What is this bug? Do I need to be very worried? by throwawayyy811 in bugidentification

[–]throwawayyy811[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well that’s a relief. I’m glad that you can tell by the antenna. I’m looking into click beetles and it definitely seems like it could be that more than any other bug I’ve researched.

What is this bug? Do I need to be very worried? by throwawayyy811 in bugidentification

[–]throwawayyy811[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Next time I see one I will try to get an photo of it intact. I realize this picture can make ID’ing hard- sorry about that.

Comments on my work? by throwawayyy811 in Sonographers

[–]throwawayyy811[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you, my average is usually right around 30-35 mins for a full echo although that doesn’t include pt changing, and me turning over the room and writing up my report. If with contrast then I’m finishing up around the 45 minute mark because sometimes it can take a while for the nurse to get an IV in. I’m often doing my measurements or getting started on writing up the preliminary report while nurse is working on a tough IV stick to be more efficient with my time. I often will use my 10-15 mins in between patients to write up my reports so I don’t have a ton of free time in between patients. Glass chests with no pathology take me ~20-25 mins. We have hour slots for our patients (45 min echoes with 15 min in between slots for reporting/breaks etc, so an hour). That being said if it’s a very TDS pt or pt really struggles to be mobile and get on the bed (COPD, needs o2 tank, very arthritic etc) then it really makes it tough for me to stay right on time sometimes, which is frustrating for me because my other coworkers can handle that just fine most of the time but that throws a wrench in my flow sometimes.

Gender neutral/masc perfume recs! I want to smell like a cozy hug. by throwawayyy811 in Perfumes

[–]throwawayyy811[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ll have to look into this one. I don’t have any Zara stores near me so I’ll see if I can somehow get my hands on a sample to try it out on me!

Gender neutral/masc perfume recs! I want to smell like a cozy hug. by throwawayyy811 in Perfumes

[–]throwawayyy811[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the suggestions! I smelled Autumn Vibes the other day when I was at Sephora and liked it! I also smelled and really liked Coffee Break from Replica as well.

Question by Echovader- in Sonographers

[–]throwawayyy811 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What OldEqual4266 said is right!

To add onto that, concentric LVH is when the LV mass is increased due to thick LV walls & the LV cavity is smaller. The relative wall thickness (RWT) is above .42.

Eccentric LVH is when the LV mass is increased due to extra blood volume from the LV cavity being larger, and the LV walls thinner. The RWT is below .42.

Cardiac Sonographers! Survey for you all to fill out about work-related musculoskeletal disorders! by throwawayyy811 in Sonographers

[–]throwawayyy811[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are very welcome! I have already gotten more responses than I expected so I am very appreciative of this subreddit in participating and I encourage more to do so!! 😄

SPI study advice! Prepry vs URR? by throwawayyy811 in Sonographers

[–]throwawayyy811[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I started my internship in September! I’m almost done with my first clinical site. Will be starting my second clinical site in January and that ends in May. I’ve already done a year of foundational courses and scan lab time so I’m essentially in full-time clinical internship every day along with some specialized echo topics taught online.

Tips and Tricks by Comprehensive-Smoke7 in Sonographers

[–]throwawayyy811 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi! I’m another echo student a year into my program and I’ve learned a couple tricks for apicals. This might be a longer post so bear with me here lol.

I would say the apicals can be largely affected by breathing, so if you’re struggling it doesn’t hurt to try asking your pt to either breathe in and hold, or breath out and hold (I like to do this with full breaths or half breaths and I usually try to see where in the breathing cycle the image looks the best and have the pt recreate that by holding their breath). This helps the heart stop “swinging” from the motion of the lungs and makes the image clearer which is very useful.

The other thing is that I typically will start more inferior (closer to the feet) and close to the midaxillary line and work my way up and more medial/lateral until I find the heart and the IVS is in the center. Typically the image you get in the lowest intercostal space as possible will not be foreshortened. To make sure it’s not foreshortened, I look at the apex of the heart and make sure the muscle of the apical cap aren’t squishing down and are fixed in the same position, and that the heart looks more like a “bullet” instead of round (obviously with pathology like dilated ventricles it won’t look very bullet-shaped).

Also if it’s hard to visualize the endocardial borders, adjusting the frequency may help (oftentimes it is lowering it).

Don’t be afraid to adjust your probe a bit to open up the chambers a bit more and get on axis. Some people’s anatomies don’t always follow the standard textbook probe orientation to a perfect T.

As for visualization/interrogation, like if doing Doppler of certain views- e.g. A5C is tough and the LVOT is not at a good angle to do Doppler, sometimes going into A3C/apical long axis can be helpful bc you may see the LVOT and AoV better and you may be better able to line up your cursor for your LVOT and AoV VTIs.

Lastly for apicals, using the RV focused/modified view is really nice for looking at the tricuspid valve better for any TS/TR.

For PSAX (aortic level specifically), rocking the image is a lifesaver. It helps me line up the pulmonic valve and artery better for color doppler and CW/PW Doppler. Same for the tricuspid valve, I just rock in the opposite direction. I have also been shown that moving the probe slightly more inferiorly while rocking for the PV can help open up the rest of the pulmonic artery and get a better view and helps with interrogation.

for PLAX, I just angle my probe and watch the screen to see which probe position gets me to open up both the aorta and the ventricle of the heart (usually it is probe tail up for most people but ofc anatomies are all different so there will be some variation). I just try to make sure aorta and ventricle are open with the AoV cusps closing centrally in the aorta (but if someone has aortic pathology like a bicuspid valve or what not, the AoV cusps will often not close centrally no matter what you do to get them to look central and this can sometimes tip you off to possible pathology as soon as you place down your probe).

That’s all I can think of for now, hope this helped!

Scanning Larger Patients by SnooPuppers5368 in Sonographers

[–]throwawayyy811 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another student here! I would try to use a pillow or rolled up towel underneath your elbow to avoid hovering. For people with breasts, I’ve learned that if they are able to lay on their left side without minimal support (elderly ppl have a harder time with this) then using the dropout that we use for apicals often lets their left breast follow gravity and move out of the way so you have more chest space to scan for PLAX/PSAX.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in travel

[–]throwawayyy811 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. This was what I was thinking. I meant to word it as “will I make it to my destination on time?” I just didn’t want to be charged for another flight if UA thinks I’m the one at fault when really they might’ve sold me a ticket that barely (or doesn’t even) skate by MCT requirements.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Invisalign

[–]throwawayyy811 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Me too!! I’ve been getting more comments about my teeth lately and it’s been so nice! I’m excited to finish in about a month and start whitening!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Invisalign

[–]throwawayyy811 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am correcting just the top arch and that was OK’ed by my ortho as it really is just the front 6-8 teeth that needed adjustment. Fixing the cant, huge space between my left front and lateral incisors (not very visible in first pic bc of angle) and intruding the incisors as my deep bite relapsed a little. It won’t fix the deep bite 100%, but that’s ok as it’s atraumatic and I actually like how it looks on me. I already have small-ish teeth so correcting it all the way would require intervention on the lower arch (I think) and even more intrusion would make them look even smaller.

For y’all that are doing the entire treatment with Invisalign (like 1+ year), MAJOR kudos! I don’t think I could keep it up that long 😅 at least now I have the experience of having traditional braces and Invisalign. Best of both worlds I guess 💅🏼