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GIUSEPPE OTTAVIANI vol 1. Selected and mix by dj luca brambilla.mp3. We teach the physical exam and clinical bedside medicine. Watch our collection of free videos here. Our enema how-to videos cover everything you need to know to take effective, safe enemas at home. Watch our basic enema administration video to understand the process from start to finish. Once you’re ready, you’ll have the resources to expand your regimen into a more complete cleanse with our enema series video. We even cover essential oil.
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Posted in Barium Enema Experiences on 2005-01-24 22:49:16
Stonefox Enema Public Health
This is nonsense. When I had my barium enema, it was administered at the radiology department of a local hospital. I arrived at the hospital and recieved directions to the radiology department. After checking in I was shown the dressing room and told to remove everything except my socks. I was given a gown to put on with the opening in the back, and a pair of pajama pants. I was also given a clip board with a questionaire to fill out.Soon the female tech arrived, took the clip board, and escorted me to the exam room. She explained the procedure to me and then told me that she was going to step out while I removed the pants. I was told to lay on my left side on the exam table.
I remember the site of the enema bag hanging from the IV pole. It was filled with the white barium. From the bag ran a long latex hose attaged to a bardex nozzle. Bardex nozzles aren't used much anymore. Now most places us the easier to insert ez-em nozzles.I tried to cover myself as best as I could with the gown while I laid there for a few minutes until she returned.
When she stepped back into the room she told me to bring my right leg up toward my chest. She also pushed back the exam gown so that my bottom was exposed. I could hear her put on the exam glove and then I felt one of her hands on my bottom spreading it apart and then her finger was inserted quickly into my rectum to lubricate my anus. Next she lubricated the bardex nozzle and pushed it into my rectum. This is a fairly wide nozzle and it literally took my breath away as it was being inserted. The nozzle was inflated, leaving with the the sensation that I needed to have a BM.The tech covered me with a sheet and told me that the radiologist would be in shortly.From behind a glass partition, the radiologist introduced himself and then I felt the cold barium start to flow into my rectum.
I was told to turn into several different positons while he watched on the flouroscope. After that part was completed the technologist took several regular xrays.
I remember at one point when she was finished, I was laying there with the nozzle still in my bottom and the sheet had come off which was covering me. I heard several other voices in the room and it seems that one or two Techs had come in for some reason or another.She had one more xray to take but first she had to remove the nozzle. It was deflated and then pulled from my rectum.
I was told to use the bathroom and then she took one last post evac xray.The procedure isn't that bad. Certainly the worst part of it is taking the laxative prep the night before to get cleaned out.
I remember the site of the enema bag hanging from the IV pole. It was filled with the white barium. From the bag ran a long latex hose attaged to a bardex nozzle. Bardex nozzles aren't used much anymore. Now most places us the easier to insert ez-em nozzles.I tried to cover myself as best as I could with the gown while I laid there for a few minutes until she returned.
When she stepped back into the room she told me to bring my right leg up toward my chest. She also pushed back the exam gown so that my bottom was exposed. I could hear her put on the exam glove and then I felt one of her hands on my bottom spreading it apart and then her finger was inserted quickly into my rectum to lubricate my anus. Next she lubricated the bardex nozzle and pushed it into my rectum. This is a fairly wide nozzle and it literally took my breath away as it was being inserted. The nozzle was inflated, leaving with the the sensation that I needed to have a BM.The tech covered me with a sheet and told me that the radiologist would be in shortly.From behind a glass partition, the radiologist introduced himself and then I felt the cold barium start to flow into my rectum.
I was told to turn into several different positons while he watched on the flouroscope. After that part was completed the technologist took several regular xrays.
I remember at one point when she was finished, I was laying there with the nozzle still in my bottom and the sheet had come off which was covering me. I heard several other voices in the room and it seems that one or two Techs had come in for some reason or another.She had one more xray to take but first she had to remove the nozzle. It was deflated and then pulled from my rectum.
I was told to use the bathroom and then she took one last post evac xray.The procedure isn't that bad. Certainly the worst part of it is taking the laxative prep the night before to get cleaned out.
Stonefox Enema Images
Posted in Shots in the butt on 2005-01-12 21:21:57
The best videos of shots in the butt are by Stonefox Productions. http://www.stonefoxproductions.com
A medical enema is a procedure during which a tube is used to insert a medication or contrasting solution into a patient’s rectum. Enemas can be used to clean a patient’s bowels or to relieve ulcerative colitis. A doctor may administer a barium enema to a patient before an x-ray imaging test of the patient’s colon and rectum.
People with constipation may use a medical enema containing sodium phosphate and sodium biphosphate. This type of enema usually relieves constipation and helps the body expel digestive waste that is in the colon. In some cases, individuals with impacted bowels use an enema to relieve pressure in the colon and pass fecal waste. A physician may have a patient use a sodium phosphate and sodium biphosphate enema to cleanse the colon before colon surgery prior to a colonoscopy examination or before an x-ray of the colon.
Sodium phosphate and sodium biphosphate enemas usually should not be administered if this type of enema was already used in the past seven days. In most cases, people with kidney disease or dehydration should not use an enema that contains sodium phosphate and sodium biphosphate. Doctors typically do not recommend a medical enema for individuals with imbalances of electrolytes such as sodium, phosphorus or potassium. This type of enema may cause side effects such as rectal bleeding, sores around the rectum or stomach pain.
Some patients with ulcerative colitis may receive a prescription for a hydrocortisone rectal enema. This type of medical enema typically reduces inflammation in a patient’s colon and rectum. Indigestion, rectal pain and an increased appetite have been reported by some users of hydrocortisone enemas.
A barium enema is a tube that contains a special contrasting solution. Health care professionals often administer this kind of medical enema before an x-ray imaging test of the colon and rectum. The contrasting solution enters the bowel, highlights areas inside the colon on an x-ray image and helps doctors identify abnormalities and disorders of the bowel. A physician may use the results of a colon x-ray to diagnose colon cancer or bowel conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease. In most cases, the contrasting solution is expelled with a patient’s normal bowel movements after an x-ray imaging test is completed.
Stonefox Enema Ayana
Patients usually empty their bowels of all fecal waste before they receive a barium enema. An individual may use a laxative or a sodium phosphate and sodium biphosphate medical enema to cleanse the bowels before receiving a barium enema. X-ray images of the bowels are usually clearer after fecal wastes have been removed. A barium enema may cause a feeling of fullness in the bowel as well as abdominal cramping. Some barium enemas introduce air into the bowel with a contrasting solution in order to improve x-ray image quality.