Finished medical school half a year ago and would recommend everyone studying to really focus on learning information that is clinically relevant. Talk to doctors, e.g. during your hospital stays, and ask them for what is the highest yield information. Passing your exams is one thing, but really you want to focus on what is mostly relevant for your future work as a doctor. Always try to tie the information to some patient case. Best of luck.
@@omarh8731 I can relate to that haha I would say it comes down to planning before you start a subject and ask certain questions: Why am I learning this? How can I use this information later? What is the most important information? Learning the fundamentals, breaking the information down into small pieces. Then you can connect dots to other subjects. Anyways, best of luck!
@@imakemusique Thank you ever so much for these points. i always find them wonderful. but easy to lose track of, would you happen to know how i can remind myself of these true objectives.. hmm. i just got an idea. to write down those objectives you mentioned on a piece of paper then write down some things after i finished the lesson. perhaps that might do the trick? I know im asking alot but ive really struggled and continue to do so unfortunately. so any help is definetly appreciated . thank you ever so much yet again
@@ultra2187 same, our exams are insane and we have to learn ultra specific stuff that is not shown in atlas and shit. It's painful and we just forget it very fast.
@Mary Collins because the light reflected to your eyes and the electrical impulses which process them and the matter in the universe are fundamentally interchangeable thanks to E=mc^2
I think "ridiculously simple" is supposed to say more about how complex the brain is than how easy it should be to understand the lecture haha, but I'm sure he meant to imply that it would be easy as a joke.
My first watch, I didn't really understand the concepts as well, but now, as I read my book and read my notes, I watched this again, totally made a big difference, and finally made connections with my notes, haha
Excellent and brief presentation by Dr.Kia Shahlaie on a very complicated and complex subject covered beautifully. I wish he had covered more information on limbic system and basal ganglia as well. Great job.
THANK YOU SOO MUCH. I discovered I have what appears to be a tuber cinereum hamartoma earlier this year. I am 37 years old and have been having a hell of a time finding any doctors that know anything about them. Not to mention all the other specialists who can not figure out why I am having the issues I'm having across multiple different systems. This was super informative and helpful! Thank you!!! ❤️
I am just in A&P 1, headed for nursing school, but having the associations of injuries with anatomy sure helps solidify the subject matter. Great video.
I'm not perfect in neuroanatomy but at 25:19 he said all cranial nerves come from the brainstem actually the first two cranial nerves don't come from the brainstem
He said that 10 of the Cranial Nerves emerge from the brainstem (which I assume excludes the Olfactory and Optic nerves CN I & II), which is fine if you include the upper cervical levels of the spinal cord where CNXI emerges as part of the brainstem. Like he said he’s going for oversimplification
Found this really useful, thankyou. To anyone else interested in this there’s a series filmed by Claudia Kerbs of UBC which goes more in depth into the anatomical side of brain study, that’s another resource I’d give a solid 10/10
Loved this intro - I feel like I appreciated this more as someone who already has a medical degree, I think med students will have to watch this a couple of times 😁
Hi Sir, why is it that our nervous system is trnasferring soo many electric signals and we don't feel any electrical shocking sensation during lets say vision , hearing or taste? Can you explain it?
My Brain Is Broken But We Are Waiting Patiently For Mother Nature To Fix It Again Your Animation Audio And Video Was Done Beautifully And Was Very Funny Thank You So Much For Sharing The Beautiful Very Interesting Video 👍👍❤️❤️
Salute to the neurosurgeons who can identify all those nerves, sulci, and gyri while performing the surgery. I can't even distinguish them in a real brain haha! OMG
What about having either a stick or a thick laser beam as a pointer. The good professor talks but it does not have enough 'stitches' to the pictures, or parts of the pictures, which are there in front of us. I'm not completely stupid but really it does not takes me in...
I quote "This is because the gadolinium contrast agents are profitable for the radiology industry but the treatment of gadolinium toxicity is NOT profitable for them even though radiologists are the ones that put it in us.'
@@LLFRA So, are you not understanding that I already know and understand this???? I'm not seeking an explanation here. I'm seeking a _justification._ And so far, I see none.
Not bad overall for a < 30 min introduction (unfortunately he missed a lot -> one ex. barely a mention of the incredibly imp’t interconnectedness of the hypothalamus & pituitary‘s essential role in cognition. They aren’t just simply hormone factories...
