Injecting Lidocaine for a Laceration - HD Video Demonstration!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • This video is intended ONLY for students and practitioners of medicine and nursing. Thanks for watching! In this video, I demonstrate how you can inject lidocaine or other local anesthetics during evaluation and treatment of lacerations. Please consider subscribing, liking this video, and sharing with your friends!
    Subscribe: / @minimedlessons
    Instagram: / minimedlessons
    Other suturing videos of mine that you may enjoy:
    Subcuticular Interrupted Suturing - • SUTURE Tutorial: Subcu...
    Simple Interrupted Suturing - • SUTURE Tutorial: Simpl...
    The Instrument Tie - • SUTURE Tutorial: The I...
    Subcuticular Suturing with Aberdeen Knot - • SUTURE Tutorial: Subcu...
    Vertical Mattress Suturing - • SUTURE Tutorial: Verti...
    Horizontal Mattress Suturing - • SUTURE Tutorial: Horiz...
    Running Locking Suturing - • SUTURE Tutorial: Runni...
    Deep Tissue Absorbables - • SUTURE Tutorial: Deep ...
    Figure-of-8 Suturing - • SUTURE Tutorial: Figur...
    Removing Sutures - • SUTURE Tutorial: How t...
    Stapling a Laceration - • Closing a Laceration U...
    Removing Skin Staples - • Surgical STAPLE REMOVA...
    PLEASE NOTE: An individual should NOT attempt this on a person unless they are a student or practitioner of medicine or nursing, and specifically trained to do so. All of the content in this video and all other videos on this channel are solely the opinion of the creator and should NOT be used as medical advice or medical care. If you have a laceration or skin injury of any kind, you are advised to seek immediate medical attention in a hospital or medical clinic.

Комментарии • 164

  • @minimedlessons
    @minimedlessons  4 года назад +22

    Thank you all for watching my video! A good next video for you might be this one - ruclips.net/video/RAVane1yvyU/видео.html - Check it out!

    • @vettechgeekgirl3559
      @vettechgeekgirl3559 3 года назад +1

      Thank you for the best, most thorough playlist on the subject.

    • @marymaebernas3350
      @marymaebernas3350 2 года назад

      What is the procedure. Sir, E and R, y the Needle so big, the w/drawal it should standby to bottle for the next used, g23,

    • @mr.mustache4743
      @mr.mustache4743 2 года назад

      Thank you, very informative.

  • @ayushikumar5594
    @ayushikumar5594 2 года назад +70

    Thank you so much for explaining the "why" in each step of the process. You answer so many questions as you go, it's phenomenal. Really helps in actually learning the procedure rather than simply memorizing each step without understanding why

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  2 года назад +2

      I’m so glad you found it to be helpful!

    • @gigicoogler
      @gigicoogler 2 года назад +4

      @@minimedlessons exactly, so helpful. The how is being taught consistently but the why is priceless!! ❤️

  • @asadjoya8017
    @asadjoya8017 4 года назад +87

    I did my first LA and stitches today

    • @asadjoya8017
      @asadjoya8017 4 года назад +4

      @@ThuthukileMkhize how was it?

    • @philippinecharity7212
      @philippinecharity7212 3 года назад +2

      OBGYN-RN here.... 'Someone' didn't iron the perineum......

    • @Raysgarage90
      @Raysgarage90 2 года назад +3

      First Los Angeles?

    • @danay6941
      @danay6941 2 года назад

      @@Raysgarage90 LA -> local anesthetic

  • @gozob
    @gozob 2 года назад +7

    this is incredibly helpful, thank you. Aspirating before numbing is a really good technique.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Год назад

      It's conceivable that the epi. would be an issue for a sensitive pt. but the volume of lidocaine used would not be. Obviously the pt. is asked about known allergies before proceeding.

  • @teddymochama
    @teddymochama 2 года назад +5

    Amazing. Thank you for explaining it extensively... massive help

  • @mannymaggot
    @mannymaggot 5 лет назад +69

    don't know how I ended up here but this is amazing

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  5 лет назад +4

      Thanks for the comment. :)

    • @Jo2h_
      @Jo2h_ 4 года назад

      It is pretty good

  • @brettp_DO
    @brettp_DO 4 года назад +16

    Thank you so much for making this! Great refresher for my EM audition.

