Hey, dr. Cellini... I was wondering if you have or have had a co-worker with a physical impairment (for example someone that needs the use of a wheelchair). I love your videos! Best regards all the way from Colombia
This was awesome! Hope u do more! Love the burgundy cap.Why do u do your own set up? Is it the ballon u inflate for a hr and half or is it for preasure so no bleeding. What a team!! Thank you !
Dr. Cellini - you are AMAZING - that was awesome, I didn't realise the paitent stayed fully awake throughout, but I guess you numb the lower arm/wrist/hand area?
I know this sound a close mind person and coming as a hush comment to you. But you did ask the patient sign any form to film. I am just asking and I like to learn new things.
@@waterfirelord im sure they did. Plus they didnt say name or show face. I think every teaching hospital has it in the comsent form . I've signed many.
I want cases more than lifestyle videos! Coz there are many students, medical field professionals who wants to learn. Waiting for more educational videos. Thank you for this video!
I’m in school for X-ray tech and this C arm and the suite in general is soooo stunning to see! My best friend is an IR X-ray tech and I’m so proud of her for being part of this!!! My dream is to be a PA. I love your videos so so much! Thank you for sharing!
Fantastic video! My 80-year-old father absolutely loves your videos. Whenever I visit him he always says put that doctor on from New York. Did he post any new videos? Watching you brings back fond memories from his past. Anyway, thank you for another great video!
AHHH dr. cellini! I absolutely love your videos. You have inspired me to continue with my education to reach my goals of becoming a medical professional. Thank you so much.
I am a 3rd year student nurse at university in the uk and am currently on placement on the interventional radiology unit. What you guys do is amazing. It’s been really good to see what happens in this department as i didn’t have a clue these procedures even existed before I worked here. The mechanical thrombectomy is unbelievable to watch
Dr. Cellini, this is great. I’m an IR tech and love seeing other facility’s’ setups and equipment. Thank you for sharing! And as an IR tech where I work we don’t often see the docs set up their own procedures. So love this✌🏻❤️☢️💀
I’m a cardiovascular sonographer student and this is so cool to see while studying vascular!! I actually saw you in the hall one day while you were at UNC!!
Hi from Lake Placid area of NY about 6 hours north of you. This was educational and it's good to see what happens when a patient is sedated. Please do more of these.
Thank you for this video!!! These are the types of videos I want to see doctors post😭 I know it’s not always easy but please post more of these videos 🙏🏻
Thanks for one more great video! Would love to hear you talking about risks of becoming an interventional radiologist like exposition to the x-rays, how well the protections you wear are really effective, cases of cancer in the field, etc. I think it might help future doctors to decide to pursue the carreer (like me).
Non trad premed student here. I have considered IR as specialty beside neurosurgery and emergency medicine. Thank you for this video which shows in depth what is IR about.
Awesome video. Work as a registered nurse in a cardiac/peripheral vascular Cath lab, so I’m very familiar with the concepts, but unfamiliar with IR. Thanks for the vid.
I'm a current med student and my classmates and I don't get too much exposure in IR in our curriculum. Your videos are some of the best resources out there, SIR better be paying you the big bucks!
Well, this is interesting, since I have to get an “interventional radiology procedure” every 2-3 months to replace a stent in my bile duct, very close to the liver. I have cholangiocarcinoma (bile duct cancer). So, needless to say, this is very enlightening. Thank you!
May God heal you, may Jesus Christ lighten your load and may the Holy Spirit continue to remind of the best that is to come for you! I hope you're doing okay. All the best!♥
Very cool to see what you do in real time! Very impressive! You seem very calm & in your element. Are there always that many Drs in the room on an average day?
This is very interesting! I was admitted into the hospital a week ago to get my thyroid cancer treated for the second time however complications arose and there was a huge chyle leakage, the surgeons did all they can however I go into IR (interventional radiology) tomorrow which will be my fourth(?) procedure. They pit me on a very strict no fat diet to try to stop the leakage however it wasn't successful. It really sucks😔 I went in for IR just yesterday however there was an emergency with another patient so they had to abort the procedure midway through nearly which is alright since it saved someone else. Tomorrow I go back to get finished up luckily 👌
I have had fistulagrams before. They have country music on and playing in the procedure room, because I so often do request that country music be played during the procedure. They would tell me "We've got your country music on and playing for you, Mark! How's that?" then when they wheel me in there, I'd often talk myself through the procedure, by saying to myself, "Now just calm down, Mark. It's a piece of cake, Mark. Shhhh,shhhh. You don't want Donovan to write you up, Mark.Lie back and just relax. It's nothing to it at all. Just think, they've got your country music on and playing for you, Mark!!" which is also very positive self talk. -Mark Weintraub.
