OMG when I die the research lab team is going to learn so much. I'm 44 and have had 33 surgeries. Of those, 6 were to add technical devices or hardware into my body, and 5 were to remove organs, tissues, etc. Research team is going to have a field day, i an just jealous that I cant participate in my own autopsy!
You might be able to participate in your own autopsy if you start your own religion. Get enough people to believe what you believe and give them solid evidence that it can come to fruition.
I’m a retired embalmer, went through college in 1973-76. Anatomy was such a favorite class and I had a wonderful and superbly smart anatomy and physiology teacher.
In my cousin's funeral home I always enjoyed collecting an autopsied body - and to closely examine the contents of the viscera bag. I learned so much about people who take care of themselves (and the people who don't). Did not become a funeral director, but I majored in English. (I would change the title of this video to things I have found INSIDE a body). Yeah, maybe I have A.D.H.D. Keep up the good work! 👨🏻🎓
My husbands grandfather died in January this year and asked that his body be donated to medical/science. He'd had a quadruple heart bypass a few years ago but died of dementia. It was hard not having a funeral to say goodbye but it feels comforting to know that in death he's helping our future doctors learn.
Yes. I want mine donated, too. I have digestive issues. From my stomach to my bowel. I've had polyps removed and have to go back every 3 years to have more removed. I'm at the stage in my life where as I've moved through my forties, I've become more intolerant to food. I've had to slowly cut out anything containing preservatives, which is a huge amount. So I grow my own fruit and veg. Have free-range chickens and ducks. I fear I will eventually end up on a liquid diet indefinitely one day when I'm reaching my retirement age. Whenever I get I'll in any way, it takes about a week or so for my digestive system to recover and I'm on liquids with biotics, vitamin supplements, and digestive enzyme replacements. It totally sucks as I love my food.
@@shereebuckley7208 I'm so sorry you're going through this. I have multiple chronic illnesses, one of them being chronic nausea which I've had for 5 years now. All day everyday feeling nauseated is not fun so I sympathise with your chronic condition.
Not sure how their problem works, but often the bodies are cremated and returned after x amount of time when ppl donate to science. Regardless, that sounds hard and I'm glad the thought is a comfort
You guys do know that when you classify yourself as a "donor", these teams come-in and begin cutting out your eyeballs and other organs before your body even gets (cold). Kind-of gruesome if you ask me.. Moreover, Medical research has already learned as much as there is to learn. The Holy Bible tells us that there's nothing (new) under the sun. That leads me to believe that what (can be) learned, has been learned already. When the fallen angels were cast out of Heaven and forced down to the earth, they introduced humanity to all manner of information they'd never known. Some examples include, weapons of war, such as the sword, shield, spear. Even "war" itself was unknown to humanity prior to this event. Some of the fallen angels taught (chemistry), some taught how to paint. One of the more well-established facts is how they shared with (man) the science of "genetics", to include genetic manipulation/tampering. There are many more disciplines formerly unknown to mortal man on the earth until the fall of Lucifer and the angels that followed him. For a more in-depth study on the topic, refer to the Book of Enoch, there you will find more of what I've briefly mentioned. It's an interesting read to say the least.
My grandmother also donated her body to science. She was an educator in life and wanted to continue to educate after death. It was odd for me to think of college students cutting into my grandma (if that was something her body would have been used for)- but it was a beautiful wish for her to continue to educate. 💖
Not a doctor, or have any desire to be in a medical field. I know that I dont have the work drive to do anything like that properly, but this is still such an interesting channel. Everyone should know how their bodies work.
@@theanatomylabcan you do a video on the Plastination used to preserve your cadavers? Do you guys do it yourself after a post mortem exam or it's done before you receive them? I've seen the body worlds exhibit and it's really interesting so I think other channel followers would also be interested
I had an inguenal hernia and it changed my posture just enough to put pressure on the syatic nerve causing such severe pain I couldn't breathe or sit or stand or lie down. It was easily repaired through a simple outpatient surgery by a highly skilled surgeon with mesh. I was back to normal that same day and haven't had a problem since. 8 years and counting.
My female coonhound had a inguenal hernia when I adopted her. We believe she was born with it. It was huge and required a specialist to fix it. She’s 2 now and doing wonderful. They are a very complicated hernia.
If only I really knew how. Unfortunately, the "same answer we're tired of hearing" apparently only goes so far. I mean, I've cut down empty calories and started exercising more, but all that's really happening is that I have more efficient muscles and am tired more. Turns out, it's a lot easier to put it on than take it off.
@@dakotahrickard so in large the "same answer were tired of hearing" will always work. The hurdle is time. The time it takes you to lose 5 pound and the time it takes me to lose the same could be drastically different, at that point there plenty of other variables as well. Just got to tick em off the list one at a time until you can find what works for you.
@@NAT-turners-Revenge port engineer? Very interesting were are you based? I'm a electromechanical engineer of electric vehicles, so I'm more apt towards electric stuff you must be a proper mechanical engineer
Two years ago, without any diagnosis of Diverticulosis, I had a large Diverticulum which ruptured. I had emergency surgery and received a Colostomy. It turned out that I was EXTREMELY constipated due to a lifelong genetic illness called Hypermobile Ehlers Danlos Syndrome, which caused my colon to stretch a lot. I didn't even know I was constipated! I recovered slowly, but these days I am never constipated due to my colostomy! Yay!
That's crazy! I recently discovered that I may have hypermobility eds as well, and I never even thought about the colon stretching. I always just think of joints and ligaments hyperextending
Yeah I'm always amazed at how many people brush off digestive issues as normal. They really aren't and it's definitely worth figuring out the root cause. Mine was food allergies and I was actually going into anaphylactic shock but because my skin didn't have the type of response people were expecting, it went undiagnosed for years and I'm honestly lucky to be alive. Since I changed my diet I have had zero digestive issues which is a huge change from having failed classes in college because I was so sick I couldn't attend them regularly and got docked for attendance.
@@Kiskadee8388 He should have, but hes only human. Sometimes when the same information is repeated to you, you think of it as a basic fact and forget to label it out for others who may not know! Its possible it just slipped through the cracks and he forgot lmao
i was kind of expecting a few un-removed bullets, or shrapnel from world war 2 or maybe a splinter when the person got when they were a kid....But the visceral fat was amazing because most of us will eventually get some and exercise and diet are the best ways to keep it low....love the videos and look forward to Sundays just to see them...thanks
It was awesome to see the conditions in the body and have them explained. As a nurse, it helps so much to see the diseases and conditions I hear so often in a patient's diagnosis.
