The MedEd Learning Experience podcast is a weekly podcast series that provides brief, interview-style discussions with clinical experts and is designed to teach safe and effective use of different therapies in patient monitoring and respiratory interventions. The podcast will feature discussions on anesthesia and brain monitoring, unplanned extubation in the NICU, routine intubation with video laryngoscopy, challenges in the NICU, the value of NIRS in clinical practice in the NICU, non-invasive and invasive ventilation in the NICU, and more.
All content for MedEd Learning Experience is the property of Medtronic and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The MedEd Learning Experience podcast is a weekly podcast series that provides brief, interview-style discussions with clinical experts and is designed to teach safe and effective use of different therapies in patient monitoring and respiratory interventions. The podcast will feature discussions on anesthesia and brain monitoring, unplanned extubation in the NICU, routine intubation with video laryngoscopy, challenges in the NICU, the value of NIRS in clinical practice in the NICU, non-invasive and invasive ventilation in the NICU, and more.
Dr. Ashish Chawla MD, Brian D. Berry Jr, RN, BSN, CRNA, MS, MBA, and Linda Erfle, BSN, RN describe how capnography can help clinicians identify airway obstructions that would otherwise go unrecognized leading to adverse events.
Dr. Ashish Chawla MD, Brian D. Berry Jr, RN, BSN, CRNA, MS, MBA, and Linda Erfle, BSN, RN review the role of sedation and endoscopy nurses play in preventing respiratory compromise.
Dr. Ashish Chawla MD, Brian D. Berry Jr, RN, BSN, CRNA, MS, MBA, and Linda Erfle, BSN, RN review a case where a patient suffered respiratory compromise and discuss whether capnography may have led to earlier detection and intervention.
Dr. Ashish Chawla MD and Brian D. Berry Jr. RN, BSN, CRNA, MS, MBA discuss whether technology can be used to improve the quality of care during procedural sedation.
For this segment, we will review how the various components of the Nellcor™ pulse oximetry system contribute to the quick and accurate acquisition of the true pulsatile signal.
For this segment, we will learn how pulse oximetry uses near infrared light to detect the cardiac induced pulsatile signal of arterial blood and then measures the percentage of oxygenated hemoglobin in arterial blood.
For this segment, we will discuss the measurement of SpO2 and pulse rate, pulse oximetry accuracy standards, and the patient factors that can impact SpO2 and pulse rate accuracy.
For this segment, we will review the evidence evaluating the effect of skin pigmentation on the accuracy of pulse oximetry and consider the consequences for clinical practice.
Eli Kuhlmann, Sr. Research Manager at Medtronic, teaches us how the concentration of melanin influences the measurement regional oxygen saturation via NIRS.
Dr. Ronald Bronicki, Professor of Pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine, Section of Critical Care Medicine & Cardiology at Texas Children’s Hospital, discusses the influence skin pigmentation has on the accuracy of NIRS readings and consider the consequences for clinical practice.
Dr. Ronald Bronicki, Professor of Pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine, Section of Critical Care Medicine & Cardiology at Texas Children’s Hospital, reviews the body of literature evaluating the value of somatic and cerebral regional oximetry in pediatric patients.
The MedEd Learning Experience podcast is a weekly podcast series that provides brief, interview-style discussions with clinical experts and is designed to teach safe and effective use of different therapies in patient monitoring and respiratory interventions. The podcast will feature discussions on anesthesia and brain monitoring, unplanned extubation in the NICU, routine intubation with video laryngoscopy, challenges in the NICU, the value of NIRS in clinical practice in the NICU, non-invasive and invasive ventilation in the NICU, and more.