Thanks for the video, I am preparing for step3. Your videos are an awesome tool for a quick review. Thanks for the good work. Just sharing my thought for question 101 Increase mitral flow velocity is in mitral regurge, not stenosis. Exertion dyspnea could be due to left ventricular failure. Mitral regurge is the most common valvular lesion in rheumatc heart disease. Thanks 😊
Hello! I would appreciate some clarification on question 79 at 38:59. How can you tell it's bronchitis rather than postnasal drip? I understand that postnasal drip typically presents with upper respiratory symptoms, while bronchitis involves wheezing and lower respiratory symptoms. But none was mentioned... Thank you!
In this video he is differentiating upper airway cough syndrome with acute bronchitis- i guess that question had acute presentation, hence its bronchitis. UACS needs 3weeks of cough
Yeah I am confused about this too. I think its timeline. Bronchitis occurs within a week or two of URI or never resolves, while UACS is more like weeks-month after having URI
I was thinking more so post nasal drip which can also manifest at night as a cough and common after URI. I actually remember a question similar to that one on Uworld and the answer being 2nd gen antihistamine, so I think he might have made a mistake.
@@AJmonics OOh WOW, I'm really glad to hear about Step-3. Can I plz request the first vidoe to be made on CCS cases?, and when can we expect the start of Step-3 plz😊
7:42 there were also serious treatment related events of about the same magnitude, so to me it's a bit of a wash. You can bump up the immune system with nutrition to protect better against severe rsv but you can't necessarily prevent side effects of the antibody shot. 15:43 50mmHg is mild/moderate hypercapnia, to suggest intubation sounds ridiculous (given how severe of a procedure that is) I'm reading asthma guidelines and it sounds like fear mongering. When I am sedentary for a while I frequently feel the need to breathe rapidly (I would say easily 30 per minute), which goes away after working out a little bit. Coincidentally, exercise significantly raises cortisol and epinephrine, exactly the same as the two medications to treat asthma: corticosteroids and beta receptor agonists which nor/epinephrine targets. Exercise also raises tissue and brain co2, which might also relieve high breathing rate. According to guidelines I would already have a 'acute severe asthma attack' at 25 breaths a minute, because I used to have asthma as a child. Asthma deaths at US schools is less than 2 per year from 1990 to 2003. I mean it can't get any rarer. Looking at all the asthma medications, which all simulate exercise induced changes, you'd think the treatment for asthma is exercise (and cause, lack thereof) 22:48 another ridiculous criteria: if a patient has nocturnal waking on any night, then they have persistent asthma? You can wake for a million reasons not related to asthma.
I've been checking my notifications every day for this video to drop 😁 Thank you!!!❤
Wow, I am so humbled!!! Thank you so much for sharing! You are so supportive!!
This is GOD sent...
Binge watching your videos again in last hours..
AJ if you ever need kidney lemme know.
WOW, never heard that one before!!!!!!!!!! I feel incredibly honored!!!! Was worth making this video for that comment!
ha ha
@@AJmonics Thank you so much, Dr.
Rewatching for Step 3.
Thank you for making medicine easy, cool, and free.
Warmest regards
Aj, you're a savior; binge watching these highly useful videos of systems before my Medicine exams.Thank you so much :)
So happy to hear!!!!!!!!!! Thank you for telling me!!
I can’t believe you posted this 5 hrs ago!!! Right on time!!! I was hoping you upload one soon❤
Yay!!! So happy I can help!
Best review of pulmonology !! Thank you for posting this 😊
Thank you so much! That means a lot - worked really hard on that!!
pulmonology smash my biggest fear was gone by this video....tq AJ
I take step 2 in 4 days, I am blessed to have a video resource that is so comprehensive.
any update on how much these videos helped?!
Really needed this… was wondering if you were ganna make a pulm video. Thank you!!!
So happy I got it to you!!
Thank you so much for putting in the effort and time to help medical students
Thanks for the video,
I am preparing for step3. Your videos are an awesome tool for a quick review. Thanks for the good work.
Just sharing my thought for question 101 Increase mitral flow velocity is in mitral regurge, not stenosis. Exertion dyspnea could be due to left ventricular failure. Mitral regurge is the most common valvular lesion in rheumatc heart disease.
Thanks 😊
I need to review - thank you so much for letting me know. It means so much to me that you were so meticulous. Thank you for the feedback!
Thank you for this ! Taking my IM shelf in 6 weeks good to review ! 😊
I hope you rock the exam!! So happy to be there for you!
This is telepathy.....was searching for Pulmonology, and Voila, it's posted.