I am sure you have to live in the area where he owns his business so that you would be sent to him after death. plus most of the work he does with the bodies he probably cannot show on youtube but certain things as long as the algorithm allows it are ok. but i agree it would be cool to have your body featured on a channel like this at least in death you would be famous for a miniute.
I have severe Ulcerative Colitis, which causes arthritis. I plan to donate my body to science once I die to assist in learning. This channel is really awesome.
My husband had diverticulitis once. Also, we decided to donate our bodies for medical research/medical school use. He passed away 10 years ago thiß November 2nd. These videos bring comfort to me, knowing how his body could help future do toes. Also .I've been through so much medically, your explanations of how things happen in our bodies helps me understand my own body issues. Thank-you! I'm hoping my body will be accepted for research also...but nephew who works at funeral home said they're not taking many lately as have plenty.
My step dad had diverticulitis! It was excruciatingly painful. I remember I would find him curled up on the ground just crying, and he isn’t normally a cryer. He had to have a large part of his intestines removed because of it! He is doing so much better now, thankfully.
I recently started physical therapy for the first time. My therapist is young, recently out of school. He gets so excited when he talks about anatomy, then apologizes, lol. I am in healthcare myself, and I tell him, "Don't apologize! I love hearing you talk!"
The spine cross-section interested me. My husband had ankylosis spondylitis for almost 50 years. At age 74, he was in a serious MVA and some of his multiple injuries included broken C6 and C7, three broken vertebrae in the lower spine and a broken pelvis. One of his surgeries was to install spinal rods. The surgeon was hesitant. He said my husband’s entire spine had fused from the AS, but that the bones themselves were brittle. They did the surgery and it was successful, but unfortunately my husband succumbed to his injuries a few weeks later. ANYWAY, have you worked on cadavers with AS? Do you have spinal cross-sections? 41 yr of living with him and the multiple permutations of AS has made me curious.
I enjoy this channel. Many years ago, I was a medical transcriptionist at the Mass. General Hospital, mostly transcribing operative notes. I have always been fascinated with the human body.
Me too, but if it were on four legged fluffies, I couldn’t handle it. The first one I “saw” was in 9th grade. My teacher was grunting and struggling, then gave up and said “still frozen” then cancelled that lesson. That was 1978-78. I read decades later on the City paper and our school old school Facebook he was found murdered and it’s a Cold Case. I hope his case gets solved.
Did he have respiratory tract issues? If I recall correctly, there are these ciliae that have two functions: moving goop up the respiratory tract but also they determine the asymmetry during early stages of development by literally moving some molecular factors to one side of the embryo. So when the ciliae are genetically disabled, Situs Inversus arises and the person has respiratory tract issues. I might of course be wrong.
man, this channel is incredibly informative and well produced but sometimes i can only go so far before getting sick, this one in particular lol. i have mad respect for doctors, i could never do this.
TY for what you do. When I was starting my degree in Southern California that Anatomy one class could only move to Anatomy too if they had an A and they were willing to work on the fresh cadavers for the other students. I learned so much more than I ever learned in any classes and any nursing program even in the ICU with open chests and ECMO thank you for all you do. And thank you to those who donated their bodies to science
This was fascinating. Im a Med Assistant that used to work for Orthopedic surgeons. The surgeons were very happy to educate us by explaining the MRIs and xrays, even explaining the surgical procedures ...but seeing the spine on an actual human...from that view, thats so amazing. 😊
You really have learned everything about human anatomy, very good. My husband suffered several bouts of diverticulitis and was hospitalized and told to avoid seeds and nuts and he took Metamucil every night and he also suffered a perforated colon and had to have a colostomy while he was receiving chemo for what they diagnosed as Pancreatic cancer with Mets to the liver. He had a lot of problems with his digestive tract and he had a lot of stomach fat.
We had two elderly people's cadavers and a younger guy with a clear gunshot wound to the head. The cranial vault underneath was shattered in a starburst pattern. Poor guy. Nobody claimed him.
AMAZING!! I’d love to leave my body to my Alma mater med school for this reason. My hubby disagrees, but there really is no downside, our cadavers were always treated with the utmost respect and we learned much needed information. So happy and proud to see this much needed traditional teaching is happening for the public to partake in. Knowledge is precious and powerful. Thank sir!
Excellent video! I actually was very sick with diverticulitis for an entire year. They had to finally do a left hemi colecectomy. Then just this past week the MRI ordered on my spine shows T7-T8 are in rough shape-- yes osteoporosis contributed to major disc problems. I do believe it was meant to be I stumbled across this video. Thank you so much for all you do. 🙏🙏
1:40 Imagine offering your body to science after death and then being roasted for unhealthy fat your body contains 😂😂 Sorry this made me laugh a bit too much Ps I am aware of the fact that it isn’t roasting but science which is very cool and interesting! I was just making a joke :)
just amazing easy to understand perfection 🥰 as a emergency first aid trainer im astounded that people know so little about how their body functions .. i am forever fascinated and grateful for this go to channel 👍👍
I will give you props for blending in the AG1 add with your videos. Of all the channels I watch, you guys do the best to make the "commercials" fit in and not interrupt.
I just watched a video explaining the history of the guy who started ag1.. apparently he scammed a bunch of folks on rent to own real estate deals in Europe and there are a number of cases against him in criminal court. So he came to America and started a supplement in an industry that literally has no regulation. And so many TH-camrs are doing his advertising. Ugh. We pay for YT premium to get rid of commercials so now they have found a way to get their stupid advertising in anyway.
I just knew it wouldn't be some classic video about strange swallowed by both ends objects. Your channel is doing a great job maintaining a nice and professional image :)
I can't watch this. I just turned 36 and somewhat recently, both of my parents passed within about a year of eachother. My father being in his early 60's and my mother in her early 50's. The weight of the contemplation of death plagues and unsettles me of late. Thank you for doing what you do though, it helps us all now and those ahead of us too.
I miss my Anatomy & physiology classes . I drove my tutor bonkers asking more & more questions ☺️ Although it saddens me that we know more about our ailments after death . 👍
Thank you for all your knowledge and for teaching us so much. And thank you to all the people that donated their bodies to science to help us all understand better how the body functions.
So interesting! My baby boy had to have hernia surgery at 3 months old. His Dad & Grandfather felt bad for calling him testiculese after birth. My Father said “call an ambulance, it feels like something inside me is leaking inside me.” He was diagnosed with diverticulitis.
