Muscles of the Larynx - Part 1 - 3D Anatomy Tutorial

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  • Опубликовано: 26 окт 2024

Комментарии • 83

  • @mitchc1851
    @mitchc1851 6 лет назад +108

    0:00 - Cricothyroid - pulls cricord forward downward), pulling/tensing vocal cords - Superior Laryngeal Nerve of Vagus nerve*.
    3:05 - Posterior Cricoarytenoid - ABD-ucts vocal cords, opening - Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve of Vagus nerve
    6:50 - Lateral Cricoarythenoid - ADD-ucts vocal cord - Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve of Vagus nerve
    All intrinsic muscles innervated by recurrent laryngeal n. except cricothyroid (superior laryngeal nerve)

  • @divyamarkande35
    @divyamarkande35 9 лет назад +18

    Super! I'm an MBBS graduate from India currently preparing for my entrance exams to postgraduate medical courses.. Your video simplifies 99% of the stuff! If only my Anatomy teachers had used these teaching aids in my 1st year!
    Thank you!

    • @siddharthpande3858
      @siddharthpande3858 7 лет назад +5

      I feel you bro.. What shit education we had man...! :/ Have never understood this so clearly...

    • @sankhya01
      @sankhya01 7 лет назад +1

      Divya Markande
      which college can I ask ?

    • @divyamarkande35
      @divyamarkande35 7 лет назад +1

      Sankhya Chatterjee SDM Medical College Dharwad.

    • @aditibajpai115
      @aditibajpai115 4 года назад

      Seriously!! 😔

    • @indian_doc
      @indian_doc 11 месяцев назад +2

      Me doing neet pg coaching and seeing this comment from 8 yrs back saying the same things I want to say 😅

  • @michellethompson4564
    @michellethompson4564 6 лет назад +10

    SUCH A GREAT STUDYING RESOURCE! Thank you so much for making this, not sure I would've passed Speech A&P without this guide!

  • @theaisha932
    @theaisha932 10 лет назад +5

    Thanks so much! Can't tell you how many times I've watched this video

  • @Ro0Sii
    @Ro0Sii 10 лет назад +6

    thank you so much for your tutorials. they help me a lot!
    keep up with the subtitles, they are great help with understanding what you say. not that there is anything wrong with your pronunciation but the terminology is really hard when you're a first year medstudent.
    could you please also put up tutorials about embryology? it is really hard to visualize how everything forms.

  • @drsreejith8509
    @drsreejith8509 5 лет назад +3

    im from kerala....it helped me alott for my pg prepartion thanks alott

  • @umbella1837
    @umbella1837 3 года назад

    no doubt you are a great anatomist! thank you so much for helping all medicoss....

  • @pockettes3918
    @pockettes3918 4 года назад +10

    Thank you for this. I'm currently taking an anatomy class and my professor has been making this more confusing than clear. Thanks for that!

  • @Msl_78hu
    @Msl_78hu 2 года назад

    You don't know how much you helped me

  • @58sivaslim58
    @58sivaslim58 11 лет назад

    i've watches all your tutorials expalining the larnyx... and i'll definitly look over your other Videos too.... Thank you so much !!!

  • @zunazi12
    @zunazi12 2 года назад +23

    How many speech therapy students are here?

  • @ttchang9
    @ttchang9 18 дней назад

    This is so helpful! Much better then kenhub!

  • @mitchc1851
    @mitchc1851 8 лет назад +1

    thank goodness i saw this video. my exams are 6 months away and your videos have helped me tremendously!

  • @jessicaalldis2493
    @jessicaalldis2493 5 лет назад

    watching this to cram for my "anatomy for speech" exam tomorrow, you are a life saver!

