This is without a doubt the best video on stroke I've seen. Not just clear and well structured, but the pared-down voice delivery and visual imagery are mesmerising. At times it kept me gripped to the screen in narrative tension, which is not what I would have expected from this kind of educational video. Sorry if it sounds daft, but I just had to comment and say thank you. I will not forget the hose-jello simile.
Will be letting my EMS class know about this channel, the complex scenarios and concepts explained in a simple and understandable way. hopefully we will be able to pass this information along in better treatment for our patients. thanks!
Thank you Dr. Shipley. My mother died from a stroke and I didn't really understand what had happened to her. Now I have a better understanding. I shall miss her terribly
Speechless to thank dr shiply for the generosity and greatness of sharing a remarkable explanation to help many learners like me understand an otherwise complicated topic. Hats off to you Sir...!!! And I'm grateful from the depth of my heart.
Are you aged, sick, lonely,tired of calling taxi & going hospital on daily basis ? No need to worry! We are here to help you. Jst make a call to us @ +918943945874 .We will be there for ur physiotherapy service at your door steps wherever you are in India. Indian Freelance Physios
God bless you for this presentation. This is the most in depth presentation I’ve ever seen. Not to mention, the easiest to understand and the most visual as well.
Very informative. Learned a lot more about stoke. It's true , you are never to old learn but remembering is another issue. Been in street EMS since 1975.
This is a wonderful illustration of Stroke! Thank you Dr. Shipley. I am a Stroke survivor and immerse myself in Stroke information and research. I also tell my story of surviving the perfect medical storm of late-stage cancer, stroke, and cardiac arrest SIMULTANEOUSLY! Once again, thanks for the illustration! JB
Stumbled upon your video while prepping for a stroke certification exam and am so thankful I did! This video nicely cleared up confusion I had regarding AVM. Thank you, you certainly have a gift for teaching!
Working on my Stroke Certified Registered Nurse credential, +Cal Shipley, M.D.. I work acute neuro and this certification will really be beneficial to my patients. Looking forward to passing this challenging exam at the end of the month with a little help from your videos. They add a nice visual to a wordy text. Thanks again!
Your video and clear explanations helped me better understand different causes of stroke in a methodical, logical sequence. This is an excellent resource! Thank you.
@@TrialImageInc thank you. Unfortunately he passed away two weeks later. I just came back from the funeral. He ended up getting a clot from his leg go into his lungs. Is this common?
i pray to God every night and day because i am at risk myself. i have. blood clots as well. but thank God i am still here to see my two grandkids Lakebbie De'shawn Ford, and Alayasia bre'ann battle.
your anterior cerebeller artery could be affected also as tbe signs and symptoms show which artery is affecting the area which is responsible for specific function and that could be ACA but vision loss strongly suggests pca dont know until wt ur reports say
Are you aged, sick, lonely,tired of calling taxi & going hospital on daily basis ? No need to worry! We are here to help you. Jst make a call to us @ +918943945874 .We will be there for ur physiotherapy service at your door steps wherever you are in India. Indian Freelance Physios
Thank you for this. My doctor told me that I have lost some blood flow to a part of my brain. I need to understand this better than I do. I want to do anything I can to not have things get worse.
This is incredible and should be "pushed" to Elementary School Science Teachers and High School Anatomy and Physiology teachers. Pushing means getting there email addresses and then sending them the link. Since this is the third most common cause of death and the most common source of significant long-term disability,
Dear bellz - I'm so glad you're finding them helpful. You can access my entire medical animation library at www.calshipleymd.com Where are you going to school?
Dr. Shipley, Thank you for responding. I will “talk your ears off” if you allow me to, so please allow me the opportunity to paraphrase. Seven years U.S.NAVY (Laboratory Technician); then I got out of the military and decided to further my education. While going to school full time: Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (Air Traffic Management), and working full time: Halifax Health Hospital (phlebotomist), I developed a passion for patient care. Having patients tell me what was wrong with them and only being able to guess as to what the problem actually was: frustrated me. I am now taking the prerequisites for med-school. I apologize if my previous comment was misleading. Currently, I am using “The Princeton Review” MCAT SUBJECT REVIEW. B. A. Bellamy
my dad had a stroke dec 6 th and it is very scary. he is still in hospital. it takes alot out of family just waiting day to day for progress. he maybe going to therapy this week. i pray every day that he will be ok.
the same. don't be scare. its to much information. family can be to much. stay focus. his recovery depends his brain damage and therapy. i wish you the best.