I really love this vlog. Highly educational. Being able to actually see the thngs you have only had word descriptions or line drawings or artist renderings of until this is super enlightening.
Could you please make a film on the sciatic nerve route through the hip bones ischium, ilium, pubis. Some images route it differently from the sacrum through the sciatic and obturator foramens. It will help understand a pain caused by a swelling on the ischium better. Thanks much.
Yes! That'd be interesting! Sciatica is the worst and no med will help the pain, not even opiods! I had a severe case of it in my mid 20s for several months. I couldn't sleep at all. From my right hip running down my leg to my foot I'd feel a electric, very painful zap every 15-20 seconds. I didn't have health insurance and didn't go to physical therapy. And this was before TH-cam videos.. It slowly stopped. i have it occasionally, but nothing compared to that! I'm sure it didn't help that I fell on my tailbone while roller skating a few weeks before the sciatica started. One of the worst pains I ever experienced!
Always good to see more things I didn't really want to know about. The hernia thing was most interesting. I had no idea that men got more hernias for a congenital reason.
Jeffrey is the perfect model, just hangs around, not seeking any attention and makes no bones about it. 😂 As always - thank you for uploading and sharing. I wish I could give this more than 1 thumb up.
I don’t know how to say this without sounding insane, but they should have a summer camp for adults at cadaver labs, like I really don’t want to go to med school, but I would love a week long crash course and to possibly be able to be a part of a dissection
I was always "grossed out" by the thought of looking at the inside of a body, but you make it actually very interesting and not bloody or gross at all. I could not bring myself to look at the hand video yet, maybe some day. Also, because of this channel, I have sent in forms to donate my body to a medical school. As long as they receive the body quickly after death and no autopsy is done, they will accept it. Hopefully, a med student interested in orthopedic surgery will find interest in my very well-done broken wrist repair (ORIF) and my TAH/BSO for ovarian cancer.
I just had two hernias repaired one navel and one lower both needed surgery. I’m 68 years old and not overweight. I also have diverticulosis. I’ve had years of horrible episodes requiring antibiotics and even hospitalization.
Great video. Can you do video on all the post operations stuff you can find inside the body? Like titanium, surgical mesh or maybe like how does acl reconstruction looks like and things like that?
I've never encountered this channel before, but this video showed up recommended. Was not expecting to see an actual cadaver within the first minute 😅 I'll be subscribing, this is super interesting!
My brother donated his body, they'll have a field day. He drank poison when his drink was spiked, got hit by lightning, and died of a rare esophageal cancer.
If he wrote a book, I'd definitely buy a copy! Sounds like he lived a life full of interesting and unique stories that not many people could ever say they've had. I hope you and your family are doing well, I'm sorry for your loss
My nephew is just healing from surgical removal of inflamed diverticuli and having a temporary osotmy bag. Thank you for this informative and visual explanation of this condition.
Had my first bout of diverticulitis recently !!! Never knew I had it and still have no idea what caused it or what to do to prevent it from happening again !!! Very scary !!! I don’t want further issues !!!
I can't believe I'm watching a TH-camr do TH-camr-ey things whilst bodies are just chilling on the table like "Yep, I'm dead and wrapped up like a Mars Bar". What a mad world we live in. It's fascinating. And also it's making me realise I need to diet, that fat 😢
I'm an archaeology student, I've always loved human and animal anatomy and cadaver/carcass decomposition. i doubt i'll ever personally see bits of "fresh" dead body but for my personal learning about human death and knowing what stuff like visceral fat looks like before it gets, idk preserved or mummified by whatever means is super interesting
We may not be sure if visceral fat is the cause but it is associated with a lot of diseases and specially the chronic ones so if you get an abdominal MRI/CT have a look at them to see how much visceral fat you have and perhaps act as motivation to improve your diet and exercise. Dr. Sean O'mara here on TH-cam is a big advocate of showing the visceral fat to their patients as motivaton.
It’s unlikely you have marketing training so I’ll tell you you’re doing a great job. Your title is so good I clicked immediately without hesitation- no way I’d miss seeing this! Excited for how it unfolds since I’m watching it now Edit 1: this is indeed my first time seeing visceral fat. Even having done some physician shadowing in college! Awesome job showing it and comparing it to normal. Edit 2: “apparently the testies are adventure seekers” 😂 Edit 3: as I watch the diverticula part, I realize just how good you are at this. Explaining exactly what the things inside our bodies are to regular people with no medical training. Last edit: I’ve never seen spinal degeneration! Really fascinating. This was an amazing video. Literally no notes. Following to learn more! Thanks for sharing this information with the general public so we can better understand our own bodies!
It's still wild how we can dry out the body enough to make everything look like stringy jerky but still moist enough to move around. Humans are weird lol. Weird lil creatures.
About Soda or soft drinks, You'll be fine if you only Drink them sometimes. Like, Once every 7 months. But Like every day, drinking 6~7 bottles of it.... NAhhhhhhh , say hello to more pain haha
Its not about what the person ate, but how much... You can eat fast food every day for every meal, but if you're consuming less energy than your body needs or balancing it, you will not gain fat.
My dad was diagnosed with diverticulosis prob a decade ago at this point through a routine colonoscopy, and his doctor told him to not eat nuts so much or basically at all to avoid it possibly getting inflamed or anything bad happening to him. Basically what you said is now outdated knowledge. When I found out about this, I tried to keep him away from nuts. But he LOVED nuts like pistachios and Planter's mixed nuts cans so it was impossible. Nothing bad happened to him cause of it at all, but I'd always remind him about what his doctor said back then cause I was worried. Glad to know that him enjoying one of his fave snacks so much was never gonna cause him that much harm!
I showed this to my evangelical neighbor and he was INFURIATED! There were many words that he didn’t understand in the video so he said it’s actually the “work of the devil”. What do we do with these people??
Thank you for presenting this episode. I have diverticulitis. Years ago I suffered from a yeast infection that extended throughout my descending colon. I was a bland diet for two years and the infection went away. Wondering if this could contribute to my sensitivity today. Enjoy all your programs especially on the heart. You describe the type of heart attack I had many years ago.
This made me wonder about the actual process for creating cross-sections of bodies. Like, is it just a regular table saw? Do y'all draw a line first? How is trauma/destruction of the body minimized? What's the sanitization/cleanup process like? What happens to the other half of the body?
When I was in school for medical asst we took a trip to a hospital pathology lab. They were dissecting a piece of a brain. They did it by cutting it into slices like slicing cold cuts with a scalpel. Very interesting to watch. Then they look at the pieces under a microscope. I was fascinated.