  • @jalalalakhras4113
    @jalalalakhras4113 10 лет назад +6

    go ahead .,, one of the best teacher I've ever seen

  • @alevelsdemystified3410
    @alevelsdemystified3410 5 лет назад +2

    *Extrinsic muscles*
    These muscles move the larynx *up and down* during *swallowing*
    Many of these are attached to the hyoid bone which is strictly not a part of the larynx but attached to it superiorly via thyrohyoid membrane.
    Elevation
    1.The digastric
    2.The stylohyoid
    3.The mylohyoid
    4.The geniohyoid
    5.The stylopharyngeus
    6.The salpinopharyngeus
    7.The palatopharyngeus
    Mnemonic
    The genious(geniohyoid) sapien(salpinopharyngeus) drank the milo(mylohyoid) with style squared(stylohyoid, stylopharyngeus). It suited his digestion(digastric) and palate(palatopharyngeus)
    Depression
    1.Sternohyoid
    2.Sternothyroid
    3.Omohyoid
    Mnemonic *Stern* treatment made *omo depressed*

  • @saranisar7999
    @saranisar7999 4 года назад

    In love with ur lectures

  • @kristenmarchetti2412
    @kristenmarchetti2412 11 лет назад +1

    These have been extremely helpful. Thank you for posting.

  • @rizt2979
    @rizt2979 6 лет назад

    I studied from your videos in my first and 2nd year MBBS and now after graduating im studying these for my postgrad exam
    Thanks Alot God bless you 😀

  • @lalawardrip
    @lalawardrip 11 лет назад

    These videos are GREAT, helpful study aids for my Voice Disorders class!! Thank you!!

  • @rforce668
    @rforce668 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks for your videos :-). I've used them a lot to supplement my graduate courses.

  • @samsadeenatyahoodotc
    @samsadeenatyahoodotc 9 лет назад +4

    Absolutely brilliant and super helpful. I am in CRNA school and this and your other tutorial are insanely helpful. I feel like I should send you some $...lol :)

  • @dimamalhis3554
    @dimamalhis3554 4 года назад

    Your videos should be taken as an example of how teaching should be , very informative and beneficial , thank you loads!

  • @rahulroy4494
    @rahulroy4494 11 лет назад

    i've watched so many of your videos... really awesome stuff... please keep doin this more!!!

  • @sonalisubhadarsini2436
    @sonalisubhadarsini2436 3 года назад

    Hats off to ur effort

  • @Msl_78hu
    @Msl_78hu 2 года назад

    Man
    You are the best

  • @anishaa6216
    @anishaa6216 6 лет назад

    I am watching in 2018! Thank you so much!

  • @krupalpatel11
    @krupalpatel11 11 лет назад

    awesome channel for medical student

  • @aspensink
    @aspensink 10 лет назад +1

    awesome walkthrough of the structures! Thank you! :)

  • @VivekJ96
    @VivekJ96 4 года назад

    Thank you so much. This was so helpful

  • @RandyBrady2024
    @RandyBrady2024 8 месяцев назад

    My right vocal chord has a wave motion when I talk. I do have a TBI suffered in 1977. I do have muscle damage on my right side firm the head to my pelvis, and multiple head injuries.

  • @alevelsdemystified3410
    @alevelsdemystified3410 5 лет назад

    *Intrinsic muscles*
    Narrow the inlet
    Oblique aryteniod ligament
    Widen inlet
    Thyroepiglottic
    Tense the vocal cords
    Cricothyoid muscle
    Relax the vocal cord
    Thyroarytenoid(vocals)
    Adduct the vocal cords
    Lateral cricoaryteniod
    Abduct
    Posterior cricoaryteniod
    Approximate aryteniod cartilages
    Transverse aryteniod muscle

  • @sonalisubhadarsini2436
    @sonalisubhadarsini2436 3 года назад

    Thanks for your help

  • @funkexter
    @funkexter 11 лет назад

    Extremely helpful! Thank you so much.

  • @smolkittyperson
    @smolkittyperson 7 лет назад

    This is a good video. Thanks!

  • @thilinaalagiyawanna3680
    @thilinaalagiyawanna3680 3 года назад

    Thank You Verymuch

  • @sonalisubhadarsini2436
    @sonalisubhadarsini2436 3 года назад

    U r simply awesome

  • @press_tinydoctor
    @press_tinydoctor 10 лет назад +2

    I think you might have got the vertical and oblique parts of the cricothyroid muscle swapped?