  • @prateekkumarsharma1136
    @prateekkumarsharma1136 2 года назад +5

    Had a great experience with the Professional and Experience staff. It was a very pain relief moment with every session I had in Physioveda Medical Center, your caring and dedication are really outstanding. I would surely recommend this Center to Everyone. Many Thanks to Physioveda and Team.

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  2 года назад +2

      I’m glad you had a good experience! I have no association with that medical center though. Perhaps you meant to comment on a different video?

  • @breveennkukan3603
    @breveennkukan3603 Год назад +1

    Great demonstration. Exactly what I was looking for.

  • @nickhaley1212
    @nickhaley1212 3 года назад +61

    Its weird I'm not a doctor of any kind but I still find myself watching these videos and buying practice suture kits then i sit around suturing for no reason except boredom. I guess if for some reason the world ends and people need stiches I'll be an expert lol since I can now do about every kind of stich there is and from the looks.of my stiches when finished it looks better than most doctors doing it on youtube. Guess that's probably because there not sitting around suturing for 6 hours a day there actual doctors and have a lot more to learn and are to busy to practice sutures all day lol but hey it's fun and very interesting. I think I have watched every surgery and suture video on youtube. Within a few years I'll be an expert brain/heart surgeon that has never done any surgery in my life. lol but I can tell you step by step what to do what it should look like and what to look for if something isn't right. I guess I should have went to med school. It is very interesting i could learn surgery every day and be happy as ever it is just so fascinating and so much fun to learn and watch.

    • @metahuman98
      @metahuman98 3 года назад +4

      Me tooooo, I'm not a doctor but I practice medicine and recently start to practice suturing , don't know why exactly but when I use any device I want to know how it actually works and to know all information about it, same here I want to know how this body that I use it every day works. That was so cool when I read your comment

    • @samryon3615
      @samryon3615 Год назад +1

      I have stitched up a friends...but the last time my best friend literally screamed from the pain. I tried to use lidocaine cream. Where do i go to get the stuff they show in these videos?

    • @YourMomfailedu
      @YourMomfailedu Год назад +2

      Do you happen to live in Ohio? You could come to our compound post apocalypse and be our fist aid person. We're looking for people that bring value like yourself. We can't just take in people that bring nothing to the table. 😁

    • @dianefresca6896
      @dianefresca6896 Год назад +1

      Excellent share.
      As a nurse I love the sutures. I need to get a practice set. When things go sideways,and it will I can help

    • @ZeePark21
      @ZeePark21 Год назад +1

      It's time to go to med school. You seem to have the passion for it and you're just not fully aware.

  • @carrieunrein2060
    @carrieunrein2060 2 года назад +6

    I watched this video again. I'm doing great on my practice sutures. I obtained the correct lidocaine. I'm not a med student. I'm the wife of a fireman who works on cars, etc. I'm ready for his next project that could result in a deep cut; again, that may need stitches. Thank you. Your tutorials are the best ones on RUclips 😊😊😊😊👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  2 года назад +11

      I am happy to hear you enjoy my videos and feel they are the best on RUclips. Thank you. 😊 That being said, please understand that my videos are intended for students and practitioners of nursing and medicine. I do not and cannot support addressing lacerations at home. There is much more to laceration care than just closing it. As it has always said in the description of this video, I officially advise anyone who experiences a laceration or significant skin injury to seek immediate medical attention at a clinic or hospital. Thank you.

    • @salonibehera6762
      @salonibehera6762 Год назад

      @@minimedlessons can i ask something..? Do we need to put injection on both the side of a laceration before sutures?

  • @zkalalah190
    @zkalalah190 3 года назад +5

    I did my first lidocaine injection today 😁

  • @sabrinajarin2231
    @sabrinajarin2231 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for a such a nice demonstration

  • @mcbadger2440
    @mcbadger2440 5 лет назад +19

    Super awesome stuff, man. I think the logic of not being in a vessel is that, in that circumstance, your lidocaine leaves the area where you want its action. Certainly, it can be used for arrhythmias, but it would take a MUCH larger dose to be problematic. Even a little of the 1:100,000 epi in a vessel would be alright.
    Either way, super informative video, brother! Thanks for your time!

