- published: 26 May 2011
- views: 14446
- author: InteractiveBiology
6:20
057 Pressure Reflexes and Mean Arterial Pressure
http://www.interactive-biology.com - Making Biology Fun http://www.interactive-biology.com...
published: 26 May 2011
author: InteractiveBiology
057 Pressure Reflexes and Mean Arterial Pressure
http://www.interactive-biology.com - Making Biology Fun http://www.interactive-biology.com/community/ - Get your BIology Questions Answered What happens when...
- published: 26 May 2011
- views: 14446
- author: InteractiveBiology
3:21
An Interesting Neck Swelling : A Carotid Body Tumour.wmv
Neck Swellings in all age groups are a relatively common occurrence. Usually they are from...
published: 07 Apr 2012
author: 1234irineu
An Interesting Neck Swelling : A Carotid Body Tumour.wmv
Neck Swellings in all age groups are a relatively common occurrence. Usually they are from Lymph Node enlargements from various causes or from Thyroid gland ...
- published: 07 Apr 2012
- views: 2799
- author: 1234irineu
1:42
The Carotid Body Tumor
THE CAROTID BODY TUMOR Introduction: Among the nonchromaffin paragangliomas, the carotid b...
published: 13 Jan 2009
author: Demagogue8990
The Carotid Body Tumor
THE CAROTID BODY TUMOR Introduction: Among the nonchromaffin paragangliomas, the carotid body tumor is second in frequency to the glomus jugulare tumor. Desp...
- published: 13 Jan 2009
- views: 24020
- author: Demagogue8990
13:47
CAROTID BODY TUMOR, DR.MUDIT AGARWAL, CANCER SURGEON ,DELHI ,09910206437
HEAD NECK....
published: 22 Mar 2012
author: Mudit Agarwal
CAROTID BODY TUMOR, DR.MUDIT AGARWAL, CANCER SURGEON ,DELHI ,09910206437
HEAD NECK.
- published: 22 Mar 2012
- views: 558
- author: Mudit Agarwal
3:02
Carotid Body Tumor
Carotid Body Tumor / Surgical Resection Arellano N, Ojeda O. HOSPITAL EUGENIO ESPEJO Quito...
published: 19 Aug 2012
author: Oscar Ojeda
Carotid Body Tumor
Carotid Body Tumor / Surgical Resection Arellano N, Ojeda O. HOSPITAL EUGENIO ESPEJO Quito - Ecuador.
- published: 19 Aug 2012
- views: 119
- author: Oscar Ojeda
1:12
carotid body tumour
a patient with an asymptomatc l carotid body tumour anyone who had the sameplease share yo...
published: 22 Nov 2009
author: crescendoclub
carotid body tumour
a patient with an asymptomatc l carotid body tumour anyone who had the sameplease share your views.
- published: 22 Nov 2009
- views: 4664
- author: crescendoclub
0:33
Carotid Body Tumor Resection (Paraganglioma)
Created by Northwest ENT and Allergy Associates with offices in Marietta, Canton, Elijay, ...
published: 17 Oct 2011
author: NorthwestENT
Carotid Body Tumor Resection (Paraganglioma)
Created by Northwest ENT and Allergy Associates with offices in Marietta, Canton, Elijay, Woodstock, and Atlanta, GA. This is the view of a neck after resect...
- published: 17 Oct 2011
- views: 1911
- author: NorthwestENT
1:08
Sultan Technique for Excision of Carotid Body Tumor
Sub-adventitial dissection is the most important trick in removing a chemodectoma by avoid...
published: 24 Nov 2012
author: sherif sultan
Sultan Technique for Excision of Carotid Body Tumor
Sub-adventitial dissection is the most important trick in removing a chemodectoma by avoiding bleeding during surgery. The Carotid Body tumour usually occupi...
- published: 24 Nov 2012
- views: 101
- author: sherif sultan
1:33
Surgical Management of Glomus Carotid Tumor
The surgical technique of surgical removal of glomus of carotid body is presented....
published: 06 Dec 2012
author: Luis Borba
Surgical Management of Glomus Carotid Tumor
The surgical technique of surgical removal of glomus of carotid body is presented.
