Dr. Mostafa Maita how do you measure a patient’s temperature during surgery? I’ve had surgery and was put under as I was being rolled into the OR. Last thing I recall was how cold the OR was. Then I woke up and surgery was done. I was out for the entire surgery of course but woke up wrapped in nice warm blankets.
@@lm3049 multiple methods. There are temperature probes that can be put on your skin(axillary area) or even oral / nasal probes for continuous temperature monitoring.
This is exactly why I love and want to get into anesthesia. Never boring, great mix of routine vs emergent cases, didactic vs hands on practice and overall fun looking career field. Thanks again, Dr. Maita. Keep em' coming!
Anesthesiologists are heroes. Last time I had surgery i had 7 pokes and then the vein finder came out, I’m a hard stick. Thanks for keeping us alive and breathing during surgery.
Victor K No. Once you log in, you tell it which medications you need or which patient you are pulling for. Once you do that, you hit remove med, and drawers start popping open one at a time. They are stocked by the hospital’s pharmacy. So, for example, if you need Propofol, sufentanil, and midazolam, once you choose those three meds (or click the patient’s name-depending on the setup), the drawers those meds are in will open one at a time. Once you close one, it prompts the machine to open the next.
skip Ortho. Anesthesia is amazing if you want to have a life, variety and use your brain as a far as critical care medicine is concern and of course no long follow ups or being stuck in the clinic.
Thanks, Dr.Webb for bringing us amazing content giving the fact you are a surgeon and have a family but still make time to bring content to your viewers.
Unfortunately, my health has gone into the toilet over the last six years. At this point, everything I’ve gone through, I could pretty much do anyone’s job in a hospital.(Sarcasm). On a serious note, this was cool to see. Thanks for putting this up and thank you for what you do.
First off, what an awesome and informative video! I just wanted to let any high school seniors know that I am currently going through the interview process for PA school and have gone through things such as research, shadowing, PCE, and the GRE. I am part of an organization called MED-ED and we are a group of students from different medical backgrounds that come and speak to high school students from medically underserved areas about different careers in healthcare. I am obviously the PA student representative of the group but we have students that represent the M.D, D.O, P.A, OTD, R.N, and N.P professions. We are based in Pittsburgh and would love to come and speak to schools about medical-related careers but we also do Zoom meetings at any school in the country! We talk about the differences between professions such as responsibilities, education requirements, and compensation. On top of all of that, we walk you through step by step on the process to becoming a P.A or any other medical professional! If any of you are interested you can follow us on Instagram @ _med_ed and message us! we would love to hear from all our future healthcare professionals! Thanks for reading!
I’m new here and I’m so terrified of hospitals I have severe anxiety and panic disorder ... I’ve had 3 c-sections and they were all bad experiences . Watching your channel helps me so much
at the end of his residency he'll be making about $370,000 a year. Or $185 per hour (assuming 2,000 work hours a year). Or in the time it takes to watch this video he would have made $25
I'm starting medical school in August and have already started thinking about what specialties I'd be interested in (I know, super early!), anesthesiology looks awesome! Definitely on my list, thank you for taking the time to film this!
did you figure out which specialty you want to go into yet? :-) Theres soo many out there! And theres a few basic ways to know which speciality is for you. The top way to know is identifying what things/ areas in life that you're good at, interested in, and passionate about :-)
I had to be conscious sedated for a heart cardioversion on 3/4/20 .. the docs used 20mg propofol and 50mg ketamine. All I have to say is, that was a very interesting experience, all I remember was having a full out of body experience while I was orbiting in space.
thats ketamine, its crazy good, I dont recommend it for most of the patients, I use it only if its absolutely necessary like super big patients or morbidly obese patient who I think I could lose airway of
Dr. Webb! Do you think you can make a video about the med school application process for Texas residents (MD and DO)? I think it would help alot of first time applicants out, especially for those who don't have the sufficient resources/ mentors! Thanks and great videos!
Just had spinal cord surgery. Laminectomy and tethered cord release. I was awake and alert in the or for a long time and the Anesthesiologist told me he was giving me a med to make my heart beat fast, and then he told me he was giving me one to make it beat slow. This honestly freaked me out. I didn't get any versed like normal before surgery. I have a connective tissue disorder so my body metabolizes meds oddly so maybe they gave me something else and it didn't work idk. I have had a lot of major surgeries in my life so I am used to going to the Or. This however was the first time that I was really fully aware and it the whole heart med thing scared me. Great video! Thanks for sharing!