That is really funny the way he said he wasnt a neurosurgeon, but still v smart, i think Neurologist are smarter than Neurosurgeons, who have no recs other than no NSG intervention at this time
i know this sounds like a ridiculous concept but in the future what if people were to volunteer to have "clear caps" and be under paid study of how to brain visually reacts to certain stimuli, as well as actively measuring beta,delta,theta,ect brainwaves. it would be indeed a scary change to have your brain exposed for all to see but having the outer shell would protect as a skull would, it would be safe and provide a greater understanding of a living human mind, sounds like something from Frankenstein, but i would volunteer. For the new crowd RGB skull ?
The brain doesn't 'visually react'. Alterations in reactions are observed as changes in sensation or function or perception, not visually appreciable alterations. Any 'clear skull cap' would be aesthetic, not medically useful as a research tool. There may be use as a tool to monitor certain conditions, but the most interesting part of the brain isn't it's structure, but what it is doing neuro-chemically and electrically. Much like a computer: pretty and complicated hardware which isn't visually changing while inside it may be doing extraordinary things.
First you have to understand what is brain. An entire memory copy of you their structural and functional requirements and the position. The whole thing is like the cell nucleus with the only purpose of memory storage map and the functional aspects.
Finished medical school half a year ago and would recommend everyone studying to really focus on learning information that is clinically relevant. Talk to doctors, e.g. during your hospital stays, and ask them for what is the highest yield information. Passing your exams is one thing, but really you want to focus on what is mostly relevant for your future work as a doctor. Always try to tie the information to some patient case. Best of luck.
Thank you kind sir, this is invaluable, but it's tough when you just wanna pass in the first place like you mentioned haha
@@omarh8731 I can relate to that haha I would say it comes down to planning before you start a subject and ask certain questions: Why am I learning this? How can I use this information later? What is the most important information? Learning the fundamentals, breaking the information down into small pieces. Then you can connect dots to other subjects. Anyways, best of luck!
@@imakemusique Thank you ever so much for these points. i always find them wonderful. but easy to lose track of, would you happen to know how i can remind myself of these true objectives..
hmm. i just got an idea. to write down those objectives you mentioned on a piece of paper then write down some things after i finished the lesson. perhaps that might do the trick? I know im asking alot but ive really struggled and continue to do so unfortunately. so any help is definetly appreciated .
thank you ever so much yet again
I'd fail if I focused on clinical information, our exams are ultra hard.
@@ultra2187 same, our exams are insane and we have to learn ultra specific stuff that is not shown in atlas and shit. It's painful and we just forget it very fast.
My brain is studying my brain.
Everytime I study neuroanatomy 😂
On the quantum level, all of existence is just light perceiving light ;)
@Mary Collins because the light reflected to your eyes and the electrical impulses which process them and the matter in the universe are fundamentally interchangeable thanks to E=mc^2
@Mary Collins whatever you say, ye holder of all truth
Underrated comment 😂🥰👽
One of the best concise neuroanatomy presentations I’ve ever heard. Very impressive!
One of the best and precise presentations I ever watched. Am an intermediate student this year. It is so helpful
Excellent! coming from the background of neuroanatomy/ neurophysiology myself, I truly appreciate how informative this lecture was. Thank you
With a title like this, I'm gonna feel pretty stupid if I don't understand everything here
absupinhere funny
I think "ridiculously simple" is supposed to say more about how complex the brain is than how easy it should be to understand the lecture haha, but I'm sure he meant to imply that it would be easy as a joke.
My first watch, I didn't really understand the concepts as well, but now, as I read my book and read my notes, I watched this again, totally made a big difference, and finally made connections with my notes, haha
Excellent and brief presentation by Dr.Kia Shahlaie on a very complicated and complex subject covered beautifully. I wish he had covered more information on limbic system and basal ganglia as well. Great job.
THANK YOU SOO MUCH. I discovered I have what appears to be a tuber cinereum hamartoma earlier this year. I am 37 years old and have been having a hell of a time finding any doctors that know anything about them. Not to mention all the other specialists who can not figure out why I am having the issues I'm having across multiple different systems. This was super informative and helpful! Thank you!!! ❤️
Excellent review taught by a neurosurgeon with intimate, first-hand experience who presents complex material well
I thought he was a neurologist and was surprised to see neurosurgeon as I do not hear our neurosurgeons go in-depth in the Neuro ICU I work in.
