Anterolateral Abdominal Wall - Anatomy | Lecturio
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
- ► Sign up here and try our FREE content: lectur.io/freec...
► If you’re an medical educator or faculty member, visit: lectur.io/medytb2u
This video “Anterolateral Abdominal Wall” is part of the Lecturio course “Abdomen - Anatomy” ► WATCH the complete course on lectur.io/anter...
► LEARN ABOUT:
- Muscles of the Abdominal Wall
- External Oblique
- Internal Oblique
- Transversus abdominis
- Rectus abdominis
- Aponeuroses
- Rectus sheath
- Neurovascular structures
- Inguinal region
► THE PROF:
Your lecturer is Dr. James Pickering. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of Leeds where he is currently working as Associate Professor in Anatomy. Due to various publications on human anatomy, such as "Access Anatomy: Abdomen", Dr. James Pickering is a leading expert in his field.
► LECTURIO is your single-point resource for medical school:
Study for your classes, USMLE Step 1, USMLE Step 2, MCAT or MBBS with video lectures by world-class professors, recall & USMLE-style questions and textbook articles. Create your free account now: lectur.io/anter...
► INSTALL our free Lecturio app
iTunes Store: app.adjust.com...
Play Store: app.adjust.com...
► READ TEXTBOOK ARTICLES related to this video:
Anatomy of the Abdominal Wall and Pelvic Floor
lectur.io/anter...
► SUBSCRIBE to our RUclips channel: lectur.io/subsc...
► WATCH MORE ON RUclips: lectur.io/playl...
► LET’S CONNECT:
• Facebook: / lecturio.medical.educa...
• Instagram: / lecturio_medical_videos
• Pinterest: www.pinterest....
• LinkedIn: / lecturio-medical
Dr James Pickering, best youtube anatomy teacher ever
you said you will change the way anatomy is taught , you actually changed it . Thanks for lecture.
Thank you very much! If you'd like more videos like this, but also downloadable study materials, quizzes, learning path, access to 3D Model and much more, register and start your FREE trial today: lectur.io/freecontentyt
Fantastic, I appreciate the slow speed and also the repetition of long words
amazing teacher!!!! thank you. I will be watching your videos many many times throughout PT school
The best explanation so far. Thanks a lot Dr👍
Thank you for your comment! If you enjoyed the video, don't forget to subscribe and turn on notifications to stay updated with all our RUclips videos. 🤗 Additionally, for more learning opportunities, we invite you to sign up here and explore even more of our free content, along with all the study features that can help you ace your exams: lectur.io/freecontentyt
sounded like a wonderful tour into abdominal wall, thank you!
wow great depiction and explanation of the anterior abdominal wall musculature layering. My professor wasn't very clear and now I feel like I can teach my med school classmates. Thank you!!
thanks Dr for the first time i got your videos i subscribed the Chanel and i will try my best to watch your lecturers Dr and thank you again and again ...from Mogadishu,Somalia
Excellant lecture well supported by fantastic diagrams ! Thanks for uploading this very useful video!
Professional Teacher who knows and has the capacity to disseminate important information about the lesson he is teaching. Thanks Dr
Great contribution to medical sciences
That's highly appreciated
Thanks
Best explanation ever ,i came across.thank u so much
Thank you Dr. Amazing explanation, i understand very well!
Thank you so much sir ❤
Very helpful! Thanks a lot!
Can anyone tell me what kind a doctor specializes in these muscles? I have an injury from a steering wheel and I get sent from gerontologist to neurologists, but they each say that they are not the right kind of doctors to help me with abdominal wall pain. Thank you in advance!
ruclips.net/video/rm8TnbVh9pI/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/2lCevWVJOiQ/видео.html
@@rbzzzzzrb Thank you very much for the links, rbzzzrb. I have watched those also. My problem is that these and others deal with referred pain for the organs inside. My injury is actually in the abdominal wall itself. My muscle is retracted, and facia is damaged. I am told that this really falls into no doctors land.
@@commonsense4993 How about Myofascial release is a type of physical therapy often used to treat myofascial pain syndrome. Myofascial pain syndrome is a chronic pain disorder caused by sensitivity and tightness in your myofascial tissues. These tissues surround and support the muscles throughout your body. The pain usually originates from specific points within your myofascial tissues called “trigger points.”
Myofascial release focuses on reducing pain by easing the tension and tightness in the trigger points. It’s not always easy to understand what trigger point is responsible for the pain. Localizing pain to a specific trigger point is very difficult. For that reason, myofascial release is often used over a broad area of muscle and tissue rather than at single points.
Wow! This was beautifully explained. Thank sooo much!
This is just AMAZING!!
Thank you!
This was super amazing, thank you very much!
very informative
Thank you joana
I always thought the internal oblique originated from the lateral TWO thirds of the inguinal ligament - not lateral third as said in the video
Nope. It's the lateral third of the inguinal ligament as well as the connective tissue that is located deep to it.
Thank you so much
Does the aponeuorosis not change arrangement at the arcuate line which is between pubic symphasis and umbilicus. Not directly below umbilicus
I have Same doubt
Awesome 😍
Thank you sir
Thnk u so much sir
Powerful
Thank u so much dr
How are long in centimeter from skin to perritomium ?
amazing
Am missing the specific ,marking points for me to pass.
Best
🤝❤
X1.25 speed!!!!
O-matic x2
Thank you!