Lol wait till you find out how well documented rather painstakingly documented everything in the hospital or medical field is. If its not document it never happened... and your ass might not be covered.
Just curious. In a future video can you describe what is done by Anesthesiologists to make sure a patient is not paralyzed by drugs, but actually awake or conscious during procedures.
A lot of the paralytic medications are reversible which means there are other Medications that can reverse the paralytic effects. Also time. Most surgeries, patients are usually not awake and conscious due to other Medications that are given with the paralytic agents
Do you have an assistant that helps you preparing the patient and the equipment? Here in Germany you have a nurse that prepares the drugs, the patient and the material, so that the anesthesiologist just has to say how much of each medication he wants to administer and puts the tube into the patient. After that he is responsible for the patient during the operation
Is it mandatory that all doctors who don’t have perfect vision wear their glasses when they work? I notice that so many doctors choose to wear theirs and I myself am a glasses wearer, but after a certain point in the day, I just get tired of having something on my face!
Big difference is if there is a fellowship trained anesthesiologist, meaning different kinds of surgery or treatments nonoperative, and probably duty hours, supervision of others and administrative tasks
Where I worked, MDAs were usually present for the induction. They supervised 4 rooms each, plus did pre surgery interviews. Sometimes they gave lunch breaks.
This guy: Hey guys, welcome to my video as an anesthesio- Everybody in this comment section: Yeah yeah show us your workout routine, diet and favorite barber instead.
Can you walk us through your preferred choice of laryngoscope blade and when to use or not use certain varieties (like whis hipple, Wisconsin, McGill etc)? Also does your hospital have anesthesiologist’s assistants/RTs in OR?
I noticed you only slipped on one type of tape. Do you have paper tape readily available for those patients whom are allergic to "sticky tape"? Thank you for sharing a glimpse of your job.😁
I don't remember a mask being placed over my mouth before my shoulder surgery. I just remember the Versed being administered through the I.V., then feeling dazed as they rolled me into the Operating room and then I went to sleep.
My neighbor swears up and down she wasn't sedated before they took her back for one of her surgeries and she said she panicked when she saw the operating room. She said she thought she was in a Walking Dead Episode. I told her Maybe the drugs worked too well on you? She loves to embellish things
URGENT !!!! What causes Pseudocholinesterase deficiency in GA? Can I safely use spinal anesthesia? Plz get back to me ASAP I have to have a surgery on Tuesday and I am TERRIFIED! I was under GA 8+ hours with a tube down my throat the whole time. I don’t want anything to happen to me.
What's that Twitch gadget all about? And, I've always been curious how you keep people sedated for 5-10 hour long surgeries? Do you use completely different meds compared to an appendectomy, for example. Thank you.
This is interesting! But I have a QUESTION: As an ER medical scribe, I always see the ER residents intubate patients not the anesthesiologist. Also, now that I think of it, I havent seen an anesthesiologist in the ER critc care room even for a GSW (Gun Shot Wound). Is this because the hospital I work at has a pharmacist in the room?
Anesthesiologists, cus ER docs need heroes too. No but for real in my hospital anesthesiologist residents are the code blue teams that respond to any code blues regardless of department, and anesthesiologists are definitely called into the ED to consult for complicated airway cases.
Doc, I got a real question for you....never had a surgery. Have a mother who is looney and told her kids about a surgery she had in which she felt and heard everyone talking. This was long before the movies were made about it. I take 4 meds daily and 2 of them would knock out most ppl like you're doing here. My Q is if....no when I have a stroke, will you guys put me under and know the meds I take? And will I be trapped in my body unable to speak or move but know everything. And last, if one has a stroke or something that will kill them, if hospital staff does not treat them does a person have that right? The DNR as I call it. I want to be put to sleep for good. I've suffered mentally most all my life but yugely since 1999. I'm being serious and hope you answer and to free you of obligation or legal, NO. I am not suicidal. I am not going to nor am I planning to harm myself, or anyone else. I just seek information. Thanks. I wish I had a normal mind like you do, I enjoy helping people and this would probably be a great job to help take care of others. Good for you!
