Absolute blast to be a part of this video - we're witnessing the coming of the greatest Anesthesiologist educator of the 21st century
@MaxFeinsteinMD6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great idea and for running the simulator!
@andrewpatrick42546 ай бұрын
@@MichaelMinhLeMD Dr. Le-bouncer aka guy at the door
@southparklion6 ай бұрын
You're not going to win any Emmys for Best Circulating Nurse without playing music and surfing Facebook.
@valeriecarpenter38002 ай бұрын
Agree
@NDMD6 ай бұрын
Ok this is so sick. Literally making the videos I would want to make in the future, and I don't think I'm ever going to be able to top your simplicity and unique way of educating patients and future anesthesiologists alike. Bravo Max 👏
@richardsimms2516 ай бұрын
A hospital cannot function without these guys. Lucky to have them !!
@brendensolis53496 ай бұрын
Dr. Feinstein, you are a true star of the medical community. Please don't ever stop making content, this is truly priceless.
@bethb92483 ай бұрын
I just had a pulsed field cardiac ablation for AFib three days ago. I tortured myself for weeks with anxiety. I kept finding out about things I'd never heard of, like propofol burning, waking during intubation or extubation, teeth getting broken from intubation and, worst of all, being awake during anesthesia. Being helpless and paralyzed, the idea of it, made me an absolute wreck for weeks. But somehow, learning through these videos exactly how things are done and why, understanding how well anesthesiologists are trained, that started to give me some comfort and confidence in the procedure. I was still a semi-wreck at the hospital, but conferring with the anesthesiologist helped -- thank god she was patient and understanding with me -- and then everyone in the procedure room likewise being kind and patient and understanding helped tremendously. I felt safe and protected. When the anesthesiologist said "Okay, I'm going to give you the calming medicine," I knew that would be the midazolam, and I expected to feel a slow fading out but WOW, it was lights out, bam! lol It felt like only ten or fifteen minutes later I was waking up, warm and cozy in the PACU with zero pain, zero nausea, zero shivering, zero of all the problems I worried about. (I was out for 2 hours 30 minutes.) I had pretty significant throat pain for two days and was surprised at the marks on the back of my throat, and I had a cut on the inside of my mouth, but that was it. I'm just amazed at how well it all went. I've studied the doctor's postop report, and there were TWELVE different medications used. Now I know what they all are and, believe me, I appreciate each one of them! :) This is a long post, but for anyone who's fearful, too, I hope you get a little comfort from this. Talk to your doctor and trust in them. They're amazing. They have to be or they wouldn't be in the job they're in. And thank you, Dr. Feinstein, for your calming, thorough presentation of information.
@amandamagana5 ай бұрын
as a med student interested in anesthesiology so grateful this content exists! tysm
@Hiyori___5 ай бұрын
My dream job when I was younger was to become an anesthesiologist. I didn't become one but that doesn't mean I cannot enjoy such high-quality related content. The internet is an amazing thing. Thank you for this video Doctor.
@peterfslife11 күн бұрын
Here's the thing. KZbin NEEDS more videos like this. KZbin lacks so much as far as anesthesia! You know because of HIPAA, we can't see full real anesthesia cases. There should be a full anesthesia case on KZbin, where you can watch from Pre-Op Pre-Meds, all the way to Emergence from Anesthesia, and transport to PACU, and the PACU hand off procedure. You know, it' videos like THIS, KZbin lacks. There's no video I can find out there that gives us a Demonstration of the use of Pressure Support Ventilation for induction. You see regular inductions, where the patient Breathes the 100% Oxygen for induction, but you never hear about when you might use Pressure Support in a Case. You hear about it for weaning from the ventilator in the ICU, but you know there are cases when you don't just want to have the patient breathe off the vent with the APL valve open. NO! You might have to use PSV during induction. I've had it done many times before I got the trach! You see, there's so much that KZbin lacks, and I know, because I'm searching for topic like this on KZbin ALL OF THE TIME!!