- published: 06 Dec 2012
- views: 52
- author: Luis Borba
0:31
Dr. Carlo Astini - Dr. Mohamed Sheeraye - Carotid body tumor- Hopital de Balbala- Djibouti
40 YRS OLD FEMALE WITH - UNCONTROLLED HYPERTENSION - MASS RT SIDE OF THE NECK....
published: 01 Feb 2011
author: HERTY2003
Dr. Carlo Astini - Dr. Mohamed Sheeraye - Carotid body tumor- Hopital de Balbala- Djibouti
40 YRS OLD FEMALE WITH - UNCONTROLLED HYPERTENSION - MASS RT SIDE OF THE NECK.
- published: 01 Feb 2011
- views: 2758
- author: HERTY2003
0:16
carotid body demo by Dr Chong
...
published: 14 Aug 2009
author: entcentral
carotid body demo by Dr Chong
- published: 14 Aug 2009
- views: 2850
- author: entcentral
Vimeo results:
2:18
Carotid Body Tumor - Tumor Glômico
published: 27 Oct 2009
author: Robson Miranda
Carotid Body Tumor - Tumor Glômico
1:08
Sultan Technique for Excision of Carotid Body Tumour
Sub-adventitial dissection is the most important trick in removing a chemodectoma by avoid...
published: 11 Jun 2012
author: Western Vascular Institute
Sultan Technique for Excision of Carotid Body Tumour
Sub-adventitial dissection is the most important trick in removing a chemodectoma by avoiding bleeding during surgery. The Carotid Body tumour usually occupies the bed between external carotid and the internal carotid pushing the hypoglossal nerve anteriorly. Kaltostat with adrenaline for few minutes will arrest the bleeding from the sub-adventitial plane.
4:42
Dr. Ravish Sachar - Treatment of Carotid Artery Disease
http://WHVheart.com - Hello. I’m Dr. Sachar with Wake Heart & Vascular, and today, I’d li...
published: 20 Oct 2011
author: WHVheart
Dr. Ravish Sachar - Treatment of Carotid Artery Disease
http://WHVheart.com - Hello. I’m Dr. Sachar with Wake Heart & Vascular, and today, I’d like to talk to you today about carotid artery disease. You may have heard of carotid artery disease. Somebody in your family — a loved one — may have carotid artery disease. You may have had a procedure done for it, so let’s talk a little bit about carotid artery disease.
Carotid arteries are the arteries that go up on either side of the neck. They supply the right side of the brain and the left side of the brain, and they provide the predominant amount of blood flow up to the brain. These arteries can develop blockages right around where the angle of the jaw is. And when these blockages develop, they can put patients at increased risk of a stroke.
Now, strokes can occur for many, many reasons. About one fourth of all strokes occur because of blockages in the carotid arteries, either on the left side or the right side. And in general, when blockages get to be 80% or more, they tend to increase the risk of stroke, but sometimes strokes can occur even in blockages of more than 50%.
These blockages cause strokes by little pieces of plaque breaking off from the blockage and going up to the brain and blocking an artery up in the brain, and thereby stopping blood flow to that portion of the brain, which then makes the cells of that portion of the brain die, and that results in a stroke. A stroke can cause things such as blindness, loss of speech, or paralysis of one side, or the inside of the body. So, of course, it’s very important to find out if there’s a blockage and get it treated, if needed.
One of the first questions one might ask is why does one develop carotid artery blockages? Well, the same things that cause blockages in the heart can cause also cause blockages in the carotid arteries. The organ system which is the arteries or the endothelium, is exactly the same in the heart, in the legs, in the carotids, so the same risk factors apply to all three areas. Those risk factors are age, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, smoking, diabetes, and a family history. So if you have any of those things, then that puts you at risk of carotid artery disease. It doesn’t mean that you’ll necessarily develop it, but it may be something that your doctor may want you to look into.
Now, once a blockage has formed in the carotid artery, and if it’s more than 80%, then we may need to fix it. And there are two ways of fixing a blockage that is more than 80%. One is surgery, where we go inside, open up the artery, clean out the plaque, stitch up the artery again, and stitch up the skin on top of the artery in the neck. That is the traditional way things have been done in the past. That procedure is called a carotid endarterectomy or a surgical removal of the plaque from the carotid artery.
More recently — and by “recently”, I mean about 10 to 12 years — we have been doing carotid artery stenting, which ends up being a lot easier for the patient. We go in from the leg or from the arm. We can put a tube up into the neck. We advance a filter beyond the blockage first, then, we treat the blockage with a stent, and then take the filter out. The purpose of the filter is so that if — during the manipulation of the blockage with the stent — anything breaks off, it can get caught in the filter and we pull it out, so it doesn’t go up into the brain and cause a stroke. Now, which is better? Well, it remains to be seen which is better in all patients, but what we know so far is that there are patients that are too high a risk for surgery.
There are many reasons why a patient may be too high a risk for surgery. It may be that you have had heart failure, you’ve had heart attacks, that you have had previous surgery in the neck. You may have lung disease. There’s a whole host of reasons why somebody may be too high a risk for open surgery. In those patients it has been shown that stenting is equally safe, if not better, than surgery. And the FDA approved stenting for those type of patients in 2004. We have treated many patients such as that. Those that are too high a risk for surgery — we’ve treated many such patients with stenting, and they’ve done very well.
More recently, a very large study was done which compared people who are not high risk for surgery — those who have blockages, but are equally suited for surgery or for stenting. In those patients, a large study was done and showed that stenting and surgery are equal — that patients do equally well in terms of future risk of heart attacks, stroke, and other major complications with surgery or for stenting, and therefore as a result of that study, the FDA has now approved stenting for everybody who does not necessarily have high risk features for surgery.