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  5 лет назад +3

      Yes, awesome. Thanks for the comment!

    • @think-islam-channel
      @think-islam-channel Год назад

      Do you have a reference regarding what doses are risky? Would be interesting to see what the details are.

  • @newmanlord7130
    @newmanlord7130 2 года назад +1

    Significant Video, Doc,
    Hi from Ghana.

  • @globalsmile
    @globalsmile Год назад

    Great instructional video . I usually enter the skin from one side and advance to the other end of laceration and inject as i retract, after negative aspiration, so there's no need to redirect the needle.

  • @think-islam-channel
    @think-islam-channel Год назад +2

    Rotating the needle from the same spot seems like it would cause more damage rather than less.
    I would have thought that 2 longer punctures on either side would cause less damage to tissues.
    The needle is fine and the skin would collapse to cover the track once it is removed.
    Rotating in one spot is going to cause shearing damage to that area.
    What's your thoughts on this?

  • @Paragon_Reason
    @Paragon_Reason 6 месяцев назад

    I had a dentist one time inject lidocaine in my jaw as he went... He's inject, wait, jiggle (slightly bump almost like tapping) needle, advance, inject, wait, jiggle, advance, inject, wait, jiggle and I literally didn't feel him inject anything even though it was deep into my jaw on inside of my mouth. Was truly a work of art.

  • @marisagarcia7166
    @marisagarcia7166 11 месяцев назад +1

    The why helped me ! Thank you

  • @amiraabdo7366
    @amiraabdo7366 Год назад +1

    Amazing, that was artistic

  • @shereenshabin9056
    @shereenshabin9056 5 лет назад +5

    Thank you for this and all of your other videos!

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you for watching and for your kind comment!

  • @SnareMan
    @SnareMan 4 года назад +5

    Some good points in the video. As for aspirating - it isn't realistically possible to continuously aspirate as you are infiltrating a wound to see see if you are passing through a few mm vessel. If you are going to deposit the anesthetic all in one spot without moving the needle , sure, but if you are moving it it seems unrealistic. Also, if the ACLS dose is 1-1.5mg/kg (say 70mg dose for the average person) and lidocaine is 10mg/ml it wouldn't seem you could get a toxic dose into a vessel as you were passing through it injecting. You might get a few tenths of a ml in it as it passes through? I don't know how much intravascular dose you need to cause a systemic side effect, but I'd think that wouldn't be enough?

    • @kaufjj
      @kaufjj 4 года назад +2

      Lawyers dude.

    • @SnareMan
      @SnareMan 4 года назад +3

      @@kaufjj I found one under a patient's bed the other night

    • @julianleil7847
      @julianleil7847 10 месяцев назад

      Exactly what I i think, but since I push a large amount at once in one place, I aspirate then inject

  • @MariamM-qs4wb
    @MariamM-qs4wb 10 месяцев назад

    That is so helpful thank you so much

  • @Resident100-g3q
    @Resident100-g3q 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent presentation❤

  • @95mohad
    @95mohad 4 года назад +3

    That’s was help full thank you brother 💯💯♥️

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  4 года назад

      I'm so glad it was helpful! Thanks for following!

  • @mikadeboos2051
    @mikadeboos2051 4 года назад +14

    Hey there! I've got a question again :D
    Your argument for injecting when you pull back is so that you know that you're not injecting the lidocaine into a vein.
    But how do you know that halfway back you're not in a vein, since you only aspirated when you where at the deepest point? The deepest point will not be inside a vein, but if you had passed a vein without noticing, you will pass it again on your way back, injecting lidocaine into it.
    Or would you have noticed this by causing extravasation when passing through the vein?
    I have no experience on this matter whatsoever, this just came up to me.
    Thanks for answering!

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  4 года назад +9

      Hi again! Another great question! (You sound like a great nursing student). Yes, you're right, there's a chance you could have passed through a vessel and may not notice when aspirating at the deepest point. However, because you're withdrawing as you inject, only a small amount of lidocaine might enter the vessel as the needle backs out of the vessel. It's not overly problematic. The main concern with possibly injecting a small amount of lidocaine into a vessel as you're backing out is a small amount of lidocaine will float off down the vessel rather than staying where you want it to stay. The concern of causing an arrhythmia is not really a big concern. I hope that answers your question.