@KirstinRN6 ай бұрын
Love the mannequin’s eyes shutting on cue at 4:06. That’s such a cool lab simulation set-up you have there!
@wotan109506 ай бұрын
Very informative. I have had too many surgeries in the last five years, but the most difficult one was the cardiac ablation. After the operation, which lasted five hours, the surgeon said that the first thing he does when the patient goes under is to try to induce A-fib. He said, “But you immediately went into A-fib spontaneously on your own!” I said, “I try to help out wherever I can.”
@DanielElwell6 ай бұрын
Same happened to me with that procedure!
@Just1Nora6 ай бұрын
I laughed probably too hard at this. I say very similar things. "Just trying to make y'all's lives easier." Is probably my go to. I haven't had a cardiac ablation, but I've had between half a dozen and a dozen various procedures with sedation or general anesthesia. A bunch more if you count non-sedated infusions. I always try my best to keep things smooth on my end. 😅 MPs have things hard/stressful enough without me causing problems.
@Whyamisomisrable125 ай бұрын
What's A_fib
@DanielElwell5 ай бұрын
@@Whyamisomisrable12 a-fib is short for atrial fibrillation, which is a type of irregular heartbeat
@bethb92484 ай бұрын
Great. I'm going in for one of these in two days and now I'm scared of this part too. Ugh.
@notgump13126 ай бұрын
My OR rotations were by far my favorite part of clinicals for Paramedic school. Getting to shadow anesthesiologists and practice intubation under their skilled observation was such a great experience to have as a student. I got a ton of good advice from the doctors.
@cubsfan573429 күн бұрын
im going to paramedic school in the summer also
@jennykvox4 ай бұрын
Anesthesiologists are my heroes (retired Paramedic and current ER RN). They’re the top of the top!
@geoneerayad90256 ай бұрын
i’m genuinely so thankful that you do this type of content doc. you don’t understand how much it helps. not just understanding anesthesia but also motivating me to become a doctor! i’m a first gen eldest daughter from egypt and it’s been a dream since i was little girl to become a doctor. im a rising senior in high school right now and i’ve been researching everything about my future! so these types of videos are EXTREMELY helpful 💗 thank you for all you do!
@F-R783 ай бұрын
Hi Max. I'm lying in my hospital room in England, about to face an anaesthetic today in a few hours. I've never had one before and I'm really nervous about it. I'm totally blind woman, nearly 40. So obviously from the visual side of things, I can't actually see your videos. But I don't need to, your commentary is brilliant. Thanks! But watching your videos has comforted me somewhat. And there are a few concerns I have which you seem to have addressed in your videos so I want to check them out. Needless to say I can't sleep, and it's now 4 am just gone.
@JamesYuen-bh5lq2 ай бұрын
Do not trust someone that says totally
@annabeltemple23023 күн бұрын
As a patient, I had a very poor induction experience w/Propofol, prior to my undergoing major surgery. Oh, the burn was very much real!.This was my 10th general anesthesia experience. Fast forward to several years later, where I got to observe a fantastic and compasionate GA induction in the OR for one of my patients, while I was working alongside a surgeon. Anesthesia has always fascinated me, and it's been a real gift for me to be able to experience it from several perspectives!. Thanks for this educational video. I especially like how you explained your clinical decision-making/rationales within the context of a (this) simulated patient.
@jo1e-de-v1vre6 ай бұрын
Incredible video, doctor! I appreciate you showing the uninterrupted anesthetizing before your annotated one. Would love to see more videos like this, showing complications patients may encounter.
@Nunofurdambiznez6 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating stuff!! Had no idea the anesthesiologist was doing all those things during surgery!
@millenniumbryan6 ай бұрын
Max, I have a video suggestion for you: I've been watching my 600lb life and wonder if you can make a video explaining the challenges of anesthesising a bariatric patient
@kenpokid106 ай бұрын
Seconded, I think this has potential to be pretty interesting!
@sarahgoldie79946 ай бұрын
thrid that
@ChrisRRT6 ай бұрын
Fourth that
@misterhat58236 ай бұрын
I read that as 600lb wife.