We all know the doc hides his dumbbells in the call room
Right!
#Caught
Wish he could talk about his workout schedule throughout his residency so far
yeah, a video about him balancing work life and personal health with entertainment would be good
I will post that ASAP!!
Dr. Mostafa Maita thanks Doc! Subscribed to your channel by the way!
Dr. Mostafa Maita how do you measure a patient’s temperature during surgery? I’ve had surgery and was put under as I was being rolled into the OR. Last thing I recall was how cold the OR was. Then I woke up and surgery was done. I was out for the entire surgery of course but woke up wrapped in nice warm blankets.
@@lm3049 multiple methods. There are temperature probes that can be put on your skin(axillary area) or even oral / nasal probes for continuous temperature monitoring.
This is exactly why I love and want to get into anesthesia. Never boring, great mix of routine vs emergent cases, didactic vs hands on practice and overall fun looking career field. Thanks again, Dr. Maita. Keep em' coming!
Awesome! You got this! 💪🏾
@@antoniowebbmd Thanks, Dr. Webb. You're the man!
Casey Todd you’re gonna be the swollest anesthesiologist!!
A day in the life of an Anesthesia Technologist
th-cam.com/video/qQTmHGGI_Ug/w-d-xo.html
I'm also very interested in anesthesia, and this video was very exciting and interesting to watch. Hope I can become an anesthesiologist one day!
Anesthesiologists are heroes. Last time I had surgery i had 7 pokes and then the vein finder came out, I’m a hard stick. Thanks for keeping us alive and breathing during surgery.
Alright that OR setup with the screens and drawers that pop out was WAY cool.
Right? I loved how the machine needed his finger print to even open :D
That’s a Pyxis machine. It uses bio metrics for login, and pops drawers one at a time for medication access. They’re all over hospitals.
Stephanie Stuart-Landrey Does the medication drop into the tray/drawer like a vending machine or something how does it work?
Victor K No. Once you log in, you tell it which medications you need or which patient you are pulling for. Once you do that, you hit remove med, and drawers start popping open one at a time. They are stocked by the hospital’s pharmacy. So, for example, if you need Propofol, sufentanil, and midazolam, once you choose those three meds (or click the patient’s name-depending on the setup), the drawers those meds are in will open one at a time. Once you close one, it prompts the machine to open the next.
I’m more impressed with the label maker. We are stuck in the Stone Age hand writing labels! Lol
He stays in shape while being a resident yall have no excuses!
I love when your guests go in details about what they do specifically!
This guy is a master alchemist. He pulled more potions then a professor at hogwarts.
The Aneswole-olgist
I wouldn’t mind seeing his face before I go to sleep for surgery and after I wake up.
Lol you are funny
I love going to work everyday. There’s nothing like the immediacy of anesthesiology .
Cruzan i like ketamine
Kitty Bitch ketamine is a wonderful meditation. It’s underutilized.
I'm interested in the matter....don't you get bored of routine? How about credit and happy life?
Silvia Jabr There is not “routine” to get board of ... life as an anesthesiologist is one of never ending change...you will never be bored
dude is straight shredded! more proof that diet is everything! great video!
Respect to any dr who doesn't judge patients falsely
I mostly want to know this dude's workout routine as a resident.
Unrelated but his beard be lookin fresh
This is fascinating! I want to be an ortho spine surgeon, but I’ve always been interested in what Anesthesiologists do in the day to day.
skip Ortho. Anesthesia is amazing if you want to have a life, variety and use your brain as a far as critical care medicine is concern and of course no long follow ups or being stuck in the clinic.
I'm still so far away from becoming a physician.😭 *Shout out* to all my present and future docs👍👍👍👍
Loveduhmusic what are you going for?! I’m so excited and stressed 😩 ugh
I'm trying...
Thanks, Dr.Webb for bringing us amazing content giving the fact you are a surgeon and have a family but still make time to bring content to your viewers.
Unfortunately, my health has gone into the toilet over the last six years. At this point, everything I’ve gone through, I could pretty much do anyone’s job in a hospital.(Sarcasm). On a serious note, this was cool to see. Thanks for putting this up and thank you for what you do.