Okay so I'm really confused. Last year I had a stroke at 18 years old. First, I had weird bodily sensations, then it felt as if my left arm started moving on its own, bending oddly toward my body. I knew something was wrong, but when I tried talking, nobody could understand me. My left arm sensation went away, and I gained my sense of language back in about 6 hours. At the hospital they diagnosed it as aphasia. So how could I have a stroke to the left side of my brain, which has the area that controls my language, but have weakness in my left arm? Please help, my doctors don't explain much 😔
+Cal Shipley, M.D. They said it was probably cryptogenic but it only happened because of several atrial septal defects I've had since birth. We only found them because of the stroke.
Hi Jillian - as you know, "cryptogenic" is a fancy term for "we don't know what caused your stroke". This is not unusual in stroke patients. Very often there simply is no obvious cause, in spite of extensive appropriate testing, etc. So in such situations, we are left guessing. Embolism (the travel of clots through the arteries supplying blood to the brain) is a common cause, and usually arises in the heart due to a variety of conditions, including septal defects. Multiple clots may form at once, or a single larger clot may form, and then break down into multiple smaller fragments, prior to exiting the heart. These clots may then randomly follow a number of different pathways, causing injury to different areas of the brain, and on different sides of the brain, as in your case, where your speech area (located in the frontal lobe) and motor area (parietal lobe) were both affected. If you are interested, take a look at my short video of the blood supply to the brain th-cam.com/video/MPcO2ibO75o/w-d-xo.html to get a better idea of the variety of pathways clots can travel. I hope this helps, and that you are doing well with your recovery Jillian! Cjs
@@TrialImageInc I'm typing with my left hand. The right side of my body is out of wack. My speech is like babble, had the valve replacement with metal and by the grace of God I'm still here. Walk good enough with no cane or walker,still keeping up the house and my mind good for conversation. 5 times I got that thing in my groin to stop bleeding in my head. Awake the whole time to feel scratching. Got a hospital up the street,but was taken to Little Rock and met awsome doctors. Doctors are GOD's GIFTS TO MANKIND other than Salvation A-MEN.
If you think someone has a stroke, ask them to say their name, stick their tongue out, and raise their arms, if they have difficulty raising arms or speaking, or stick their tongue out sideways call an ambulance immediately.
I suffered from a stroke due of an arterial malformation. It led to an hemorragy of the side : 5,2 * 4,5 * 3 cm in the left occipital lobe; resulting to a loss of the right side vision. Seeing your video makes me realize more what happened in my brain and makes me feel even luckier that with this massive "explosion", I have just lost this bit.
During the stroke: loss of vision, dizziness, vomiting A fex hours/day before stroke : Loss of almost all the memory of that period of time. Right after surgery: Loss of memory for the few days after the surgery (around 1 week). Huge loss in weight (-8 kgs in 14 days) Between 1 to 4 weeks after : blurred vision ; a lost of some random memories (coudln't remember where was the trash in my house, in which position I lie in the bathtube) ; had incontinence (nocturn pee) ; trouble focusing All those problems disappeared, except for the vision loss and the memory of during/after stroke. I do gym again, don't wet my bad (it just happened for once though.. maybe due of the drugs?), well I live my life normally as an healthy person.. healthier than 99% of the population XD
We have anastemosis in the brain,so why if you clog one vertebral artery or one carotid artery,you get a stroke? The blood will find another path. This confuses me.
Thank you so much Doctor for this video it helped me understand our mechanism better. I had a cerebellar infarction 4 months ago at 34 years old. I have no after effect which makes me a very lucky man. I am scared of recurrence of course but aspirin treatment and better life style will hopefully prevent that.