@PaulLoveless-Cincinnati6 ай бұрын
I also agree this would be interesting. Airway management and heart monitoring is probably number 1 concern on a bariatric patient.
@callunafrph20 күн бұрын
this is my absolute dream! i'll come back to this after a few years. i'm in first year med :>
@darriontunstall37086 ай бұрын
Wow this video was very very cool and amazing! I really enjoy donating to the anesthesiologist Foundation, since it was hard for me to go to college because of my cerebral palsy, I really wanted to be a anesthesiologist, it takes a special person to be a anesthesiologist or CRNA and you’re one of them, I look up to all anesthesiologist and CRNA! I really enjoyed this video! I have had 15 years because of my cerebral palsy, that’s one reason I wanted to be an anesthesiologist and I love the hilarious patient and I love helping people! You rock
@vidad38203 ай бұрын
Just here to say congrats! I've been watching your content for quite some time, and it's pretty cool to hear you say "I'm an anesthesiologist," rather than a resident. :)
@Retiredtraveler1961Ай бұрын
Very nice job Max. I’m a retired RN with 40 years experience trained in ACLS and ATLS. I’ve had surgery several times. I appreciate you explaining in detail your sequence of actions and the drugs used.
@mhenderson93116 ай бұрын
Dr Feinstein, just want to say how much I appreciate you sharing these videos with the public as well as with students! Last year I had surgery and I certainly didn’t expect a "Spanish Inquisition” pre-surgery from the anesthesia resident! Almost as if I was on street drugs and didn’t want to admit it! I had no questions to ask, so I kept quiet and didn't have much idea what was going on. It all makes a lot more sense now.
@feversol6 ай бұрын
Thank you. I’ve seen a few of your other videos. This one is especially important to me as I’m having a parotidectomy in four days. I like to know what is going to happen and what to expect. In understanding this process, I know I may feel a mild sore throat in the day or so after surgery and know that it is expected and normal. I’ve had several surgeries without really understanding the paralyzing part. Again, I want you to know that your videos are appreciated apparently by a wide range of people as well as us patients who have no medical background. That is probably why you make them but I did want to express my appreciation. I’m anxious about this upcoming surgery. I’ve had no issue with anesthesia but I still like to know what you folks will be doing while the lady is filleting my face.
@kthewhite74536 ай бұрын
Agreed. I've always found anaesthesiologist to be the least aspect explained to a patient during surgery and waking up with an unexpected and unplanned sore throat, or the taste of chemicals everytime you exhale is kinda annoying. I've had so many questions about anaesthesia that was finally answered in this video.
@Vintagecouturebags1Ай бұрын
I have had anemia for the last five years, which I just now found out is due to Cameron lesions caused by a huge hiatal hernia. I am terrified of surgery. I am 55 years old and I’ve never had surgery. I guess you could say I have PTSD from it when my sister went under anesthesia and never came out of it and passed away.This has definitely convinced me to not have the surgery! I had no idea that you literally quit breathing!
@angelinenortier703818 күн бұрын
Hi ,sorry to hear but what went wrong?
@929448892944885 ай бұрын
As a 4th year student preparing for auditions this was so helpful thank you Doctor!!
@eugenio57746 ай бұрын
how interesting! I underwent surgery to remove my gallbladder one week ago, the anesthesia worked so incredibly fast! from when they put the oxygen mask on me, I barely had the time to say "my head is spinning, what's happ-" and I woke up in the recovery room.
@timothyb9496 ай бұрын
That's so amazing... I've been on the table a few times in the last few years. I always feel safe.
@jbreezy1016 ай бұрын
Here’s hoping you have no more of those moments remaining!
@tylervalentine64016 ай бұрын
this is really cool video and then seeing in a first person point of view is even cooler!! thank you so much for sharing all your awesome videos and for putting all the effort in making them!
