Sir appreciate to all cases but in last case i have doubt about present last case in this video OSTEUM LCX STENT is short because land on the edge of OM1 acc to me stent is taken long 6mm to cross the OM1 due to in future if any disease occur in OM 1 if any operator treat this easily to treat in future i see your all caese excellent knowledge
@zahedullah50383 күн бұрын
Thank you sir
@namphan69115 күн бұрын
Thank you for such a fantastic lecture Professor. In my experience, the issue of STEMI late-comers still has quite a bit of nuances. Let me present a specific scenario to illustrate my point: Anterior STEMI (QS + STe 1mm in V1 -> V4), chest pain suggestive of angina 5 days ago, hs Troponin T 2603 -> 2720 ng/L. Bedside echo: LVEF 35%, ischemic heart disease, LV not dilated. The patient eventually underwent elective invasive angiography the next day (Class IIB per your lecture) which revealed total occlusion of ostial LAD, non-significant stenosis of LCx and RCA. 1/ If the patient still complains of pain and distress, will you PCI the occluded LAD? 2/ If the patient no longer has chest pain, I understand that PCI is not indicated in this patient (OAT trial). However, given the LVEF of 35% (most likely left ventricular dysfunction/heart failure post MI), how would you manage this patient after the angiogram? Will you do stress test to further evaluate ischemia (and thus, indication for PCI of the occluded LAD), and if yes, how (which modality) and when (timing post STEMI)? 3/ If the patient no longer has chest pain, but the main symptom now is dyspnea suggestive of congestion due to heart failure post-MI (say Killip II, elevated NT-proBNP), will there be indication for LAD PCI?
@EMILIOFABIAN245 күн бұрын
Vikhram is killing it! 😎
@sarge50007 күн бұрын
Concepts that are poorly understood by most experienced cardiologists 👍🏼
@nouraldeenmanasrah35018 күн бұрын
Thank you for the amazing lecture
@dr.ajab-kharoty129910 күн бұрын
You are amazing sir, your lectures are guidelines in intervention
@ratheraltaf54112 күн бұрын
❤❤❤
@ratheraltaf54112 күн бұрын
Thank you so much sir
@dr.ajab-kharoty129912 күн бұрын
Fabulous sir thanks 🙏
@anuppusate255913 күн бұрын
Thank you Sir
@tom1129813 күн бұрын
excellent presentation, the best till date to cover this topic, I would like to add that souh 0.3 wire is very effective in wiring in these cases.
@user-cf9sm6tx1v13 күн бұрын
very nice and educational cases and lecture for us many thanks
@pavelsomov829714 күн бұрын
Thank you for such a great presentation! What do you think about suoh 03 wire for iatrogenic dissection? We have some data about this wire - safe and always goes in true lumen!
@cristianolisi300115 күн бұрын
Thank you Prof.Hanna for this exaustive lesson of iatrogeniic coronary dissections. I think that this lesson will improve our clinical practice. Dr. Cristiano Lisi, Interventional Cardiologist San Luca Hospital, Lucca, Italy. Many thanks
@petarbeslic99115 күн бұрын
You're simply the best!
@Dr.YudhavirsinghShekhawa-se4iw16 күн бұрын
Thank you Dr Hanna sir....
@haiderguru755116 күн бұрын
Thank you
@studentforlife968716 күн бұрын
Thank you so much Pr Hanna !!!
@Aliahani123417 күн бұрын
From Egypt 🇪🇬 You are the best teacher ever I have one question please, Could we do cutting balloon and observe in your first case? If we undersized the stent should we take another look one month later?
@violetag.343017 күн бұрын
❤
@tompagano901517 күн бұрын
AL catheters , especially for the RCA, especially 7 and 8 French , are WEAPONS. I remember being a first/ second year fellow back in ‘80 - ‘81. If Dr. S. , the Chief, had to use a 8 French AL 2 for even the LCA, it was going to be a long day in the lab and the Surgeon was going to be busy! The catheters in those days were a piece of work. Ah, the “ good old days”.
@violetag.343017 күн бұрын
❤
@zubairwarraich24217 күн бұрын
Thank you so much Dr Hanna❤
@vvasavvat17 күн бұрын
Thank you 😊
@AshokKumar-dn5tu18 күн бұрын
Great presentation as usual sir, thanks a lot.
@user-cu3lf3qc3u18 күн бұрын
Amazing lectures and a great book on hemodynamics. There can be a difference between PCWP and LV if there is some constriction at AV groove or Mitral stenosis. With a LV-PCWP trace alone can we diagnose CCP? Another point - IVC pressure is not affected by respiration while SVC is affected because IVC is mainly abdominal and not thoracic ?
@yousifahmed49223 күн бұрын
Thank you very much
@ahmeddaoud990125 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot
@Mohamed-cz7kc26 күн бұрын
Thank you sir❤
@ahmeddaoud990129 күн бұрын
Deeply Thanks
@ahmeddaoud990129 күн бұрын
Awesome Lecture , Thanks a lot
@saiko8407Ай бұрын
Great Thanks Sir
@disoxy1Ай бұрын
Thank you Dr. Hanna. How about manual aspiration thrombectomy through guideliner or other type of aspiration catheter, instead of Penumbra System?
@Proud_kaafir_72Ай бұрын
Can i get the pdf of this legendary lecture
@disoxy1Ай бұрын
Thank you for your amazing talk~~
@sheraligowani9029Ай бұрын
Excellent
@xtsreaper2Ай бұрын
Very interesting viedo again
@rajthapa1997Ай бұрын
Thank you sir for one more great lecture as always.
@user-lt5no1xt1zАй бұрын
Great vid ❤
@jed5356Ай бұрын
Huge thanks to you. The work you put in throughout your videos and textbook helps us immensely.
@rajthapa1997Ай бұрын
Thank you sir for one more clinical pearls
@dr.settapongpmk4374Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing. I have one question for TAP, which wire do you recemended to use for final POT ?
@eliashanna8248Ай бұрын
We use the MB wire for final POT. You may review a video animation of the TAP steps I have under Bifurcation LM part 1: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/f7tkZq57vq_apWw.html
@dr.settapongpmk437424 күн бұрын
@@eliashanna8248 Thank you Sir
@vvasavvatАй бұрын
Thank you. This is very helpful 😊😊
@NikesnipeАй бұрын
Thanks a Million Times
@Mohamed-cz7kcАй бұрын
Thank you our great prof thank you a million
@kzhralozАй бұрын
Thanks my mentor
@annas890Ай бұрын
I am a cardiology fellow and i've watched lots of videos throughout my medical training. this is one of the best overview videos of any topic I've ever seen, thank you!
@RoshanLovesallАй бұрын
Elias, you r really doing good work, by helping Cardiology residents throughout the world, and thereby saving thousands of lives.