    • @mikadeboos2051
      @mikadeboos2051 4 года назад +1

      MiniMedLessons Thanks again! Hope to see some more of your video’s!

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  4 года назад +4

      Mika De Boos you bet! Recording a new one tonight! I’m starting a comprehensive EKG interpretation series that will be about 14 episodes long. Stay tuned!

  • @dave0z96
    @dave0z96 7 месяцев назад

    I had to have emergency hand surgery due to getting my hand caught in a diesel engine cooling fan blade and they used a lot of this stuff on me, my hand was numb for 8 hours . They had to scrub and clean the dirt out of the wound down to the bone fix tendons a nerve and put a bone back into place . The surgery was successful I still got all my fingers and everything works right thank god .

  • @TheAmmorna
    @TheAmmorna 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing this video

  • @iriss3460
    @iriss3460 4 года назад +10

    I got my birth control implant inserted on Oct. 22 and it wasn’t as painful as I thought it’d be. The anesthesia was inserted the way he showed. Pretty happy with my choice to get the implant 🥰

    • @bengood7337
      @bengood7337 2 года назад

      Hi baby how are you doing now i hope you are really doing good you are awesome looking at you baby makes happy when I look at your picture it is beyond my imagination that a creature like you really exist like a rose you make the garden so beautiful You are a diamond to any man that have eyes to see goodness of a womanhood Baby am Ben easy going person very understandable Am a civil engineer and a contractor I work at so many places like Asia Europe and Africa I love art craft and I write music I like ideal people when I see your picture am impress I want a good woman that understand what real love is all about who will understand me and perfectly be for me So we can build our world strong enough to care for each other I want you to be mine and I hope to hear from you soonest thanks

  • @yb6451
    @yb6451 3 года назад +2

    great video. A way to reduce the burning sensation of lidocaine is to add a bit of bicarb. I've been doing that for some years now and it should be more known in my opinion. Seems the lidocaine burns because it's more acidic than the tissue.

    • @maseyb
      @maseyb 2 года назад

      What ratio of lidocaine:bicarb do you do?

    • @yosefyitz
      @yosefyitz 2 года назад +2

      @@maseyb I use 1:10-1:20 bicard to lido

    • @Person._.0
      @Person._.0 Год назад

      It doesn’t affect its efficacy at all or do any harm to the tissues?

    • @yosefyitz
      @yosefyitz Год назад

      @@Person._.0 no. It helps neutralize the acidity of the lido

  • @daze4341
    @daze4341 Год назад +1

    I'm not a doctor but find this interesting.

  • @hunterstokes9306
    @hunterstokes9306 2 года назад +1

    Not a doctor or educated really what so ever but I always thought that when you turn the needle 90° while in the skin, that it was kind of stretch or rear the tissue. Clearly the more you remove the needle it wouldent bee as bad
    But I wonder what's going on in the skin when you do that does your skin just stretch around a fabric or are like cutting b
    The flesh a little

  • @BabyBlondie311
    @BabyBlondie311 4 месяца назад

    New drinking game: take a shot every time he says "laceration"
    You might meet him in the emergency room!

  • @agyapongmaapriscilla1789
    @agyapongmaapriscilla1789 4 года назад

    That was very educative.

  • @conan2566
    @conan2566 2 года назад

    Great lesson thank you

  • @xavieragee3916
    @xavieragee3916 Месяц назад

    What the. Oh ma gawd 😱. You didn't pull it out. Were you scraping under the skin or is the soft tissue movable.

  • @gentleauroraasmr8562
    @gentleauroraasmr8562 2 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for this video. I have a question, how much of the lidocaine do you use, like once you inject the lidocaine inside the syringe, do you use all of it to inject it to the skin? and what cc of the syringe do you use? Like do you use a 1cc?

  • @alishoja3289
    @alishoja3289 3 года назад

    Very useful, thanks

  • @drrajat4659
    @drrajat4659 4 года назад +3

    Amazing 👌😍

  • @dr.kaliprasadmishra
    @dr.kaliprasadmishra 3 года назад

    thanks from india 🇮🇳

  • @becky2235
    @becky2235 Год назад +1

    Why is lidocaine mixed with ephinerphine?

