💲 10% off Critical Care Academy (CCRN Review): 👉🏼adv.icu/cca (USE CODE "icuadv10") 💲 10% off EACH Month @ Nurisng Mastery membership: 👉🏼 adv.icu/mastery ❤ Show your support with an ICU Advantage sticker! 👉🏼 adv.icu/support 📝 NOTES available to members! ► RUclips: adv.icu/ym | ► Patreon: adv.icu/pm
Been a trauma/cvicu/cath lab nurse for 8years, and I understand all your content but you’re so much more adept at explaining it! Been sharing it with my little brother who just started his career as an ICU nurse as well
Awesome, thanks so much for sharing and spreading the word. Sounds like our backgrounds are similar, minus no Cath lab for me. I had always thought about it though!
PGY-1 EM resident on my MICU rotation and watched my first RHC today. This was super helpful to better understand what was going on with our patient. Thank you!
Eddie, your videos have been backpacking me through my career as a CVICU nurse lol… any chance you’ll have any videos on VADs and Impella’s anytime soon? Again, I love your content! I can’t express how helpful all of your videos have been!
Ahh apparently my comment didn't save! So great to hear the videos have been helpful for you. As for VADs and Impella, I will be doing Impella very soon, and then VADs eventually at some point. Not sure when though.
Happy New Year everyone! Eddie these videos are so helpful, I have been watching your videos since I was in nursing school!! I work in a CTICU now and we are constantly using swans. All the info is solid and you explain it very well. Even though I'm very comfortable with these lines its always nice to refresh on it and even learn something new that maybe wasn't as familiar with! Love watching these keep doing the awesome work!
Thank you so much and great perspective. One of the things I love about this channel and making these lessons is finding new nuggets of knowledge I didn’t have before or refreshing something that had been a while. Appreciate the feedback and glad to know they are well received.
Kind of, but its a little more than just contraction. Its how much work the heart has to do to achieve the output it gets. Its almost like an efficiency metric. You can have the same force of contraction, but different volumes of blood that are ejected based on the other pressures and forces at play.
Shouldn't you measure in spont breathing patient at the end of expiration rather than end of inspiration? At end inspiration of a spont breathing patient, your intrathoracic pressure is at the lowest, which is the FARTHEST away from atmospheric pressure. I think you have it flipped. The best time to measure waveforms for mechanically ventilated patients is at the end of inspiration.
Yes it should be end expiration in spont breathing patient and end inspiration for ventilated patient. Funny though he got it right in the Pulmonary Artery (PA) Catheter Waveforms EXPLAINED! video. The systolic peak will be the waveform after the tallest waveform and the diastolic pressure is measured preceding that systolic peak waveform.
💲 10% off Critical Care Academy (CCRN Review): 👉🏼adv.icu/cca (USE CODE "icuadv10")
💲 10% off EACH Month @ Nurisng Mastery membership: 👉🏼 adv.icu/mastery
❤ Show your support with an ICU Advantage sticker! 👉🏼 adv.icu/support
📝 NOTES available to members! ► RUclips: adv.icu/ym | ► Patreon: adv.icu/pm
Been a trauma/cvicu/cath lab nurse for 8years, and I understand all your content but you’re so much more adept at explaining it! Been sharing it with my little brother who just started his career as an ICU nurse as well
Awesome, thanks so much for sharing and spreading the word. Sounds like our backgrounds are similar, minus no Cath lab for me. I had always thought about it though!
PGY-1 EM resident on my MICU rotation and watched my first RHC today. This was super helpful to better understand what was going on with our patient. Thank you!
Awesome man. Glad you found it helpful!
Eddie, your videos have been backpacking me through my career as a CVICU nurse lol… any chance you’ll have any videos on VADs and Impella’s anytime soon?
Again, I love your content! I can’t express how helpful all of your videos have been!
Yes! Impellas please!
Ahh apparently my comment didn't save!
So great to hear the videos have been helpful for you.
As for VADs and Impella, I will be doing Impella very soon, and then VADs eventually at some point. Not sure when though.
This is so intense but I love learning about it. Even if it extracurricular to my schooling right now.
I find all this stuff fascinating!
Happy New Year everyone! Eddie these videos are so helpful, I have been watching your videos since I was in nursing school!! I work in a CTICU now and we are constantly using swans. All the info is solid and you explain it very well. Even though I'm very comfortable with these lines its always nice to refresh on it and even learn something new that maybe wasn't as familiar with! Love watching these keep doing the awesome work!
Thank you so much and great perspective. One of the things I love about this channel and making these lessons is finding new nuggets of knowledge I didn’t have before or refreshing something that had been a while. Appreciate the feedback and glad to know they are well received.
love your work
Happy New Year, Eddie 🎉 Many thanks for all your hard work, brilliant and informative videos. Roland
Many thanks Roland! Happy New Year to ya!
Omg perfect timing! I'm reviewing Swans.
Awesome! I love it when the timing is right 😊
Hi Eddie I’m new to the Cath lab and this video was very helpful thanks
Hey Charles! Enoy the cath lab. It always looked fun to work there! Glad you enjoyed the vid.
Thank You... perfectly explained ☺️ ❤️ your videos
Great to hear! Glad you liked it and thank you.
Awesome Video as always Eddie! Quick question about RVSWI/ LVSWI: are they, in a sense, can be considered contractility of each chamber? Thank you
Kind of, but its a little more than just contraction. Its how much work the heart has to do to achieve the output it gets. Its almost like an efficiency metric. You can have the same force of contraction, but different volumes of blood that are ejected based on the other pressures and forces at play.
Thank you so much ❤️❤️
You are very welcome!
Great work 👏🏻
Thank you!
Thanks
Welcome!
Teşekkürler
You’re welcome!
Shouldn't you measure in spont breathing patient at the end of expiration rather than end of inspiration? At end inspiration of a spont breathing patient, your intrathoracic pressure is at the lowest, which is the FARTHEST away from atmospheric pressure. I think you have it flipped.
The best time to measure waveforms for mechanically ventilated patients is at the end of inspiration.
I believe you are right. Inspiration = low intrathoracic pressure (in spontaneously breathing patients)
Yes it should be end expiration in spont breathing patient and end inspiration for ventilated patient. Funny though he got it right in the Pulmonary Artery (PA) Catheter Waveforms EXPLAINED! video. The systolic peak will be the waveform after the tallest waveform and the diastolic pressure is measured preceding that systolic peak waveform.
i’m struggling
👍
*PromoSM* 😥