So this field is evolving. If somebody in your family or you have a blockage in your carotid arteries and you want further evaluat
2:05
What Your Body is Saying About Your Health
Marian Alpaugh figured something was wrong with her heart.
“I had a doctor’s appointment,...
published: 24 Oct 2011
author: Lee Memorial Health System
What Your Body is Saying About Your Health
Marian Alpaugh figured something was wrong with her heart.
“I had a doctor’s appointment, and when I went in he said ‘Marian your heart’s racing something fierce’. So he sent me right into the hospital and then of course I had all those tests.”
Fortunately she was in tune with her health. Her doctor found an irregular rhythm and was able to treat it. People could learn from her; many times your body is trying to tell you something.
“Sometimes we meet people first in the emergency room once they have a heart attack. On the other hand we have a number of people coming here and saying you know I have that family history,” says Dr. Vladimir Ilic, a cardiologist with Lee Memorial Health System.
Doctors have some tests that you may not have heard of that are good indicators of your heart health.
One test is calcium score. Done with a simple CT scan, it shows the amount of calcium build up in the arteries.
“When you see some calcium, that’s already a marker of plaque formation. It’s very unusual to have calcium for some other reason,” says Dr. Ilic.
A second tool is advanced lipid testing. It measures the concentration of bad cholesterol in your blood.
“Not all the cholesterols are the same. So besides the basic lipid profile which is total cholesterol; LDL cholesterol which is bad cholesterol, HDL triglycerides,” says Dr. Ilic.
Another test is the carotid intima-media thickness test. It’s a 15-minute ultrasound that allows doctors to detect thickening in the neck arteries.
“Your carotid artery is very close to the skin. We can read it without a sonic evaluation we can see it clearly. You can see if there’s any plaque inside, it’s very noninvasive,” says Dr. Ilic.
These tests don’t predict a heart attack but should provide risk factors. Marian took the hint and is better off for it.
“Make sure you get your heart and all that stuff checked out at least once a year, if you have a problem then go and get it taken care of.”
Better to meet your cardiologist before you find yourself in an emergency situation.
View More Health Matters video segments at leememorial.org/healthmatters/
Lee Memorial Health System in Fort Myers, FL is the largest network of medical care facilities in Southwest Florida and is highly respected for its expertise, innovation and quality of care. For nearly a century, we've been providing our community with everything from primary care treatment to highly specialized care services and robotic assisted surgeries.
Visit leememorial.org
Youtube results:
1:22
Carotid body tumours - Tumore del glomo carotideo
Carotid body tumours. A 20-year single-institution experience. Chir Ital. 2006 Sep-Oct;58(...
published: 05 Jan 2009
author: casanarenato
Carotid body tumours - Tumore del glomo carotideo
Carotid body tumours. A 20-year single-institution experience. Chir Ital. 2006 Sep-Oct;58(5):631-5. Copyright© MD Casana R. www.renatocasana.it.
- published: 05 Jan 2009
- views: 2688
- author: casanarenato
2:00
Colorado Springs Carotid Surgery - Scott Hurlbert, MD, Memorial Vein Center
http://www.memorialvein.com | 719-634-8346 Colorado Springs vascular surgeon, Scott Hurlbe...
published: 20 Oct 2011
author: MemorialHealthSystem
Colorado Springs Carotid Surgery - Scott Hurlbert, MD, Memorial Vein Center
http://www.memorialvein.com | 719-634-8346 Colorado Springs vascular surgeon, Scott Hurlbert, MD, explains carotid surgery and the associated risks and likel...
- published: 20 Oct 2011
- views: 72
- author: MemorialHealthSystem
2:46
Locating Pulses of the Body: How to Find Them
Includes the following pulses: Temporal, Carotid, Brachial, Abdominal Aorta, Radial, Ulnar...
published: 26 Jan 2013
author: fostty01
Locating Pulses of the Body: How to Find Them
Includes the following pulses: Temporal, Carotid, Brachial, Abdominal Aorta, Radial, Ulnar, Dorsalis Pedis, Tibialis Posterior Remember when taking pulses to...
- published: 26 Jan 2013
- views: 567
- author: fostty01
46:47
EVAR, TEVAR and TAVR by Vikram Kashyap, MD, FACS.wmv
Dr. Vikram Kashyap discusses endovascular treatments of aortic pathologies at CWRU Departm...
published: 14 Feb 2013
author: CWRUmedicine
EVAR, TEVAR and TAVR by Vikram Kashyap, MD, FACS.wmv
Dr. Vikram Kashyap discusses endovascular treatments of aortic pathologies at CWRU Department of Medicine Grand Rounds.
- published: 14 Feb 2013
- views: 36
- author: CWRUmedicine