@@LaurieWisti-go3yr Thank you for the info and the vicarious fascination!! That makes sense for microscope slides, but I still wonder about the half-complete bodies with the half-bones still in them!
@@yesterdaydreamThat i dont know about. They didnt show us that much.i would imagine they take tissue samples like when you have cancer. Theyre called biopsies. 5hey also find things by microscopic tests. Like I'm bleeding internally. The way they found out is that they took a stopl sample and looked at it under a microscope. Its not detectable by the naked eye. Also causes you to have a low iron count even though im taking iron 3x a day.
Hey Jonathan, how long do these cadavers usually last? I’d imagine the institute is provided a regular supply, but I’m curious about the numbers, ie how often the institute gets more. Thanks for the videos!
A few months I'd imagine, just long enough to dissect them completely. If the cadaver (or more often part of it) are intended to be used as a teaching aid then they can be preserved and used indefinitely, as anyone who has seen human body parts and embryos in jars of formaldehyde/alcohol will attest.
@keithmanning6564 at the very beginning of this video we have some BRoll of the lab from a few years ago (before we painted and added artwork, etc.). The body that is furthest back and by the open backroom door, I brought that body into the lab in December of 2012, and have continued to get bodies from donor programs since that time. As long as the bodies are embalmed properly and we continue to take good care of them, they can last for years. We will get new bodies as we needed for our students that come into the lab. Usually we have a plan for each body. Like... once body might be utilized for teaching more muscular anatomy, and another might be utilized to teach specific organ systems. It might be time to do another lab tour video....
First time seeing one of these videos....WOW!!! Jonathan is incredible, how he's able to explain these very technical medical processes, and keep me interested, fascinated, and understanding everything he says! What an amazing teacher! Is he a doctor, a researcher, or instructor at the institute? I'm gonna deep dive all the videos, cuz this is just too fascinating to stop watching! And I'm totally shocked that I was not grossed out in any way....completely due to his explanation, and matter-of-fact speaking and touching of the cadaver. Truly professional in every way! He's amazing!
Oh yeah and maybe do something to show what an internal decapitation looks like from the inside of the body - atlanto-occipital dislocation. Saw a video of a gal who was in a motorcycle accident who had that and she was one of very few who actually survived it..
@@AllThingsConsidered333 Actually, what Cervical Instability looks like. Likely too wasteful to have a brainless Occiput to view down the Foramen Magnum. That would be awesome. IDK if they have any facet joint slices. 🫣 we are crazy mad scientists!
OMG when I die the research lab team is going to learn so much. I'm 44 and have had 33 surgeries. Of those, 6 were to add technical devices or hardware into my body, and 5 were to remove organs, tissues, etc. Research team is going to have a field day, i an just jealous that I cant participate in my own autopsy!
You might be able to participate in your own autopsy if you start your own religion. Get enough people to believe what you believe and give them solid evidence that it can come to fruition.
Yuck
😂 They're totally going to quiz students with with your cadaver
Keep going. If you become a cyborg, you'll get to oversee your own service and repairs🙃
Just go full Robocop already
Today's unboxing is amazing
😂😂😂😂😂
LOL!! brilliant!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂
I’m a retired embalmer, went through college in 1973-76. Anatomy was such a favorite class and I had a wonderful and superbly smart anatomy and physiology teacher.
In my cousin's funeral home I always enjoyed collecting an autopsied body - and to closely examine the contents of the viscera bag. I learned so much about people who take care of themselves (and the people who don't). Did not become a funeral director, but I majored in English. (I would change the title of this video to things I have found INSIDE a body). Yeah, maybe I have A.D.H.D. Keep up the good work! 👨🏻🎓
Would love to hear about your stories!
My husbands grandfather died in January this year and asked that his body be donated to medical/science. He'd had a quadruple heart bypass a few years ago but died of dementia. It was hard not having a funeral to say goodbye but it feels comforting to know that in death he's helping our future doctors learn.
Yes. I want mine donated, too. I have digestive issues. From my stomach to my bowel. I've had polyps removed and have to go back every 3 years to have more removed. I'm at the stage in my life where as I've moved through my forties, I've become more intolerant to food. I've had to slowly cut out anything containing preservatives, which is a huge amount. So I grow my own fruit and veg. Have free-range chickens and ducks. I fear I will eventually end up on a liquid diet indefinitely one day when I'm reaching my retirement age. Whenever I get I'll in any way, it takes about a week or so for my digestive system to recover and I'm on liquids with biotics, vitamin supplements, and digestive enzyme replacements. It totally sucks as I love my food.
@@shereebuckley7208 I'm so sorry you're going through this. I have multiple chronic illnesses, one of them being chronic nausea which I've had for 5 years now. All day everyday feeling nauseated is not fun so I sympathise with your chronic condition.
Not sure how their problem works, but often the bodies are cremated and returned after x amount of time when ppl donate to science. Regardless, that sounds hard and I'm glad the thought is a comfort
You guys do know that when you classify yourself as a "donor", these teams come-in and begin cutting out your eyeballs and other organs before your body even gets (cold). Kind-of gruesome if you ask me.. Moreover, Medical research has already learned as much as there is to learn. The Holy Bible tells us that there's nothing (new) under the sun. That leads me to believe that what (can be) learned, has been learned already. When the fallen angels were cast out of Heaven and forced down to the earth, they introduced humanity to all manner of information they'd never known. Some examples include, weapons of war, such as the sword, shield, spear. Even "war" itself was unknown to humanity prior to this event. Some of the fallen angels taught (chemistry), some taught how to paint. One of the more well-established facts is how they shared with (man) the science of "genetics", to include genetic manipulation/tampering. There are many more disciplines formerly unknown to mortal man on the earth until the fall of Lucifer and the angels that followed him. For a more in-depth study on the topic, refer to the Book of Enoch, there you will find more of what I've briefly mentioned. It's an interesting read to say the least.
My grandmother also donated her body to science. She was an educator in life and wanted to continue to educate after death. It was odd for me to think of college students cutting into my grandma (if that was something her body would have been used for)- but it was a beautiful wish for her to continue to educate. 💖
Damn. I was expecting to see people who had swallowed pens and other inanimate objects that somehow didn’t have complications.
Me too! Like maybe someone who's liver formed a pearl or something...😂
Me too! The title was misleading for us non-medical people eh? My Imagination went wild!