I'm glad it helped KBJP - having a stroke can be a terrifying thing, but it sounds as though you are taking the right steps to prevent a recurrence. Be well! Http://www.CalShipleyMD.com
+Cal Shipley, M.D. Thank you for your reply doctor. Sorry to take some of your time but if you had any URL or documentation regarding cerebellar infarction I would greatly appreciate if you could share it. I find it difficult to find any information regarding this type of stroke on the internet. Kind regards KBA
Its really stupendous and wonderful and I have no words to describe the greatness of this video. I am a common man in India(not a doctor) and could understand the concepts very well by watching this video and in fact, one need not do any 5 years medical course like MBBS in India and watching this half-an-hour video is enough. May be bit exaggerating but I liked this video that much. I do not think, even doctors know this much in depth. I have a small query. Can you please let me know where exactly speech/communication centre lies in the brain. Some videos show that it is in temporal lobe and other videos shows that it is in front lobe. please clarify and if possible please suggest any video to watch. Thank you.
brilliant narration and picturisation!! So informative. I had a mini stroke and doctors also found enlarged pitutary gland. Going through tests now.I would assume both stoke and gland are not related anyway.Is that so?
Im interested but slightly terrorised at how lucky we are to live everyday and how many horrible ways there are to die, often slowly. My neighbour is only 30 yrs old and had a blood clog in her brain. I actually cried after seeing what looks like a confused dying human shuffling along with her head spinning in circles. It overwhelmed me emotionally as she was a healthy new mum and i dont think she will make it past a few days as she appears to be deteriorating daily.
+Ravi Vaswani - very definitely Ravi. Stress by itself would be an unusual cause for stroke, but stress can aggravate conditions that predispose to stroke, for example, high blood pressure...
+Proceso Tulio - thank you for your question. Without knowing your medical history in detail, I can't make a recommendation. Please consult with your personal physician...
Very interesting explanation.....I am so worried because my grandmother was admitted in hospital before a week and it seems ischemic stroke .... she got a problem in her limbs . she has also eating and speaking problems... what shall I do Dr I want to see my grandma cured ...
Hello Meseret. I hope your grandmother is doing better. The best treatment for ischemic stroke is to treat any precipitating causes, such as high blood pressure, and rehabilitation therapy to recover function. Her doctors should be able to help her with all of this.
Very interesting I like this, I have a fusiform aneurysm of the mid basilar artery up to 6 mm in diameter with additional 2 mm aneurysm projecting from its wall. How serious is that
+Linda Ford - hi Linda - in general, arterial aneurysms involving the brain are considered low risk for rupture if they are less than 7mm, but whether or not to intervene with treatment depends on a lot of factors, including age, past history, necessity of taking anticoagulants for other conditions, etc. I'm assuming you are being followed by a neurologist or neurosurgeon for this issue, but if not, please do!
You might also include a "fill-in the blank sheet" of those terms and processes that YOU think would be useful to anyone as general useful knowledge which is the basis of the current USA educational curriculum.at anytime.
wow, excellent explanation and very helpful with my case study. In relation to endocarditis and embolism, if the patient suffered right temporal lobe stroke, is there any chance that stroke will happen again within 4 weeks?
Much Appreciated for the response. Unfortunately at this time that's all I have via diagnose from my good buddy who's mother just had this come about ... A physician text me that last part about "hemorrhagic conversion" and haven't heard back from him since. Therefore that's why I was wondering what that statement meant. I apologize for the lack of information, which isn't helping you nor the physician (friend).
Just did some quick research - when a stroke occurs due to interruption of blood flow (for example a clot) clot - busting enzymes like tpa are given to dissolve the clot. One risk of this is that the tpa may cause a hemorrage, which can cause a stroke anyway. hope this helps...
I learned more during the 27 minutes of this video than during the entire semester of my grad level Neuroscience course. Thank you!
lol
I've watched atleast 30 videos on this subject, and this video is the most informational so far!
My father had a stroke yesterday. It is a scary thing so I am here to watch this video and learn more about it.
At 21:30, it's an Axial CT image not MR image . Wonderful video.
Can't learn stroke in a better way than this!..lucky to have great tutors like you sir...just brilliant piece of teaching ..hats off...
sebin mon - thank you! www.CalShipleyMD.com
This is without a doubt the best video on stroke I've seen. Not just clear and well structured, but the pared-down voice delivery and visual imagery are mesmerising. At times it kept me gripped to the screen in narrative tension, which is not what I would have expected from this kind of educational video. Sorry if it sounds daft, but I just had to comment and say thank you. I will not forget the hose-jello simile.
Laura Lopez Bueno - thanks Laura! Glad you liked it. www.CalShipleyMD.com.
