You have no idea, do you..? The last thing a Doctor would do is tell a patient they missed a touch or got a response wrong... because doing that then encourages the now worried patient to give false responses when in truth they don't feel / identify a touch or item... which would invalidate the whole process.
Why are these videos more involved than a real neurological exam? I have MS and the neurologist barely examined me. He did just sensation testing on my arms, legs and feet along with vibration on my legs
Fellow mser here 👋🏼 thinking the exact same thing… I get a couple of taps on my arms and legs & off I pop I think my neuro spends about 15 min with me at most lol mental 😅
Because these tests were developed at a time when CAT scans, MRIs and nuclear medicine didn't exist. Doctors had to really know their trade and actually practice hands on medicine to figure out what was wrong. Today, a doctor will rarely touch you and barely spend 5 minutes in the room Instead a PA will ask you what your symptoms are, plug your answers into a diagnostic app on her laptop and run labs and scans to confirm. It's not bad to have all this tech but old physicians will tell you that their young colleagues don't know how to do any real, actual hands on doctoring anymore. They rely on the tech. Old airline pilots will tell you the same thing. The computer flies the plane. It's a new world for sure.
Depends on the purpose of the examination i guess. When I was first diagnosed, or doing research projects the exams are very detailed and protracted. If I’m just seeing my neuro to gauge progression he doesn’t need to do much. She has a very particular deficiency though.
@@meggiemoo931 It’s a scene where Bill Tench and Nancy Tench are in a waiting room of sorts talking about their son. They start whispering because they don’t want others to hear them
"after close examination, we've reached a conclusion: you are indeed crippled. unfortunately your future employer isn't going to believe you so you'll have to slam the door on your arm repeatedly during the interview to really get the point across"
Die junge Dame hatte bestimmt einen Unfall oder Ähnliches, was ihren rechten Arm so beeinträchtigt, dass sie ihn nicht richtig selbst bewegen kann und auch nicht richtig fühlen kann 😢🙏🏻🍀
Strange how she stopped feeling them at one point when she was asked to open her eyes and locate them. Unless she wasn’t being touched at all? I wonder what that indicates. Neuropathy?
It's freebooted from another channel: it is part of a series demonstrating ideal exams for training medical students so they can practice for their practical exams
In the original videos, it's explained that they are roleplaying someone with some kind of nerve injury, hence the tests. That info is lost in this edit.
@@bigbob8572 nope. Just a perspective on how broken this world is. On a matter completely irrelevant you're still focusing on the matter of her beauty over any meaningful topic. That's what's sad
My assumption is that one is a teacher and the other is a student and she was telling the student to not say stuff like that when going through the testing to see how well the student know the exam, etc. if not this, than something similar.
Im.very sorry so missed a few cotton swab touches on the right arm, werr going to have to go ahead and amputate.
Who's the mega rack?
LOL
she misses multiple arm touches and the doctor responds “Great!” HAHA
there is a whole series of these videos and in the first one they explain for demonstration purposes they are simulating some nerve damage i think
You have no idea, do you..? The last thing a Doctor would do is tell a patient they missed a touch or got a response wrong... because doing that then encourages the now worried patient to give false responses when in truth they don't feel / identify a touch or item... which would invalidate the whole process.
Why are these videos more involved than a real neurological exam? I have MS and the neurologist barely examined me. He did just sensation testing on my arms, legs and feet along with vibration on my legs
Not sure, I had one done as a medical screening before working at a mine and it was just like the ones you see on here
Depends on the doctor and how fast they need to be to see other patients
Fellow mser here 👋🏼 thinking the exact same thing… I get a couple of taps on my arms and legs & off I pop I think my neuro spends about 15 min with me at most lol mental 😅
Because these tests were developed at a time when CAT scans, MRIs and nuclear medicine didn't exist. Doctors had to really know their trade and actually practice hands on medicine to figure out what was wrong. Today, a doctor will rarely touch you and barely spend 5 minutes in the room
Instead a PA will ask you what your symptoms are, plug your answers into a diagnostic app on her laptop and run labs and scans to confirm. It's not bad to have all this tech but old physicians will tell you that their young colleagues don't know how to do any real, actual hands on doctoring anymore. They rely on the tech. Old airline pilots will tell you the same thing. The computer flies the plane. It's a new world for sure.