@AMGbrakedancer6 ай бұрын
I had surgery 4 days ago and had major anxiety. The doctor injected clear stuff that made me feel drunk. Then it was lights out. I had no oxygen mask while awake. Guess they knocked me out first? I was still on the gurney and freaked out when wheeled in and saw the buffet table of “tools” to be used. Omg I was terrified. Woke up groggy and head back and forth. Had oxygen in nose and leg compressors on. Sore throat for 2 days from tube. Hard to swallow and severe abdominal pain. Had laparoscopic gall bladder surgery. Felling better day by day but this has been not what i expected.
@mhenderson93116 ай бұрын
I also saw no oxygen mask while awake. General surgery.
@awhatsname6 ай бұрын
I have gallbladder surgery coming up, and I am most worried about the anesthesia part (and picking up Covid during a surgery again, ugg). This was a very cool and informative video! It's nice to know about the Propofol burning. When I received it during a previous procedure, I wasn't given any heads up that a drug was being administered so the last thing I remembered before falling asleep was the pain and thinking "oh !%$* something is wrong".
@ckuethe3 ай бұрын
my anaesthesiologist just called to ask if I have any questions before my surgery tomorrow. I resisted the urge to say "I'm a KZbin certified anesthesiologist from watching Max's videos!" It was nice to have the opportunity to ask for more specific information from my actual doctor, with a bit of background to help me ask smart questions and understand the replies.
@wxkat6 ай бұрын
When I had general anesthesia for a tympanoplasty/mastoidectomy in March, the last thing I consciously remember was the anesthesiologist injecting midazolam into the IV. I had a brief memory/dream of talking to a couple people about the surgery while I was lying on a gurney, then found myself in recovery. The surgery took almost 5 hours but to me felt like no more than a couple minutes.
@FrankLucas-eq1os3 ай бұрын
I recently started my anaethesia appointment & your videos helped me in big way. Thank you.
@todoz116 ай бұрын
I have no connection to the field of anesthesiology or any kind of medical field for that matter, but I always find your videos fascinating - both for their subject matter and your calm manner of explaining things. Also made me less nervous about undergoing general anesthesia should I ever need it, just from seeing the breadth of knowledge and expertise that you guys and gals have. If I had been a little younger, your videos may well have inspired me to pursue a career in medicine. You seem like a great doctor, but you're clearly also a great educator. Thanks for all the time and effort you put into this channel :)
@GreggBB6 ай бұрын
wonderful video! So much information about what you do and all the things you have to pay attention to. Loved this!
@KishoreRajput326 ай бұрын
Awesome Video, I am Anaesthesiologist Assistant (AA) from India 🇮🇳
@eddyvideostar6 ай бұрын
Dear Kishore, Would bradycardia hinder the qualifications for a patient's surgery?
@Godfavorsmi3 ай бұрын
As a respiratory therapist it’s most important that the tube is secured but I do not approve of the tape job 😭 my dentist informed me of considering AA school vs dental school; which has been a long time goal/ passion of mine, but this is something definitely worth considering !🤩🤩
@joannetucker1538Ай бұрын
You guys are amazing. That looks terrifying in terms of responsibilities and things that can go wrong
@svellah43886 ай бұрын
I'm interested in anesthesiology, so this video was extremely helpful. You always make your videos top-notch. Absolutely fantastic, high-quality content. I've been subscribed to you for quite some time now, and can only hope you'll keep releasing superb videos! Thank you!
@jakebrandonm.andalrnd72546 ай бұрын
I have encountered your channel even before I entered med school, during the times when I was taking up my masters wherein I minored in Biochem. Always loved biochem and pharma so thats the reason why I considered Anesthesiology if ever I become a doctor. Now, I am on my 4th yr medical school (Junior Internship here in the Philippines) and my first rotation is Anesthesiology. I am a fan ever since! Albeit I am considering pursuing IM-Endocrinology after my Senior Internship and board exam (yes, we have 2 years of internship here in the Philippines before we take the boards 😭), I am still amazed about the field of Anesthesia. Enjoying my rotation so far, and I totally relate to this video as this is also what I have been observing so far in GA.