Would have preferred to be able to see the screens you are looking at. Love this type of videos. Thirty four years ago there was a doctor channel I watched all the time, even while pregnant and eating spaghetti. Loved to learn.
Interesting. I never knew about intervention radiology until I had Non Hodgkin's Lymphoma and it crushed my left common illiac vein and artery. It cause massive blood clots and they had to put a stent in and a plastic tube in a cut behind my knee to dispense the blood thinner through out my leg and hip area. Seeing that video brought back a lot of memories.
Watching this with sickness and fever (not respiratory related), miss so much of what you say, so now I restart the video for 2nd time ;) (fever= not focused)
Wow this was an amazing video. I never knew exactly what IR was. My dad was a radiologist and I saw him read films mostly. Does IR also include heart stints?
I clicked so fast on this!! I've been thinking of getting into interventional radiology a lot lately. How long the procedures usually take in average ? Love your content
This was so cool. I love medical stuff. I had anxiety for that patient. Thankfully, any surgery/procedure I’ve had so far I’ve been asleep. How long does that whole procedure take for the patient?
@@Ahn-mu3db , Absolutely ! And it is great to see the joy some people have for what they do in life ! In medicine, a passion for the profession and a sincere love for people (and their welfare) is a winning combination. Some doctors see people as diseases and cases to solve. They don’t see the patients’ experience and emotions.
Not a doc but an IR nurse! We use radial access because patients tend to enjoy it better. There’s no bedrest period like if we would go through the femoral artery. Sometimes patient have femoral stents or other vascular surgeries that may make femoral access more difficult.
Thanks for the Videos! I'm struggling to find the right specialization for me. I can think of so many specialities that I would enjoy and you made me consider radiology :-)
That part is rather unavoidable. But while the patient would (hopefully) not need another procedure with those levels of radiation again anytime soon, IR does similar procedures daily and have to limit their exposure as much as they can. (A 3 months late reply)
Hi! I’m a 5th year student in medschool in Norway, and really enjoy your videoes. Would you recommend going into IR? I watch your vlogs and the 7-days shifts look absolutelly horrible. Will you ever be able to have 8-5 work schedule? I’m struggeling with deciding what field to choose, but I find IR to be pretty badass. Stay safe! Julie
The military is always an option! It teaches great life skills and disciplines, and in the end they could pay for your college! You could even go to a military academy like West Point or the uscga, and go to college there!
Also Khan Academy is amazing to use for MCAT study as a free resource. Military is also a good option as Anthony said, plus they also provide free study resources. Do no give up.
Hi I really do. I have a question for you. If a person has had several power ports and lines for plasma exchange told that they are not able to get access because of scar tissue does that leave them open for a stroke
Great videos!! Why do we only use protection from radiation for the chest only and not the extremities? Also, very interested if you could do a small vid on how many if any test you were taking during residency. I saw a vid on an anesthesiologist and and for example he had to take first year Basic Anest, second Advan Anest, etc, until his fourth and last year of anesthesiology. Is it the same for IR? Love your content
Hi doc I like your blog I'm just watching you about the cases I am rad tech for emergency cases like RTA and code blues etc. so much interesting so much informative can learn from u
Can you take about radiologists relationship to sonographers?? I’m a sonographer and I want to know the details you think of our exams and how we present them to the rads. Curious if they are any pet peeves or what you appreciate most that we do.
I’m extremely grateful for you doc,can u pls collaborate with dr.grey from med school hq so we can e shadow with you ,I know ur very busy just doing my best.warm regards,likhith
I hope you enjoy this behind the scenes look into my job...After all, you all made me post it! 😉
Hey, dr. Cellini... I was wondering if you have or have had a co-worker with a physical impairment (for example someone that needs the use of a wheelchair). I love your videos! Best regards all the way from Colombia
This was awesome! Hope u do more! Love the burgundy cap.Why do u do your own set up? Is it the ballon u inflate for a hr and half or is it for preasure so no bleeding. What a team!! Thank you !
Dr. Cellini - you are AMAZING - that was awesome, I didn't realise the paitent stayed fully awake throughout, but I guess you numb the lower arm/wrist/hand area?
I know this sound a close mind person and coming as a hush comment to you. But you did ask the patient sign any form to film. I am just asking and I like to learn new things.