We should start a me too movement right here 😂😂
I was HOPING for this too omg 😂😂 imagine
funny
Not a doctor, or have any desire to be in a medical field. I know that I dont have the work drive to do anything like that properly, but this is still such an interesting channel. Everyone should know how their bodies work.
Same here...I agree! 👍
We agree! Thanks for watching!
@@theanatomylabcan you do a video on the Plastination used to preserve your cadavers? Do you guys do it yourself after a post mortem exam or it's done before you receive them?
I've seen the body worlds exhibit and it's really interesting so I think other channel followers would also be interested
I wish everyone had a basic understanding, it would make my job as an RN so much easier!
Could the big packets of fat be cut out adjunct to a required other surgery?
I had an inguenal hernia and it changed my posture just enough to put pressure on the syatic nerve causing such severe pain I couldn't breathe or sit or stand or lie down. It was easily repaired through a simple outpatient surgery by a highly skilled surgeon with mesh. I was back to normal that same day and haven't had a problem since. 8 years and counting.
My female coonhound had a inguenal hernia when I adopted her. We believe she was born with it. It was huge and required a specialist to fix it. She’s 2 now and doing wonderful. They are a very complicated hernia.
Your comment is being shown to future surg techs as motivational material at the present.
wow!
Damn I guess I got lucky when I had mine I was like 6 months old when they caught it, lucky it didn’t cause any more issues down the line.
“Testes are adventure seekers”
That cracked me up 🤣🤣🤣
Yea they are, they’ve taken me to some interesting places.
I know! That was NUTS!
Just like most men😅
@@Actias1974 Yes! More than one time I have been like "Ok, here is where I die! Damn you testes, I should have never listened to you"
Can be trouble makers too!
The bit about the fat really hit home for me !
Time to do something about this gut !
Same! Currently trying to get healthier for medical reasons and this gives me more motivation!
Ditto!
If only I really knew how.
Unfortunately, the "same answer we're tired of hearing" apparently only goes so far.
I mean, I've cut down empty calories and started exercising more, but all that's really happening is that I have more efficient muscles and am tired more.
Turns out, it's a lot easier to put it on than take it off.
@@dakotahrickard so in large the "same answer were tired of hearing" will always work. The hurdle is time. The time it takes you to lose 5 pound and the time it takes me to lose the same could be drastically different, at that point there plenty of other variables as well. Just got to tick em off the list one at a time until you can find what works for you.
@@dakotahrickardmovement and weight removal is also different for women, women moving through menopause have different requirements as well
This is one of the best places on TH-cam for any Aspiring doctors and medical students to learn anatomy.
And curious people too!
I'm an engineer but still I love the bioengineering of our bodies
@@iuristasiv9360engineer also 😀.... port engineer to be specific
@@NAT-turners-Revenge port engineer? Very interesting were are you based? I'm a electromechanical engineer of electric vehicles, so I'm more apt towards electric stuff you must be a proper mechanical engineer
Love to see comments like this! Thank you!
Two years ago, without any diagnosis of Diverticulosis, I had a large Diverticulum which ruptured. I had emergency surgery and received a Colostomy. It turned out that I was EXTREMELY constipated due to a lifelong genetic illness called Hypermobile Ehlers Danlos Syndrome, which caused my colon to stretch a lot. I didn't even know I was constipated!
I recovered slowly, but these days I am never constipated due to my colostomy! Yay!
That's crazy! I recently discovered that I may have hypermobility eds as well, and I never even thought about the colon stretching. I always just think of joints and ligaments hyperextending
Yeah I'm always amazed at how many people brush off digestive issues as normal. They really aren't and it's definitely worth figuring out the root cause. Mine was food allergies and I was actually going into anaphylactic shock but because my skin didn't have the type of response people were expecting, it went undiagnosed for years and I'm honestly lucky to be alive. Since I changed my diet I have had zero digestive issues which is a huge change from having failed classes in college because I was so sick I couldn't attend them regularly and got docked for attendance.
Can anybody inform whether a colostomy bag can be temporary or once a person has one, it will remain permanently? Just curious. Thank you.
@@annfrost3323they can be surgically reversed depending on the patient.
@@annfrost3323 they can be temporary
Visceral fat is pretty shocking. And a good motivation to start shaking your inner Jeff.
He should have differentiated the omentum from the fat in the intestinal region. Kind of misleading.
@@Kiskadee8388 He should have, but hes only human. Sometimes when the same information is repeated to you, you think of it as a basic fact and forget to label it out for others who may not know! Its possible it just slipped through the cracks and he forgot lmao
Love this comment, hahaha
@@Kiskadee8388wtf is the omentum? That all looked crazy
i was kind of expecting a few un-removed bullets, or shrapnel from world war 2 or maybe a splinter when the person got when they were a kid....But the visceral fat was amazing because most of us will eventually get some and exercise and diet are the best ways to keep it low....love the videos and look forward to Sundays just to see them...thanks
It was awesome to see the conditions in the body and have them explained. As a nurse, it helps so much to see the diseases and conditions I hear so often in a patient's diagnosis.
Imagine a Chubbyemu case that ends with "At Autopsy", and then continues over at this channel where we can actually see the cadaver 😀
That'd actually be awesome, he should reach out!
You'd run into some ethical and moral issues doing that. Not going to happen.
I am sure you have to live in the area where he owns his business so that you would be sent to him after death. plus most of the work he does with the bodies he probably cannot show on youtube but certain things as long as the algorithm allows it are ok. but i agree it would be cool to have your body featured on a channel like this at least in death you would be famous for a miniute.
Brilliant idea
I have severe Ulcerative Colitis, which causes arthritis. I plan to donate my body to science once I die to assist in learning. This channel is really awesome.
My husband had diverticulitis once. Also, we decided to donate our bodies for medical research/medical school use. He passed away 10 years ago thiß November 2nd. These videos bring comfort to me, knowing how his body could help future do toes. Also .I've been through so much medically, your explanations of how things happen in our bodies helps me understand my own body issues. Thank-you!
I'm hoping my body will be accepted for research also...but nephew who works at funeral home said they're not taking many lately as have plenty.
My step dad had diverticulitis! It was excruciatingly painful. I remember I would find him curled up on the ground just crying, and he isn’t normally a cryer. He had to have a large part of his intestines removed because of it! He is doing so much better now, thankfully.
I recently started physical therapy for the first time. My therapist is young, recently out of school. He gets so excited when he talks about anatomy, then apologizes, lol. I am in healthcare myself, and I tell him, "Don't apologize! I love hearing you talk!"
