This is a Gold standard of Teaching; (1) Using a board, (2) A teacher illustrating on the board, (3) and the students jotting down points. There is nop substitute for this. Too much use of technology distorts and confuses the learners. All the best Dr Matt and Mike.
Thank you Dr Mike for this amazing video. I've spinal disease and have had several surgeries, just waiting for a 5th. You've explained a lot of the weird stuff I experience e.g. the difference between feeling pain and touch. Could never understand why certain things felt the way they do. I can feel pain (lots) yet can't always feel touch. Can't tell you what an amazing thing you have to be able to explain in terms lay folk can understand. God bless you for that and warm greetings from North Wales UK
Thank you, Dr Mike. I have been learning from your lectures and through them, I have passed my OSCE. I love your teaching style, and how you make lessons easier for my understanding. I will be starting non-medical prescribing course and wondering if you provide courses/lessons on pharma.
Thank you for the great explanation, just some correction : Spinothalamic pathway conducts Superficial senses(Temperature, Crude touch, Pain) and Dorsal column pathway conducts Deep senses(Vibration, Joint location,Pressure, Fine touch, Two point discrimination).
@@air_howl5316 I know this was 5 months ago but I really want to answer you because I actually know something lmao. Basically fine (discriminative) touch is when you can localize the stimulus and crude (non-discriminative) touch is when you cannot localize the stimulus.
@@air_howl5316 Fine touch (or discriminative touch) is a sensory modality that allows a subject to sense and localize touch. The form of touch where localization is not possible is known as crude touch.
Thanks for explaining the pain pathway as well. I had a hard time finding that online. Where are the soma of the neurons that detect the finger injury located? In the part of the spinal cord inside your neck?
Thanks. I am happy that a there is a healthy individual teaching this. Do we know what the name of the disc that the spinal cord goes through that has a bull horn like structure?
Thank you for your explanation. Please I have a question in regards to the somatosensory pathway. I do understand that when it comes to the Pain/Temperature/Coarse touch pathway, a damage to one side of the brain (left) or a hemisection on the same side (left of spinal cord) will lead to a loss of this function on the contralateral side. However, I am confused when it comes to the pathway for fine touch and proprioception. Please would you say that a patient with a left sided hemisection will retain fine touch and proprioception on the contralateral side. However, when the injury is on the level of the brain (left cerebral hemisphere), would fine touch and proprioception be lost on the contralateral side this time?
What’s the purpose of testing light touch, vibration AND proprioception during a neurological examination since they are all the dorsal column? It is acceptable to test sensations via the dorsal column and spinaothalamic tract using only light touch and pin prick across all dermatomes?
the video is useless but not clear you have not mentioned the name of nucleus tract will pass through but thank you please add full information in video it really mean for medico like me 🙂
Dr. Matt and Dr. Mike single handedly helping me pass my neuro class 🫶🏼
This is a Gold standard of Teaching; (1) Using a board, (2) A teacher illustrating on the board, (3) and the students jotting down points. There is nop substitute for this. Too much use of technology distorts and confuses the learners. All the best Dr Matt and Mike.
Thank you, I'm a Nigerian medical student, watching your video was really useful to me
Thanks from my heart for this teaching 🤍
My pleasure 😊
you are saving my life in these neuroscience shenanigans thank you so much
U r genius when it comes to explaining!!!
This guy is a life saver and very good at what he does.
U explain topics in a very clear way! Thank you so much!
Thank you Dr Mike for this amazing video. I've spinal disease and have had several surgeries, just waiting for a 5th. You've explained a lot of the weird stuff I experience e.g. the difference between feeling pain and touch. Could never understand why certain things felt the way they do. I can feel pain (lots) yet can't always feel touch. Can't tell you what an amazing thing you have to be able to explain in terms lay folk can understand. God bless you for that and warm greetings from North Wales UK
Thank you, Dr Mike. I have been learning from your lectures and through them, I have passed my OSCE. I love your teaching style, and how you make lessons easier for my understanding. I will be starting non-medical prescribing course and wondering if you provide courses/lessons on pharma.