Will be letting my EMS class know about this channel, the complex scenarios and concepts explained in a simple and understandable way. hopefully we will be able to pass this information along in better treatment for our patients. thanks!
thank you CTBL! Much more at www.CalShipleyMD.com
Thank you Dr. Shipley. My mother died from a stroke and I didn't really understand what had happened to her. Now I have a better understanding. I shall miss her terribly
sorry to hear about your Mom AnneM, but I'm glad the video helped your understanding...
Sorry to hear that Anne, but I'm glad the video helped...
Speechless to thank dr shiply for the generosity and greatness of sharing a remarkable explanation to help many learners like me understand an otherwise complicated topic. Hats off to you Sir...!!! And I'm grateful from the depth of my heart.
many thanks for your kind words Azeem!
my pleasure
Are you aged, sick, lonely,tired of calling taxi & going hospital on daily basis ? No need to worry! We are here to help you. Jst make a call to us @ +918943945874 .We will be there for ur physiotherapy service at your door steps wherever you are in India.
Indian Freelance Physios
God bless you for this presentation. This is the most in depth presentation I’ve ever seen. Not to mention, the easiest to understand and the most visual as well.
Thank you C! You can access my entire library of medical videos at trialimage.com
Very informative. Learned a lot more about stoke. It's true , you are never to old learn but remembering is another issue. Been in street EMS since 1975.
+New Market EMS - glad it helped New. Congrats on 40+ years in EMS! CalShipleyMD.com
This is a wonderful illustration of Stroke! Thank you Dr. Shipley. I am a Stroke survivor and immerse myself in Stroke information and research. I also tell my story of surviving the perfect medical storm of late-stage cancer, stroke, and cardiac arrest SIMULTANEOUSLY! Once again, thanks for the illustration! JB
Thank you Mr. Bergman. I'm so glad to hear of your survival!
Stumbled upon your video while prepping for a stroke certification exam and am so thankful I did!
This video nicely cleared up confusion I had regarding AVM. Thank you, you certainly have a gift for teaching!
Thanks Kim - good luck on the exam! Are you training in the Medical field?
Working on my Stroke Certified Registered Nurse credential, +Cal Shipley, M.D.. I work acute neuro and this certification will really be beneficial to my patients. Looking forward to passing this challenging exam at the end of the month with a little help from your videos. They add a nice visual to a wordy text. Thanks again!
Your video and clear explanations helped me better understand different causes of stroke in a methodical, logical sequence. This is an excellent resource! Thank you.
+Beth Mathews - thank you, Beth! Access my entire library at CalShipleyMD.com
LOVED THIS VIDEO!!! You made understanding strokes so much easier! Thank you!!!
Thank you Dr. Shipley. As an OT student with a very large interest in Neuro Rehab, this video is helping clarify a lot about stroke in general.
Glad it helped Ky! Where are you studying? As a student, you may be interested in my Educational Site www.calshipleymd.com
very useful and easily understable approach to upgrade knowldge about stroke. thank you very much sir for such a useful information....
My pleasure Harry...
walking again I
Harry Brar p
glad it helped Harry! www.CalShipleyMD.com
Very close friend of mine had a stroke recently so this was very helpful explaining the cause.thank you
simply perfect way of teaching thanks!
Thank you Addis! Check out my site calshipleymd.com if you're interested in seeing more...
Thank you for this as it helped me explain whats going on with me to my children (smaller kids).
Excellent animations Dr. Shipley. You explained the various types of stroke very effectively to a nursing student a few months from taking the NCLEX.
Thank you Andrew - glad it helped. Much more on CalShipleyMD.com Good luck with your exams...
Wonderful work, Dr. Cal Shipley. You are such a thorough educator.
+Carlota Manzano - thank you Carlota! HTTPS://www.CalShipleyMD.com
Thank you for this amazing explanation. Godfather to my son had a stroke and this video gave me a better picture in understanding what happened.
Thank you, I'm glad it helped. I hope you son's godfather is doing well...
@@TrialImageInc thank you. Unfortunately he passed away two weeks later. I just came back from the funeral. He ended up getting a clot from his leg go into his lungs. Is this common?
I had a stroke when I was 17 and never really understood, this has helped me a lot with coming to terms with what happened to me.
