Procedure Ready: Ob/Gyn (formerly called Pimped Ob/Gyn) is a podcast aimed at medical, PA, and NP students who are entering their clinical rotation in Ob/Gyn. It covers topics including Your Ob/Gyn Survival Guide-Tips and Tricks, Labor and Delivery, Vaginal deliveries, C-sections, Hysterectomies, and more.
Each podcast walks you through a portion of what you’ll experience during your clinical rotations, gives you tips for excelling, preps you for the clinical questioning that’ll occur, and sets you up to overall Honor the rotation!
Email podcasts@procedureready.com with comments, questions, and episode ideas.
##Legal Disclaimer## The opinions expressed within this content are solely the speakers' and do not reflect the opinions and beliefs of their employers or affiliates.
All content for Procedure Ready: Ob/Gyn is the property of Jennifer Doorey, MD, MS and is served directly from their servers
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Procedure Ready: Ob/Gyn (formerly called Pimped Ob/Gyn) is a podcast aimed at medical, PA, and NP students who are entering their clinical rotation in Ob/Gyn. It covers topics including Your Ob/Gyn Survival Guide-Tips and Tricks, Labor and Delivery, Vaginal deliveries, C-sections, Hysterectomies, and more.
Each podcast walks you through a portion of what you’ll experience during your clinical rotations, gives you tips for excelling, preps you for the clinical questioning that’ll occur, and sets you up to overall Honor the rotation!
Email podcasts@procedureready.com with comments, questions, and episode ideas.
##Legal Disclaimer## The opinions expressed within this content are solely the speakers' and do not reflect the opinions and beliefs of their employers or affiliates.
Why: ASCCP guidelines (there is an app! Or PDF)
Cervical dysplasia — caused by HPV
CIN I–CIN3 is a progression
Risk factors: Smoking, other STIs including HIV, immunodeficiency
Histology: Increased Nuclear: cytoplasmic ratio when abnormal
Acetic Acid: exact mechanism unknown, the higher N:C ratio cells (aka abnormal cells) reflect more light and appear white.
Lugols: Iodine rich-reacts with glycogen in normal squamous cells so they appear dark. Non-staining cells are abnormal.
HPV — changes
Colpo:
Increased vascularity, punctations, mosaicism, surface contour changes
LEEP:
Stain abnormality and know where abnormal biopsy was taken
Single pass is ideal–tag a side for orientation
+/- Top Hat depending on ECC result
CKC:
Higher up in cervical canal, but more complications
No electricity– okay if pregnant
Procedure Ready: Ob/Gyn
Procedure Ready: Ob/Gyn (formerly called Pimped Ob/Gyn) is a podcast aimed at medical, PA, and NP students who are entering their clinical rotation in Ob/Gyn. It covers topics including Your Ob/Gyn Survival Guide-Tips and Tricks, Labor and Delivery, Vaginal deliveries, C-sections, Hysterectomies, and more.
Each podcast walks you through a portion of what you’ll experience during your clinical rotations, gives you tips for excelling, preps you for the clinical questioning that’ll occur, and sets you up to overall Honor the rotation!
Email podcasts@procedureready.com with comments, questions, and episode ideas.
##Legal Disclaimer## The opinions expressed within this content are solely the speakers' and do not reflect the opinions and beliefs of their employers or affiliates.