@fitsumgetachew93966 ай бұрын
Thanks alot doc ❤❤❤, please make more skill based videos like this
@ZumarKhan-vk7ct6 ай бұрын
The most awaited vid since prescribing your channel, no doubt you have educated a lot about basics of anesthesialogy but as human we always want a ful ready made package ....lol Thank you for uploading ,plz do special cases same way for those working at peripheral areas in developing countries Nd are not blessed with any mentor or supervisor. Merci beaucoup.
@valeriecarpenter38002 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your anesthesia series. I had spinal fusion surgery in Feb 2024 - not sure what anesthesia cocktail they gave me but my mind was significantly effected. Couldn't even rember how to turn my iPhone on. Is that a normal side effect? Your series helped me be a lot less apprehensive about general anesthesia. Great series and great information. 😀
@Rea-Rey10 күн бұрын
Thank you so much much! I’ve always wondered what happened when I was put under!
@lorifrederick23675 ай бұрын
The eye blink of your "patient" was not a figment of my imagination. Glad i really saw it when he was going under. I thought i was seeing things 😊
@Charminar5206 ай бұрын
so interesting to see what my uncle does. tysm for posting!
@Whyamisomisrable125 ай бұрын
This is intubation I watched videos like this today I am training to be a doctor and this teached me everything I need to know thanks doctor
@kyle90085 ай бұрын
As an M1 interested in anesthesia, this was awesome to see
@khadirabdilahi24336 ай бұрын
Awesome to watch as anesthetist jn somali
@LindaDeo5 ай бұрын
0:35 did the manequim blink?? 😮
@dylanjkvogt19896 ай бұрын
fantastic video! this is the best overview I've seen. I'm motivated and inspired to become an anesthesiologist! thank you!!
@brandonsrebnik29806 ай бұрын
Dr. Max your videos are top notch!
@pamelah21526 ай бұрын
WOW! Thank you, Dr Max!!! AWESOME VID!!! Can you please enlighten us on how anesthesia handles a patient with sleep apnea? I've always wondered about that.
@reddbendd6 ай бұрын
They will be paralyzed; they will not be breathing at all, likely, sleep apnea is not going to affect the outcome if everything goes as done in the video
@CharleysAquaticNook5 ай бұрын
@@reddbenddThere are still major considerations and precautions that an anesthesiologist takes for someone with sleep apnea.
@terrycallow29794 ай бұрын
Thank you Doctor Feinstein, I've been under a few times and always wanted to know the ins and outs of what goes on, even if it was of course a brief summary of the work you do.
@blackboy-f5z3 ай бұрын
Awesome ! Lucid explanation Lemme mention some things that you missed while doing induction & intubation: • starting inhalational agent • Inflating ETT ballon
@jeffm9227Ай бұрын
Awesome video, doc. Thanks for doing it.
@elliottschwartz74 ай бұрын
Very interesting to see how a patient is anesthisized it's a detailed way of saving a person's life or just putting him to sleep
@earlstudios4 ай бұрын
I"m getting ambilical hernia surgery in a week and I watched this to make me feel better but now i'm absolutely terrified and having a full on panic attack.
@ckuethe3 ай бұрын
just wait until you find video of demonstrating your exact procedure.
@earlstudios3 ай бұрын
@@ckuethe I'm 6 weeks out from the procedure and it was honestly, the best time i've had in a while. there was nothing really to be nervous about. The shot me up with something before they wheeled me in, and the table slide under the light someone maybe said somethign to me and then I woke up in recovery. not loopy, groggy or drugged, just super relaxed happy. at least for me, I never experienced any of this, I must have been out or the drugs wiped my memory. 10/10 would do it again.
@ckuethe3 ай бұрын
here comes the midazolam and... oh, the surgery is done already? that was easy. I found videos of my procedure, which were really interesting, but I'm the sort of person who can watch Air Crash Investigations right before getting on a plane.