  • @avee7880
    @avee7880 10 лет назад

    Great video, thank you!

  • @shammafarhathp3808
    @shammafarhathp3808 7 лет назад

    Great video! !

  • @apatta4155
    @apatta4155 9 лет назад +1

    contrary to what most places on the internet says, the lateral cricoarytenoid actually opens the rima glottidis along with the posterior cricoarytenoid.

  • @cheroziahmohdsukari4437
    @cheroziahmohdsukari4437 10 лет назад +1

    awesome ever. thank you from malaysia

  • @M7mmad08
    @M7mmad08 11 лет назад +2

    awesome!
    greetings from Palestine

  • @eliasseise1189
    @eliasseise1189 5 лет назад +1

    Kind of confused how your larynx moves up when making a high pitched sound if the circothyroid pulls the larynx down and forward to tense the cords..

  • @karenthiele48
    @karenthiele48 11 лет назад

    absolutely awesome. thank you thank you thank you!!!

  • @vitekbo
    @vitekbo 10 лет назад +2

    Thanks a lot!

  • @asmita4062
    @asmita4062 4 года назад

    Amazing

  • @RobinahJuru1992
    @RobinahJuru1992 7 лет назад

    Thanks heaps for this!

  • @jennyjiyuewang
    @jennyjiyuewang 11 лет назад

    life saver!!!! thank you!

  • @rainsky6227
    @rainsky6227 4 года назад

    helpfull videos thnxxx

  • @TheHamtons
    @TheHamtons 11 лет назад

    AWESOME!

  • @bloomprinceton
    @bloomprinceton 8 лет назад +1

    simply amazing

  • @rpg6987
    @rpg6987 5 лет назад

    Thanks a lot man

  • @melaniestryder3635
    @melaniestryder3635 11 лет назад

    Brilliant again :-)

  • @ignatius7004
    @ignatius7004 8 лет назад +34

    thanks british guy

  • @MisterOpera
    @MisterOpera 2 года назад

    this isn't really correct, from a biomechanical or acoustic point of view. There are actually multiple ways to raise the pitch, so it's not correct to mention only stretching the folds to increase tension. It's also possible to resist stretch while increasing pressure, thus raising the frequency of oscillation. This bad information is confusing so many people who don't realize they should be figuring out another way to change the pitch!
    Many are confused by the basic idea that the CT and TA are doing everything people think they are doing. But it's this modeling that is incorrect. It doesn't make any sense at all, and that's even without nonlinear acoustics to explain missing forces contributing to fold closure. We are set up to expect simple muscle antagonism, and it's just not that.

  • @melike2781
    @melike2781 7 лет назад +1

    does anyone knows whom which anatomy atlas did he find this pics about the muscles?

    • @sreeragnair4392
      @sreeragnair4392 6 лет назад

      Gray's anatomy... you can get those pictures in the google images

  • @Nim565
    @Nim565 11 лет назад

    Thanks a lot!! =D

  • @elizitaarqueros4917
    @elizitaarqueros4917 8 дней назад

    como hago para escucharlo en español por favor

  • @kritisethi5666
    @kritisethi5666 4 года назад

    Wow wow wow

  • @shade-e4836
    @shade-e4836 7 лет назад +3

    You blundered in adduction and abduction part .. if there's anyway to edit it then it'll b good..

  • @elizabeththompson343
    @elizabeththompson343 9 лет назад +1

    is this about a cat's? :(

  • @JeSsWoNn
    @JeSsWoNn 11 лет назад

    haha your loss on some really good information.

  • @bakhtawarsingh2316
    @bakhtawarsingh2316 2 года назад

    Ì

  • @coconut199737
    @coconut199737 4 года назад

    nani the fuck

  • @Sorkaification
    @Sorkaification 11 лет назад

    Your british accent and haste makes it very difficult for me to understand :(
    Can you subtitle more?

  • @stelluhh45
    @stelluhh45 10 лет назад

    :)

  • @yzanmohmmd1112
    @yzanmohmmd1112 3 года назад

    thank you very much

  • @zas881
    @zas881 4 года назад

    thank you so much