You are a blessing for every medical student. Love and respect you from the core of my heart. I dont know how to express what I am feeling right now. Just.. Be billionaire and stay in good health.
You are a life saver... we have an Anatomy teacher that basically disappeared and abandoned her students and I have been able to provide them content through your videos. THEY LOVE YOU! Thank you!/
I love this video, and I am excited to watch the rest of the cranial nerves - which I know far less about. I've been working in an ENT department for about 1.5 years now, so I wanted to add a few things. First: anosmia is complete loss of smell, hyposmia is reduced smell. Usually, during a cold, you have hyposmia. The most common causes in order of anosmia are as followes: 1) Post-viral injury/damage 2) Trauma breaking the nerves 3) Chronic inflammation, like from allergies, covering the olfactory nerve 4) Far less common, tumors or masses. Also, one thing awesome, if the nerve is damaged from trauma or an infection, the olfactory nerve is the only cranial nerve that can grow back, so the doctors I work with are know recommending olfactory retraining, sort of like PT for the nose. It has worked pretty well.
wow, my university made us just remember the lesions from 5-8 blindly without any explanation. You have made everything clear, cannot thank you enough! 🙏🏻 , please keep up this channel! 👌🏻
trust me ive watched several videos about visual pathway and lesions but yours is the best i couldn't understand till i watched yours THANK YOU SO MUCH you are saving a lot of peolple here ! God bless you
I'm an international student in Germany, majoring in biology (well not a medical student). German is not my first language and i feel like I always need more time to understand what was taught in the lecture than other fellow students who are germans. I'm currently taking Physiology as a module this semester and I just can't stress it enough..how grateful I am to have found your channel 🥲thank you so much!!
I learnt the visual pathway in my first profession and now I'm in an internship and wanted to revise, use many other videos but still your lecture made it simple and clear all my doubts as clear as it was in my first profession.
I'm blown away by your ability to unpack and communicate such a potentially intractable subject (bad pun). Your choices of when to use "Nasal/temporal" vs "L/R" were astute, and kept left/right confusion to an absolute minimum. You have helped a lot of people with these videos. THANKS!
This is so freakin brilliant! Heard this so many times from so many people, this is the first time ever that I actually grasp the whole thing. Thank you so much!
U r a brilliant genius teacher....this video suddenly gave me the energy to study hard nd understand the basics....u r soo awesome...loved ur way of teaching...thank u soo much Sir😇💙
Absolutely brilliant! I had a major stroke 18 months ago which left me with left inferotemporal quadrantanopia and this is the irst time I have really understood what the real cause actually was and what had been damaged Thanks so much
I actually fucking love you, thank you so much. You thoroughly yet concisely explain everything perfectly and I completely get it now. This deserves wayyyyy more than 5k views
THE NINETY DISLIKES ARE ALL SALTY MED SCHOOL PROFESSORS WHO SPEND 7+ HRS FAILING TO EXPLAIN WHAT NINJA NERD EXPLAINED IN LESS THAN 40 MINUTES . you sir, are the 8th world wonder
Oh my God! What an explanation! i UNDERSTOOD THE conecpts vry clear..Thank U so much Sir U make medical Students life easier! Keep making more Videos Sir
I was never able to those lesions posterior to the optic tract. It was always a frustrating point. Thaank you sooooooo much for finally clearing it up! Feels amazing to know I finally understand it :-))))
The only criticism I have for this video is that the lesions along the Meyer's Loop & Baum's Loop should be referred to as a quadrantonopia (not a hemianopia, as hemianopia refers to blindness in half of the field)
You guys are the single best medical content lecturers out there! I am wishing you guys all the luck of this world in your future endeavors! Greeting from Greece!
Really, Well done!! This one of the best videos I've ever watched at my whole studying experience!!👏👏👏 I learnt something after a hundred of repetition OMG! Thank you so much 🙂🙂✌️💪💪
Hi, I reallyyyyy love your videos. I think you are so clear and effective at explaining concepts that the professors at my university struggle to express to students. Especially since I have been online this semester, your videos have been a crucial part to my education. Would you consider in the beginning of your videos allowing for the screen with all the blank templates you drew out prior to starting the video to be recorded just a few seconds without you in frame so, we can screenshot and follow along with you as you draw it out? Thank you so much!