The spine cross-section interested me. My husband had ankylosis spondylitis for almost 50 years. At age 74, he was in a serious MVA and some of his multiple injuries included broken C6 and C7, three broken vertebrae in the lower spine and a broken pelvis. One of his surgeries was to install spinal rods. The surgeon was hesitant. He said my husband’s entire spine had fused from the AS, but that the bones themselves were brittle. They did the surgery and it was successful, but unfortunately my husband succumbed to his injuries a few weeks later. ANYWAY, have you worked on cadavers with AS? Do you have spinal cross-sections? 41 yr of living with him and the multiple permutations of AS has made me curious.
I'm obese, and this is a real eye-opener. That amount of fat is just chilling in my body (and around my heart!)
To well, actually protect your heart (I think)
Imagine sitting in the afterlife and watching half a million people watch someone call you fat 💀
LOL!
I enjoy this channel. Many years ago, I was a medical transcriptionist at the Mass. General Hospital, mostly transcribing operative notes. I have always been fascinated with the human body.
Me too, but if it were on four legged fluffies, I couldn’t handle it. The first one I “saw” was in 9th grade. My teacher was grunting and struggling, then gave up and said “still frozen” then cancelled that lesson. That was 1978-78. I read decades later on the City paper and our school old school Facebook he was found murdered and it’s a Cold Case. I hope his case gets solved.
On autopsy, they found my dad's organs reversed left/right. I didn't inherit that apparently.
My mom had an extra chamber in her heart
The reversal condition is called 'Situs Inversus'.
It's call Situs Inversus- a somewhat rare anomaly.
Did he have respiratory tract issues? If I recall correctly, there are these ciliae that have two functions: moving goop up the respiratory tract but also they determine the asymmetry during early stages of development by literally moving some molecular factors to one side of the embryo. So when the ciliae are genetically disabled, Situs Inversus arises and the person has respiratory tract issues. I might of course be wrong.
@@GetOutsideYourself my grandmother was the same way.
This channel is like my favorite anatomy class
This channel is biology student's goal for anatomy class presentation.
I wonder so hard what this guy's class presentations were like. Was he always this good at communicating?!
I wish bio would have allowed us cadavers but reserved for medical school. Too expensive and few donations
We actually recently recorded one of our in person lab classes. We are debating on releasing it on TH-cam over the next few weeks...
@@theanatomylab🎉
@@theanatomylab so many of us would watch that!! I find these videos tremendously insightful and keep my mind learning!
man, this channel is incredibly informative and well produced but sometimes i can only go so far before getting sick, this one in particular lol. i have mad respect for doctors, i could never do this.
TY for what you do. When I was starting my degree in Southern California that Anatomy one class could only move to Anatomy too if they had an A and they were willing to work on the fresh cadavers for the other students. I learned so much more than I ever learned in any classes and any nursing program even in the ICU with open chests and ECMO thank you for all you do. And thank you to those who donated their bodies to science
This was fascinating. Im a Med Assistant that used to work for Orthopedic surgeons. The surgeons were very happy to educate us by explaining the MRIs and xrays, even explaining the surgical procedures ...but seeing the spine on an actual human...from that view, thats so amazing. 😊
Very helpful to actually see the abnormalities. You explain very well. Thank you.
Please make a video on Nervous System in our body.
You really have learned everything about human anatomy, very good. My husband suffered several bouts of diverticulitis and was hospitalized and told to avoid seeds and nuts and he took Metamucil every night and he also suffered a perforated colon and had to have a colostomy while he was receiving chemo for what they diagnosed as Pancreatic cancer with Mets to the liver. He had a lot of problems with his digestive tract and he had a lot of stomach fat.
I knew a grandfather of a friend years ago that had a colostomy and he had a lot of gas, it was not nice to be around him.
We had two elderly people's cadavers and a younger guy with a clear gunshot wound to the head. The cranial vault underneath was shattered in a starburst pattern. Poor guy. Nobody claimed him.
Gee, I wonder why? He seemed to be so loved.
@@SlickArmorwhoa… hold up, swole up. Are you trying to connect his horrific death to no one wanting to claim his body?
😮
AMAZING!! I’d love to leave my body to my Alma mater med school for this reason. My hubby disagrees, but there really is no downside, our cadavers were always treated with the utmost respect and we learned much needed information. So happy and proud to see this much needed traditional teaching is happening for the public to partake in. Knowledge is precious and powerful. Thank sir!
Excellent video! I actually was very sick with diverticulitis for an entire year. They had to finally do a left hemi colecectomy. Then just this past week the MRI ordered on my spine shows T7-T8 are in rough shape-- yes osteoporosis contributed to major disc problems. I do believe it was meant to be I stumbled across this video. Thank you so much for all you do. 🙏🙏
I am jealous of that guy. He is very articulate and knowledgeable for his age.
Yes, he is awesome!
He’s 41
@Kalin9955RN he looks great for his age! I thought late 20s/early 30s!
He's grinning like an infomercial host while he cuts up a human corpse for views. It may be articulate but it's not particularly healthy.
@@hamishwhitehenderson5197 he's a scientist... We would be really really really bad off without people with this passion
1:40 Imagine offering your body to science after death and then being roasted for unhealthy fat your body contains 😂😂 Sorry this made me laugh a bit too much
Ps I am aware of the fact that it isn’t roasting but science which is very cool and interesting! I was just making a joke :)
😂😂😂😂
telling basic, obv facts ≠ roasting
That would be me. Drs would be discussing what I must have ate to get so fat.
Chill its not roasting .. as student studying biology i find it helpful and intresting
Put down that crookie!
just amazing easy to understand perfection 🥰 as a emergency first aid trainer im astounded that people know so little about how their body functions .. i am forever fascinated and grateful for this go to channel 👍👍
this is one of the most interesting YT sites ever! I wanted to work in the medical field so badly but my health held me back. awesome video!
Yeah it's kind of a bummer that in order to be a healer you have to be healthy yourself.
I will give you props for blending in the AG1 add with your videos. Of all the channels I watch, you guys do the best to make the "commercials" fit in and not interrupt.
I just watched a video explaining the history of the guy who started ag1.. apparently he scammed a bunch of folks on rent to own real estate deals in Europe and there are a number of cases against him in criminal court. So he came to America and started a supplement in an industry that literally has no regulation. And so many TH-camrs are doing his advertising. Ugh. We pay for YT premium to get rid of commercials so now they have found a way to get their stupid advertising in anyway.
