A lecture covering the consequences of endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation, focusing on auto-PEEP, patient ventilator dyssynchrony, and ventilator associated pneumonia.
yes, please complete the series! this series has been soooo helpful! I walked into my ICU rotation as a family medicine resident and didnt feel like a complete idiot. thank you so much! I also watch your videos in acid/base stuff which was a great review. I had been injecting joints the whole month before and needed a refresher!
Dr. Strong, I am an RRT who has been out of the medical field for nearly 5 years. You lectures are just fantastic for someone like me who needs to study/re-learn all of the mechanics involved in respiratory care. Thank you so much. I think these are just fantastic!
This series of lectures are beyond perfect! Thank you, Sir for the great work. I never commented on s RU-vid video, but this is so worth it. Please come back soon and complete them. From an anesthesia specialist from Cairo, Egypt :)
Thank you very much Dr Strong, it is a wonderful lecture series indeed. It is a good review, refresh for me , my mind wander back to those year, I am grateful for people who have taught me in the past and nowadays like you Dr Strong. You are a good teacher, I could see why medical students and residents at Stanford has a reputation of “ walk on water “ .
I almost finished the couse...it fully covered every aspect of subject one might consider...it undoubtly worth watching over and over and still grasping new points....exactly bcz of this it also worth "vividizing!!" the learning atmosphere by changing the background color and esp the opening music...there are numerous options before your eyes using new presentation softwares...it adds to its visual appeal doubling or more!!! the final effect....
these lectures are very good and very helpful in understanding of mechanical ventilation basics. it would be very helpful if u add some cases/situations that we come across in the icu.
Wian M Very sorry, but I actually haven't created that lecture. Definitely plan to get back to it at some point, but I way behind in fulfilling viewer requests, that I can't make any estimates as to when that might be.
Dean Bailey I know I had originally told viewers the mech ventilation series would have 15 videos, including one on weaning, and then I stalled a little bit. I'm definitely planning on finishing these, but I'm so far behind on fulfilling viewer requests, that I can't make any predictions at the moment when that will happen.
Thank you for your lectures, in the last u said something about troubleshooting, it would be great if you could please make that video along with liberation from ventilator and the role of sedation, Thank you.
+ankit chellani I'm very sorry that I seem to have abandoned this series before completion. It was a combination of relative lack of audience interest with the more advanced mech ventilation issues (as opposed to modes, initial settings, etc...), and a mild shift in my own clinical practice by which I manage ventilated patients only rarely at this point. I honestly plan to come back to it, just don't know when.
I'm so sorry - I never got around to finishing the series. There were too many other competing requests for topics. I'm honestly not sure if I'm going to get back to mechanical ventilation any time soon, but the remaining topics were either incrementally less exciting (e.g. prolonged vent weaning) or less practical (e.g. ECMO, liquid ventilation, etc...).
Thanks for the suggestion. Unfortunately, vent management has fallen out of my usual scope of practice in the 5 years since I made the original ventilator videos. I try to avoid making videos about topics which have no relation to my clinical work since I lose the clinical relevance and can't offer up-to-date bedside pearls (the primary reason that board review books are nearly useless as preparation for clinical practice). There are several respiratory therapists who have active channels on RU-vid which you might want to check out instead.
yo Strong.... don't leave us in the middle of the sea guide us through Sedation protocols and Weaning Strategies for Intubation and comparing Tracheostomy towards routine intubation.
I'm sorry this particular series remains unfinished. Unfortunately, my practice shifted away from managing ventilated patients years ago. I reached the point where I was no longer sure but my knowledge was still sufficiently up-to-date to be making new videos on the topic.