I’m in awe of how you broke down my 3 hour lecture into 13 mins and made it all make sense. I like your delivery and fast talking it kept me on my toes and didn’t allow me to get bored. I feel hella confident for this upcoming test. I’m just proud of how you lectured this and the drawings to go w/ it.........wow great job and thank you!
I never realized how much more helpful a guide is when the speaker is also a talented artist. It is so much easier to internalize and apply the knowledge
I’m sat in hospital next to my 16yr old son who has broken his 6 and 7T and has no feeling below. Desperately trying to understand how our spinal cord works and grasp some basic understand so I’m ready for the impending meetings with doctors, surgeons and specialists. This video has been fantastic. Thank you so much.
Thanks ALOT! its sooo nice of you to invest so much to time in drawing, filming, cutting etc. and it makes it so much easier and much more fun to learn all this
You are honestly a lifesaver. Taking neuro for the first time in medical school was making me lose my mind, until I came across these - you make it SO ORGANIZED! Thank you so so so so much!
I'm italian and I could not find anywhere videos like this in my language. You are so good at explaining that I'm understanding better than reading my own book.. AND ENGLISH IS NOT MY FIRT LANGUAGE! You are the best, I'm so grateful for what you do, your brain and your amazing drawing skills Thank you 🙏🙏
Have multiple neuromas on my spine and have 3 surgeries to debulk what I understand to be swanomas. For the most part have not lost much motor abilities but some significant sensory losses. Basically my leg and a few other parts feel like they are asleep. You have made a lot of this make sense and I will look for more, Please keep them coming! I have a new appreciation for the wonderful work my neurosurgeon and his team have done to keep me going.
Very well done! But in this video, the second sensory neuron has to take the anterolateral spinothalamic pathway (cross to anterior and lateral tract of the opposite side, NOT in the dorsal tract) and goes straight to the thalamus (NOT stops in the brainstem). For the posterior column pathway, the first sensory neuron goes through posterior column to meet the second sensory neuron in gracilis and cuneate nuclei in the brainstem (medulla oblongata) of the same side...
Where were you when I was in medical school? Life would have been so much easier for me. I like neurology when I was practicing but love it now after watching your awesome lecture. Keep up the good work. Lots of thanks.
In peripheral nervous system myelination is done by oligodendrocytes and not by schwann cells. So spinal nerves should not be covered by schwann cells. Anyways very very nice video and explanation.
GOD BLESS THIS MAN OMG.... i am not one of those ppl who cna just memorize slides without understanding.. this made me visualize what i am learning and or what is expected of me to understand.. THANK U MAN
This video is awesome. I am so thrilled that I was able to find it. I am going to share it with my teenage son. You have made the material enjoyable. Thanks so much. Please keep the videos coming. I watched your videos and was able to pass my family nurse practitioner board exams. I kept your descriptions in my brain for the exam.
This was spectacular - you have no idea how many i have gone through and finally found this gem! Thank you so much for putting in the effort to make it.
Had I studied in these TH-cam era, I had excelled more than I did during my studies. This was hard in those years of mine🤦 But I'm still learning, so Thanks and I appreciate your efforts.
Me: studies neurology Me: I don't understand a thing, the professor didn't explain shit, and the official material is useless. A guy I just found on TH-cam: Let me help you out
@@loey5317 I'm a psychology BA student, neurology is not my main subject, but I find it fascinating. If you have the knack for it, it can be really cool. It os also a field of science with rapid improovement and if you want to research, there is plenty to be done.
Thank you sir. It becomes very easy for me to understand from your videos and the diagrams are brilliant. I am doing my batchelors in physiotherapy and it is helping me a lot.
You're a treasure! Don't slow down... a viewer may pause, if need be. You're natural pace has a great flow. Speed is welcomed! Thank you for sharing your gift.