+Kayla Marie - I'm glad it helped, Kayla, and I hope you are doing well...
i pray to God every night and day because i am at risk myself. i have. blood clots as well. but thank God i am still here to see my two grandkids Lakebbie De'shawn Ford, and Alayasia bre'ann battle.
your anterior cerebeller artery could be affected also as tbe signs and symptoms show which artery is affecting the area which is responsible for specific function and that could be ACA but vision loss strongly suggests pca dont know until wt ur reports say
Are you aged, sick, lonely,tired of calling taxi & going hospital on daily basis ? No need to worry! We are here to help you. Jst make a call to us @ +918943945874 .We will be there for ur physiotherapy service at your door steps wherever you are in India.
Indian Freelance Physios
thanks for this video. I've had a few strokes and never really knew what a stroke was. your video was highly appreciated.
glad it helped you tube 425
This was truly excellent. Thorough yet accessible. Thank you!
God's creation very well explianed. One of the best videos. God bless you and entire team for the efforts.
Thank you Javed!
Amazing explanation with 3D animation ! Thanks. :)
+captfalconXX - I'm glad you liked it! Access my entire library here www.calshipleymd.com
thanks mrstoday! We are currently looking at getting more into the educational side of things with our presentations...
Thank you so much for this amazing video! Super informative and easy to understand
+Ishvani Govender - glad it helped Ishvani. HTTPS://www.calshipleymd.com
Thank you for this. My doctor told me that I have lost some blood flow to a part of my brain. I need to understand this better than I do. I want to do anything I can to not have things get worse.
What an excellent explanation and animation. Thanks a lot.
Thanks Yudi! Access my entire library at trialimage.com
Thanks Yudi! Access my entire library at trialimage.com
Thanks Yudi! Access my entire library at trialimage.com
Terrific! Thank you for sharing this excellent video!
I am taking a class on Organic disorders and this will surely help a lot!
Glad it helped!
This is incredible and should be "pushed" to Elementary School Science Teachers and High School Anatomy and Physiology teachers. Pushing means getting there email addresses and then sending them the link. Since this is the third most common cause of death and the most common source of significant long-term disability,
EXCELLENT!! one million thank yous!!
Thank you Rusty! Glad it helped www.CalShipleyMD.com
very fantastic and easily understood
animation
Glad it helped Fouad www.CalShipleyMD.com
Thank you cause you explain it clearly. I am having these stroke, my right body. About a year now.
I’m so sorry to hear that, Pok. How is your recovery?
I’m so sorry to hear that, Pok. How is your recovery?
@@TrialImageInc Basal Ganglia Bleed, can't feel my right body, i'm still walking with stick, but my brain and my speech improved. Its been 3 years.
Dr. Shipley,
From watching your videos, I honestly feel as if I will have a major advantage over other students in med-school.
Dear bellz - I'm so glad you're finding them helpful. You can access my entire medical animation library at www.calshipleymd.com Where are you going to school?
Dr. Shipley,
Thank you for responding. I will “talk your ears off” if you allow me to, so please allow me the opportunity to paraphrase.
Seven years U.S.NAVY (Laboratory Technician); then I got out of the military and decided to further my education.
While going to school full time: Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (Air Traffic Management), and working full time: Halifax Health Hospital (phlebotomist), I developed a passion for patient care. Having patients tell me what was wrong with them and only being able to guess as to what the problem actually was: frustrated me.
I am now taking the prerequisites for med-school. I apologize if my previous comment was misleading.
Currently, I am using “The Princeton Review” MCAT SUBJECT REVIEW.
B. A. Bellamy
bellz803 no need for apologies. Best of luck with your studies!
Excellent video! Made me wish I had the memory to be in the medical field. 10/10 Great job Doctor!
Very kind of you, Alex! You can access my entire library of medical videos at trialimage.com
one of the best lectures ever
thank you so much
Everyone should be aware of strokes,thanks AHA/ASA.
appealing and concise , amazing skills u got their sir.
Thank you Hiru! Access my entire library at trialimage.com
Thanks Hiru! You can access my entire medical video library at: trialimage.com
my dad had a stroke dec 6 th and it is very scary. he is still in hospital. it takes alot out of family just waiting day to day for progress. he maybe going to therapy this week. i pray every day that he will be ok.
the same. don't be scare. its to much information. family can be to much. stay focus. his recovery depends his brain damage and therapy. i wish you the best.
