The lateral x-ray and illustration match well, with the shaft of the femur being parallel to the table. This is not ideal position for a frog-leg lateral hip, however, since this results in the greater trochanter completely superimposing the femoral neck. If the shaft of the femur is instead at a roughly 45 degree angle to the table, the femoral neck should be projected mostly free of superimposition by the greater trochanter, and the femoral neck is then parallel with the table, maximizing its demonstration on the x-ray. This is important since the neck is a commonly fractured site, and greater trochanter superimposition can hide a fracture on a frog-leg lateral.
Thanks again Alex! I was under a time crunch to get these videos done for the curriculum when Covid hit. That’s why I made mention at the beginning that I am not a radiologist but trying to help our medical students learn the anatomy from the various x-rays. Thanks for watching
@@TheNotedAnatomist Certainly! It occurs to me that I would have benefitted from seeing this x-ray anatomy series of yours while I was in school, and you'll probably have a number of viewers find these videos while studying for their radiography programs. I know we'd all love to see more of them!
I've seen lectures on this topic drag out over an hour without explaining things as clearly. Thank you soo much for making this public.
best video I've seen so far..I've been struggling for the past hour ! Thank you
Glad it helped!
very clear, concise, direct to the point! very help
Excellent! Clear and succinct. Wish I’d had you as my anatomy teacher
Upload more xray videos, great helpful understanding anatomy
Short, simple and sweet!
i really enjoy your educational videos here Dr. Morton.Thanks💚
Thank-you as always Mina. I always enjoy hearing from you.
Great work as usual! Thanks for your efforts 😁
Thank you for making this, its very helpful and well presented 😊
YOU are AMAZING 💖
Thank you 🌹🌹🌹 nicely explained Sir
So nice of you
Beautifully explained god bless
Thanks Dr. Morton. ✔️✨🌠🦴
Great job!..Thank you Doc.
I appreciate your work! Thank you!
Very good 👍
Unfortunately there were no specific orthopedic terms I was looking for, but beside this, a pretty Great Video!
Thanks
great effort 🔥
Thank you Dr
You’re welcome 😊
Thank you.
thank you so much for the excellent and well explained video! 12/2/22
So much for reading the text book. This is much better lol
Great video! Great martial Dr!
Thanks alottttttttttt❤❤
Thanks❤❤❤
You are most welcome
Thanks
🌹2:57
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Thank you
Welcome!
Great
Nice
Actually am a bsc student from zbc and I found ur vedios interested but am not sure will these vedios help me in future. .??
The lateral x-ray and illustration match well, with the shaft of the femur being parallel to the table. This is not ideal position for a frog-leg lateral hip, however, since this results in the greater trochanter completely superimposing the femoral neck. If the shaft of the femur is instead at a roughly 45 degree angle to the table, the femoral neck should be projected mostly free of superimposition by the greater trochanter, and the femoral neck is then parallel with the table, maximizing its demonstration on the x-ray. This is important since the neck is a commonly fractured site, and greater trochanter superimposition can hide a fracture on a frog-leg lateral.
Thanks again Alex! I was under a time crunch to get these videos done for the curriculum when Covid hit. That’s why I made mention at the beginning that I am not a radiologist but trying to help our medical students learn the anatomy from the various x-rays. Thanks for watching
@@TheNotedAnatomist Certainly! It occurs to me that I would have benefitted from seeing this x-ray anatomy series of yours while I was in school, and you'll probably have a number of viewers find these videos while studying for their radiography programs. I know we'd all love to see more of them!
Good morning sir .whatever u teach is interested but I is it shyllabus of mbbs.
👍👍🙏
Thank you for your help xoxo 💋🫵🏽
You are so welcome
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
inversion therapy (hanging upside down) worked for me -- after two weeks
i have no hip pain at all and im back into running - total cost $120