Thank you so much! I’m doing surgery in tiny animals, like birds, reptiles and mammals, many smaller than an eye. The tissue is as delicate, so a great skills lesson from a “proper” human surgeon!
Bananas are a great model that we have used more during the pandemic. It we can't get our students to the lab, we can get materials to them and assess their completion with a video. #SimTribe
If you could make a video how to load suture needles in Barraquer needle holder for lefties and right handed doctors cuz I'm an OR-Ophtha nurse and did my second scrubbing in pterygium yesterday and can't load the suture needle properly cuz it was so tiny and thin and kept on jumping or rotating plus the fact that the suture is so thiiiiin, one small force and it breaks so easily. The resident who did the surgery is a lefty, and can't figure out how to put it fast and properly. It would mean so much for me if you could teach me.
Thank you for all your videos. I am a first-year ophthalmology resident in Israel. One little question, how did you choose your magnification loupes? :D Thank you!!
Doctor Eyeball MD thank you for the quick answer! Actually, I have the same question. Some of the forums I have read mention that 2.5x seems to be sufficient for ophthalmology. I found this “guide” a few days back, www.ophthalmologyweb.com/Featured-Articles/139184-A-Guide-to-Surgical-Loupes-for-Ophthalmology/ I am just trying to make a good choice. Any particular brand do you recommend me? Again, thank you very much :)
it just depends on what direction the pass needs to be made. At times you’ll have to do one or the other. At other times either might work in which case I’d prefer forehand because it’s a more natural movement.
Thank you so much! I’m doing surgery in tiny animals, like birds, reptiles and mammals, many smaller than an eye. The tissue is as delicate, so a great skills lesson from a “proper” human surgeon!
that’s awesome i’m glad the micro surgical skills translate well to small animals. i almost became a vet myself- love the field!
Fdbu.. solved so many of my confusions.. thanks
설명 자세하고 잡는방법과 패싱방법까지 설명해줘서 유용함
omg you are a life saver thank soooo much
Thanks very much from 🇲🇷 Mauritania
marvelous video , very informative , thanks a lot
Sure thing. I’m glad it helped. Coming out with some more suturing videos soon
Explained beautifully
thanks!
Really helpful
Great job as usual 🏆. 😍
thanks
Very helpful
Bananas are a great model that we have used more during the pandemic. It we can't get our students to the lab, we can get materials to them and assess their completion with a video. #SimTribe
Great job 💖
Very useful tips thank you 😀😀
of course!
Where can I get instruments to practice with? Do you have any links?
So useful..thank you🙏
of course!
If you could make a video how to load suture needles in Barraquer needle holder for lefties and right handed doctors cuz I'm an OR-Ophtha nurse and did my second scrubbing in pterygium yesterday and can't load the suture needle properly cuz it was so tiny and thin and kept on jumping or rotating plus the fact that the suture is so thiiiiin, one small force and it breaks so easily. The resident who did the surgery is a lefty, and can't figure out how to put it fast and properly. It would mean so much for me if you could teach me.
I go live on Instagram sometimes to show suturing and needle handling techniques :)
Thank you for all your videos. I am a first-year ophthalmology resident in Israel. One little question, how did you choose your magnification loupes? :D Thank you!!
Hi! I just tried a few. mine are 2.5 and they work fine. sometimes i wish i has gotten 3.5 though.
Doctor Eyeball MD thank you for the quick answer! Actually, I have the same question. Some of the forums I have read mention that 2.5x seems to be sufficient for ophthalmology. I found this “guide” a few days back, www.ophthalmologyweb.com/Featured-Articles/139184-A-Guide-to-Surgical-Loupes-for-Ophthalmology/
I am just trying to make a good choice. Any particular brand do you recommend me? Again, thank you very much :)
🙏 dr
Are those from storz?
They’re just cheap Amazon tools :)
@@doctoreyeballmd7493 lol not leaving an affiliate link lol
In terms of forehand vs backhand, is one technique better than the other in certain situations/precedures or is it personal preference?
it just depends on what direction the pass needs to be made. At times you’ll have to do one or the other. At other times either might work in which case I’d prefer forehand because it’s a more natural movement.
Doctor Eyeball MD alright thank you for clarifying. love your videos!
Nice video but less nerd stuff and more pistol Pete. And get some fresh produce.
haha
Older bananas work better for experienced people doing sutures because they are softer and tear easier. Always a fun simulation either way. #SimTribe