@sherryannstowell2714 ай бұрын
Dr. Feinstein, thank you so much for your very informative videos, especially this one but I’ve also learned a lot from your other videos as well. Recently, i got hip replacement surgery, and the information you provided on your videos helped to ease my mind regarding the whole process of sedation. Generally speaking, I’m an anxious person but watching your videos (over and over) I felt so assured going through the induction process that my mind was eased. I went comfortably down saying to myself, “ok, he said something about the oxygen mask…yes he was right about the ‘warmth’ sensation of the propylfol/milk of amnesia…” it was a positive experience going through the whole process, and I thank you for providing that information to ease my mind. God bless you.
@ianpedersen27396 ай бұрын
I’m an RN and everyone keeps telling me that I should’ve become a CRNA but I don’t know if it’s right for me. I’m so torn between all the possible careers as an RN. I constantly come back to these videos because they are so informative and helpful in my decision making. Thank you for helping me understand what anesthesia providers do and think.
@allyu2746 ай бұрын
If you haven’t already, definitely shadow!! I was on the fence about becoming one, until I shadowed and truly enjoyed watching what the CRNA did
@ianpedersen27396 ай бұрын
@@allyu274 thank you! Im in the process of filling out the necessary forms for shadowing
@puffyelvis5895Ай бұрын
My resting heart rate is 45, but prior to surgery it’s always elevated above 60 due to preoperative anxiety. I make it a habit of telling the anesthesiologist that I have exercise induced bradycardia prior to anesthesia so they don’t freak out and think they’ve overdosed me. I’ve had several physicians thank me for the heads during the preoperative interview.
@frankiepizzo44996 ай бұрын
Great video Dr. Feinstein! Could you do a future video on different wakeup strategies? I think that would be cool to see as well!
@reganwolf44059 сағат бұрын
this was a great video. thanks
@felixcat43466 ай бұрын
This was exactly the kind of surgery I had that Mount Sinai several years back
@tinyphillips65215 ай бұрын
Amazing I just had 3 hernias repaired. I had no idea all this went on. One day could you address patients that have NO memory for several days following surgery. 😊😊😊
@Leander_6 ай бұрын
Fantastic insights in this video!
@Meme-w1v5 ай бұрын
Thank you soooo much doctor now I can attend any induction with full of confidence.plz doctor try to make Vedio to continue surgery till the extubation.thank you
@marosvarga91986 ай бұрын
Great video! Hopefully we'll also see other parts of general anesthesia. As you mentioned in the video I'd like to ask you for video related to sounds and beepings of the machines and their function. We didn't have this topic much covered in the school and I was always confused whether it's pathological or not. Especially low tone beep-beep-beep randomly occuring during operation :D
@amythomas11246 ай бұрын
I’ve had seven major surgeries from December 2014 to May 2024. I don’t remember ever anything in the operating room. Nothing before, nothing afterwards. I’ve always been asleep before I ever get to the operating room, with the exception of when I had emergency surgery in 2017, when my colon had ruptured! But even then, I don’t remember much, other than being transferred from my hospital bed to the operating table. I think the medications to relax me, always knock me out cold, ha.
@jessicafan46146 ай бұрын
Hi, Doc. Thanks for this amazing teaching video again.
@crazygirl_irl6 ай бұрын
Max, I love your videos but I don't have plans to become anesthesiologist, just watching for entertainment. Can you please make a video explaining if a fire in hospital happens and what are the steps for if is someone is under general anesthesia in the OR during serious STAT surgery? I don't remember if you have a video explaining this but I know you have done one if a patient needs to be transported from one floor to another for example MRI.
@michellenainkristinabusch12216 ай бұрын
He has a video with that
@MeredithBKassnerHypnotherapy6 ай бұрын
Great video Doc. Very informative and super interesting.
@debbismith-moore89406 ай бұрын
Ok, now I really want to see the actual OCD method of applying the tape (being quite OCD myself 😂)!
@z1u5126 ай бұрын
Gonna save my grandad with this vid thanks man
@Just1Nora6 ай бұрын
Very thorough and informative, though I know I'm not the target audience, lol. The blinking eyes of the training dummy is a bit unsettling, but still neat. I see so many vids where people are asked to count down, but I've never been asked to do so, to my knowledge/memory anyway, and this feels much more familiar, but with the advantage of seeing the parts after which I've never seen.