@@eldquigley4928 the Mauritius Ofcom msm and night night my in Mauritius workings the other day
He is a gifted lecturer
Currently studying for the MCAT and I thought it was a pretty well rounded and explaination on neuroanatomy and its functions
How did it go
how did it go
How did it go
I remember watching that show. And this song was probably somewhere in the back of the brain. Glad they made catchy songs and introduced kids to this
Wat ws the name of the cartoon
angelin jovita it’s“Pinky and the Brain”
@@aadhyareddy thanks dear Aadhya
venus hadian you’re welcome! :)
I am just in A&P 1, headed for nursing school, but having the associations of injuries with anatomy sure helps solidify the subject matter. Great video.
I'm not perfect in neuroanatomy but at 25:19 he said all cranial nerves come from the brainstem actually the first two cranial nerves don't come from the brainstem
abdullah saleh Facts
He said that 10 of the Cranial Nerves emerge from the brainstem (which I assume excludes the Olfactory and Optic nerves CN I & II), which is fine if you include the upper cervical levels of the spinal cord where CNXI emerges as part of the brainstem. Like he said he’s going for oversimplification
CN1 - telencephalon ; CN2- Diencephalon :)
@@beloveddina8578 What about the CN 11?
At the slides there's a note which stated 10/12 cranial nerves come out from brain stem
Thank you so much! I am on my neurosurgery rotation and this video was SO helpful!!
Excellent video to branch out from and find more videos on cortex, thalamus, etc.
I had to learn all of this in the pre-CT era, when much of these structures had less known function. It was sooo fun.
Found this really useful, thankyou. To anyone else interested in this there’s a series filmed by Claudia Kerbs of UBC which goes more in depth into the anatomical side of brain study, that’s another resource I’d give a solid 10/10
Absolutely phenomenal teaching Dr. K ❤
Loved this intro - I feel like I appreciated this more as someone who already has a medical degree, I think med students will have to watch this a couple of times 😁
Sarai , 100%, and no other way to study medicine - repetition and repetition again and again, and better with a book, first
Watch Dr. Najeeb lecture to master your concepts
th-cam.com/video/SZLKnvf_pjc/w-d-xo.html
great doctor,
thank you very much you had given me a good overview of neuroanatomy
Brilliant, I really enjoyed this lecture and it has helped me enormously with understanding brain anatomy.
Best Video till date on Neuroanatomy
Awesome, so much more simplified!
Excellent top-level summary, thank you.
Hi! All my gratitude for this lecture. I'm currently studying naturopathy and it has been very helpful.
Thanks Dr. for this presentation
Where are the pictures from? I really like them, are clear!
18:07 tractograghy diffusion tensor imaging
18:29 grey
Very good presentation of a complex subject.
Thank you very much for the wonderful video.
Amazing lecture! Thank you so much
20:59 what textbook is he talking about?
wow am so beyond grateful for this
I'm waiting for the day when the effects of a spinal cord injury can be reversed, offering those affected full mobility again.
HOw about stem cells ?
Depending on how soon it can be treated, I've read about mesenchymal stem cells being used for just such an injury.
Hi Sir, why is it that our nervous system is trnasferring soo many electric signals and we don't feel any electrical shocking sensation during lets say vision , hearing or taste? Can you explain it?
Can someone send link to the animation played at the beginning ?
Excellent lecture delivered by you it is wonder speech thanks a lot
Very lucid explanation. Thanks
amazing lecture, understand most everything here im 13 and i love studying neurology
My son 3 years has Pons sol. Doctors refused to operate.
Is there any hope for his surgery??
I really enjoyed it! Thank you!
My Brain Is Broken But We Are Waiting Patiently For Mother Nature To Fix It Again Your Animation Audio And Video Was Done Beautifully And Was Very Funny Thank You So Much For Sharing The Beautiful Very Interesting Video 👍👍❤️❤️
Thanks! need to hear the lingo...
Salute to the neurosurgeons who can identify all those nerves, sulci, and gyri while performing the surgery. I can't even distinguish them in a real brain haha! OMG
Doctor what are intersegmental tracts ??
Great Video. Thanks!
Excellent lecture THANKS
Thanks for the information. The simplicity of the brain, even though the complexity boggles the mind of many neurosurgeons.
Thanks, what a great video! Helped me to understand the things I studied about, just with my neurology exam knocking at the door.. :)
Brain is very complicated structure, how they managed to relate various parts with wide range of different functions is mind blowing..
Your sentence is a very complicated structure.
@@bakaar6423 my mind is blown away by your reply.
What about having either a stick or a thick laser beam as a pointer. The good professor talks but it does not have enough 'stitches' to the pictures, or parts of the pictures, which are there in front of us. I'm not completely stupid but really it does not takes me in...
