I'm so glad I spent time on this video. BEST teaching, straight to the point and very very high yield concepts. Step 2 in a week, Thankssss a tonneee for this video
This video was amazing! Thank you so much. No other step/NBME resource gives us exclusive Ophtho reviews, which is why it was my most poorly performed system on uworld haha. This is very helpful!
Thank for making this video. I have always been looking for contents like this in TH-cam. This is a very good all in one video with excellent content not only for ophthalmology students, but also, optometry students like me to revise occasionally and before exams.
Thank you very much for this amazing video. I have one question about cn 7 palsy which is at 53:34, as far as I know umn lesion affects lower face and lmn lesion affects all face bcs lmn lesion effects nerves that innervate upper face and come from both sides of the brain but umn does not.
Thank you so much for the correction. I unfortunately mixed up my lesions when narrating. Now noted as a correction in the pinned comments and in the video description!
thank you so much doctor this saved me so much time and effort from books and university lectures !! is there a way i find the slides as a powerpoint or PDF to get them printed ? :)
Ophthalmology is a subject that I don't think a general physician needs to know that well. People with eye problems should go to an ophthalmologist directly
While I agree that many eye pathologies fall outside the realm of management by general physicians, The vast majority of community hospitals, ERs and urgent cares in North America do not have access to on call ophthalmologists in person. Life threatening Pathologies like CN III palsies or GCA cannot wait till being seen by outpatient ophthalmologists. Other pathologies like retinal detachments, infections and vision loss need to be appropriately recognized and triaged by general physicians in order to ensure timely referrals.
And even if one doesn’t plan on looking at patients eyes as a general physician, everyone still needs to know enough ophthalmology to pass their general medicine boards, which is hopefully what this video is meant to help with
@@osamaahmedmd I agree but if it's a real emergency then there is not much a general physician can do in a clinic and that patient will have to get referred to an Emergency department. Also, I always read of GCA as being a chronic condition
@@HT.100 the majority of ERs in America do not have ophthalmology on call. In which case patient may have to be triaged at the local ER for transfer to a hospital like mine which may be over 5 hours away. Appropriate triage necessitates ER physicians having a good understanding of ophthalmology. Also GCA can have chronic inflammation but arterial inflammation can lead to sudden permanent vision loss and strokes that require immediate IV steroids even before the diagnosis is confirmed via biopsy
CORRECTION: At 53:30, order is reversed. UMN Lesion only affects lower face and LMN affects whole face
this was a high-yield marathon and i enjoyed every second of your wonderful teaching, doc. Thank u so much!
THANK YOU SO MUCH. This is so helpful.
I wish I had listened to this lec before I gave my ophthalmology exam, thank yo for this brilliant lecture
I'm so glad I spent time on this video. BEST teaching, straight to the point and very very high yield concepts. Step 2 in a week, Thankssss a tonneee for this video
Im glad this helped, best of luck on Step 2!
❤
I have used this video past yr for step 1 , now i am using it again for my FCPS 1 ... Thanks ❤
This was one of the best lectures I have seen! So useful and well organized.
This video was amazing! Thank you so much. No other step/NBME resource gives us exclusive Ophtho reviews, which is why it was my most poorly performed system on uworld haha. This is very helpful!
Thank for making this video. I have always been looking for contents like this in TH-cam. This is a very good all in one video with excellent content not only for ophthalmology students, but also, optometry students like me to revise occasionally and before exams.
Best of luck with optometry school! I'm glad you found this helpful
Ophthalmology explained so well🎉…..thanks for such an amazing video lecture
THIS IS GOLD! THANK YOU!
This video is so so amazing. There are so few good resources for ophtho for step 1/2 and this covered all the bases so well!!
Amazing Work!! Keep it up please it was extremely helpful!!!
Thanks so much, this is fantastic!!
You're very welcome!
Straight to the point and informative
Great Video, I am happy that it came infront of me somehow through TH-cam. God Bless You Dr Osama 🙏🙏🙏
Just a little correction - The fluorescein dye is not blue, it's orange. You use a cobalt blue light to make green fluorescence.
great job Doc
great lecture
Kindly attach pdf to it ,if you still have it .
Awesome bro you nailed it
This video is awesome! Thanks for taking the time to make this information succinct and easy to understand with visual images :D
Amaaaaaazing , thank you for the great lecture , I had a hard time learning ophthalmology during school but your great video helped me a lot.
This was amazing!
thank you so much for your effort!
thank you for this brilliant class
Indeed, a very good class!
thanks a ton!!
can you please make videos on pupillary control, visual field defect, internuclear ophthalmoplegia.
Appreciate it! Yes, will try to make one soon!
Thank you!!
Wish my teacher could explain things like u do
Thank you very much for this amazing video. I have one question about cn 7 palsy which is at 53:34, as far as I know umn lesion affects lower face and lmn lesion affects all face bcs lmn lesion effects nerves that innervate upper face and come from both sides of the brain but umn does not.
Thank you so much for the correction. I unfortunately mixed up my lesions when narrating. Now noted as a correction in the pinned comments and in the video description!
Thank you doctor osama, you saved us, may Allah grant you paradise
Inshallah, thank you for your feedback :)
Thanks a lot🙌🙌🙌
❤❤❤❤
thank you so much doctor this saved me so much time and effort from books and university lectures !! is there a way i find the slides as a powerpoint or PDF to get them printed ? :)
Thank you! Sadly can’t find PDF right now - will send it to you if I can, but I have my website with a lot of this info on it www.ophthobasics.com
King Pin 🔥
Hi is there a pdf for the slides? great lecture
Yes! I’ll link it in the description soon!
hi does this cover thyroid eye disease
Yes, very briefly at 50:09
Ophthalmology is a subject that I don't think a general physician needs to know that well.
People with eye problems should go to an ophthalmologist directly
While I agree that many eye pathologies fall outside the realm of management by general physicians, The vast majority of community hospitals, ERs and urgent cares in North America do not have access to on call ophthalmologists in person. Life threatening Pathologies like CN III palsies or GCA cannot wait till being seen by outpatient ophthalmologists. Other pathologies like retinal detachments, infections and vision loss need to be appropriately recognized and triaged by general physicians in order to ensure timely referrals.
And even if one doesn’t plan on looking at patients eyes as a general physician, everyone still needs to know enough ophthalmology to pass their general medicine boards, which is hopefully what this video is meant to help with
@@osamaahmedmd
I agree but if it's a real emergency then there is not much a general physician can do in a clinic and that patient will have to get referred to an Emergency department.
Also, I always read of GCA as being a chronic condition
@@HT.100 the majority of ERs in America do not have ophthalmology on call. In which case patient may have to be triaged at the local ER for transfer to a hospital like mine which may be over 5 hours away. Appropriate triage necessitates ER physicians having a good understanding of ophthalmology.
Also GCA can have chronic inflammation but arterial inflammation can lead to sudden permanent vision loss and strokes that require immediate IV steroids even before the diagnosis is confirmed via biopsy
Anyone got an anki deck for this lecture?
Wish I had time to make an anki deck for this. Will Defs try to put one together if time allows during residency
Haha this was on my recommended 🥲 congratulations on your fellowship match!
@@minjungkim4052 thank you so much! Hope all is well :)