Great video ! Nice drawings and explanation :) But maybe it is more informative to mention that the spinal cord stops at L1-L2 and from there on continues as the cauda equina. Keep up the good work :)
The lowest part of the spinal cord tapers (comes to a point) forming a "tail" of spinal nerves, at this point the nerves travel inside the spinal column. This tail of spinal nerves is known as the cauda equina originating at around the first or second lumbar nerve. So you're right I hope? Cause thats what my lecturer taught me hahah :)
Armando, You are soooooooo SMART AND TALENTED! How did you learn to do all these things - teach neuroanatomy and create this beautiful and informative video?! Wow! Thank you, thank you, for helping me/everyone with our studies!
hey Luke do you by any chance have the other drawings of other videos for neurology. can you please kindly notify me, I would really appreciate it. thank you
You sir are just an amazing person sent from heaven. I can't even begin to express how much I appreciate the videos you have made thus far. I'm a premed student and one of my goals is to become a surgeon which is my dream job. However, sometimes learning about the body how it functions and the different infections and disorders that cause it to go astray is sometimes confusing and hard to grasp. But you have explained it in "laymans" term that I now have a general understanding on how things work in the body. Again thank you so much Armando your a very intelligent person who is well spoken and caring and may god bless you with nothing but happiness on your future endeavours.
Thank you so much for all of your videos. I used your videos to get me through undergraduate. Now I am in a graduate Anesthesia program and once again your helping me! Thank you so much..your awesome!
THIS WAS SO HELPFUL. Thank you so much, I have been watching videos all day to understand the spinal nerves and this was by far the best I have seen !!
Very nicely done. Would like to point out one thing about the ganglion part for autonomic neurons though: The ganglion is part of the sympathetic trunk (a separate structure) and is NOT a part of any spinal nerve. These ganglia are connected to the ventral rami for spinal nerves T1-L2 through white and grey rami communicantes. Apart from that, amazing video!
Seriously, these videos are SO helpful! i'm a visual learning and trying to revise all this in books and journals is so frustrating. Thank you so much for these and keep up the GREAT work :)
You are so very talented and amazing. What a beautifully illustrated and easy to understand description of the central nervous system. Really helps me out a lot!!!!
Bright明 understanding comes from great clarity . (Same word in Chinese with 日sun plus 月moon drawn together !) Thanks for brilliantly illustrating how to teach this !
we never covered human biology at school. Wished we had, and this guy would have been the ideal Teacher. Very good video. I am currently suffering pain from the lower thoracic region...keeps firing up the lower rib cage. Very painful but got some pills to block the nerves a bit. Cant help but be impressed with how the Human body is designed...well, all of Creation is wonderfully designed.
Hey really great job! If I can add something for everybody studying right now, the drawing/description toward the end of the postganglionic autonomic motor neuron should NOT be drawn with myeline shealth. Post ganglionic autonomic motor neurons are type C fibers meaning they are characterized by the fact they are UNmyelinated. However, somatic motor neurons are indeed myelinated. thank you for this great video.
I’m in awe of how you broke down my 3 hour lecture into 13 mins and made it all make sense. I like your delivery and fast talking it kept me on my toes and didn’t allow me to get bored. I feel hella confident for this upcoming test. I’m just proud of how you lectured this and the drawings to go w/ it.........wow great job and thank you!
Hi
Hii
Are you in med school?
literally a waste of time sitting in class to have it explained way better here in a fraction of the time
I never realized how much more helpful a guide is when the speaker is also a talented artist. It is so much easier to internalize and apply the knowledge
I’m sat in hospital next to my 16yr old son who has broken his 6 and 7T and has no feeling below. Desperately trying to understand how our spinal cord works and grasp some basic understand so I’m ready for the impending meetings with doctors, surgeons and specialists. This video has been fantastic. Thank you so much.
I pray for his fast recovery
How is he doing now
Mnemonic to remember the meningeal layers: PAD (Like a padding of the Spine) - Pia, Arachnoid and Dura. Great video as always Armando!!
@@RandomThought111 My pleasure Niki!
Thank!😊
Pad means fart in hindi
great way of remembering!
weeks of lecture condensed beautifully into 13 minutes. bravo
😍😍
absolutely ridiculous how much more I learned in 13:45 minutes than in a 4 hour lecture.Love this!
this is true talent, knowledge tied in with art
I haven't got a clue what you said at the very start but this has been so helpful.
This is actually phenomenal!!! so condensed and detailed. I've learnt more here than I have in all my anatomy lectures. THANK YOU SO MUCH
agreed!!!
Thanks ALOT! its sooo nice of you to invest so much to time in drawing, filming, cutting etc. and it makes it so much easier and much more fun to learn all this
You are honestly a lifesaver. Taking neuro for the first time in medical school was making me lose my mind, until I came across these - you make it SO ORGANIZED! Thank you so so so so much!
