I only can give a thumbs up. Never got interested in anatomy but the way you explained, drew me till the end of the class. That's why you deserved to be called "SIR". hats off sir. Excellent.
Amazing lecture! This is so excellent! I appreciate the integration of embryology--the best way to understand the peritoneal structures (and medicine in general). Why haven't I discovered your lectures earlier when you began? Thank you so much!
@BidhanShah, check the video 15:15-16:00 to answer your question "why the liver is drawn on the left and the stomach on the right?". The reason is to draw a section that has the same orientation as a CT or MRI section because many physicians will be more familiar with axial sections in their practice. In CT and MRI axial sections the viscera appear as if looking at the body from below. In anatomical sections it is the reverse; However, in many anatomy textbooks, imaging orientation is now used.
Thank you so much from Ukraine, you made it all easy for me, when i listen to you teach i see the need to know more, i see the need to get better. Sukran.
very professional & well presented with detailed illustrations of peritoneum ( both parietal & visceral) correlated with other internal various organs.Very good for studies of how the treatments for various problems resulted from omental cakes and peritoneal cancers concerned for various cancerous patients using natural herbal system and alternative operation system or both applications. Good for further advanced research & development in due course.
The triangular ligaments of the liver are part of the peritoneum. They represent folding of the right & left leaves of the falciform ligament. Each leaf folds on itself when splitting to right & left. The left leaf will form a long double fold, left triangular ligament. The right leaf folds on itself at a more lateral position to form the short right triangular ligament; medially, the two layers of the right double fold are separated from each other, thus bordering the bare area of the liver.
Doc, even here, as you say, looking up from the bottom, the RT and LFT markings are opposite what they should be, if the vertebrae is in the correct place. The liver will always be to the right of the spine A/P or P/A (looking down Sup/Inf or up from Inf/Sup. You need to reverse the position of the vertebrae & organs forward to back OR change the markings Rt to Lft. Otherwise, everything else is well explained and the directional relationships are correct.
This was done intentionally in order to teach students to recognize sections as they appear in a CT or MRI because these are the sections the students will be familiar with after graduation. An anatomical section shows the section as if looking at the section from above and would have the sides reversed as you clearly noted but an MRI or CT axial section shows the section as if looking at the body from below.
Very helpful video,thanks.But I have a question: What about positon of triangular ligaments of Liver?What are they continuous with or not part of the peritoneum?
very nice, thank you, i appreciate the way of explanation using drawing methods it helps understanding small details and thanks for embryological information but i wonder what is the medical school/university this video lecture belongs to ?
Does anyone have the answer to the question enumerate the blood vessels which are located in the following pertitoneal folds, 1 lesser omentum, 2 greater omentum, 3 transverse colon 4 small intestine mesentery?
Dr. Akram do you have a video like this just about Retro peritoneum Organs? I'm an Ultra sound student and I can't find anything useful like your videos about retro-peritoneum
A topic that wasn't clearly explained in college has been beautifully done so by this awesome Dr. Akram. Thanks a ton.
I cannot emphasize enough how well this lecture had presented! Thank you so much!
Best video ever. Thank you from Hungary!
I only can give a thumbs up. Never got interested in anatomy but the way you explained, drew me till the end of the class. That's why you deserved to be called "SIR". hats off sir. Excellent.
Thank you for your interest!
Awesome. This is how anatomy is fun. Please more teachers like Dr. Akram!
best description ever! thank you so much! I couldnt understand this for a month! love and respect from Pakistan!
We took this in year 2, I am now reusing it in year 3 and I'm sure i'll reuse it again in the future.. thank you so much for all your efforts
Amazing lecture! This is so excellent! I appreciate the integration of embryology--the best way to understand the peritoneal structures (and medicine in general). Why haven't I discovered your lectures earlier when you began? Thank you so much!
@BidhanShah, check the video 15:15-16:00 to answer your question "why the liver is drawn on the left and the stomach on the right?". The reason is to draw a section that has the same orientation as a CT or MRI section because many physicians will be more familiar with axial sections in their practice. In CT and MRI axial sections the viscera appear as if looking at the body from below. In anatomical sections it is the reverse; However, in many anatomy textbooks, imaging orientation is now used.
this video was FANTASTIC and enormously helpful, thank you
Thank you so much from Ukraine, you made it all easy for me, when i listen to you teach i see the need to know more, i see the need to get better. Sukran.
+olanipekun oluwaseun thanks for the comment I really appreciate. Best wishes.
Excellent description and easy to understand, Thank you Dr Akram Jaffar,
Best teacher for me..... and a talented person....Mashallah.....👌👌
this is the best video explained the peritoneum , thank you so musch
very professional & well presented with detailed illustrations of peritoneum ( both parietal & visceral) correlated with other internal various organs.Very good for studies of how the treatments for various problems resulted from omental cakes and peritoneal cancers concerned for various cancerous patients using natural herbal system and alternative operation system or both applications. Good for further advanced research & development in due course.
you are a genius, nobody explains the way you do, thanks Dr.!!!
So nice of you
thank you, was so difficult to understand this, watching your video before reading does help a great deal, thanks for your help Dr.
excellent excellent. .....ummmmmmm love you sir..mind blowing explanation
It is the best video ever!!!!!!!! .It cleared my all doubts .Thankyou so much sir :)
very interesting and useful stuff. very grateful for your help. May Allah reward you
Thank you so much Doctor ... Very useful explanation. Thank you again.
Brilliant video! Thank you and best wishes.
تابعت الكثير من الفيديوهات حول هالموضوع ولم أجد أفضل من هذا الشرح اختصرت عليه وقت كثير جزيل الشكر دكتورنا الفاضل
Thanks! Glad it helped.
Thank you! This really made much more sense than my lecture did!