  • @JungleEd17
    @JungleEd17 4 года назад +7

    Question: My son had a cut on his head that looked almost exactly what you showed. It was clean but he fell in a place that housed pig feed. The doctor injected so much stuff under scalp and so fast that the whole wound bubbled up like a half sized ping pong ball. What that Lidocaine? Was he trying to clean the wound? He also put tons and tons of hydrogen pyroxide and betadine/iodine soaked gauze in it. Really painful for the little guy.

    • @Sartorius988
      @Sartorius988 4 года назад +3

      Yeah, that likely was lidocaine. The wound would definitely be considered dirty because he fell into a place that housed pig feed, so the hydrogen peroxide wash makes sense. It may have been overkill but I don't think anything bad was done.

  • @rebekkahreyes9073
    @rebekkahreyes9073 4 года назад +2

    How much mls do u usually put for each section

  • @joeblow9295
    @joeblow9295 4 года назад

    can your incision grow over the stitches after there was some
    swelling the first 3 days after the surgery? what will the Dr have to do
    if that happens to remove the sutures?

  • @nancydrew8388
    @nancydrew8388 Год назад

    Can there be any side effects from using a 1% solution of lidocaine on a bleeding finger from a splinter?

  • @faimafabz6091
    @faimafabz6091 9 месяцев назад

    What if the wound is not straight and it is dirty?? How do you inject the anesthetic?

  • @swiftlyturnip
    @swiftlyturnip Год назад

    Do you scrub out a wound that's straight and clean with gauze?

  • @paulastafford1642
    @paulastafford1642 3 года назад

    Thank you

  • @jameswan3820
    @jameswan3820 3 года назад

    very nice

  • @gehirnakrobat883
    @gehirnakrobat883 2 года назад +1

    How do you know you didn't perforate and leave a larger vessel before aspiration and the inject Lidocaine into the larger vessel as you pull back??

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  2 года назад +1

      Great question! Theoretically, that can happen. However, if you’re injecting as you pull back, any vessel the tip of your needle passes through as you withdraw the needle will only receive a very small amount of lidocaine. It with be taken away in the blood flow of the vessel but will be so little in amount that it will not hurt the patient.

    • @gehirnakrobat883
      @gehirnakrobat883 2 года назад

      @@minimedlessons Thank you! :) But that leaves one more annoying question: Then why do an aspiration at all?
      Do we usually inject a larger volume in the beginning before starting to pull the needle back? Or is it just because one aspiration at one point is better than no aspiration at all?

  • @erumfatima7301
    @erumfatima7301 Год назад

    Good point to aspirate first

  • @kylehenderson4524
    @kylehenderson4524 3 года назад +1

    Two questions. Would you do both sides of the laceration, and if so, do you use a new syringe for the second one?

    • @samimmondal5284
      @samimmondal5284 3 года назад +1

      yeah both side & no need to replace needle as it's the same person .

    • @shainakalesh
      @shainakalesh 2 года назад

      @@samimmondal5284 old used needles becomes dull and duller after every use... Maybe a new one

  • @MrBeachwaves
    @MrBeachwaves 4 года назад +4

    Thanks for your video. When injecting from inside the wound approx how many CC’s do you inject before re-positioning the needle?
    Also, do you inject on either side of the wound?
    Thanks

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  4 года назад +6

      The amount of lidocaine used usually depends on the size of the laceration. For something that is 3 cm long or so, I'll probably use a total of about 3 cc of lidocaine for the entire laceration, injecting both sides.

    • @MrBeachwaves
      @MrBeachwaves 4 года назад

      MiniMedLessons Thank you for taking the time to respond!

    • @drkh5137
      @drkh5137 4 года назад

      @@minimedlessons yesssss lastly i get it thank you soooooo much😊🌹

    • @drkh5137
      @drkh5137 4 года назад

      @@minimedlessonsis this dose for children also ??

  • @sowdaabdi1240
    @sowdaabdi1240 4 года назад

    U helped me thnkz😙

  • @TH-qv6ef
    @TH-qv6ef 2 года назад +1

    Do you need to do both sides of the lac?