This type of videos is my favourite for some reason💀
Nice. Thank you
Thanks! It was about time to do another video like this.
Same🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😭😭I even feel guilty 💀💀💀and dark
@@theanatomylab why are all the bodies you show , a yellow colour? ... that is not normal
2:58 bro just has people laying around 💀
I just knew it wouldn't be some classic video about strange swallowed by both ends objects. Your channel is doing a great job maintaining a nice and professional image :)
Thanks❤
I know nothing about the medical field but I love this channel. Feel like I understand so much more from a short period of time.
Absolutely love your videos. Keep up the great work!!
Such a great contribution! Thanks for the video
I can't watch this. I just turned 36 and somewhat recently, both of my parents passed within about a year of eachother. My father being in his early 60's and my mother in her early 50's. The weight of the contemplation of death plagues and unsettles me of late. Thank you for doing what you do though, it helps us all now and those ahead of us too.
Nuts: Yeah, we going on a mission, it's too damn hot up here.
Soooo interesting and so well explained!! Love this channel!!! Thank You!!
I miss my Anatomy & physiology classes .
I drove my tutor bonkers asking more & more questions ☺️
Although it saddens me that we know more about our ailments after death .
👍
Thank you for all your knowledge and for teaching us so much. And thank you to all the people that donated their bodies to science to help us all understand better how the body functions.
1:00 opened the mf like an ancient tome
huey
Just want to say thank you for being educated and entertained at the same time ❤️
So interesting!
My baby boy had to have hernia surgery at 3 months old. His Dad & Grandfather felt bad for calling him testiculese after birth.
My Father said “call an ambulance, it feels like something inside me is leaking inside me.”
He was diagnosed with diverticulitis.
It might be too late but please tell them not to fall bad for calling him testicules, because that is a masterpiece
@@lisachiappetti6092 HA! I took a screenshot for them. 😆
I really love this vlog. Highly educational. Being able to actually see the thngs you have only had word descriptions or line drawings or artist renderings of until this is super enlightening.
Could you please make a film on the sciatic nerve route through the hip bones ischium, ilium, pubis. Some images route it differently from the sacrum through the sciatic and obturator foramens. It will help understand a pain caused by a swelling on the ischium better. Thanks much.
Yes! That'd be interesting! Sciatica is the worst and no med will help the pain, not even opiods!
I had a severe case of it in my mid 20s for several months. I couldn't sleep at all. From my right hip running down my leg to my foot I'd feel a electric, very painful zap every 15-20 seconds. I didn't have health insurance and didn't go to physical therapy. And this was before TH-cam videos.. It slowly stopped. i have it occasionally, but nothing compared to that! I'm sure it didn't help that I fell on my tailbone while roller skating a few weeks before the sciatica started. One of the worst pains I ever experienced!
I'm watching this for my massage therapy course. It helps alot.
Love your teaching method ❤❤❤❤
Nice. Thank you
Thank you!
Always good to see more things I didn't really want to know about. The hernia thing was most interesting. I had no idea that men got more hernias for a congenital reason.
Excellent explanations and graphics.
Excellent work love it as a senior nurse!
Jeffrey is the perfect model, just hangs around, not seeking any attention and makes no bones about it. 😂
As always - thank you for uploading and sharing.
I wish I could give this more than 1 thumb up.
Great pun! … Jeffrey usually makes no bones about it, but sometimes he gets up to a little skullduggery.
@@ralphlyda4545 Awesome add 😀
I don’t know how to say this without sounding insane, but they should have a summer camp for adults at cadaver labs, like I really don’t want to go to med school, but I would love a week long crash course and to possibly be able to be a part of a dissection
I was always "grossed out" by the thought of looking at the inside of a body, but you make it actually very interesting and not bloody or gross at all. I could not bring myself to look at the hand video yet, maybe some day.
Also, because of this channel, I have sent in forms to donate my body to a medical school. As long as they receive the body quickly after death and no autopsy is done, they will accept it. Hopefully, a med student interested in orthopedic surgery will find interest in my very well-done broken wrist repair (ORIF) and my TAH/BSO for ovarian cancer.
Oh girl wow you're a survivor????? Good for you my grandma died of ovarian cancer I'm glad you survived it ❤️
I just had two hernias repaired one navel and one lower both needed surgery. I’m 68 years old and not overweight. I also have diverticulosis. I’ve had years of horrible episodes requiring antibiotics and even hospitalization.
Great video. Can you do video on all the post operations stuff you can find inside the body? Like titanium, surgical mesh or maybe like how does acl reconstruction looks like and things like that?
I've never encountered this channel before, but this video showed up recommended. Was not expecting to see an actual cadaver within the first minute 😅 I'll be subscribing, this is super interesting!
They have a lot of interesting videos!
My brother donated his body, they'll have a field day. He drank poison when his drink was spiked, got hit by lightning, and died of a rare esophageal cancer.
Damn! Seems like he lives one heck of a life. Sorry for you loss though
If he wrote a book, I'd definitely buy a copy! Sounds like he lived a life full of interesting and unique stories that not many people could ever say they've had. I hope you and your family are doing well, I'm sorry for your loss
My nephew is just healing from surgical removal of inflamed diverticuli and having a temporary osotmy bag. Thank you for this informative and visual explanation of this condition.
The proverbial picture is worth a thousand words. Thanks.
Had my first bout of diverticulitis recently !!! Never knew I had it and still have no idea what caused it or what to do to prevent it from happening again !!! Very scary !!! I don’t want further issues !!!
I can't believe I'm watching a TH-camr do TH-camr-ey things whilst bodies are just chilling on the table like "Yep, I'm dead and wrapped up like a Mars Bar". What a mad world we live in. It's fascinating. And also it's making me realise I need to diet, that fat 😢
I love your videos, I learn a lot, thank you ❤
Thank you! I hear a lot about visceral vat but didn’t have a great visual for normal vs abnormal.
I'm an archaeology student, I've always loved human and animal anatomy and cadaver/carcass decomposition. i doubt i'll ever personally see bits of "fresh" dead body but for my personal learning about human death and knowing what stuff like visceral fat looks like before it gets, idk preserved or mummified by whatever means is super interesting
Wow 👏 😮
You are an amazing teacher! Ty🌝
I love your videos! I learn so much about the body every time you post one. Thank you for doing a great job!
Your channel ROCKS. ❤ 💯
Oh wow, the belly button 0:14 looks so weird without skin. 😄 Edit: or it is with skin!
❤I love this channel so much. Thank you for sharing.