I’m so sorry to head that I hope you feels better soon!
First off, what an awesome and informative video! I just wanted to let any high school seniors know that I am currently going through the interview process for PA school and have gone through things such as research, shadowing, PCE, and the GRE. I am part of an organization called MED-ED and we are a group of students from different medical backgrounds that come and speak to high school students from medically underserved areas about different careers in healthcare. I am obviously the PA student representative of the group but we have students that represent the M.D, D.O, P.A, OTD, R.N, and N.P professions. We are based in Pittsburgh and would love to come and speak to schools about medical-related careers but we also do Zoom meetings at any school in the country! We talk about the differences between professions such as responsibilities, education requirements, and compensation. On top of all of that, we walk you through step by step on the process to becoming a P.A or any other medical professional! If any of you are interested you can follow us on Instagram @ _med_ed and message us! we would love to hear from all our future healthcare professionals! Thanks for reading!
I’m new here and I’m so terrified of hospitals I have severe anxiety and panic disorder ... I’ve had 3 c-sections and they were all bad experiences . Watching your channel helps me so much
Thanks for the perspective in to one of your shifts. Always appreciate when anesthesia shows up at a code!
at the end of his residency he'll be making about $370,000 a year. Or $185 per hour (assuming 2,000 work hours a year). Or in the time it takes to watch this video he would have made $25
That's ridiculous.. that means if you get sick you'll be in hospital debt for the rest of your life.
Forget “per hour”! That’s $7,000 a week!
Truth Reigns you also have to realize the time and effort he put in to get where he is. Not many people would do the same amount of work for less
Another dr to subscribe to because I’m VERY interested in anesthesiology. Thanks Dr.Webb
I'm starting medical school in August and have already started thinking about what specialties I'd be interested in (I know, super early!), anesthesiology looks awesome! Definitely on my list, thank you for taking the time to film this!
did you figure out which specialty you want to go into yet? :-) Theres soo many out there! And theres a few basic ways to know which speciality is for you. The top way to know is identifying what things/ areas in life that you're good at, interested in, and passionate about :-)
I have such a long way until I'm there...
omg it’s been three years .. u soon gonna graduate sis .. 😭
The “red wine” before surgery is the best, makes you feel so relaxed.
Dr. Maita is doctor goals 💪
Adnan A I see you comment on a lot of TH-cam videos. It’s so weird.
I been so nervous for my last pre-clinical exam thats in 2 days, so this video def came in at a good time for some extra motivation ! THANKS!!
I had to be conscious sedated for a heart cardioversion on 3/4/20 .. the docs used 20mg propofol and 50mg ketamine. All I have to say is, that was a very interesting experience, all I remember was having a full out of body experience while I was orbiting in space.
Wow! Thanks for sharing!
thats ketamine, its crazy good, I dont recommend it for most of the patients, I use it only if its absolutely necessary like super big patients or morbidly obese patient who I think I could lose airway of
Hay I'm 12 and a half and you inspire me! I really want to be a anesthesiologist or radiologist when I grow up.
Anesthesiologist are the real success key of every operation.They can make difference between life and death.
I love anesthesiologist can pre-prepare everything instead of having to rush it all during the surgery
This video was really great and informative! Keep them coming Dr Webb
I ve been under anesthexia it was a great experience. It s good to understand all the prep before cirjury 👏👏👏
I don't remember being under anesthesia. Just before and after anesthesia lol
Thank you for posting your videos, you are an inspiration to many! Been here almost since the beginning!!
have him on here more😂😍😍
That is a very serious job.
looooooove these video series Dr. Webb 👌🏾👌🏾👌🏾👌🏾
Thanks for watching! Will try to do more of these
Aww man 😩 I love your channel 🤧 keep them coming 💪🏾💯‼️
this might be a weird and unusual question... but can u be a a anesthesiologists for just pediatric? like i want to be a kids anesthesiologists
amran isaq yes you can!
Yes you have to do a fellowship peds year after residency
Dedicated lifesaving expert! Awesome. Thank you for sharing. God bless you!
This guy's so chill
thank you for this great video!!
Glad you liked it!