Sir thank you so much you explanation is very clear, precise and very easy to understand, great job..... sir .
Thanks alot Sir.. :) Your Videos Clear My Doubts....
amazing video, i sturggled to understand mesentries before you drew it out, thanks!
شكرا دكتور 💜
Amazing explanation thank you so much
That's so helpful thank you !
Very clear explanation, more than ,in lecture, in University or medical schools./.
excellent and easy to understand
Thank you very much. It was a mystery before now.
That's just amazing!! Thank you too much
totally understood the topic for the 1st time ever... thanku ✌
+Aparna Gupta you're welcome
all good stuff, thank you...
finally got it!thank you so much
Superb sir... fantastic....
Thank you from India!! Very Helpful :)
+Simranjit Gill you're welcome
It was awesome
Finally relieved
شكرا شكرا شكرا دكتور أكرم على مجهودك الرائع من فلسطين القدس
+mustafa natsheh you're most welcome
brilliant video. thankyou!
thank you soooooooooooooooooooooooo much dear doctor this was a
great help for me
Infact it is a nice video to understand intra abdominal structures in realation to peritonium. Great job .
+Prakash Dansana :-)
excellent,thank you.
this is awesome!!!!! thank you so much Dr. Akram
You're most welcome!
great video n really helpful
plz keep uploading more videos
god bless u
helped me a lot..thank you
Loved your explanation!
Andrea Castelino thank you for your contribution
very excellent explanation thank you ☺
+Zainab Fadhil :-)
AMAZING!
Really awesome
Thank you so so much for such a clear explanation video.. lots of love From russia... It was a pretty confusing before. Now I'm confident ❣️
You're very welcome!
thank you doctor akram
+Abdelrahman Omara you're most welcome!
thank you so so much
thanq u so much i hav chances of passing xam 2more.....i really respect u sir...
So helpful!! Thank you!
+Rose S :-)
Thank you so much sir
Best best sir thanks. God bless you
Thank you!
The triangular ligaments of the liver are part of the peritoneum. They represent folding of the right & left leaves of the falciform ligament. Each leaf folds on itself when splitting to right & left. The left leaf will form a long double fold, left triangular ligament. The right leaf folds on itself at a more lateral position to form the short right triangular ligament; medially, the two layers of the right double fold are separated from each other, thus bordering the bare area of the liver.
very clear explanation ...
Glad you think so!
thank you so much. this made things very understandable. you are a genius🤗
Glad you think so!
Doc, even here, as you say, looking up from the bottom, the RT and LFT markings are opposite what they should be, if the vertebrae is in the correct place. The liver will always be to the right of the spine A/P or P/A (looking down Sup/Inf or up from Inf/Sup. You need to reverse the position of the vertebrae & organs forward to back OR change the markings Rt to Lft. Otherwise, everything else is well explained and the directional relationships are correct.
This was done intentionally in order to teach students to recognize sections as they appear in a CT or MRI because these are the sections the students will be familiar with after graduation. An anatomical section shows the section as if looking at the section from above and would have the sides reversed as you clearly noted but an MRI or CT axial section shows the section as if looking at the body from below.
bless you Dr
Glad it helped.
nice and clear explanation
+kuhataparunks thanks!
So helpful
Fantastic!!
Thanks!
thanks a lot sir
Thanks a lot
thank u helped me alot learning it for my medical school exam :)
Glad to hear that.
i dont get the dislikes?? seriously this is excellent!!!!!!
Inspirational
excellent video!!!👌👌
+Aman Dalal best wishes
GREAT VIDEO. FOR ME IT IS THE BEST.
Thank you!
Thanks!
Welcome!
Thankyou so much sir!!
Most welcome!
Thank you Sooo much! You're helping me with dental school
Do you study such detailed anatomy of the abdomen in dental school?
Thank you!!
+qwertykeyboard123 best wishes
Thanks. So, there`s lesser sac & greater sac , and there`s an opening between them.
Thanks 🙏
You’re welcome 😊
Thankyou sir
Wonderful
Thank you! Cheers!
Very helpful video,thanks.But I have a question:
What about positon of triangular ligaments of Liver?What are they continuous with or not part of the peritoneum?
excellent sir
+srinu gorla thanks
What's the name of the peritoneal pouch between the liver & the diaphragm as asked in the red square in the video?
very nice, thank you, i appreciate the way of explanation using drawing methods it helps understanding small details and thanks for embryological information but i wonder what is the medical school/university this video lecture belongs to ?
Many thanks🌻❤🌻❤🌻❤✋
Thank you too
wooow its really helpful
thanks alot
Good luck
Good presentation
xxx
Finally I understood
thank u
wow sir,awseome
All the best.
Thanks for all your helpful videos doctor. By the way, do you have any video about posterior abdominal wall, inf. vena cava and abdominal aorta?
I just found it. :))
Good!
Thank you so much doctor. I cant express how amazing this video is.
just one doubt, what are the vessels that can be seen in the greater omentum?
So nice of you
Omental (epiploic) branches of the right and left gastroepiploic arteries.
got a question...why is liver on the left and stomach on the right side in that transverse section of abdomen??
Can somebody please answer question 3, much appreciated. Is it the subphrenic recess?
Superb
Thank you! Cheers!
Does anyone have the answer to the question enumerate the blood vessels which are located in the following pertitoneal folds, 1 lesser omentum, 2 greater omentum, 3 transverse colon 4 small intestine mesentery?
nice.. thank you very much :)
Dr. Akram do you have a video like this just about Retro peritoneum Organs? I'm an Ultra sound student and I can't find anything useful like your videos about retro-peritoneum
Bamdad Navabi ruclips.net/video/Scbv7fLLtc0/видео.html
Bamdad Navabi ruclips.net/video/E9JaJIhDIOI/видео.html