We may not be sure if visceral fat is the cause but it is associated with a lot of diseases and specially the chronic ones so if you get an abdominal MRI/CT have a look at them to see how much visceral fat you have and perhaps act as motivation to improve your diet and exercise.
Dr. Sean O'mara here on TH-cam is a big advocate of showing the visceral fat to their patients as motivaton.
My BFF has duverticulosis. She spent 3 days in the hospital last week. I'm SO grateful I don't have it!!! I'll be sending her this video!
I loved anatomy and had a perfect score, when I studied medicine at Aarhus university
It’s unlikely you have marketing training so I’ll tell you you’re doing a great job. Your title is so good I clicked immediately without hesitation- no way I’d miss seeing this! Excited for how it unfolds since I’m watching it now
Edit 1: this is indeed my first time seeing visceral fat. Even having done some physician shadowing in college! Awesome job showing it and comparing it to normal.
Edit 2: “apparently the testies are adventure seekers” 😂
Edit 3: as I watch the diverticula part, I realize just how good you are at this. Explaining exactly what the things inside our bodies are to regular people with no medical training.
Last edit: I’ve never seen spinal degeneration! Really fascinating.
This was an amazing video. Literally no notes. Following to learn more! Thanks for sharing this information with the general public so we can better understand our own bodies!
It's still wild how we can dry out the body enough to make everything look like stringy jerky but still moist enough to move around. Humans are weird lol. Weird lil creatures.
So happy I found this channel as I find the body to be fascinating
You can see that people ate a lot of fast food and drunk a lot of sodas…
About Soda or soft drinks, You'll be fine if you only Drink them sometimes. Like, Once every 7 months. But Like every day, drinking 6~7 bottles of it.... NAhhhhhhh , say hello to more pain haha
Its not about what the person ate, but how much... You can eat fast food every day for every meal, but if you're consuming less energy than your body needs or balancing it, you will not gain fat.
Drunk?
My dad was diagnosed with diverticulosis prob a decade ago at this point through a routine colonoscopy, and his doctor told him to not eat nuts so much or basically at all to avoid it possibly getting inflamed or anything bad happening to him. Basically what you said is now outdated knowledge. When I found out about this, I tried to keep him away from nuts. But he LOVED nuts like pistachios and Planter's mixed nuts cans so it was impossible. Nothing bad happened to him cause of it at all, but I'd always remind him about what his doctor said back then cause I was worried. Glad to know that him enjoying one of his fave snacks so much was never gonna cause him that much harm!
I showed this to my evangelical neighbor and he was INFURIATED! There were many words that he didn’t understand in the video so he said it’s actually the “work of the devil”.
What do we do with these people??
Health is Wealth. Without this nothing is possible.
Neat, thanks for sharing!
Thank you for presenting this episode. I have diverticulitis. Years ago I suffered from a yeast infection that extended throughout my descending colon. I was a bland diet for two years and the infection went away. Wondering if this could contribute to my sensitivity today. Enjoy all your programs especially on the heart. You describe the type of heart attack I had many years ago.
This made me wonder about the actual process for creating cross-sections of bodies. Like, is it just a regular table saw? Do y'all draw a line first? How is trauma/destruction of the body minimized? What's the sanitization/cleanup process like? What happens to the other half of the body?
Have you seen them slice cold cuts at the deli?
@@Actias1974😂😂😂😂
When I was in school for medical asst we took a trip to a hospital pathology lab. They were dissecting a piece of a brain. They did it by cutting it into slices like slicing cold cuts with a scalpel. Very interesting to watch. Then they look at the pieces under a microscope. I was fascinated.
@@LaurieWisti-go3yr Thank you for the info and the vicarious fascination!! That makes sense for microscope slides, but I still wonder about the half-complete bodies with the half-bones still in them!
@@yesterdaydreamThat i dont know about. They didnt show us that much.i would imagine they take tissue samples like when you have cancer. Theyre called biopsies. 5hey also find things by microscopic tests. Like I'm bleeding internally. The way they found out is that they took a stopl sample and looked at it under a microscope. Its not detectable by the naked eye. Also causes you to have a low iron count even though im taking iron 3x a day.
Thank you so much for these anatomy lessons! I am learning so much!
Hey Jonathan, how long do these cadavers usually last? I’d imagine the institute is provided a regular supply, but I’m curious about the numbers, ie how often the institute gets more.
Thanks for the videos!
A few months I'd imagine, just long enough to dissect them completely.
If the cadaver (or more often part of it) are intended to be used as a teaching aid then they can be preserved and used indefinitely, as anyone who has seen human body parts and embryos in jars of formaldehyde/alcohol will attest.
@keithmanning6564 at the very beginning of this video we have some BRoll of the lab from a few years ago (before we painted and added artwork, etc.). The body that is furthest back and by the open backroom door, I brought that body into the lab in December of 2012, and have continued to get bodies from donor programs since that time. As long as the bodies are embalmed properly and we continue to take good care of them, they can last for years. We will get new bodies as we needed for our students that come into the lab. Usually we have a plan for each body. Like... once body might be utilized for teaching more muscular anatomy, and another might be utilized to teach specific organ systems. It might be time to do another lab tour video....
@@theanatomylab I’ll have a look for your existing lab tour, thanks!
First time seeing one of these videos....WOW!!! Jonathan is incredible, how he's able to explain these very technical medical processes, and keep me interested, fascinated, and understanding everything he says! What an amazing teacher! Is he a doctor, a researcher, or instructor at the institute? I'm gonna deep dive all the videos, cuz this is just too fascinating to stop watching! And I'm totally shocked that I was not grossed out in any way....completely due to his explanation, and matter-of-fact speaking and touching of the cadaver. Truly professional in every way! He's amazing!
Wish you didn’t push AG1. It’s a massive scam and it takes away from your channel.
I have a few conditions you documented in this video and showed my 20 yr. old son so he could understand more about my health issues. Thanks !!!
Do you have a Cadaver you can go over Craniocervical Junction ligaments? (Alar, Capsule, Apical, PLL, ALL, even Transverse)?
Oh yeah and maybe do something to show what an internal decapitation looks like from the inside of the body - atlanto-occipital dislocation. Saw a video of a gal who was in a motorcycle accident who had that and she was one of very few who actually survived it..
@@AllThingsConsidered333 Actually, what Cervical Instability looks like. Likely too wasteful to have a brainless Occiput to view down the Foramen Magnum. That would be awesome. IDK if they have any facet joint slices.
🫣 we are crazy mad scientists!