@@waterfirelord im sure they did. Plus they didnt say name or show face. I think every teaching hospital has it in the comsent form . I've signed many.
I want cases more than lifestyle videos! Coz there are many students, medical field professionals who wants to learn. Waiting for more educational videos. Thank you for this video!
The way you scrubbed in was WAY BETTER than the medic dramas. So I am glad their portrayal is pretty inaccurate.
haha you do it multiple times a day...every single day...it's like riding a bike!
This is so incredible. Thank you not only for the work that you do, but figuring out how to share it. Thank you and continue to be safe.
it's definitely not easy...but I try to get some exposure to our amazing field!
Ohhh can't wait. I have never seen an Internventional Radiography vlog. I can't wait.
I’m in school for X-ray tech and this C arm and the suite in general is soooo stunning to see! My best friend is an IR X-ray tech and I’m so proud of her for being part of this!!! My dream is to be a PA. I love your videos so so much! Thank you for sharing!
Fantastic video! My 80-year-old father absolutely loves your videos. Whenever I visit him he always says put that doctor on from New York. Did he post any new videos? Watching you brings back fond memories from his past. Anyway, thank you for another great video!
Very cool story!
AHHH dr. cellini! I absolutely love your videos. You have inspired me to continue with my education to reach my goals of becoming a medical professional. Thank you so much.
thanks so much for the kind words!
Super cool! As a senior in high school, your videos inspire me more and more to become a radiologist! :)
best field in medicine...don't tell anyone :)
Interventional radiology is the most interesting field to go into.
I am a 3rd year student nurse at university in the uk and am currently on placement on the interventional radiology unit. What you guys do is amazing. It’s been really good to see what happens in this department as i didn’t have a clue these procedures even existed before I worked here. The mechanical thrombectomy is unbelievable to watch
This was so amazing to see. I'm in medical school, aspiring to go into IR, and it's been a slog being online. This relit my fire. Thank you!
Dr. Cellini, this is great. I’m an IR tech and love seeing other facility’s’ setups and equipment. Thank you for sharing! And as an IR tech where I work we don’t often see the docs set up their own procedures. So love this✌🏻❤️☢️💀
Thanks for posting this Dr. Cellini! As a third year pre-med student this gave me some motivation by showing me what I'm working towards.
This is awesome. Thanks for posting this! As a premed, it is great to see what some of the procedures actually look like.
I’m a cardiovascular sonographer student and this is so cool to see while studying vascular!! I actually saw you in the hall one day while you were at UNC!!
Hi from Lake Placid area of NY about 6 hours north of you. This was educational and it's good to see what happens when a patient is sedated. Please do more of these.
Thank you for this video!!! These are the types of videos I want to see doctors post😭 I know it’s not always easy but please post more of these videos 🙏🏻
Thanks for one more great video! Would love to hear you talking about risks of becoming an interventional radiologist like exposition to the x-rays, how well the protections you wear are really effective, cases of cancer in the field, etc. I think it might help future doctors to decide to pursue the carreer (like me).
Non trad premed student here. I have considered IR as specialty beside neurosurgery and emergency medicine. Thank you for this video which shows in depth what is IR about.
Thanks so much!
@@DrCellini you are welcome Dr. Cellini. Please continue posting interesting videos.
Awesome video. Work as a registered nurse in a cardiac/peripheral vascular Cath lab, so I’m very familiar with the concepts, but unfamiliar with IR. Thanks for the vid.
As an x-ray tech is always interesting to see how things are done across the country. Love the content.
Happy rad tech week☠️
Happy Rad Tech week fellow Rad Tech!!
Lol my name is Rahul and I felt like he was talking to me. Great inspiring video haha
Notification crew here! Dr. Cellini is the best medical vloger
I do it for the people!! haha...thanks a lot!
I'm a current med student and my classmates and I don't get too much exposure in IR in our curriculum. Your videos are some of the best resources out there, SIR better be paying you the big bucks!
I love the behind the scenes! It’s also so cool to see you in action! What you Drs do Is amazing work! We need videos like this more often.
YET AGAIN MY FAV DOCTOR DOING HIS THING I CLICKED SO FAST TO WATCH THIS
Lots and lots of hard work for years for sure and im glad you have a happy life now!
Well, this is interesting, since I have to get an “interventional radiology procedure” every 2-3 months to replace a stent in my bile duct, very close to the liver. I have cholangiocarcinoma (bile duct cancer). So, needless to say, this is very enlightening. Thank you!