  • @jorgenegrete1482
    @jorgenegrete1482 5 лет назад +5

    Where do you get this stuff at. Do you have a link?

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  5 лет назад +8

      Hello! This particular product is a SurgiReal skin pad. surgireal.com/

    • @samryon3615
      @samryon3615 Год назад

      You can buy the entire kit with everything except the lidocaine...i cant find any info on how to obtain that.

    • @brentdavis9801
      @brentdavis9801 Год назад

      ​@@samryon3615I am looking for the same stuff I live out in the country and I am pretty far from a hospital and could fix some stuff by myself without having to make a 45-minute trip if you ever find out where to get it please let me know

  • @nataliayoung3734
    @nataliayoung3734 4 года назад +2

    When I was a teenager, I had 2 Lydo-Caine, shots, to numb up my ear lobe, for surgery. It hurt.

    • @micjam1986
      @micjam1986 4 года назад +2

      i got so many stitches as a kid, when my mom went to the E.R. for stitches the Doctor said " wheres michael??" lol true!

  • @wildness01
    @wildness01 2 года назад

    Do you ever start by irrigating the laceration itself with a small amount of lidocaine and waiting a couple minutes before proceeding to the injections so as to numb the area before injecting deeper?

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Год назад

      I always did in conscious pts. Makes a difference esp. when the pt. is frightened. Inject slowly to minimize pain.

  • @flatcarwillie
    @flatcarwillie 2 года назад

    Is it less painful for the patient to come outside the wound?

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Год назад

      No, just the opposite.

  • @mariyamnadeem9202
    @mariyamnadeem9202 2 года назад

    What if the needle goes through the vein to reach the end, and when you pull, there's no blood. But won't some of the lidocaine still be injected in the vein whilst pulling it back? I don't know if I was articulate enough.. I meant the big vessel is just where you enter your needle, you go all the way through.. But since you get no blood, you still inject it.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Год назад +1

      The amount of lidocaine is so small that accidental IV injection isn't an issue.

  • @azro7717
    @azro7717 2 года назад

    What is the max dose of lidocaine that I can injecte ?

  • @konicakhanom1737
    @konicakhanom1737 3 года назад +1

    How can I push on nurvd ???

  • @carrieunrein2060
    @carrieunrein2060 2 года назад +1

    Where do I get the injectable lidocaine? How can I get the medication?

    • @samryon3615
      @samryon3615 Год назад

      Thats what i came here to find out.

    • @brentdavis9801
      @brentdavis9801 Год назад

      There has to be someplace to get it if anyone ever finds out where please let me know the only place I can think of is maybe Mexico you can seem to get anything there

  • @eliakimsando2919
    @eliakimsando2919 4 года назад

    Does ligdocaine work on dirty wounds

  • @jonaben5714
    @jonaben5714 2 года назад

    will this work with 1% Lidocainhydrochlorid, is it strong enough? Lidocainhydrochlorid

  • @agro5687
    @agro5687 3 года назад

    Is it possible for a lac, that is small enough,, to start at one end (on the outside of the wound) and advance all the way to the other end straight and inject the lidocaine as you pull out instead of the fanning motion done here? i.e inject in two straight lines parallel to the lac rather than starting in the middle and fanning out?

    • @rileyeveritt9934
      @rileyeveritt9934 3 года назад

      im not a dr, but ive seen quite a few videos where they do exactly what you just described. so i would say yes you can

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Год назад

      Of course.

  • @sagunshrestha1943
    @sagunshrestha1943 2 года назад

    Accidental IV injection might be lethal because Arrythmia is caused by the preservative in the solution. Methyl paraben is what we get in my part of the world.

  • @ideallyjekyl5200
    @ideallyjekyl5200 2 года назад +1

    You sound like a mix of casually explained and technoblade

  • @mhsulistyo5473
    @mhsulistyo5473 3 года назад

    Mantap

  • @derekfoulk4692
    @derekfoulk4692 3 года назад +1

    As a hobby I've been doing self surgeries and this video is very helpful, I just wish they made this medication easier to obtain. Word of caution healthcare in the US is ending due to high cost and so if you are doctor expect to be out of a job soon.

