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The anatomy of the airway is incredibly important and fairly simple. The structures of the trachea and bronchi are adapted tubes that don't collapse with changes in pressure, and the mucociliary escalator has an important protective role.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
„Bronchiální astma je chronické onemocnění dýchacích cest, při němž dochází k zúžení cest dýchacích na zánětlivém podkladě. Dobrá zpráva je, že se dá vyléčit,“ popisuje doktorka Kateřina Cajthamlová v pořadu Vesele a zdravě.
Dr. Brian Lindsay, pulmonologist with UnityPoint Clinic Multi-Specialty, joins Dr. Arnold to discuss signs, symptoms and treatment of bronchitis. They also discuss recent air quality issues and how it can affect patients with lung conditions.To learn more about lung care, visit unitypoint.org.Do you have a question about a trending medical topic? Ask Dr. Arnold! Submit your question and it may be answered by Dr. Arnold on the podcast! Submit your questions at: https://www.unitypoint.org/cedarrapids/submit-a-question-for-the-mailbag.aspx If you have a topic you'd like Dr. Arnold to discuss with a guest on the podcast, shoot us an email at stlukescr@unitypoint.org.
The eleventh in our series on the thorax describes the Trachea, Bronchi and Tracheostomy. See our website for accompanying diagrams
Going Pro Yoga (Formerly the Yoga Teacher Evolution Podcast)
Do you want to incorporate the breath more into your yoga teaching? Or do you just want to better understand how breathing works, and how it benefits us? In this episode, Michael covers all the aspects of breathing relating to yoga. He discusses how we breathe, the basic science and understanding of the body parts involved in breathing, and how we can use different techniques to affect our breathing patterns. He also details the benefits and reasons for using different types of breathing, and how this applies to your yoga practice. Then he brings it all together by linking it to your yoga teaching. Check out the full episode to get everything you need to know on the breath relating to yoga: (01:04) We don't just breathe in oxygen… (02:52) Our lungs work like a vacuum (05:07) The lungs have branches like a tree called the Bronchi (09:05) What muscles control our breathing? (14:17) Shoulder and neck breathing often occurs due to stress or anxiety (19:38) Many yoga students can benefit from better breathing (21:30) Parts of the lungs go dormant when you sleep and when you don't use them (24:42) Breathing slow or fast, what's better? (25:58) The benefit of holding your breath (29:54) You can also force an exhale by using certain muscles… (33:34) Holding the bottom of your exhale is great for your vagus nerve (39:35) Applying the knowledge to your yoga teaching --- About Going Pro Yoga: Going Pro Yoga is the first platform dedicated to supporting teachers in furthering their education and helping you transfer what you learn to the ‘real world' of yoga immediately so that your confidence and your classes continue to grow! **Create a Free Account at Going Pro Yoga and receive access to: The first EVER Yoga Cueing System for over 120 yoga poses, with over 300 variations and modifications, to refine your teaching The first EVER Sequencing Vault with over 70 videos to plug-in-play and create your own sequences in minutes. The first EVER Injury Management and Injury Prevention Program for Yoga Teachers from a licensed Physical Therapist And so much more.. If you like what you see, there is an opportunity to become a founding member for a low-cost one time fee and you'll NEVER have to pay a monthly subscription. To Learn More, Visit Going Pro Yoga, and Create an Account for Free! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/goingproyoga/message
Acute bronchitis is a sudden swelling in the major airways into your lungs, called bronchi. It is usually caused by a virus, but it can also be caused by breathing in things that irritate your lungs, such as tobacco smoke, fumes, dust, and air pollution.
In questo episodio parleremo di asma bronchiale.Con l'aiuto degli specialisti dell'Ospedale Pediatrico Bambino Gesù, capiremo cos'è, quali sono le cause e come si cura.
