. I could be wrong! Let me know! Either way I'll remember your rules of thumb.
Because inhalation on ventilators, controled by ventilators, and you can ajust desired preasure and volume tu inhale. Exhalation is passive procese and not depend on ventilator. in other words if there is obstruction, exhalation becomes big job for patient, not inhalation wich is controld by ventilator
it made me wonder too bc people ith copd do pursed lip expiration to prolong expiration and thus getting more air out .. in the video it says this traps the air which i don't think so