From India ...
That Video Is Very Helpfull For Me ...
Thanks 🙏
the first 8 seconds are like another language! :P fantastic video overall though.
Exactly
Yesss! Frst i thought i wont be able to understand😰
No, but seriously lmfao I was about to click another video. Haha!
Exactly what I thought! I was about to exit and continue looking😂
Omg yes, I checked if I had my speed on 2.0 hahaha
your videos are going to get very popular with everybody teaching themselves this year
I'm italian and I could not find anywhere videos like this in my language.
You are so good at explaining that I'm understanding better than reading my own book.. AND ENGLISH IS NOT MY FIRT LANGUAGE!
You are the best, I'm so grateful for what you do, your brain and your amazing drawing skills
Thank you 🙏🙏
Have multiple neuromas on my spine and have 3 surgeries to debulk what I understand to be swanomas. For the most part have not lost much motor abilities but some significant sensory losses. Basically my leg and a few other parts feel like they are asleep. You have made a lot of this make sense and I will look for more, Please keep them coming! I have a new appreciation for the wonderful work my neurosurgeon and his team have done to keep me going.
Very well done! But in this video, the second sensory neuron has to take the anterolateral spinothalamic pathway (cross to anterior and lateral tract of the opposite side, NOT in the dorsal tract) and goes straight to the thalamus (NOT stops in the brainstem). For the posterior column pathway, the first sensory neuron goes through posterior column to meet the second sensory neuron in gracilis and cuneate nuclei in the brainstem (medulla oblongata) of the same side...
He discusses the intro for first-year students, your information will be discussed in depth later.
WOW! AMAZING LECTURES AND DRAWINGS!! THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!
You've managed to do what my lecturer couldn't do in an hour! You make a difficult subject for me actually understandable! Thanks!
THANK YOU!!! I understand the way you teach. Its simple to grasp. Please don't stop making videos. You're helping so many students!!
Wow I watched so many videos and never understood the spinal cord and nerves. UNTIL I watched this. THANK YOUUUUU
Extremely talented illustrator. The illustrations made what he was saying more accessible to my understanding of it.
Where were you when I was in medical school? Life would have been so much easier for me. I like neurology when I was practicing but love it now after watching your awesome lecture. Keep up the good work. Lots of thanks.
Hi sir would you give me your number
@@FaheemKhan-bp1hj are you okay???
@@mfatimah9427 for what
Remember using your videos to prepare for exams 2-3 years ago! They are amazing! Still use them today! thanks Armando
wowwwwwww!!!
I can't found any words that express my gratitude for this video.
very helpful for
In peripheral nervous system myelination is done by oligodendrocytes and not by schwann cells. So spinal nerves should not be covered by schwann cells.
Anyways very very nice video and explanation.
this guy needs to be a medical illustrator 🙏🌷💗😉
Cary (DAT ass?)
Cary sorry. I had to.
@@kenkaneki2486 you're giving reply to this guy (cary) for a comment he made 2 years ago😂😂😂. I'm wondering if cary is still alive it not
I think that is what he is
@@doctorminhaj3597 I’m replying to a comment that you made two years ago, I wonder if you’re still alive
GOD BLESS THIS MAN OMG.... i am not one of those ppl who cna just memorize slides without understanding.. this made me visualize what i am learning and or what is expected of me to understand.. THANK U MAN
Man this is amazing.
You are amazing.
Helped a lot.
Appreciate it so much.
Too amazing!
I am amazed at how clear, concise and informative this video was.
Armando.. I just want to thank you for these videos! They are extremely helpful!!
This video is awesome. I am so thrilled that I was able to find it. I am going to share it with my teenage son. You have made the material enjoyable. Thanks so much. Please keep the videos coming. I watched your videos and was able to pass my family nurse practitioner board exams. I kept your descriptions in my brain for the exam.
This was spectacular - you have no idea how many i have gone through and finally found this gem! Thank you so much for putting in the effort to make it.
Your diagram makes it so much better to understand, rather than just staring at one picture at a time in the textbook. Thank you :)
You are amazing. Please start an Embryology Series !!!!
Had I studied in these TH-cam era, I had excelled more than I did during my studies. This was hard in those years of mine🤦
But I'm still learning, so Thanks and I appreciate your efforts.