I read from bronchi- to brontosaurus. The word of the episode is "brontosaurus". dictionarypod@gmail.com Facebook Twitter Instagram Patreon 917-727-5757
In the next two episodes we journey down the conduction zone and explore how air moves into the alveoli for gas exchange, continuing from the larynx and moving through the trachea and bronchi. Intro Song: Riot - Dance With The Dead Background Music: gfbeats - Talking Nonsense Sound Effects: zapsplat.com
Join Yvonne Brandenburg, RVT, VTS SAIM and Jordan Porter RVT, LVT, VTS SAIM as we talk about: Upper and Lower airways and knowing the different parts and their functions of each. Question of the Week What respiratory disease would you like to hear more about? Leave a comment at https://imfpp.org/episode28 Resources We Mentioned in the Show IMFPP Respiratory System https://www.internalmedicineforpetparents.com/respiratory.html Canine and Feline Practice Stertor and Stridor: Book Author(s): Ryane E. Englar DVM, DABVP (Canine and Feline Practice) First published:03 July 2019 https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119414612.ch34 Merck Veterinary Manual: Respiratory https://www.merckvetmanual.com/respiratory-system Overview of Respiratory Diseases of Small Animals : By Ned F. Kuehn , DVM, MS, DACVIM, Michigan Veterinary Specialists Content last modified Nov 2013 https://www.merckvetmanual.com/respiratory-system/respiratory-diseases-of-small-animals/overview-of-respiratory-diseases-of-small-animals Heart and Lung Sounds: Good Auscultation British Small Animal Veterinary Congress 2008 Mike K. Holgate, BVetMed, CertVC, MRCVS Mike Holgate Cardiology Referrals Ltd Alsager, Stoke-on-Trent https://www.vin.com/apputil/content/defaultadv1.aspx?pId=11254&catId=32185&id=3862993 Magic School Bus Episode (Lung oxygen exchange at 10 minutes) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8NPrAiTinNM Thanks so much for tuning in. Join us again next week for another episode! Get Access to the Technician Treasure Trove Sign up at https://imfpp.org/treasuretrove Thanks for listening! – Yvonne and Jordan
Hello, I'm Chance Reynolds. Okay, so I've recorded in my life probably well over 300 podcasts I've started and stopped, so tons of kind of little pet projects with podcasts with not a whole lot of, um, expectations that they would blow up in any massive way. Um, first one I did was one with my wife where we just talked about having our kid and just, it was just like a fun way to kind of communicate with each other and communicate about our son and have something that he could listen back to. That was kind of the idea behind that. And that one had a fair amount of listeners, like surprisingly we only probably did less than 50 episodes and I had one with a buddy of mine where we talk to like sports and entertainment and um, it just became like too hard to manage for us to manage our time and we both have families and we just kind of was getting like two Bronchi and it was like particularly going to a possibly hurt our possibilities of getting jobs. This was like right after I got barred and he had just started a new job and we were just like, this is, it's okay for us to talk like this when it's just you and I, but recording this is probably not good for our future. So we, we stopped doing that show and um, that one was, we got tons of downloads as well and uh, the most popular one I did that got by far the most downloads of anything was where I interviewed law school students and not just students. I interviewed kind of other professors, um, law school admission specialists, just people surrounding law school. Um, what else? I am randomly, like interviewed some lady who actually contacted me about this. She had been on Oprah Winfrey. She'd had a, like a lifetime movie made about this experience where she went to Mexico and like on some corporate retreat as an attorney and a fell off a horse or something. I can't remember exactly when. I think she felt no, a boogie board. She was boogie boarding and broke her neck and like died and they brought her back. She was paralyzed. And just as crazy, crazy story and I'll talk to her for like a couple of hours and I'm actually almost ended up going into business with this. It was a strange thing, but none of that is the point. The point is I've. I've done this podcast for about five months, four or five months. I think it took until after I hit the one hundredth episode for kind of a, a landslide like effect to happen. Like a slippery slope effect to happen with the, I don't know why I'm talking about is 5:00 in the morning, but for momentum to pick up on the podcast, it took a long time. Took 100 episodes where I really saw any results. But having done so many podcasts, I know it takes a lot of time. Not like rarely, unless you're starting off with an interview platform where you're interviewing big names and you're interviewing them about things that are kind of really niche. Are you going to be able to just blast off a podcast like in in popularity, even famous people start podcasts where they interview other famous people and those podcasts fail sometimes and that's kind of the most popular platform is the interview platform, so if you're going to start a podcast, you have to think about it as a long term project. It's like blogging. You can't just start blogging and expect people to read your blow. As hard as it is to put out content and to record content or write content, whatever it is you're doing to produce content, people are probably not going to be watching it or listening to it right off the bat. Youtube is kind of the exception. I haven't really figured out exactly how to get people to watch my youtube videos yet because mostly what I'm using youtube force like repurposing. I'm not doing any original content there. I'm like re purposing podcast stuff, facebook live stuff, and maybe that stuff just doesn't work well on Youtube. I don't know, but my goal isn't really to build my youtube right now. It's more about to be consistent with this podcast and do more of the facebook live stuff and that's what I've been doing. So with all of that stuff, you have to keep in mind that it takes a long time and you don't know what people want. Um, you may only have some episodes that you spend a lot of time thinking about, a lot of time recording, a lot of time researching what you want to talk about. And five people listened to that. Sometimes nobody will like to. People listened to it and you wonder are they even listening to it? And so you kind of, after you do a whole lot, you have a large sample size to say, okay, this is what people, these are the episodes that people liked. These are the topics that kind of got some traction and sometimes just about the way you name your episodes and you just look at