Your videos are amazing!!! They're helping me a lot!!! Right now I'm going to each video you made about the cranial nerves, because my upcoming exam is soon. Your explanations are very good and understandable and your drawings are also perfect! Thank you very much for your nice explanations, pictures, efforts, etc. I really appreciate your emphasizing methods through many repeated sentences and that you sometimes shortly! go back to already discussed structures. I'm enjoying watching your videos and learning a lot :)
can't even fathom how much time did you took to make this complicated concept this simple!!!!! great teaching communication !!! awesome!! kudos mate :)
this is excellent. i have Left homonymous hemianopia due to a hemorrhagic stroke because due to a ruptured PCOM artery ...i had endovascular coiling surgery with stent. i developed hydrocephalus hemorrhagic transformation among other complications. october 2022 will be one year/
I have no words to express how grateful I feel that I found you guys, thank you for the immaculate and full of love job YOU ARE MAKING A DIFFERENCE for all med students struggling around the world 🌍💓
I wish my lecturer was this informative and good. She just comes to the lecture and changes slides. A new lecturer arrived yesterday, he was decent but still not this good.
@NinjaNerdScience your videos are absolutely quality. I learn more from you, then lectures at med school. Thank you so much your intelligence and quality of teaching is phenomenal.
I am studying physiology...and this semester my chapter is special sense....n i find ur video n for every topic i search from ur video it really help me a lot .....❣️BEST VIDEO
oh boy.. this is just the optic nerve.. wonder what the glossopharyngeal nerve is going to be like! An old neurobiologist told me one time that we have 12 cranial nerves and it takes a minimum of 12 years to learn them all. That statement is correct!
Personally I think you should've stuck to nasal and temporal. I appreciate your intent behind it but I think that students should get used to nasal and temporal ASAP, no matter how confusing they may be, because that's how it will be known anywhere else. Also, the left VF of the left eye may be even more confusing in future since it's 'left of left', 'right of left' etc.
Furthermore when you say 'right VF goes to left' etc., can also be confusing again. Think it would be better to say temporal stay, nasal cross or something equivalent.
Really love your presentation. There are a few mistakes though. Quadrantic field defects are known as "quadrantanopia" and not 'quadrant - hemianopia'. Hemi means half.
Purple💜💜💜, I like the way how you play ć colours, I just now ordered a purple tab from Amazon, and hearing purple out of your mouth, put a big smile on my face . 😊
Excellent teaching sir...I am a 1st yr MBBS student in West Bengal in India ....I read the visual pathway from book but was unable to understand 60% ...then I watched ur video ..now I think my concept is pretty clear....
The afferent fibers for light reflex leave the optic tract just immediately before the tract gets in to medial geniculate body. Then these afferent fibers go to both the ipsilateral and contralateral pretectal nucleus of mid brain. This is an important anatomical explanation for the consensual light reflex occurring in the opposite pupil. Thank you
You are a blessing for every medical student. Love and respect you from the core of my heart. I dont know how to express what I am feeling right now. Just.. Be billionaire and stay in good health.
Just wow😮 Five(5) years later and still unmatched Crystal clear concepts 🙏
I would never get this information from my university, you made everything crystal clear THANK you so much ..
Where r u frm friend our colges are same too yaar
he probably gets paid more than university instructors
Which country
YOU COULD SINGLE-HANDEDLY PUT ALL THE PROFESSORS IN MY MED SCHOOL TO SHAME
I think half of the world's med school 😅😂
Yea, mine too 😂
seriously.. 95% of them suck at explaining and delivering the concepts while the remaining 5% hardly ever get assigned to my group..
well yeah he probably gets paid more than them
@@rafiyashaikh2368 the whole world's med schools actually😂
You are a life saver... we have an Anatomy teacher that basically disappeared and abandoned her students and I have been able to provide them content through your videos. THEY LOVE YOU! Thank you!/
I love this video, and I am excited to watch the rest of the cranial nerves - which I know far less about. I've been working in an ENT department for about 1.5 years now, so I wanted to add a few things. First: anosmia is complete loss of smell, hyposmia is reduced smell. Usually, during a cold, you have hyposmia.
The most common causes in order of anosmia are as followes:
1) Post-viral injury/damage
2) Trauma breaking the nerves
3) Chronic inflammation, like from allergies, covering the olfactory nerve
4) Far less common, tumors or masses.
Also, one thing awesome, if the nerve is damaged from trauma or an infection, the olfactory nerve is the only cranial nerve that can grow back, so the doctors I work with are know recommending olfactory retraining, sort of like PT for the nose. It has worked pretty well.
john towers, yep! I was watching the olfactory video. Somehow I commented on this one, but I’m not erasing it.
