Thanks for the video, I really enjoyed it. But what kind of dental surgeries and for how long? Are Health insurances cover the anesthesia procedure? Best 👍
well im 33 year old male and i had a 3.5 hour dental surgery intubated nasaly, and and it was done very well... i spoke with the anesthesolgist prior for an hour at least .and i was well taken care of... I live in nj and have medi-caid horizen nj health ...i took a few months to find a dr. who would do it but eveything was covered.. i was given Propofol and versed and tiny bits of fentanyl while under to regulate heart rate.....only discomfort was mild sore throat and burning from that tube... u cant get arouned it , it sux but the surgery went well.... yes i had a tiny bit of blood in my nasal cavity for a day or 2 but nothing major..... i was givin lidocaine viscous nasal solution spray for nose n throat...to ease the pain ... 4 wisdom teeth a molar and 6 cavities fillled and a cleaning and x rays ..... al so my front teeth bonded and re shaped and filled in... i had very mild mouth pain .... 400mgs a day of motrin was all i needed..... it takes doing ur homework and finding the right oral surgeon or dentist.....
Can you clarify what you mean by Remi 10? What’s the exact amount of remi used and how much propofol is drawn up per syringe? What’s a typical infusion rate?
Great question. Ventilators work very well, however, they are large and bulky and generally not needed with children. 99.9% of children do very well breathing spontaneously. The only cases where a ventilator is sometimes needed is with an adult.
I have a feeling that most dentist offices won't have as many nice anesthesia supplies. I also wonder if it has anything to do with not needing a malignant hyperthermia cart when there are no volatile anesthetics or succinylcholine. In my town, the dentist does it at the community hospital and they are all connected to the anesthesia machine with a ventilator.
I’ve done this over 16K times now. This video is about 5 years old so the way I do things are much different. Oral surgeons do not usually intubate. Their methods of anesthesia are quite a bit different…
Образовательное пособие для парамедиков (врачей одного органа - недоучек главврачей, хозяек, зубных и гинекологических кабинетов), сколько и что нужно для адекватного анестезиологического пособия у детей.
this is very helpful , easy and nice way to use your circuit , and treat your patient ,thank you
Congratulations Doctor !!! You work with love !
Great job! I like how to tape your tube, I am going to start doing it like this!
Great demo thanks. How long does it take to recover? Is it scarier for patient to be put under than stay awake or is it done for speed?
I was wondering at 2:09 and 6:22 there was a thing placed to the child's neck. What is it called? And what is the function of that thing?
Thanks for the video,
I really enjoyed it. But what kind of dental surgeries and for how long?
Are Health insurances cover the anesthesia procedure?
Best 👍
well im 33 year old male and i had a 3.5 hour dental surgery intubated nasaly, and and it was done very well... i spoke with the anesthesolgist prior for an hour at least .and i was well taken care of... I live in nj and have medi-caid horizen nj health ...i took a few months to find a dr. who would do it but eveything was covered.. i was given Propofol and versed and tiny bits of fentanyl while under to regulate heart rate.....only discomfort was mild sore throat and burning from that tube... u cant get arouned it , it sux but the surgery went well.... yes i had a tiny bit of blood in my nasal cavity for a day or 2 but nothing major..... i was givin lidocaine viscous nasal solution spray for nose n throat...to ease the pain ... 4 wisdom teeth a molar and 6 cavities fillled and a cleaning and x rays ..... al so my front teeth bonded and re shaped and filled in...
i had very mild mouth pain .... 400mgs a day of motrin was all i needed.....
it takes doing ur homework and finding the right oral surgeon or dentist.....
@@Scruffy_Talks super glad the tax payers could cover your dental surgery for you!
It could be any dental surgery, and any length. It just depends on the depth of the anesthesia. I’ve seen it done for wisdom teeth removal.
@@Scruffy_Talks I live in Jersey....with the same insurance....where'd you go??...I need some dental work done ASAP..😂😂
What do you mean by Remi 10 for those of us who are MD attending at teaching centers. Perhaps we can try this. Thanks.
mathew , your video very informative .. can you make more more videos
Can you clarify what you mean by Remi 10? What’s the exact amount of remi used and how much propofol is drawn up per syringe? What’s a typical infusion rate?
Congratulations !!!!
Wouldn't it be easier to just put them on the ventilator??
Great question. Ventilators work very well, however, they are large and bulky and generally not needed with children. 99.9% of children do very well breathing spontaneously. The only cases where a ventilator is sometimes needed is with an adult.
I have a feeling that most dentist offices won't have as many nice anesthesia supplies. I also wonder if it has anything to do with not needing a malignant hyperthermia cart when there are no volatile anesthetics or succinylcholine. In my town, the dentist does it at the community hospital and they are all connected to the anesthesia machine with a ventilator.
So good 😀 thanks
nicely done
Looks like that guy's done it a time or two
He probably has; it’s common in oral surgery.
I’ve done this over 16K times now. This video is about 5 years old so the way I do things are much different.
Oral surgeons do not usually intubate. Their methods of anesthesia are quite a bit different…
Образовательное пособие для парамедиков (врачей одного органа - недоучек главврачей, хозяек, зубных и гинекологических кабинетов), сколько и что нужно для адекватного анестезиологического пособия у детей.
مريم هو اللي ارسلتها
😂🌏🇫🇮
STOP IT GET SOME HELP.avi