Me: studies neurology
Me: I don't understand a thing, the professor didn't explain shit, and the official material is useless.
A guy I just found on TH-cam: Let me help you out
Marcell Bagyinszky Me too. I was so upset in class or with all those books. But once you find the right mentor, neurology could be really fun.
@anshaj chaudhary Then go ahead and request your neuroscience phd form your local uni
Hey can uh tell something about ...like ur opinion for neuroscience/ neurology cause am also gonna study neuroscience...
All the best for ur study....
@@loey5317 I'm a psychology BA student, neurology is not my main subject, but I find it fascinating. If you have the knack for it, it can be really cool. It os also a field of science with rapid improovement and if you want to research, there is plenty to be done.
@@marcellbagyinszky1713 me 2...but mine is main
I wish my uni had a teacher like you, I couldn’t understand this subject for whole semester until i found this video! Kudos Mr, you da best!
The whole 13 min I have been concentrating on how perfectly hr draws!
Like so very Awesome
You got a new subscribers for your drawings!
Thank you sir. It becomes very easy for me to understand from your videos and the diagrams are brilliant. I am doing my batchelors in physiotherapy and it is helping me a lot.
Thank you a million times for making neuro easy !! keep on sharing more and more videos
You're a treasure! Don't slow down... a viewer may pause, if need be. You're natural pace has a great flow. Speed is welcomed! Thank you for sharing your gift.
Great video ! Nice drawings and explanation :)
But maybe it is more informative to mention that the spinal cord stops at L1-L2 and from there on continues as the cauda equina. Keep up the good work :)
not true. that is not what the caudal equina is.
What is the cauda equina then?
The lowest part of the spinal cord tapers (comes to a point) forming a "tail" of spinal nerves, at this point the nerves travel inside the spinal column. This tail of spinal nerves is known as the cauda equina originating at around the first or second lumbar nerve. So you're right I hope? Cause thats what my lecturer taught me hahah :)
yes it is.
isn't it filum terminale?
Armando, You are soooooooo SMART AND TALENTED! How did you learn to do all these things - teach neuroanatomy and create this beautiful and informative video?! Wow! Thank you, thank you, for helping me/everyone with our studies!
u should put these in books and sell them they're so good
This is beautiful... why isn't this guy viral???
Your awesome man! Thank you for your contribution to help others learn anatomy.
Why could anyone dislike that type of video , this guy put a lot of time and effort to make it !
Visuals are excellent!
It is beautiful how you just connected everything in just one video . I can not thank you enough !!!!!
Love you videos!!! you are great at explaining and your Illustration is on point!!!
thank you soo much!!! I have learnt what I could not learn during 5 hours lecture👌
Hi is there any chance you could save all these drawings as a pdf or something so we can print them out???
+Bridgette Thwaites Take the screenshot at the end or pause it where you wish to and convert the screenshot into PDF on your device ;)
+Bridgette Thwaites If i'm not mistaken, he has a link to his website or fb where the compilations of all his notes are found. hope it helps!
+Makar Chandra Majee whats the video is amazing infathamable
armandoh.org/ have a look at the videos on his site
hey Luke do you by any chance have the other drawings of other videos for neurology. can you please kindly notify me, I would really appreciate it. thank you
I don't know who dislikes these amazing videos and i don't understand why
thank you so much, your videos are my favourite
This guy should have close to 5 M subscribers.I am sure that many medical students exist in the world.
You deserve some sort of award, or parade or something. This video is incredible
You sir are just an amazing person sent from heaven. I can't even begin to express how much I appreciate the videos you have made thus far. I'm a premed student and one of my goals is to become a surgeon which is my dream job. However, sometimes learning about the body how it functions and the different infections and disorders that cause it to go astray is sometimes confusing and hard to grasp. But you have explained it in "laymans" term that I now have a general understanding on how things work in the body. Again thank you so much Armando your a very intelligent person who is well spoken and caring and may god bless you with nothing but happiness on your future endeavours.
doesnt the autonomic stimuli come from the intermediate/lateral horn rather than the ventral horn?
The sensory one is incorrect too.
Beautifully explained...I am refering yoyr videos for my Anatomy and Physiology classes. Thank You for making it easy.
where is the lateral horn of grey matter in thoracic region?