that and go, okay, people like how to titles that are more likely to listen to those people. Like, you know, more personal stories. People like, you know, transformational stuff. And I'm, I'm talking about this on here because I recorded a podcast last week because actually a facebook live that I repurposed for a and I had to strip the audio off the facebook live and turned it into a podcast and um, it just got, blew all the other stuff I've ever done out of the water as far as for this podcast and got like several hundred downloads over the weekend. I just realized it this morning when I logged on, I was like, Oh shit, this thing actually like got some traction. So you have to give people what they want. If that's what people want to hear, it's just more of the personal stuff. They may have some other outlet to hear all of the tactical guidance or the legal compliance issues, all the other things that I can talk about. And then I do talk about it on here. Maybe some of that stuff's going to take a back seat to more personal stories of transformation. And that drives me to think maybe I'm going to have some interview more interview subjects on here that talk about their personal transformation stories. And it makes sense when you think about, that's what people like to hear. They like to hear stories. We look at the most popular podcasts. That's kind of a theme of a lot of the most popular ones. Even the business ones, um, that's just what people like to hear because that's what people go through. Those are the stories that we can all relate to and if you can't relate to it, it can inspire you that someone else went through something. And so that podcast that I did was about how I had gone from essentially being a high school dropout to becoming an attorney to just hold about that journey and all the stupid shit that I did on the way and you know, kind of, it's not like I had to overcome any big obstacle that was like outside of myself. It was overcoming like internal obstacles that I was creating for myself in order to succeed and kind of the steps that I took to do that. So if you didn't hear that episode, people seem to be enjoying that up. So to relating to it in some way. So check that out. I think that's episode 103. Um, and maybe [inaudible] I don't know. You'd have to look. I think this one's [inaudible] but I'm not a hundred percent sure either way. The point is that it takes a while for things to start working and you have to be patient and I'm so glad that I don't look. I haven't been looking at the numbers every day. I don't look at my stats sometimes at all. Um, during the week. Maybe I'll take a quick glance at them. I'm uploading, but I don't put any stock into. It doesn't change my motivation of whether when I wake up in the morning, if I'm going to put, if I'm going to record and post a new podcast or not, I just know I'm going to do it and it may be another year. I had originally thought that when I started recording this because I've seen how podcasts from doing so many of them, how long it takes for them to pick up. I had stopped doing my law school podcast for six, seven months before it hit like the 10,000 download mark and I'm not even close to 10,000 downloads on this one and I already have 100 episodes and that podcast was not even 40 episodes. I don't think it, it went well over 10,000 downloads, but it was way later and I wasn't promoting it. I wasn't bringing new people on, I wasn't running any ads, I never ran ads to that, like literally never one single ad to that podcast. I'm because I didn't know how to do that at that point. And so it just takes a long time for content to start working. So you have to be patient, you have to be consistent and um, it's not like this podcast is, you know, blowing up the charts and it's going to be up there with like, you know, the Gary v experience or something like that. I'm not striving for anything that big at all. Even it's just carving out a little niche for myself. I'm understanding what people want, improving my storytelling capabilities. Those are kind of the purpose of this and over ideas and helping people, providing value, but uh, you have to think about what are, what do people find valuable, not what you think that is valuable to them, what do they want from you? And so I'm going to start gearing my podcast towards giving the people what they want. That's a, you know, something that you should do in business and podcasts and content creation and whatever you're doing, that's the direction to go. Be patient, be consistent, and keep creating content because that content can live on six months from now. When I'm talking about right now, people will be stumbling upon this podcast. There's no doubt in my mind that that will happen because that's just the nature of content creation. So stick with it. I'm hope everybody had a great weekend. Hope you have good solid plans on what you want to accomplish this week. If you don't have some, some way of scheduling out, even if you're just doing a side hustle, um, how you're going to spend time on your business every day this week charted out today. That's what you should do at the, you know, on Sunday or at the beginning of the week is make sure that you have something charted out. So have a great week. I'll be checking in tomorrow and uh, go to, um, my facebook group, LLC, freedom.com/group. Get in my group. I'm going to be talking about all this stuff there. So see you there. My FB GROUP >>>>>LLCFreedom.com/group
Dr. Jed Gorden, Swedish Cancer Institute, describes the differences between bronchoscopy and endobronchial ultrasound, highlighting the advantages of EBUS in diagnosis and staging.
Dr. Jed Gorden, Swedish Cancer Institute, describes the differences between bronchoscopy and endobronchial ultrasound, highlighting the advantages of EBUS in diagnosis and staging.
Dr. Jed Gorden, Swedish Cancer Institute, describes the differences between bronchoscopy and endobronchial ultrasound, highlighting the advantages of EBUS in diagnosis and staging.
Interview with Brian Wecht; This Day in Skepticism: Chien-Shiung Wu; News Items: AI Doctor, Ball and Cup Magic, Gorilla in the Bronchi, Feathered Dino Follow Up; Who's That Noisy; Name That Logical Fallacy; Science or Fiction
Interview with Brian Wecht; This Day in Skepticism: Chien-Shiung Wu; News Items: AI Doctor, Ball and Cup Magic, Gorilla in the Bronchi, Feathered Dino Follow Up; Who's That Noisy; Name That Logical Fallacy; Science or Fiction
Andrew Bush, Professor of Paediatric Respirology Imperial College London, talks to Fernando Martinez, Professor of Pediatrics and Director of the Arizona Respiratory Center at University of Arizona, about recent developements in the understanding of the link between childhood asthma and infection.