    • @vettechgeekgirl3559
      @vettechgeekgirl3559 3 года назад +3

      OhhhKaaaay Derek.

    • @terriecosby7293
      @terriecosby7293 3 года назад +1

      bwahaha. Thats funny. See you in our ICU when you are septic from your "self surgery hobby".

    • @WeirdGirl93
      @WeirdGirl93 2 года назад

      It is not hard to obtain from overseas.

  • @SovereignSmurf
    @SovereignSmurf 2 года назад

    I was half expecting the lacerations to heal

  • @Dandelion_flight
    @Dandelion_flight Год назад

    25, 27 gauge? That’s quite big isnt it?

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  Год назад +1

      No, it’s actually quite small. Remember, as the number gets bigger, the size gets smaller. So 27 gauge is smaller than 18 gauge, for example.

    • @Dandelion_flight
      @Dandelion_flight Год назад

      @@minimedlessons yes I get that. I thought a 30 or 31G may be better 😁

  • @ChickentNug
    @ChickentNug Год назад

    This looks like it would be more painful than the suture itself haha

    • @okbot5538
      @okbot5538 Год назад +1

      It is painful I got 4 shots on the bottom of my foot

  • @philippinecharity7212
    @philippinecharity7212 3 года назад

    Nurse here..... If you still believe the wound is contaminated..... (stuff in there....) then why close? If an infection comes later and the wound needs to be reopened, usually by someone else, and debris is noted, there is no real defense. 'You' failed to 'properly and thoroughly' clean the wound prior to closure.

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  3 года назад +7

      Hi, thanks for watching! Of course, cleaning a laceration before closure is extremely important. However, this video is simply about anesthetizing the wound, nothing more. Providing anesthesia prior to thorough irrigation and removal of debris is the humane, ethical way to do it as cleaning a wound properly is incredibly painful without anesthesia first. When closing a laceration, the steps could be summarized simply as 1) Inject lidocaine for anesthesia, 2) thoroughly clean and irrigate the wound, ensuring all visible debris is removed, and 3) close the wound. This video was about that first step, that's all. Thanks.

    • @terriecosby7293
      @terriecosby7293 3 года назад +1

      Its a video sister. Its not like he's closing an animal
      bite in a real setting. its just an example. Relax

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Год назад

      @@minimedlessons Actually just irrigating the wound with plain lido. before cleaning is humane and greatly reduces the discomfort involved in both irrigating and manipulating the area.

  • @ThePerpetualStudent
    @ThePerpetualStudent 2 года назад

    Patient currently screaming

  • @Aaliyah_luvs_dogs
    @Aaliyah_luvs_dogs 3 года назад

    I'm scared I hate stitches

  • @wazzupypypy6915
    @wazzupypypy6915 3 года назад

    push 1 of epi😭 greys anatomy 😭😭

  • @heathr6995
    @heathr6995 4 года назад

    What does the epinephrine do with the lidocaine

    • @125vinaykumarsd7
      @125vinaykumarsd7 4 года назад +3

      Vasoconstriction of blood vessels increases the time lidocaine acts.

    • @M7mdsafar94
      @M7mdsafar94 4 года назад

      @@125vinaykumarsd7 and causes vasoconstriction to contract the effect of vasodilation of lidocaine

  • @user-si2wi4sk2u
    @user-si2wi4sk2u 2 года назад

    I wanna do this to remove a mole at home it’s a small mole so I don’t know how much to use

    • @minimedlessons
      @minimedlessons  2 года назад +2

      I strongly advise against this. Moles should never be removed at home.

    • @brentdavis9801
      @brentdavis9801 Год назад

      Where did you get the lidocaine from?

  • @harishsehgal3114
    @harishsehgal3114 2 года назад

    Lol👍👍

  • @Justin-mu5lh
    @Justin-mu5lh Год назад

    :/ Lol

  • @omyadav6017
    @omyadav6017 Год назад +1

    Good info thx

  • @joeblow9295
    @joeblow9295 4 года назад

    can your incision grow over the stitches after there was some
    swelling the first 3 days after the surgery? what will the Dr have to do
    if that happens to remove the sutures?