Dr. Webb! Do you think you can make a video about the med school application process for Texas residents (MD and DO)? I think it would help alot of first time applicants out, especially for those who don't have the sufficient resources/ mentors! Thanks and great videos!
Just go on the TMDSAS website. Al the information is there.
Just had spinal cord surgery. Laminectomy and tethered cord release. I was awake and alert in the or for a long time and the Anesthesiologist told me he was giving me a med to make my heart beat fast, and then he told me he was giving me one to make it beat slow. This honestly freaked me out. I didn't get any versed like normal before surgery. I have a connective tissue disorder so my body metabolizes meds oddly so maybe they gave me something else and it didn't work idk. I have had a lot of major surgeries in my life so I am used to going to the Or. This however was the first time that I was really fully aware and it the whole heart med thing scared me. Great video! Thanks for sharing!
Allright Doc, very cool video!
That's why I love anesthesia.
I enjoyed this a lot very interesting what you all have to do,just awesome take care Doctor Webb.
Hello I’m a big supporter 🙏🏾❤️❤️
Thanks for sharing and caring 🥰🥰🦋
Thank you 🙏🏾
Hard to believe that you are a resident. Totally looks like a professional bodybuilder.
Far from any sort of bodybuilder, but he is swole af indeed
No wonder medical care in the US cost so much. 50% of what he did was liability control.
Lol wait till you find out how well documented rather painstakingly documented everything in the hospital or medical field is. If its not document it never happened... and your ass might not be covered.
In my second life, I want to be like Dr. Maita.
Thanks for sharing because im pursuing this career
Awesome! Good luck!
@@antoniowebbmd dont need luck need motivation and i got motivation
Just curious. In a future video can you describe what is done by Anesthesiologists to make sure a patient is not paralyzed by drugs, but actually awake or conscious during procedures.
A lot of the paralytic medications are reversible which means there are other Medications that can reverse the paralytic effects. Also time. Most surgeries, patients are usually not awake and conscious due to other Medications that are given with the paralytic agents
Holy smokes Doctor Webb you look so different!
Oh my..lovely doc. I am crazy scared of going into surgery but this doc seems very calming so i will let him put me out for a while😂😉
This guy makes me want to go workout
He can put me to sleep any day 😌
Thank you for posting.
He is very handsome 👀😘
Love the safe label machine.👌
Great video very informative thanks for sharing it.
Hey Majda :-)
Can we get a day in the life video of an epidemiologist and healthcare administrator ?
Wow u have alot to do before u even start to put someone out. Well organized but how do u do a 24hr plus shift?
Do you have an assistant that helps you preparing the patient and the equipment? Here in Germany you have a nurse that prepares the drugs, the patient and the material, so that the anesthesiologist just has to say how much of each medication he wants to administer and puts the tube into the patient. After that he is responsible for the patient during the operation
I don't know anything about it how can I become an Anesthesiologist 🥺😓😭😭🥺
Thank you for sharing your experience.
When do you have time to make all those GAINZ???
Great insight!
Did you go from the stairwell to the OR without changing scrubs?
Just found this channel and I love it!!
Thank you! Welcome to the fam!
Is it mandatory that all doctors who don’t have perfect vision wear their glasses when they work? I notice that so many doctors choose to wear theirs and I myself am a glasses wearer, but after a certain point in the day, I just get tired of having something on my face!
No, not mandatory per se. But if you're unable to see well enough without your glasses to do your work, then you're stuck wearing them!
How are the duties different between a CRNA and an M.D in providing anesthesia?
Barbara J, there is a video on the day in the life of a CRNA too that Dr. Webb posted. Check it out.
Big difference is if there is a fellowship trained anesthesiologist, meaning different kinds of surgery or treatments nonoperative, and probably duty hours, supervision of others and administrative tasks
Also: Watch Rhianna Ferial
@Rich 91 they asked duties though.
Where I worked, MDAs were usually present for the induction. They supervised 4 rooms each, plus did pre surgery interviews. Sometimes they gave lunch breaks.
So many gold diggers on this channel 🤦🏼♂️
Great video! ❤️
What time of the day do you workout at?? When times do you eat?? 🥨
Is anyone gonna mention how vascular his forearms are?!
KayKay Kaliseo, you mean muscular. Vascular means blood vessels, so you might be saying that his veins pop out, but I think you mean muscular.