Thanks a ton
So happy I can be there for you!!
please do for step 2. thanks
Thank you so much
Please consider doing Infectious dis for CK
I have definitely considered doing ID and dermatology... trying to find the time for it
im writing step 2 tomorrow the timing is insane
I hope you rock the exam!!!
Thank you very much for this review!!!
You are very welcome!! I am so bad with responding these days... rrr!
How did I end up on this video? It was just open in a tab and I have no memory of it lol
Hello! I would appreciate some clarification on question 79 at 38:59. How can you tell it's bronchitis rather than postnasal drip? I understand that postnasal drip typically presents with upper respiratory symptoms, while bronchitis involves wheezing and lower respiratory symptoms. But none was mentioned... Thank you!
In this video he is differentiating upper airway cough syndrome with acute bronchitis- i guess that question had acute presentation, hence its bronchitis. UACS needs 3weeks of cough
God Bless you! Please post Pdf Emergency Medicine on your website? The marker Q55-77 blocks the view to see explanations
I am working on that right now!!
A HUGE thank you!!!!
You are very welcome!!
Hey! Confused about question 79. Is it not upper airway cough syndrome? How do you differentiate between acute bronchitis v/s UACS?
Is the only difference the timeline? UACS is chronic/subacute (3wks and above) v/s acute bronchitis (few days-week).
Yeah I am confused about this too. I think its timeline. Bronchitis occurs within a week or two of URI or never resolves, while UACS is more like weeks-month after having URI
I was thinking more so post nasal drip which can also manifest at night as a cough and common after URI. I actually remember a question similar to that one on Uworld and the answer being 2nd gen antihistamine, so I think he might have made a mistake.
love your page so much
=) Thank you so much!!
The paradoxical vocal cord closure actually came up on my exam, next to a flow volume loop, LOL
thanks AJ
Awesome!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you so much for telling me!!!!!!!!!!
Please upload reviews for step 1
That is my plan - but I may produce step 3 first, we'll see..
@@AJmonics OOh WOW, I'm really glad to hear about Step-3. Can I plz request the first vidoe to be made on CCS cases?, and when can we expect the start of Step-3 plz😊
Thank you so much 😊
You are welcome Dr Deepa!
yayyy Thank you AJ
You are welcome menekse!
What is the difference between 32:19 q60 and 38:56 q79?
Hello the pdfs on your website are they gone?
Will be updated very very soon!
Thank you that was amazing
Thanks a lot dear 😊❤
Hello dr doctor thanks a lot your videos are very helpful in my presentation and can you please tell how to get pdf from it and others too
www.AJmonicsPDF.com let me know if you have an issue or if it's too much
very nice, but these questions from what reference?
all over
Thanks!!
You are welcome!!
Whatever you need, you just let me know.
Thank you Sarah!!! I would love your help =) all on my own, what year are you? feel free to email me ajmonics@gmail.com no pressure
Do you have one for step 1 ?
not yet =(
thanks
You are welcome Leah!
7:42 there were also serious treatment related events of about the same magnitude, so to me it's a bit of a wash. You can bump up the immune system with nutrition to protect better against severe rsv but you can't necessarily prevent side effects of the antibody shot.
15:43 50mmHg is mild/moderate hypercapnia, to suggest intubation sounds ridiculous (given how severe of a procedure that is)
I'm reading asthma guidelines and it sounds like fear mongering. When I am sedentary for a while I frequently feel the need to breathe rapidly (I would say easily 30 per minute), which goes away after working out a little bit. Coincidentally, exercise significantly raises cortisol and epinephrine, exactly the same as the two medications to treat asthma: corticosteroids and beta receptor agonists which nor/epinephrine targets. Exercise also raises tissue and brain co2, which might also relieve high breathing rate.
According to guidelines I would already have a 'acute severe asthma attack' at 25 breaths a minute, because I used to have asthma as a child.
Asthma deaths at US schools is less than 2 per year from 1990 to 2003. I mean it can't get any rarer.
Looking at all the asthma medications, which all simulate exercise induced changes, you'd think the treatment for asthma is exercise (and cause, lack thereof)
22:48 another ridiculous criteria: if a patient has nocturnal waking on any night, then they have persistent asthma? You can wake for a million reasons not related to asthma.
Thank you for your ocmments!!! I really appreciate them!
What is scar tissue in the lungs n how does it look like
I've seen it in several times during open heart surgery; similar to scar tissue you'd see on a really bad skin wound!
Thanks a lot ❤
You are very welcome!!