Thank you for this legendary simple explanation!
you are welcome Lorenzo! Access my entire library at www.CalShipleyMD.com
what would you expect the prognosis to be for someone with a thrombosis of their basilar artery.?
Okay so I'm really confused. Last year I had a stroke at 18 years old. First, I had weird bodily sensations, then it felt as if my left arm started moving on its own, bending oddly toward my body. I knew something was wrong, but when I tried talking, nobody could understand me. My left arm sensation went away, and I gained my sense of language back in about 6 hours. At the hospital they diagnosed it as aphasia. So how could I have a stroke to the left side of my brain, which has the area that controls my language, but have weakness in my left arm? Please help, my doctors don't explain much 😔
+Jillian Trimble - Hi Jillian. What was the underlying cause for your stroke?
+Cal Shipley, M.D. They said it was probably cryptogenic but it only happened because of several atrial septal defects I've had since birth. We only found them because of the stroke.
Hi Jillian - as you know, "cryptogenic" is a fancy term for "we don't know what caused your stroke". This is not unusual in stroke patients. Very often there simply is no obvious cause, in spite of extensive appropriate testing, etc. So in such situations, we are left guessing. Embolism (the travel of clots through the arteries supplying blood to the brain) is a common cause, and usually arises in the heart due to a variety of conditions, including septal defects. Multiple clots may form at once, or a single larger clot may form, and then break down into multiple smaller fragments, prior to exiting the heart. These clots may then randomly follow a number of different pathways, causing injury to different areas of the brain, and on different sides of the brain, as in your case, where your speech area (located in the frontal lobe) and motor area (parietal lobe) were both affected. If you are interested, take a look at my short video of the blood supply to the brain th-cam.com/video/MPcO2ibO75o/w-d-xo.html to get a better idea of the variety of pathways clots can travel.
I hope this helps, and that you are doing well with your recovery Jillian! Cjs
may be it is TIA not a stroke ??
@@TrialImageInc I'm typing with my left hand. The right side of my body is out of wack. My speech is like babble, had the valve replacement with metal and by the grace of God I'm still here. Walk good enough with no cane or walker,still keeping up the house and my mind good for conversation. 5 times I got that thing in my groin to stop bleeding in my head. Awake the whole time to feel scratching. Got a hospital up the street,but was taken to Little Rock and met awsome doctors. Doctors are GOD's GIFTS TO MANKIND other than Salvation A-MEN.
If you think someone has a stroke, ask them to say their name, stick their tongue out, and raise their arms, if they have difficulty raising arms or speaking, or stick their tongue out sideways call an ambulance immediately.
Great video. This is really going to help me in class tomorrow!
That's great Michael. What is your class?
Adult I Theory. It's a nursing class that teaches how to care for patients suffering from certain diseases or impairments.
Michael Grady terrific! As a student, you might be interested in my educational site calshipleymd.com
Very helpful!!!
I now understand stroke
+Everlyne Achieng I'm glad it helped! Http://www.CalShipleyMD.com
Fantastic Video ! Thank you so much for putting this together:)
+Anely Erlewein - my pleasure Anely - access my entire library at www.CalShipleyMD.com
I suffered from a stroke due of an arterial malformation.
It led to an hemorragy of the side : 5,2 * 4,5 * 3 cm in the left occipital lobe; resulting to a loss of the right side vision.
Seeing your video makes me realize more what happened in my brain and makes me feel even luckier that with this massive "explosion", I have just lost this bit.
Besides vision lost were there any impairments?
During the stroke: loss of vision, dizziness, vomiting
A fex hours/day before stroke : Loss of almost all the memory of that period of time.
Right after surgery: Loss of memory for the few days after the surgery (around 1 week). Huge loss in weight (-8 kgs in 14 days)
Between 1 to 4 weeks after : blurred vision ; a lost of some random memories (coudln't remember where was the trash in my house, in which position I lie in the bathtube) ; had incontinence (nocturn pee) ; trouble focusing
All those problems disappeared, except for the vision loss and the memory of during/after stroke.
I do gym again, don't wet my bad (it just happened for once though.. maybe due of the drugs?), well I live my life normally as an healthy person.. healthier than 99% of the population XD
The Humming Boy guy XP
Incredibly helpful and informative- thank you!