@Chilli_TeaАй бұрын
cant wait to prank one of my boys with this, cheers Max!
@amalaldakhil033 күн бұрын
Amazing video!
@salve11856 ай бұрын
Please make a video of the different audio or sounds from the anesthesia machine like the sound when the patient’s blood pressure is abnormally high or low or if the oxygen saturation is abnormally low or if the heart has abnormal beat or rhythm etc.
@wol_ves6 ай бұрын
It would actually be interesting to hear about your typical ETT tape routine lol... I've seen patients end up with injuries around their lips after surgery, and while it's probably not much compared to recovering from surgical wounds, it is still another annoying thing for them to deal with and we should definitely work to avoid it if possible. Especially as someone going into a field that will have to intubate patients from time to time but probably not often enough to learn all the little tips, knowing how you do this would actually be super helpful!
@GeneralFork1Over6 ай бұрын
I'd also like to know about this :) No part of the process is too small or "boring"; it's all a valuable learning opportunity.
@Mayurbhedru5 ай бұрын
Injury around lip is during intubation, usually.
@CharleysAquaticNook5 ай бұрын
@@MayurbhedruThere would be zero reasons why an ETT around the lips would cause injury: that’s incorrect.
@ShonMardani4 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video. In my opinion the concepts of gas exchange based on pressure differences also having O2 and CO2 in the blood as gases which form bubbles are invalid and false, are there any other hypotheses out there? Atmospheric pressure continually changes based on wind, temperature and the elevation of the ground, it is almost impossible that O2 and CO2 as gases pass by each other in and out blood inside the Alveolus. Another problem is that the same pressure pushes O2 into blood and pulls the CO2 out, it doesn't make sense. Also we can not measure the CO2 or O2 gas volumes in the blood, the only gas forming in the blood after compressing and decompressing it is Nitrogen bubbles after a deep dive and rapid ascending in the water.
@kuromitcfan3 ай бұрын
this inspired me tyy max and new sub I have a question what happens if u refuse the anesthetic?
@t.h.84752 ай бұрын
I had spinal surgery last year. I was wheeled in the surgical suite and was sitting next to the table. I knew immediately that my anesthesiologist was behind me, and he put something in my IV. I asked him if he had put something in my IV. That's the last thing I remember.
@Bahiyyabadriya.3 ай бұрын
I enjoy this point of view Thank You!
@prabhleenkaur91576 ай бұрын
This is awesome and very very helpful, 2week in CA-1 here! Thank you so much!! Also, it would be very helpful if you could do the same for emergence, and please show how you tape your tubes, I'm figuring out what I like at this point!
@SoftservePOV6 ай бұрын
Great video! You should make one about using a bronchoscope or trans esophageal echocardiogram and how to find ejection fraction
@717Nora6 ай бұрын
I would like them to explain why general anesthesia affects memory adversely especially in the elderly and how can it be prevented.
@Engineer_Eric_596 ай бұрын
Hello Max, hope all is going well, sir. Nice to see you practicing as a full anesthesiologist. :) I see you like the Mac blade. I was always a Miller man myself ;)
@Reghan鹤骄20 күн бұрын
When I did my heart surgery, after coming out of anestesia(had mine through an IV, not fas mask), I couldn’t breathe through my nose(I’m a nose breather), and kind of freaked out because I’m autistic , so some sense are stronger for me than others. I kept mouthing to Mom, “I can’t breathe” and teared up a bit from the momentary stress. I eventually calmed done after a minute and fell back asleep. I could breathe, just wasn’t breathing correctly with the breathing tube down my throat. The nurse didn’t remove the breathing tube until I was fully conscious and awake for 30minutes to make sure I could breathe on my own. The tube cause my throat to be sore for up to 2 days.😖
@gopats146 ай бұрын
Can you please do a video about why anesthetic medications work the way they do and what goes on inside the patient’s body. For example, how does propofol induce unconsciousness and what does it do to the brain and body?