May God heal you, may Jesus Christ lighten your load and may the Holy Spirit continue to remind of the best that is to come for you!
I hope you're doing okay. All the best!♥
We need more videos like this!!!!💪🔥🔥🔥 I'm going to PA school and im very interested in Interventional Radiology.
My heart dropped watching this😓 but good thing there is a grwat team of doctors working tirelessly and efficently to bring success to the case.
This dude is basically famous and he still responds to us little ones. I love it. HI DR. CELLINI THANK YOU FOR WHAT YOU DO
great video👍🏻👍
have posted 4 PTBD 's for today
IR is love❤️
Very cool to see what you do in real time! Very impressive! You seem very calm & in your element.
Are there always that many Drs in the room on an average day?
BEST VIDEO EVER! we want more of behind the scenes videos
WOW. Thank you so much. Just fabulous Dr. Cellini you are a credit to your Hospital!
I’ve watched a lot doctor channels and your intro is by far the coolest.
Hi! That was interesting! Thanks for showing us !
Raising the patient closer to the IR also reduces the amount of x rays needed to produce your image decreasing patient dose slightly.
This is very interesting! I was admitted into the hospital a week ago to get my thyroid cancer treated for the second time however complications arose and there was a huge chyle leakage, the surgeons did all they can however I go into IR (interventional radiology) tomorrow which will be my fourth(?) procedure. They pit me on a very strict no fat diet to try to stop the leakage however it wasn't successful. It really sucks😔 I went in for IR just yesterday however there was an emergency with another patient so they had to abort the procedure midway through nearly which is alright since it saved someone else. Tomorrow I go back to get finished up luckily 👌
Thank you Doctor. The best video I’ve seen on your channel. Looking forward to seeing more.
I have had fistulagrams before. They have country music on and playing in the procedure room, because I so often do request that country music be played during the procedure.
They would tell me "We've got your country music on and playing for you, Mark! How's that?"
then when they wheel me in there, I'd often talk myself through the procedure, by saying to myself, "Now just calm down, Mark. It's a piece of cake, Mark. Shhhh,shhhh.
You don't want Donovan to write you up, Mark.Lie back and just relax. It's nothing to it at all. Just think, they've got your country music on and playing for you, Mark!!"
which is also very positive self talk.
-Mark Weintraub.
came back to this video bc i LOVEE WATCHING IT ITS SO COOOLLL
I love these kinds of videos !!! Pls pls pls do more!!! You are so inspiring!!! I hope you only well and thank you so much for you’re service
Would have preferred to be able to see the screens you are looking at. Love this type of videos. Thirty four years ago there was a doctor channel I watched all the time, even while pregnant and eating spaghetti. Loved to learn.
Definitely prefer videos like this, this is the best one ever.
Super interesting!!! Cool to see the behind the scene POV - love your videos!
Interesting. I never knew about intervention radiology until I had Non Hodgkin's Lymphoma and it crushed my left common illiac vein and artery. It cause massive blood clots and they had to put a stent in and a plastic tube in a cut behind my knee to dispense the blood thinner through out my leg and hip area. Seeing that video brought back a lot of memories.
Love your videos 🤙🔥 keep up the good work and be safe out there doc 🙏.
This is so awesome. Thanks for sharing Dr. Cellini.
Thank you Dr. Cellini, great video very interesting and informative..
Great video doc! I'm an ICU RN, and have also spent some time in the cath lab. I hope we see more of these vids.
Hello thank you so much about your video about Lenox hill your an amazing docter
The way this content excites meee😭
I sure enjoyed watching. I understood what you were doing. I am a certified medical coder. Thank you!
reminds me of some of the procedures that interventional cardiology does
Watching this with sickness and fever (not respiratory related), miss so much of what you say, so now I restart the video for 2nd time ;) (fever= not focused)
Hope you feel better soon!
@@sim_aware yep. Me too.
that's so cool! can not wait
This was SO COOL to see!!!
Wow this was an amazing video. I never knew exactly what IR was. My dad was a radiologist and I saw him read films mostly.
Does IR also include heart stints?
That was just so interesting to watch.
Man! This is really awesome! I like to see your vids because I want to be a neurologist, so, I can see how is a doctor's life, and its awesome
IR looks legit - definitely keen for rotation through IR.
I clicked so fast on this!! I've been thinking of getting into interventional radiology a lot lately. How long the procedures usually take in average ? Love your content
This was so cool. I love medical stuff. I had anxiety for that patient. Thankfully, any surgery/procedure I’ve had so far I’ve been asleep. How long does that whole procedure take for the patient?