Glad it helped Kim. You can see my entire library of medical animation at www.calshipleymd.com
@@TrialImageIncskzmsmz
This has really helped me, great video
Thanks Sir for such wonderful explanation...it increase my interest in study.
such an amazing videoooo too nicely expplainedd
Thank you Cal Shipley .
santosh mb - my pleasure - thank you!
best video for the stroke,brillant explanation
thank you Nirmala... www.CalShipleyMD.com
Thank you so much! This was so informative! I really enjoyed watching this.
Viktor Lasmarias - thank you! www.calshipleymd.com
nice............ really helped a lot to understand the Concept.........
***** Sir can you please upload some other videos regarding its clinical features and treatment also. It would be a great mercy. Its so easy to learn.
thank you, for me to understand a complex subject, ..... very informative
Very nice. It would be helpful for studying sleep apnea causes & report analysis. Thanks a lot.
My pleasure Subrata...
How do I obtain a neuroscience stimulation or animation like this one? Is there any websites you recommend?
Hi Jad - you can stream any of my medical videos (including the Stroke video) any time at trialimage.com
Would You please tell what tools have you use to make the animations?
Very informative and clear! Thank you very much!
Hello Aki - I use several programs but my main animating software is 3D Studio Max by Autodesk...
Too good sir thank you for up loding the video
Thank you Kaleem! You can access my entire video library at www.CalShipleyMD.com
Very informative, thank you.
You're welcome Rosemary! You can access my entire library of medical videos at trialimage.com
Thank you for sharing.
Choc-full of information! Great video!
Awesome video TKS doc!
Thanks Marcelo! If you are interested, you can see much more at www.calshipleymd.com
We have anastemosis in the brain,so why if you clog one vertebral artery or one carotid artery,you get a stroke?
The blood will find another path.
This confuses me.
There are different variations and some people do not have the communicating arteries
Thank you so much Doctor for this video it helped me understand our mechanism better. I had a cerebellar infarction 4 months ago at 34 years old. I have no after effect which makes me a very lucky man. I am scared of recurrence of course but aspirin treatment and better life style will hopefully prevent that.
I'm glad it helped KBJP - having a stroke can be a terrifying thing, but it sounds as though you are taking the right steps to prevent a recurrence. Be well! Http://www.CalShipleyMD.com
+Cal Shipley, M.D. Thank you for your reply doctor. Sorry to take some of your time but if you had any URL or documentation regarding cerebellar infarction I would greatly appreciate if you could share it. I find it difficult to find any information regarding this type of stroke on the internet.
Kind regards
KBA
KBA - if you register at my educational site www.calshipleymd.com I will forward some information to you regarding your problem...
Dear Doctor, Thank you very much again for your kind assistance. I just registered at your educational site.
Wow..
Thank u so much sir..
Very good explanation..
Thank you Niranjan - you can access my entire video library at www.CalShipleyMD.com
Cal Shipley, M.D. thank u so much sir..they're gems..👍👌
Its really stupendous and wonderful and I have no words to describe the greatness of this video. I am a common man in India(not a doctor) and could understand the concepts very well by watching this video and in fact, one need not do any 5 years medical course like MBBS in India and watching this half-an-hour video is enough. May be bit exaggerating but I liked this video that much. I do not think, even doctors know this much in depth.
I have a small query. Can you please let me know where exactly speech/communication centre lies in the brain. Some videos show that it is in temporal lobe and other videos shows that it is in front lobe. please clarify and if possible please suggest any video to watch. Thank you.
Speech appears to be synthesized in Broca's area of the brain, usually located in either the left frontal lobe or, less commonly, right frontal lobe.
thank you
I study medicine in yemen .. this helped a lot thank u :)
Thank you Sir First time I truly understood what to me
glad it helped Rick...
THANKS FOR MAKING COMPLICATED ISSUE VERY EASY THRO ANIMATION
My pleasure Drrajesh - you can see much more animation here www.calshipleymd.com
Very helpful video.
Thank you Julker - you can access all my medical videos at www.calshipleymd.com
brilliant narration and picturisation!! So informative.
I had a mini stroke and doctors also found enlarged pitutary gland. Going through tests now.I would assume both stoke and gland are not related anyway.Is that so?
Hi Ramesh - Do you know if the area of stroke was near the pituitary?
