Surgery 101 Team
Surgery 101
Welcome to Surgery 101, a series of podcasts produced with the help of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. The podcasts are intended to serve as brief introductions or reviews of surgical topics for medical students. We've aimed to cover a single topic in between 10-20 minutes so that you can quickly get a good idea of the basic concepts involved. Every episode is divided into chapters and concludes with several key points to summarize the topic. We are always keen to receive your feedback on our podcasts, and we are accepting suggestions for additional topics. New episodes are publ...
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Surgery 101 Team
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Web del podcast
Último episodio
13 de may. de 2026
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Episodios
447. Surgical Management of Rectal Cancer - Part 2 NOTES 13.05.2026
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on Surgical Management of Rectal Cancer - Part 2
447. Surgical Management of Rectal Cancer - Part 2 13.05.2026 15:17
After listening to this podcast, learners will be able to: 1. Describe the anatomy and blood supply of the distal colon and rectum. 2. List what is resected and what is reconnected during a low anterior resection. 3. Describe the major differences between a low anterior resection and an abdominoperineal resection, and the indications for each. 4. Outline risk factors for anastomotic...
446. Surgical Management of Colorectal Cancer – Part 1 11.05.2026 11:29
After listening to this podcast, learners will be able to: 1. Describe the anatomy and blood supply of the proximal colon. 2. Outline the principles of resection for colon cancer. 3. List what is resected and what is reconnected during a right hemicolectomy. 4. Describe what is required for a successful anastomosis in colorectal surgery.
446. Surgical Management of Colorectal Cancer – Part 1 NOTES 06.05.2026
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on Surgical Management of Colorectal Cancer – Part 1
445. Recognizing Stomas NOTES 29.04.2026
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on Recognizing Stomas
445. Recognizing Stomas 29.04.2026 11:17
After listening to this podcast, learners will be able to: 1. Describe different types of stomas, including ileostomy, colostomy, urostomy, and mucus fistula. 2. Explain the indications for a permanent versus temporary ostomy. 3. Evaluate the type of stoma a patient has based on clinical history, location, appearance, and output.
444. Laryngeal Cancer NOTES 22.04.2026
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on Laryngeal Cancer.
444. Laryngeal Cancer 22.04.2026 11:32
Today, we're going to discuss the topic of laryngeal cancer, a difficult head and neck cancer which has significantly improved prognosis if caught early. Laryngeal cancer is a type of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, or HNSCC for short. It typically arises from the epithelial lining of the larynx. After listening to this podcast, learners will be able to understand what laryngeal cancer is...
443. Neck Dissection NOTES 15.04.2026
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on Neck Dissection.
443. Neck Dissection 15.04.2026 12:53
After listening to this podcast, you should be able to: Describe the basic anatomy of lymph nodes in the neck List 4 different types of neck dissections, and what they entail Be able to identify common complications of neck dissection Outline the initial management of the common complications of neck dissection
442. Beyond the Horizon: Ongoing Innovations and the Future of Endoscopy NOTES 11.02.2026
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on Beyond the Horizon: Ongoing Innovations and the Future of Endoscopy
442. Beyond the Horizon: Ongoing Innovations and the Future of Endoscopy 11.02.2026 10:13
The close of the 20th century saw endoscopy and laparoscopy evolve from passive optical tools into dynamic platforms that integrated real-time guidance, autonomous movement, and computational interpretation for navigation, diagnosis, and therapy.
441. From Fiber to Video: The Visual Revolution in Endoscopy and Laparoscopy NOTES 04.02.2026
Description: PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on From Fiber to Video: The Visual Revolution in Endoscopy and Laparoscopy
441. From Fiber to Video: The Visual Revolution in Endoscopy and Laparoscopy 04.02.2026 11:06
By the mid-20th century, endoscopy's long-standing challenge of safely illuminating internal structures was transformed by postwar advances—especially Harold Hopkins's 1950s rod-lens system, which enabled brighter, distortion-free, miniaturized imaging that could reliably guide clinical decisions.
440. The Fiberoptic Breakthrough: Hopkins, Hirschowitz, and the Flexible Scope NOTES 21.01.2026
Description: PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on The Fiberoptic Breakthrough: Hopkins, Hirschowitz, and the Flexible Scope
440. The Fiberoptic Breakthrough: Hopkins, Hirschowitz, and the Flexible Scope 21.01.2026 10:02
By the mid-20th century, endoscopy and laparoscopy were ready for major advancement. Although instruments had evolved into semi-flexible designs, visualization was still limited by glass optics and heat-producing light sources. A breakthrough toward fully flexible, high-resolution imaging emerged through the combined demands of surgery and advances in optical physics, driven by the pioneering work...
439. The Semiflexible Era-Schindler and The Pre-Fiberoptic Revolution NOTES 14.01.2026
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on The Semiflexible Era-Schindler and The Pre-Fiberoptic Revolution
439. The Semiflexible Era: Schindler and the Pre-Fiberoptic Revolution 14.01.2026 10:16
By the early 20th century, endoscopy had evolved from candle-lit brass tubes into electrically illuminated rigid instruments. The decisive shift toward flexibility — the stage upon which Rudolf Schindler would make his contribution — was the product of several converging advances in optics, illumination, and instrument design that began in the late 19th century.
438. From Mirrors to Incandescent Bulbs: The 19th- Century Leap 07.01.2026 10:07
By the mid-19th century, improvements in illumination and optics transformed endoscopy from a theoretical idea into a practical clinical tool, culminating in Antoine Jean Desormeaux's work in Paris in 1853. Building on Bozzini's Lichtleiter and frustrated by diagnostic limits of palpation, Desormeaux replaced candlelight with a brighter, controllable source known as the gazogène.
438. From Mirrors to Incandescent Bulbs: The 19th- Century Leap NOTES 07.01.2026
Description: PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode From Mirrors to Incandescent Bulbs: The 19th- Century Leap
437. A Candle in the Darkness – Philipp Bozzini and the Lichtleiter NOTES 31.12.2025
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on A Candle in the Darkness – Philipp Bozzini and the Lichtleiter
437. A Candle in the Darkness – Philipp Bozzini and the Lichtleiter 31.12.2025 7:38
In 1806, physician Philipp Bozzini introduced the Lichtleiter, a candle-lit, mirror-lined instrument designed for direct visual inspection of internal organs—an idea far ahead of its time and initially met with skepticism. Though dismissed by many contemporaries, the device is now recognized as the first true endoscope, establishing Bozzini as the founder of endoscopy.
436. Endoscopy vs Laparoscopy and the Beginnings NOTES 17.12.2025
PDF notes for Surgery 101 episode on Endoscopy vs Laparoscopy and the Beginnings.
436. Endoscopy vs Laparoscopy and the Beginnings 17.12.2025 10:51
Technological progress in medicine, as in other fields, emerges from the interplay of incremental refinement and decisive breakthroughs—those moments when a missing element is discovered and the path forward suddenly accelerates. The evolution of endoscopic surgery over the last century illustrates this well. Yet even today, the terminology surrounding procedures that employ scopes is often misund...
435. Laser Refractive Surgery NOTES 03.12.2025
PDF Notes for Surgery 101 episode on Laser Refractive Surgery
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