@@thusharamr9868 We are actually working on an aortic regurgitation video next week, so I am very happy to hear you would find this helpful. Look out for it around Thursday or Friday of next week! You can also sign up to our newsletter here: www.animalultrasoundassociation.org/veterinarians
I love the term 'scanning blind' ! I find a big problem is that the dogs that we need to do subaortic view on (e.g. boxers) their ventral costal arch is too tight to get the probe in - any tips?
Do you have someone bringing their back legs in for you? Sometimes it can be a matter of waiting long enough with a low frequency probe on the abdomen, the dog gets bored and heaves a big sigh, and in that moment you get a couple of waveforms on screen! I'm half joking, but getting the dog to sniff for a treat can also sometimes give you the lucky break you need. In such difficult cases it may be that the apical view gives you the best alignment - thank goodness for the option of multiple views in echocardiography!
I am getting more information through your video thank you so much Doc 👍
Thank you, Arun. I am really glad you're finding these videos useful.
Hi Catherine? How to judge aortic regurgitation? Can u upload a video about quantifying aortic regurgitation and stenosis.
@@thusharamr9868 We are actually working on an aortic regurgitation video next week, so I am very happy to hear you would find this helpful. Look out for it around Thursday or Friday of next week! You can also sign up to our newsletter here: www.animalultrasoundassociation.org/veterinarians
I love the term 'scanning blind' ! I find a big problem is that the dogs that we need to do subaortic view on (e.g. boxers) their ventral costal arch is too tight to get the probe in - any tips?
Do you have someone bringing their back legs in for you? Sometimes it can be a matter of waiting long enough with a low frequency probe on the abdomen, the dog gets bored and heaves a big sigh, and in that moment you get a couple of waveforms on screen! I'm half joking, but getting the dog to sniff for a treat can also sometimes give you the lucky break you need. In such difficult cases it may be that the apical view gives you the best alignment - thank goodness for the option of multiple views in echocardiography!