You could fit at least 5 green cannulas in
This was so interesting!!!
This guy: Hey guys, welcome to my video as an anesthesio-
Everybody in this comment section: Yeah yeah show us your workout routine, diet and favorite barber instead.
Did he only have celery juice
Can you walk us through your preferred choice of laryngoscope blade and when to use or not use certain varieties (like whis hipple, Wisconsin, McGill etc)?
Also does your hospital have anesthesiologist’s assistants/RTs in OR?
I noticed you only slipped on one type of tape. Do you have paper tape readily available for those patients whom are allergic to "sticky tape"?
Thank you for sharing a glimpse of your job.😁
Im sure it's great to be a doc in the US. All that money
("could swear the Rite-Aid pharmacist was just ghouling out on me over you selecting the medications 'needed'...")
Cool man. But do you really drink that mess every morning? I like celery ok but I don’t I could drink it.
Is the pay good?
I don't remember a mask being placed over my mouth before my shoulder surgery. I just remember the Versed being administered through the I.V., then feeling dazed as they rolled me into the Operating room and then I went to sleep.
Ha yeah most people don’t remember
My neighbor swears up and down she wasn't sedated before they took her back for one of her surgeries and she said she panicked when she saw the operating room. She said she thought she was in a Walking Dead Episode. I told her Maybe the drugs worked too well on you? She loves to embellish things
what the best undergraduate degree to become a anesthesiologist? I am considering biochemistry or neuroscience behavior.... Any recommendation Doctor?
My professor would fail me if I set up a sterile field like that 😂😂 .... nursing students should know
It’s a good thing this guy became a doctor!
Apolonioman that’s the end goal 👌🏿
Very interesting ✔👌
Thank you.
URGENT !!!!
What causes Pseudocholinesterase deficiency in GA? Can I safely use spinal anesthesia? Plz get back to me ASAP I have to have a surgery on Tuesday and I am TERRIFIED! I was under GA 8+ hours with a tube down my throat the whole time. I don’t want anything to happen to me.
Congratulations! And foremost thank you
What's that Twitch gadget all about? And, I've always been curious how you keep people sedated for 5-10 hour long surgeries? Do you use completely different meds compared to an appendectomy, for example. Thank you.
@Jay Ho thank you Jay
@@Lisa_RNHealthHub Meds are given via IV as needed during surgery. The nerve stimulator is used as a guide to check responses.
Very interesting. Big responsibility. Do patients ever get addicted to anesthesia drugs ?
Not from a single operation
This is interesting! But I have a QUESTION: As an ER medical scribe, I always see the ER residents intubate patients not the anesthesiologist. Also, now that I think of it, I havent seen an anesthesiologist in the ER critc care room even for a GSW (Gun Shot Wound). Is this because the hospital I work at has a pharmacist in the room?
ER docs can intubate. A MDA need not be present. Occasionally, the MDA may be called for a difficult intubation.
@@ccoop3774 Thanks! Thats what I thought.
Anesthesiologists, cus ER docs need heroes too. No but for real in my hospital anesthesiologist residents are the code blue teams that respond to any code blues regardless of department, and anesthesiologists are definitely called into the ED to consult for complicated airway cases.
Mobile phones are not allowed? Only pager?
You are so calm. Must be the celery juice.
Doc, I got a real question for you....never had a surgery. Have a mother who is looney and told her kids about a surgery she had in which she felt and heard everyone talking. This was long before the movies were made about it. I take 4 meds daily and 2 of them would knock out most ppl like you're doing here. My Q is if....no when I have a stroke, will you guys put me under and know the meds I take? And will I be trapped in my body unable to speak or move but know everything. And last, if one has a stroke or something that will kill them, if hospital staff does not treat them does a person have that right? The DNR as I call it. I want to be put to sleep for good. I've suffered mentally most all my life but yugely since 1999. I'm being serious and hope you answer and to free you of obligation or legal, NO. I am not suicidal. I am not going to nor am I planning to harm myself, or anyone else. I just seek information. Thanks. I wish I had a normal mind like you do, I enjoy helping people and this would probably be a great job to help take care of others. Good for you!
He’s handsomeeeeeeee