Abdominal X-Rays Made Easy

preview_player
Показать описание
An overview of abdominal radiographs, including indications, conventional views, normal anatomy, and common abnormalities (e.g. SBO, ileus, volvulus, constipation, pneumoperitoneum, gallstones, kidney stones, pancreatic calcifications, foreign bodies, and more!)

Under U.S. Copyright Law, plain non-annotated radiographs are not copyrightable, and can be reproduced without permission or attribution. All other content in this video is made available via Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommerical-NoDerivs 4.0 Unported License, with the exception of the following images (whose authors retain their respective rights):

Coffee Beans Photographed in Macro, by Robert Knapp. Made available under CC BY-SA 3.0. Downloaded from Wikimedia Commons Jan 2021.

Bipolar hip prosthesis, by Carl Jones, Nikolai Briffa, Joshua Jacob2 and Richard Hargrove. Made available under CC BY 4.0. Downloaded from Wikimedia Commons Jan 2021.

Endovascular Aneurysm Repair. In Public Domain. Downloaded from Wikimedia Commons Jan 2021.

Mirena IUD with hand, by Sarahmirk. Made available under CC BY-SA 4.0. Downloaded from Wikimedia Commons Jan 2021.

#radiology #X-rays
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Fantastic! The video provides concise and highly valuable information. I appreciate the time and dedication you put into creating it. People like you make a difference.

josegarcia-xts
Автор

Such perfect timing, I'm studying abdominal radio right now!! Thank you for fantastic videos, I learn much more from you than from my med school

ippeikawano
Автор

Thankyouuu sooo muchh !! Im so grateful fr this video... Im having my OSCE in 2 days... and this was the best revision fr me!

senuridharmakeerthi
Автор

This amazing video explains almost everything related to Abdominal X-rays and the pathology involved, faster and better than a textbook. Thank you for the effort. The" 3-6-9 rule" is essential knowledge.

cornelbacauanu
Автор

just as i was thinking it would be amazing if Dr.Strong also made abdominal ones. Thank u a lot!

faxm
Автор

The best ever teaching video about abdominal x-ray, altogether very helpful, thanks a lot sir 🙏🏻🙏🏻💐💐

maryamzamani
Автор

Thank you so much for these videos. The only thing that would make them even better is the findings' association with a specific clinical scenario. We are often told not to treat the investigation results but treat the patient. Having a few clinical correlates with the various findings would bring the concept together. Thank you so much for your time and energy.

shahedahfornah
Автор

Excellent video, Dr. Strong. It'd be interesting to see your take on common abnormalities compared on different imaging modalities, and the decision-making involved in choosing which would be most appropriate to obtain.

Omnis
Автор

Amazing as always! Thank you, Dr Strong. I always look forward to your videos.

shail
Автор

Your CXR series was top notch thanks for making these Dr

RakhtanQ
Автор

This is how to make a challenging topic nice and easy. Thank you for your time

abbasabbass
Автор

thank you, doc. Amaze as always. hope you make also for CT scan.

arabiahlampa
Автор

This is the perfect video! Thanks for the effort

claudiasimonelee
Автор

Thank you so much for this very great series ❤️❤️❤️
I wish you all the best 💕

Itsyasr
Автор

That was very helpful! Thank you doctor👍

nickyvalana
Автор

Thank you. The explanation is very useful.

poohpkk
Автор

4:49 thank you Dr Strong for another brilliant video

Just one question; my specialty area is oncology & I often order AXR to assess stool burden; you mention that you don’t use AXR for this indication

How do you assess stool burden?

Regards EN

eliasnasser
Автор

Thank you very much sir, much appreciated 🙏

BENNETLANDSMANN
Автор

My God, I'm in gratitude for you sharing your expertise online. Thank you!!

LisaGorman-bu
Автор

BBC approach:

Bowel and other organs: small bowel, large bowel, lungs, liver, gallbladder, stomach, psoas muscles, kidneys, spleen and bladder.

Bones: ribs, lumbar vertebrae, sacrum, coccyx, pelvis and proximal femurs.

Calcification and artefact (e.g. renal stones)

MedNerdDrWaqasFazal