Thanks. Interesting 👌
I literally cheered because i finally understood how the various lesions impacted on vision. maybe you saved my ophtalmology exam next month!
wow, my university made us just remember the lesions from 5-8 blindly without any explanation. You have made everything clear, cannot thank you enough! 🙏🏻 , please keep up this channel! 👌🏻
I am neurology resident and you are my official reference for neuroanatomy, this is unbelievable you are a legend
so do I and I agree with you.
Every single video of yours is awesome.. First year med student here..and for me you're nothing less than a blessing..
trust me ive watched several videos about visual pathway and lesions but yours is the best i couldn't understand till i watched yours THANK YOU SO MUCH you are saving a lot of peolple here ! God bless you
I always double-check my lessons about Optometry with your channel. Thank you so much from Sri Lanka
I'm an international student in Germany, majoring in biology (well not a medical student). German is not my first language and i feel like I always need more time to understand what was taught in the lecture than other fellow students who are germans. I'm currently taking Physiology as a module this semester and I just can't stress it enough..how grateful I am to have found your channel 🥲thank you so much!!
I am enjoying learning Anatomy with Ninja nerd .what a joy I found you.
Hi Same here. I’m learning anatomy in my fourth language, French. Thankfully, both French and English share a lot of terminology in common.
There are not enough words to describe how much i appreciate your efforts. THANK YOU
holly hell.. i cant believe i actually followed through the whole thing .. lol ..ur a gem. THANKYOU
U R A Blessing to medical students
You're doing a great job Zac. 30 minutes and optic tract is clear. Can't thank you enough. Be blessed sir!
Your the man! Better than my professor for anatomy by a long shot!
Sam Webster was number one until I watched your videos my friend. The detail into which you go is awesome! Kudos!
Pantelis C can you please share the link to Webster’s video on the visual pathway?
@@RehamSalama98 he is anatomy teacher tho
I learnt the visual pathway in my first profession and now I'm in an internship and wanted to revise, use many other videos but still your lecture made it simple and clear all my doubts as clear as it was in my first profession.
This is excellent work mate! Keep it up!
We plan too! Thanks so much!
I'm blown away by your ability to unpack and communicate such a potentially intractable subject (bad pun). Your choices of when to use "Nasal/temporal" vs "L/R" were astute, and kept left/right confusion to an absolute minimum. You have helped a lot of people with these videos. THANKS!
Optic nerve cranial nerve-
Left to right
Right to nerve
Temporal hemi retina
Nasal hemi retina.
Optic nerve
Optic chiasmata
Optic tract
Lateral geniculate nucleus in THALAMUS.6 layers
I/L 235.
C/L 146.
Optic radiation.
Striae cortex primary visual cortex. Perception.
LESION-
Optic nerve- mono ocular blindness.
Optic chiasma medial aspect- bitemporal hemianopia.
I/L- binasal hemianopia.
Right optic tract- left homonymous hemianopia.
Right Baram loop/ Superior tectal fibers-
Left inferior quadrant hemianopia.
Left inferior rectal fibers-right Superior quadrant hemianopia.
Right optic radiation-
Left homonymous hemianopia
Posterior cerebral artery-
Left homonymous hemianopia with macula sparing.
Thank you sir
This is so freakin brilliant!
Heard this so many times from so many people, this is the first time ever that I actually grasp the whole thing. Thank you so much!
U r a brilliant genius teacher....this video suddenly gave me the energy to study hard nd understand the basics....u r soo awesome...loved ur way of teaching...thank u soo much Sir😇💙
*Each time I watch a video of yours, it makes me wanna demand my money back from my Uni so I can give it to you 😭😭😭*
You're a Godsend. Thank you!
Damn, I would never get this information from my university professors, thank you so much!
never knew neurology could be this fun when u actually got a good teacher, thanks alot
Make more videos on pathology, pharmacology, and micro as i’m heading to my 3rd year and i need you to be my teacher in that year too. Love your work.
