Great video Paul. Just a small thing but Kayser-Fleischer rings are copper depositions in the cornea not the iris. it is in the periphery (limbus) of the cornea at the level of Descemet's membrane.
I believe there is an error on drugs, pramipexole, ropinerole and bromocriptine are all dopamin agonists, while Benshexole, Orphenadrine, Benztropine and Procyclidine are examples of anticholinergic used in PD
+Peter Peters Can you tell me where that slide is? I'm looking at 20:00 and it says trihexyphenidyl and benztropine are anticholinergics (second bullet point), whilst pramipexole and ropinirole are dopamine agonists (last bullet point)... this is the same as what you said.
Great Video Paul however there are some mistakes in the medication Part, e.g. Maobi are given when levodopa/ carbidopa do not respondiere. U give maobi in pd with minor symptoms ( preferably in the Beginning)
Hi Paul, thank you for making these wonderful videos, they are so helpful! There is one minor point though: the Kayser-Fleischer ring is that they are on the peripheral cornea, but not on the iris 15:05.
I understand that there is a form of stem medicine out there that can reverse this disease. Why is this information being filtered to the physician to combat patients with ALS?
I have muscle stiffness from a drug called haldol. Would procyclidine help me with that? I also have a masked like face as a side effect. How to get rid of that?
Parkinson disease is a very terrible illness, my Dad suffered from it for 19 years until we finally got a help and a medicine that truly works that helped treat, cure and reversed all his symptoms••My Dad is completely okay and healthy now.
Great video Paul. Just a small thing but Kayser-Fleischer rings are copper depositions in the cornea not the iris. it is in the periphery (limbus) of the cornea at the level of Descemet's membrane.
I believe there is an error on drugs, pramipexole, ropinerole and bromocriptine are all dopamin agonists, while Benshexole, Orphenadrine, Benztropine and Procyclidine are examples of anticholinergic used in PD
+Peter Peters Can you tell me where that slide is? I'm looking at 20:00 and it says trihexyphenidyl and benztropine are anticholinergics (second bullet point), whilst pramipexole and ropinirole are dopamine agonists (last bullet point)... this is the same as what you said.
Great on catching this error, I was wondering the same thing!
@@pwbmd Slide at 16:30 Sir
you are an excellent teacher bro.massive respect.
Great Video Paul however there are some mistakes in the medication Part, e.g. Maobi are given when levodopa/ carbidopa do not respondiere. U give maobi in pd with minor symptoms ( preferably in the Beginning)
Amazing video,thank you so much for the efforts ,I find it human to make tiny little mistakes it's a great work that only few can achieve
Hi Paul, thank you for making these wonderful videos, they are so helpful! There is one minor point though: the Kayser-Fleischer ring is that they are on the peripheral cornea, but not on the iris 15:05.
Amazing video like always Dr. Bolin, besides whatever errors were mentioned in the comment section.
You should really add a lecture on vertebrogenic syndromes. The section is just not full without it.
Thank you Dr Bolin.
Thanks for these really helpful videos!!! 👍
I understand that there is a form of stem medicine out there that can reverse this disease. Why is this information being filtered to the physician to combat patients with ALS?
nice lecture
I have muscle stiffness from a drug called haldol. Would procyclidine help me with that? I also have a masked like face as a side effect. How to get rid of that?
Have u got also in ms?
Parkinson disease is a very terrible illness, my Dad suffered from it for 19 years until we finally got a help and a medicine that truly works that helped treat, cure and reversed all his symptoms••My Dad is completely okay and healthy now.