Depends on the purpose of the examination i guess. When I was first diagnosed, or doing research projects the exams are very detailed and protracted. If I’m just seeing my neuro to gauge progression he doesn’t need to do much. She has a very particular deficiency though.
2:11 Go ahead and open your eyes if you have any
“If you haven’t”
This one is insanely good
this one is amazing! I thought I had lost my asmr
Mindhunter S2 E8 has a decent scene of whispering around 10 minutes in
which scene is it?
@@meggiemoo931 It’s a scene where Bill Tench and Nancy Tench are in a waiting room of sorts talking about their son. They start whispering because they don’t want others to hear them
"after close examination, we've reached a conclusion: you are indeed crippled. unfortunately your future employer isn't going to believe you so you'll have to slam the door on your arm repeatedly during the interview to really get the point across"
Young Sheldons Mom
So she needs help putting her arm on the table but suddenly she can hold up the card to her face??😂😂 I get that its fake but gotta finish the bit lol
Oh come on, she's been peeking the whole time, Doc...
Die junge Dame hatte bestimmt einen Unfall oder Ähnliches, was ihren rechten Arm so beeinträchtigt, dass sie ihn nicht richtig selbst bewegen kann und auch nicht richtig fühlen kann 😢🙏🏻🍀
Strange how she stopped feeling them at one point when she was asked to open her eyes and locate them. Unless she wasn’t being touched at all? I wonder what that indicates. Neuropathy?
It's just roleplay, nothing to be taken seriously
its fake but in a real case its probably not neuropathy as she has no movement at all so best explanation is a stroke
This video is stolen. It’s a stroke patient rp how to video.
Kkkikkii😊i
It's freebooted from another channel: it is part of a series demonstrating ideal exams for training medical students so they can practice for their practical exams
Ma quanto è bella lei?😍😍😍😍
Thanks for watching ❤
I love it
"I'm just going to help you put your arm back in your lap".... ummm why?
Seems like she was injured in that right arm somehow
In the original videos, it's explained that they are roleplaying someone with some kind of nerve injury, hence the tests. That info is lost in this edit.
@@NickGelo It's a roleplay of someone with nerve damage iirc, to demonstrate the tests.
what’s her @
@melisakayeot
interesting she missed a lot of touches on her middle finger and palm
i enjoy watching 🎉
she is beautiful what is he name
Darude.
i'll give her my cranial nerve
???😭😂
🤣🤣
So bad it just might work 😂😂
Love this!
Wow she is beautiful
perv
Completely irrelevant
@@Jakub2 you sound very bitter my friend 😞
@@bigbob8572 nope. Just a perspective on how broken this world is. On a matter completely irrelevant you're still focusing on the matter of her beauty over any meaningful topic. That's what's sad
@@Jakub2 or maybe I was offering a compliment! Cheer up buddy, life's to short to be so bitter
Wait…
ForANewHeart
Great job, well prepared and executed
Are you serious
@@anireseegam6128 ?
Ridiculous
Troglodyte
I think it's intended for people who have had some kind of nerve damage. A healthy functioning nervous system surely wouldn't need a test like this.
I'm curious why she said "we're not going to say that in testing" at the end unless I misheard her
My assumption is that one is a teacher and the other is a student and she was telling the student to not say stuff like that when going through the testing to see how well the student know the exam, etc. if not this, than something similar.
Freebooted from a series of medical training videos ruclips.net/video/14aqsxFZQWk/видео.htmlsi=c_KejFbtgcTO5Djm