Absolutely brilliant! I had a major stroke 18 months ago which left me with left inferotemporal quadrantanopia and this is the irst time I have really understood what the real cause actually was and what had been damaged Thanks so much
I actually fucking love you, thank you so much. You thoroughly yet concisely explain everything perfectly and I completely get it now. This deserves wayyyyy more than 5k views
Zach you are amazing mate! I am a proud member of Ninja nerds and a subscriber. Once you go Ninja, you don't turn back
THE NINETY DISLIKES ARE ALL SALTY MED SCHOOL PROFESSORS WHO SPEND 7+ HRS FAILING TO EXPLAIN WHAT NINJA NERD EXPLAINED IN LESS THAN 40 MINUTES . you sir, are the 8th world wonder
This is timeless content - always find myself coming back when i need some refreshing
Oh my God! What an explanation! i UNDERSTOOD THE conecpts vry clear..Thank U so much Sir U make medical Students life easier! Keep making more Videos Sir
i cant tell you how thankful and grateful I am.
I was never able to those lesions posterior to the optic tract. It was always a frustrating point.
Thaank you sooooooo much for finally clearing it up! Feels amazing to know I finally understand it :-))))
All of your videos are soo helpfull. I dont even have to pick up my book. Thank youu. This all means alot.
The only criticism I have for this video is that the lesions along the Meyer's Loop & Baum's Loop should be referred to as a quadrantonopia (not a hemianopia, as hemianopia refers to blindness in half of the field)
You’re indeed the boss when it comes to teaching
You guys are the single best medical content lecturers out there!
I am wishing you guys all the luck of this world in your future endeavors!
Greeting from Greece!
You made everything so much easier!!!! Thank you
اقسم بالله انك شنب و احسن من الدكاترة الزبالين الي بيدرسونا
Salman Thabet 😂😂😂 انت ف انهي كلية
صدقت والله
ههههههههههههه والله معك حق
😂😂😂😂😂😂
اتفق اتفق اتفق
Man it's amazing how you cover up everything necessary for the each topic. You are doing a holy job thank you so much !!
Really, Well done!!
This one of the best videos I've ever watched at my whole studying experience!!👏👏👏 I learnt something after a hundred of repetition OMG!
Thank you so much 🙂🙂✌️💪💪
I never got my concept that much crystal clear... no words to thank u man!
your vast knowledge blows me away...when did you first start studying all this?
These videos are really long, BUT THE DETAILS ARE LIFE SAVING
Hi, I reallyyyyy love your videos. I think you are so clear and effective at explaining concepts that the professors at my university struggle to express to students. Especially since I have been online this semester, your videos have been a crucial part to my education. Would you consider in the beginning of your videos allowing for the screen with all the blank templates you drew out prior to starting the video to be recorded just a few seconds without you in frame so, we can screenshot and follow along with you as you draw it out? Thank you so much!
That’s so smart
perfect. need no other video to understand the visual pathways and associated lesion. thank you
Thank you! This is amazing I really appreciate this effort, you made everything crystal clear.
I'm not a doctor or plan to be but I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express. I really enjoy your explanations. No anxiety when I don't have to memorize.
Your videos are amazing!!!
They're helping me a lot!!!
Right now I'm going to each video you made about the cranial nerves, because my upcoming exam is soon.
Your explanations are very good and understandable and your drawings are also perfect!
Thank you very much for your nice explanations, pictures, efforts, etc.
I really appreciate your emphasizing methods through many repeated sentences and that you sometimes shortly! go back to already discussed structures.
I'm enjoying watching your videos and learning a lot :)
can't even fathom how much time did you took to make this complicated concept this simple!!!!!
great teaching communication !!! awesome!! kudos mate :)
though i cannot pay them through direct funding but i watched twice ads not skipping it so that i might help the team thanks alot
i think clicking on the ads helps them too
They have a Patreon that you can contribute to! I just give a dollar a month since that's all I can do for now
Damn!!!!! The finest explanation of visual pathway on the internet. Thank you so much man......Great content. Keep it up.
Amazing work...God bless you sir.Love from Pakistan
Its so much complicated in the book , but you dude made it really crystal clear. Thanks
Holy Sweet Goodness! Just learnt a lot from this. Recommended by a friend. Thanks bro.
this is excellent. i have Left homonymous hemianopia due to a hemorrhagic stroke because due to a ruptured PCOM artery ...i had endovascular coiling surgery with stent. i developed hydrocephalus hemorrhagic transformation among other complications. october 2022 will be one year/
Sir you are the best ever, please complete autonomic nervous system and many topics in embryology thanks, you are highly awesome
Thank you, we will have the sympathetic and parasympathetic videos up by mid December. 👍
All Sudanese Medical Students appreciate and respect your effort ;I know that NENJA NERD represent the whole world.
OMGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG I LEARNT SOMETHING FOR ONCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THANK YOU
You are the best Zach. You make everything easier. Thanks a lot for all your effort.
My brain cells gave up on lesion 5 and left my brain completely at lesion 7 😭😩
I am here just to appreciate his efforts. His explanation is far far better than my university professors :)
You are so awesome! Pls do make a video regarding spinal cord lesions. Thanks much!
I'm so thankful for your existence! I mean it. I don't know what would I have done without your help.
Thanks so much! This was very helpful in my review of the visual pathway and VF defects!
I have no words to express how grateful I feel that I found you guys, thank you for the immaculate and full of love job YOU ARE MAKING A DIFFERENCE for all med students struggling around the world 🌍💓
I wish my lecturer was this informative and good. She just comes to the lecture and changes slides. A new lecturer arrived yesterday, he was decent but still not this good.
@NinjaNerdScience your videos are absolutely quality. I learn more from you, then lectures at med school. Thank you so much your intelligence and quality of teaching is phenomenal.
Thank you so much! This was really helpful :)
+Simran Razdan I am so glad it was helpful. Thank you for the nice comment!!
I am studying physiology...and this semester my chapter is special sense....n i find ur video n for every topic i search from ur video it really help me a lot .....❣️BEST VIDEO
you are my optic nerve
😂😂 good vision
You are the hero for all medical students💕
شكرا ع مجهودك 🌹
oh boy.. this is just the optic nerve.. wonder what the glossopharyngeal nerve is going to be like! An old neurobiologist told me one time that we have 12 cranial nerves and it takes a minimum of 12 years to learn them all. That statement is correct!
I need to learn that in 4 days for my exam... Just love time pressure.
starting my ophthalmology residency here!!! this was super helpful! thank you
Everything was clear but the lesions were somewhat difficult for me to understand. Otherwise good job . New subbie
Very complicated topic ....you made its soooo simple...... thank you.....
Dr.sandeep from INDIA 🇮🇳
"I'm sorry, but that's how it works""😂😂😂💜
Personally I think you should've stuck to nasal and temporal. I appreciate your intent behind it but I think that students should get used to nasal and temporal ASAP, no matter how confusing they may be, because that's how it will be known anywhere else. Also, the left VF of the left eye may be even more confusing in future since it's 'left of left', 'right of left' etc.
Furthermore when you say 'right VF goes to left' etc., can also be confusing again. Think it would be better to say temporal stay, nasal cross or something equivalent.
@@SingZeon48 yes true
I have struggled with this for years. I finally understand it. Thank you.
Really love your presentation. There are a few mistakes though. Quadrantic field defects are known as "quadrantanopia" and not 'quadrant - hemianopia'. Hemi means half.
You explain it way better than my teacher does!! Thank you very much
"Turn me over and tickle me twisted" lmfao
Some of his remarks really make me crack up too XDD
Hi
I know explaining a joke makes it lame but I'm really curious to understand
Would you please explain ?
😂😂😂😂crying !!!
you made a really complex topic for me very simple .. can not find words to thank you
You got patreon bro? 🙃
That we do! The link is in the info boxes of all of our videos! Thanks for your support 👍
Purple💜💜💜, I like the way how you play ć colours, I just now ordered a purple tab from Amazon, and hearing purple out of your mouth, put a big smile on my face . 😊
Thank you put I think you have mistake in 6 and 5 lesion!!
y
ive noticed that too
You are just awesome! Words are less expressive! I wish you were my medical college's professor!
plz make a video of tracks of spinal cord 😢😢😢
What are you studying
Wow i never understood this before. Great work
U always reduce my med school work load through ur videos,thnx alot
Excellent teaching sir...I am a 1st yr MBBS student in West Bengal in India ....I read the visual pathway from book but was unable to understand 60% ...then I watched ur video ..now I think my concept is pretty clear....
You are just amazing. You made physiology so simple and understandable, I can't even imagine passing physiology without your lectures
And the Best teacher award goes to... Thank you man 👊🏻👏
What a guy you are. Thanks for the precious help
The afferent fibers for light reflex leave the optic tract just immediately before the tract gets in to medial geniculate body. Then these afferent fibers go to both the ipsilateral and contralateral pretectal nucleus of mid brain. This is an important anatomical explanation for the consensual light reflex occurring in the opposite pupil. Thank you
I am so grateful for this video. The first ten minutes was just what I needed. Thank you very much