Im interested but slightly terrorised at how lucky we are to live everyday and how many horrible ways there are to die, often slowly. My neighbour is only 30 yrs old and had a blood clog in her brain. I actually cried after seeing what looks like a confused dying human shuffling along with her head spinning in circles. It overwhelmed me emotionally as she was a healthy new mum and i dont think she will make it past a few days as she appears to be deteriorating daily.
I'm so sorry to hear about your neighbor. Stroke is truly a devastating disease.
POWERFUL AMAZING 🎈🎈🎈🎈🎈.DR.SHIPLEY , M.D SPEECHES ME .THANKS FOR YOUR TIME AND SHARING YOUR FOR GIFT DR .● BROWN FAMILY DAPHNE COTTON 💜
Thank you so much Daphne! You can view my entire library at www.calshipleymd.com
Wonderful video about stroke. Thank you Sir. :)
Sir, do you think stress can also cause or contribute in stroke...am sorry if this is a repeat question.
+Ravi Vaswani - very definitely Ravi. Stress by itself would be an unusual cause for stroke, but stress can aggravate conditions that predispose to stroke, for example, high blood pressure...
thank u for share with us........sir..
My pleasure Dipen!
Great video.
Thank you Valerie! You can view my entire library at www.calshipleymd.com
Excellent!!!!!
+unrivaled37 -thank you! CalShipleyMD.com
Great video!!! Thank you!
clear explanation. have to present this topic tomorrow :(
Thank you very much Dr.
My pleasure Shankar - here is a related video from my library on traumatic brain injury trialimage.com/diffuse-axonal-injury-video/
My pleasure Shankar! You can access my entire medical video library at trialimage.com
my father died due to brainstem infarct last April 6, 2016 and it was so hard
Sorry to hear that Winston...
thank you sir for such knowledge
+Vinod Saini - my pleasure Vinod. You can access all my medical videos at www.CalShipleyMD.com
sir well done and well explained
+BHARGAV CHANDAN - thank you Bhargav. Http://www.calshipleymd.com
Simvastatin is also one reason to get Stroke. Since 2006 Iam taking Simvastatin, should I continue taking this medicine?
+Proceso Tulio - thank you for your question. Without knowing your medical history in detail, I can't make a recommendation. Please consult with your personal physician...
Very interesting explanation.....I am so worried because my grandmother was admitted in hospital before a week and it seems ischemic stroke .... she got a problem in her limbs . she has also eating and speaking problems... what shall I do Dr I want to see my grandma cured ...
Hello Meseret. I hope your grandmother is doing better. The best treatment for ischemic stroke is to treat any precipitating causes, such as high blood pressure, and rehabilitation therapy to recover function. Her doctors should be able to help her with all of this.
Very interesting I like this, I have a fusiform aneurysm of the mid basilar artery up to 6 mm in diameter with additional 2 mm aneurysm projecting from its wall. How serious is that
+Linda Ford - hi Linda - in general, arterial aneurysms involving the brain are considered low risk for rupture if they are less than 7mm, but whether or not to intervene with treatment depends on a lot of factors, including age, past history, necessity of taking anticoagulants for other conditions, etc. I'm assuming you are being followed by a neurologist or neurosurgeon for this issue, but if not, please do!
You might also include a "fill-in the blank sheet" of those terms and processes that YOU think would be useful to anyone as general useful knowledge which is the basis of the current USA educational curriculum.at anytime.
wow, excellent explanation and very helpful with my case study. In relation to endocarditis and embolism, if the patient suffered right temporal lobe stroke, is there any chance that stroke will happen again within 4 weeks?
THIS IS MANIFIQUE. my teacher get me all confused this really helped me better understand thanks
Brilliant, thanks !
thanks - my pleasure Haik0
Much Appreciated for the response. Unfortunately at this time that's all I have via diagnose from my good buddy who's mother just had this come about ...
A physician text me that last part about "hemorrhagic conversion" and haven't heard back from him since. Therefore that's why I was wondering what that statement meant. I apologize for the lack of information, which isn't helping you nor the physician (friend).
Just did some quick research - when a stroke occurs due to interruption of blood
flow (for example a clot) clot - busting enzymes like tpa are given to dissolve the clot. One risk of this is that the tpa may cause a hemorrage, which can cause a stroke anyway. hope this helps...
thank you so much for amazing video sir
You’re welcome Bhoot! Access my entire medical video library at www.CalShipleyMD.com