I'm sure you are .
Cool am I now qualified to do neuro surgery?
thanx for this easy explaination is it possible to get the ppt which the doc is using in this course
Me watching this at 7 am and thankful that its “ridiculously simple”
Why is it so difficult to get a contrast medium other than Gadolinium?????
>.
Gadolinium is profitable
@@LLFRA Right????!!!
I quote "This is because the gadolinium contrast agents are profitable for the radiology industry but the treatment of gadolinium toxicity is NOT profitable for them even though radiologists are the ones that put it in us.'
@@LLFRA
So, are you not understanding that I already know and understand this???? I'm not seeking an explanation here. I'm seeking a _justification._ And so far, I see none.
@@DarkMoonDroid this for everyone to see. Not just you
Identify the difference
trancation
trucking your shoulder
means a little brain
priority INCordingING your memory
blane
can movement
obception moment
so watching this in 2019, they're teaching us that the insula is the gustatory center. is that accurate?
Not bad overall for a < 30 min introduction (unfortunately he missed a lot -> one ex. barely a mention of the incredibly imp’t interconnectedness of the hypothalamus & pituitary‘s essential role in cognition. They aren’t just simply hormone factories...
Thank you!
Good video. ...... just the basics!
Great, well-done.
Excellent lecture!!!!!
Would have liked to see pointer
That is really funny the way he said he wasnt a neurosurgeon, but still v smart, i think Neurologist are smarter than Neurosurgeons, who have no recs other than no NSG intervention at this time
Wow! Pinky and The brain 🥰. It's so pretty. I love them. 🤗 You're an awesome professor 🤗.
thank you a lot!
Pretty interesting, thank you!
Mane sub Kar diya ❤👍
CN 11 is not in the brainstem. Its outside the brainstem.
My exam for neuroanatomy is in 2 days ... I've studied so much and I need a break so I came here :3
How did you do?
@@jx14aby I did well! Finished with an A! Thnx for asking😊
Found it useful.Thank you
excellent class.
From Perú.
Edwin Vilca Pajares brain research
Awesome
My brain must be very smooth!
That part at Interlaminal tract in Thalamus😯🙌
My brain is refreshing from past lesning
Short but good. I wish he had more time to shed a little bit of light onto plasticiy theorem, in addition to localization theorem. Really good though.
Fun and informativ. Thanks! Legendary: the pinkie and the brain video in the beginning!
great stuff , where can i get that lecture ppt.
Such good information
0:41 wth did not see that coming lool😂😂😂😂 amazing lecture would love to see more
That was beautiful.
Dr. Patrick William Hitchon, from the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, made getting away with intentionally paralyzing a patient very SIMPLE.
Thank u it really helped alot
A very interesting area
午候的一场大雨 突然来了一声学习的安静的飨亮打雷声
LEGENDARY!!
i know this sounds like a ridiculous concept but in the future what if people were to volunteer to have "clear caps" and be under paid study of how to brain visually reacts to certain stimuli,
as well as actively measuring beta,delta,theta,ect brainwaves.
it would be indeed a scary change to have your brain exposed for all to see but having the outer shell would protect as a skull would, it would be safe and provide a greater understanding of a living human mind, sounds like something from Frankenstein,
but i would volunteer.
For the new crowd RGB skull ?
I hope they are not "under paid" hahah just a joke
The brain doesn't 'visually react'. Alterations in reactions are observed as changes in sensation or function or perception, not visually appreciable alterations. Any 'clear skull cap' would be aesthetic, not medically useful as a research tool. There may be use as a tool to monitor certain conditions, but the most interesting part of the brain isn't it's structure, but what it is doing neuro-chemically and electrically. Much like a computer: pretty and complicated hardware which isn't visually changing while inside it may be doing extraordinary things.
Fantastic Maks me open my skull and play with my brain
I love this, thank you, my exam is in two weeks
First you have to understand what is brain. An entire memory copy of you their structural and functional requirements and the position. The whole thing is like the cell nucleus with the only purpose of memory storage map and the functional aspects.
Anyone notice the starting tone #shomus biology
What school did he go to?
UC Davis w/fellowship at UCSF (what I read on the UC Davis website.)
Laura Kulsik OK thanks.
There is a reason why people say that brain science isn't easy.
Well done
Wish he didn't stop the beginning song.
I’m here because of Chase Hughes. ❤
Sensationalistic title, I think
Neurologists are the coolest weirdest people you will meet ever :) amazing peps
Helped alot