Wow,, the diagnosis is very nice... Didn't do the practical not yet,, but will be very interesting... By the way, the tabla was fabulous.. like a professional 😬
This is some great content right here, thank you Sir. But I have a question - can fat tissue in areas around the lungs in overweight people affect the sound of percussion, making it more dull?
Yes it can. And in such a circumstance, we will have to correlate this with the other clinical findings (like, auscultation over the lungs). Yes, percussion can provide important clues toward the diagnosis. However, by itself , it may not be enough to come to a conclusion regarding the clinical condition.
An addition:- If the percussion is done on the bone, pleximeter is NOT placed on the bone. Strike directly on the bone with plexor finger.
very good greetings from brazil 🇧🇷
Thanks for the comment..!
You are a great teacher
Thanks doc...!
Amazing way respected sir explaining very well
Thanks…!
Wow,, the diagnosis is very nice...
Didn't do the practical not yet,, but will be very interesting...
By the way, the tabla was fabulous.. like a professional 😬
Thanks, Snehajeet….!
Aur koi farmaaiishh hai toh zaroor batana. Any topic that you want.
Regards,
Very well explained.you make it seem so interesting.
Thanks , doctor Ashesh. Let's collab , for ophthalmic physiology.
This is some great content right here, thank you Sir. But I have a question - can fat tissue in areas around the lungs in overweight people affect the sound of percussion, making it more dull?
Yes it can. And in such a circumstance, we will have to correlate this with the other clinical findings (like, auscultation over the lungs). Yes, percussion can provide important clues toward the diagnosis. However, by itself , it may not be enough to come to a conclusion regarding the clinical condition.
@@VivekSirsPhysiology Thank you for your reply! I find it very helpful.