Maybe he'll explain it in detail in next video
I don't understand lot many things in the class but your videos clear all my doubts ...thank you 🙏
Can you please, please add a link to the drawing in every video????
I really appreciate your work, and I'd like to have those images to study, thanks!
Your drawing and explanation skills are on another level! Thank you for helping me prepare for my physiology exam
was probably the best video I've had seen in a while . (Y)
I just love the way you teach. It's so amazing to learn from your videos. Thankyou for creating such knowledgeable content.
we are so thankful for your videos...do you drink coffee?
Thank you so much for all of your videos. I used your videos to get me through undergraduate. Now I am in a graduate Anesthesia program and once again your helping me! Thank you so much..your awesome!
Imagine God did not create you, what will we do? you are more than amazing
seriously amazing vedio .... etne sare concepts ek vedio m clear kr diye .... sch m bhut bhut ache vedio h
_Amazing design._
_Yett some people still don't believe the existence of God._
Very helpful... I have my lab practical this Thursday. I'll be studying with your vids.
My friend I owe u like 1/2 of my tuition fees
THIS WAS SO HELPFUL. Thank you so much, I have been watching videos all day to understand the spinal nerves and this was by far the best I have seen !!
stop saying Epineuroneum... it's epineurium dammit
he writes epineurium though....
accent he has
carl nothing to do with accent he just isn't pronouncing it correctly and adding to the words he' saying epineuroneum and perineuroneum
The visuals phenomenally enhanced understanding, well done! Lovely enunciation and the right pace to follow along.
Very nicely done. Would like to point out one thing about the ganglion part for autonomic neurons though:
The ganglion is part of the sympathetic trunk (a separate structure) and is NOT a part of any spinal nerve. These ganglia are connected to the ventral rami for spinal nerves T1-L2 through white and grey rami communicantes.
Apart from that, amazing video!
I don't understand how someone can hit the dislike button on something like this. Awesome video. God bless.
Seriously, these videos are SO helpful! i'm a visual learning and trying to revise all this in books and journals is so frustrating. Thank you so much for these and keep up the GREAT work :)
These videos have been so helpful! You don't know how grateful i am!! Truly, an amazing person you are!!! Stay blessed
Don't thank us for watching because we must thank you for teaching! Fabulous! :-)
You are really good teacher ❤️
You are so very talented and amazing. What a beautifully illustrated and easy to understand description of the central nervous system. Really helps me out a lot!!!!
Bright明 understanding comes from great clarity . (Same word in Chinese with 日sun plus 月moon drawn together !) Thanks for brilliantly illustrating how to teach this !
Why don't i find you in my first year in med school?
This help me a lot! Thank you so much!
Awesome video. Easy to understand. Excellent illustrations. They really helped!!!
Thank you!!!
Ohhh I wish my professors can teach like you .. you made it looks so simple and fun .. you are amazing ..
WE LOVE YOU! You are helping us pass CRNA school.
we never covered human biology at school. Wished we had, and this guy would have been the ideal Teacher. Very good video. I am currently suffering pain from the lower thoracic region...keeps firing up the lower rib cage. Very painful but got some pills to block the nerves a bit. Cant help but be impressed with how the Human body is designed...well, all of Creation is wonderfully designed.
Man, I wish I had these notes! These illustrations are amazing
Armando means brother. you are really a brother from a different mother to me. thanks a lot man. 😊
I love this man so much, he has been pulling me out of mental blocks since pre-med now I'm about to finish med school
This video is the best one I have seen! It explains the spinal cord perfectly!
Thank you! You bring art and science together. You have a gift.
You are awesome Sir, I truely respect your hardwork. You made it easy while it's not.
A plus. Extremely well explained and visualized. I wish all my professors were like you!
Bravo man.... awesome..this..is..the...one..of...best... lecture..I.. watched..on.. TH-cam..... really...... appreciating...your..work
Hey really great job! If I can add something for everybody studying right now, the drawing/description toward the end of the postganglionic autonomic motor neuron should NOT be drawn with myeline shealth. Post ganglionic autonomic motor neurons are type C fibers meaning they are characterized by the fact they are UNmyelinated. However, somatic motor neurons are indeed myelinated. thank you for this great video.
You are an artist. Perfect drawings! Also great explanation. Thank you sir.
You are a life saver! Your videos are so helpful and straight forward. Even helps me in Veterinary school since you address things so universally