I wanted to be a doctor for so long 🥺. Now I’m going through the criminal justice field but I love your videos 💯❤️.
thanks so much! Glad you like them
Life can lead us to many different paths :P
@@Ahn-mu3db , Absolutely ! And it is great to see the joy some people have for what they do in life ! In medicine, a passion for the profession and a sincere love for people (and their welfare) is a winning combination. Some doctors see people as diseases and cases to solve. They don’t see the patients’ experience and emotions.
Great. Thanks for posting
Yayyy the video I’ve been waiting for 😆
Great video! Are there any dangers or issues for being exposed to radiation so much?
Hey Doc, I'm an MS1! I was wondering why you use the radial artery to go all the way to the prostatic artery. Thanks for your insight!
Not a doc but an IR nurse! We use radial access because patients tend to enjoy it better. There’s no bedrest period like if we would go through the femoral artery. Sometimes patient have femoral stents or other vascular surgeries that may make femoral access more difficult.
Thanks for the Videos! I'm struggling to find the right specialization for me. I can think of so many specialities that I would enjoy and you made me consider radiology :-)
Absolutely awesome video to see the real working . What is the necklace you are wearing ?
I like how at 13:00 all the doctors leave due to the high levels of radiation but the patient was left in the room lol
? um
That part is rather unavoidable. But while the patient would (hopefully) not need another procedure with those levels of radiation again anytime soon, IR does similar procedures daily and have to limit their exposure as much as they can.
(A 3 months late reply)
This was a nice birthday gift
This was amazing video I glad u posted this
Surgical tech in training here!! Very interesting learning that you guys set everything up yourselves!
Not my favorite...but it is what it is!
@@DrCellini Waaaah! Just kidding, but you have to suck it up!
incredible insight, thank you dr.
Hi! I’m a 5th year student in medschool in Norway, and really enjoy your videoes. Would you recommend going into IR? I watch your vlogs and the 7-days shifts look absolutelly horrible. Will you ever be able to have 8-5 work schedule? I’m struggeling with deciding what field to choose, but I find IR to be pretty badass. Stay safe! Julie
I want to be an IR tech so this was very fun to watch
I shared this with all my ultrasound students! ✨
I love the behind the scenes video
Omgosh! I know exactly where you're sitting. I just to get my coffee, sit there, and just breathe!
Procedural content ! My fav!
One of my dreams is to become intervention radiologist, but i dont have money to study. Anyways, love this video from ph!! ❤️❤️❤️
The military is always an option! It teaches great life skills and disciplines, and in the end they could pay for your college! You could even go to a military academy like West Point or the uscga, and go to college there!
Also Khan Academy is amazing to use for MCAT study as a free resource. Military is also a good option as Anthony said, plus they also provide free study resources.
Do no give up.
Yay! Procedures!
Beeeeeen waitiiinggggg for one of these
Hi I really do. I have a question for you. If a person has had several power ports and lines for plasma exchange told that they are not able to get access because of scar tissue does that leave them open for a stroke
Great videos!! Why do we only use protection from radiation for the chest only and not the extremities? Also, very interested if you could do a small vid on how many if any test you were taking during residency. I saw a vid on an anesthesiologist and and for example he had to take first year Basic Anest, second Advan Anest, etc, until his fourth and last year of anesthesiology. Is it the same for IR? Love your content
Awesome! Loved this video
Okay I just watched the last video and I think andriana should be a vlogger
Hi doc I like your blog I'm just watching you about the cases I am rad tech for emergency cases like RTA and code blues etc. so much interesting so much informative can learn from u
Can you take about radiologists relationship to sonographers?? I’m a sonographer and I want to know the details you think of our exams and how we present them to the rads. Curious if they are any pet peeves or what you appreciate most that we do.
Do you trust yourself to do everything automatically or do you have a checklist of some sort when doing a procedure?
I’m currently a surgical tech student and this was cool to see! And I love that you guys did a time out!
Where can we watch these live streams?
Yes yes yes thank you! ❤️❤️❤️
Great video ❤ thanks!
this is amazing 🙌
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
hehe thanks!
Do you have any IMGs at your program?
Don’t think so
I’m extremely grateful for you doc,can u pls collaborate with dr.grey from med school hq so we can e shadow with you ,I know ur very busy just doing my best.warm regards,likhith
I want to be a dr !!!! When I grow up good job
Thank you Dr. Cellini for inspiring me to eat A hot dog while watching this.