@PaulLoveless-Cincinnati6 ай бұрын
If I am correct - scientists do not know the exact mechanism of action for propafol. It works on the GABA receptors but the mechanism is not completely understood.
@diode_wow6 ай бұрын
2 words: Medicosis Perfectionalis That channel will satisfy your every curiosity in regards to pharmacology, anatomy, physiology, etc.
@ShonMardani4 ай бұрын
The secret is C12 H18 O , and no Nitrogen.
@victoriagiusto7553Ай бұрын
Doc can I shadow you ? Love your content and personality . More of this .😊
@mrewilson1063 ай бұрын
Interesting 👍
@IniritАй бұрын
I had 13 experiences in the last two months being put to sleep and every time they put the oxygen mask on and assured me it was just oxygen I always wondered if maybe it wasn't just oxygen and that was just a little fib tactic to keep me calm, or maybe it was a stretch of the truth where it would start out as just oxygen but soon change to something else. Looks like it was probably just oxygen lol, thanks for the informative video. It's also interesting to learn more about the use of fentanyl. I knew fentanyl was sometimes used in a medical context to control pain, but the way you present its application it sounds like this is more common than I thought? Perhaps this is why I always felt extremely floaty and weird for about 20 seconds before getting knocked out, like I was sinking into the bed and floating on a cloud.
@MaxxUS08Ай бұрын
I remember waking up shortly after my operation and gagging on the breathing tube right before they removed it. I went asleep again and woke up a few hrs later in recovery
@sumabiju79325 ай бұрын
Nice presentation
@Healthyhealings6 ай бұрын
Awesome video Doc! If I sign a release can you film me live going through this process?
@alibadran83956 ай бұрын
Great video dr max ❤
@413smr6 ай бұрын
When I had my gallbladder removed, I was told afterwards by the anesthesiologist that I was "difficult to intubate." I mentioned this to the surgeon at a follow up visit and she vaguely responded, Oh yeah something wasn't where we thought it would be" Where could "it" have gone? /s It added 30 min. to the surgery but I was blissfully unaware. :-)
@estelleadamski3086 ай бұрын
I had GA twice in 13 days. The 1st time, I was given something to "relax" me as soon as I entered the OR and it knocked me out. I never remember getting on the table or breathing thru the mask. I didn't like that at all. The next time I asked the anesthesiologist not to put me" under "until I got on the table and at least took breathes in the mask. He did as I requested and I liked it much better. Afterwards, when I wake up ,I always remember the exact second I go "out". Most ppl don't remember, but, I always do. Why is that? Thxs for the info.
@JoeDFWAviation6 ай бұрын
I always remembered going into the OR and then going to sleep. I then remember waking up in recovery. One time I think I remember waking in the OR but after surgery.
@estelleadamski3086 ай бұрын
@@JoeDFWAviation You have me beat. I have never remembered waking up in the OR, only in PACU. When I had my THR I only remember waking up in my room, many hrs. later.
@JoeDFWAviation6 ай бұрын
@@estelleadamski308 occasionally I woke up directly in my ICU room (I’ve had 50 surgeries but not all of them were GA)
@estelleadamski3086 ай бұрын
@@JoeDFWAviation WOW! That's a lot of surgeries. I've never been in ICU (thankfully) I did get sepsis MRSA and was in the hospital for 6 wks. but, I was stable so no ICU. I've had 15 surgeries and hopefully that's all.
@kevindavis81754 ай бұрын
The last time I had surgery, when the Midazolam kicked in, I literally talked about this channel until they put in the Propofol (either because the surgery was going to start, or they were just jealous of you)! 😂
@VarvaraPe6 ай бұрын
Hi! New Anesthesiology resident here. Would be interested in your typical tape routine. Not boring at all ! Thanks for your videos :)
@infoLePresidentАй бұрын
Its great how you portraits the solving problem skills with a co,mbination of knowledge and pratical skills . Thimps up