Just saved my life with this 😭😭😭
It's a great video and so easy to understand. Thank you so much!
Thank you so much ..I was thinking it was so difficult which I was about to leave ..saw ua video and it's so faking easyyyyy
Fantastic instructor
Thank you so much for making this video! I was having a terrible time with the clinical implications of these tracks and you simplified it for me 🙏
You're really good at explaining this.
You saved my life, thank you so much!!!!!!
Amazing video!
THIS IS SO HELPFUL THANKS SO MUCH!!
Dr. Mike saves the day once again
Thanks a lot from Italy 🙏🙏🙏
Finally understood... Thank you so much
thanks Dr. mike for this video. On a light note, the secondary neuron in the spinothalamic tract doesn't have a cell body
Great explanation Dr. Mike. You are a gifted individual. Respect from Canada
Great explanation 💛💛
OMG, you are amazing. Thanks so much.
Thank you! makes so much more sense now! Really helped me to understand the symptoms of SCI in relation to the decussation of spinal tracts.
Thank you very much, great explanation 👍👍
Thankyou ! My book didn’t describe contralateral and ipsilateral to the point like this
Finally I understand! Thank you soooo much!!!!
Powerfull....straight to the point
This is awesome, very accessible!
Very good attempt ❤
You're THE BEST!
i cant thank you enough for this amazing video god bless you
Thank you for the great explanation, just some correction : Spinothalamic pathway conducts Superficial senses(Temperature, Crude touch, Pain) and Dorsal column pathway conducts Deep senses(Vibration, Joint location,Pressure, Fine touch, Two point discrimination).
Whats the diff between fine touch and crude touch?
@@air_howl5316 I know this was 5 months ago but I really want to answer you because I actually know something lmao. Basically fine (discriminative) touch is when you can localize the stimulus and crude (non-discriminative) touch is when you cannot localize the stimulus.
@@chloeash1981 thank youuuu I appreciate it😁😁good answer.
@@air_howl5316 Fine touch (or discriminative touch) is a sensory modality that allows a subject to sense and localize touch. The form of touch where localization is not possible is known as crude touch.
I love you , you save me in med school
Thanks for explaining the pain pathway as well. I had a hard time finding that online. Where are the soma of the neurons that detect the finger injury located? In the part of the spinal cord inside your neck?
Hej man, might be a but to late but the soma or cell Bodies is located in the dorsal root ganglion in the dorsal root of the spinal cord (outside CSN)
Raduuuuuuuuuuuuuuu
god bless you sir
Great Video! I kind of wish you explained the Fas Gracilis & Fas Cuneatus details for the Dorsal Column tract though
Great explanation!!!
Great videos, thanks you.
Thanks. I am happy that a there is a healthy individual teaching this. Do we know what the name of the disc that the spinal cord goes through that has a bull horn like structure?
perfectly explained
thank u Dr. mike
Awesome video! Thank you so much for uploading this :D
You are Great!
So awesome video lecture sir thanks in please make video's
Perhaps this difference in pathways (one ipsilateral, one contralateral) is protective. It means we don't lose all our sensation on one side.
Thank you for your explanation. Please I have a question in regards to the somatosensory pathway. I do understand that when it comes to the Pain/Temperature/Coarse touch pathway, a damage to one side of the brain (left) or a hemisection on the same side (left of spinal cord) will lead to a loss of this function on the contralateral side. However, I am confused when it comes to the pathway for fine touch and proprioception. Please would you say that a patient with a left sided hemisection will retain fine touch and proprioception on the contralateral side. However, when the injury is on the level of the brain (left cerebral hemisphere), would fine touch and proprioception be lost on the contralateral side this time?
Thank you soooo much!!
What’s the purpose of testing light touch, vibration AND proprioception during a neurological examination since they are all the dorsal column? It is acceptable to test sensations via the dorsal column and spinaothalamic tract using only light touch and pin prick across all dermatomes?
thanks
is there just one single first neuron or many, in your example?
Fine touch and light touch, are the same thing?
hi doctor?i want to know the three sensory laws?
Thankss
Good job thanks 🤍👏🏼
Heey where did the rest of the video go 😢
Thank you 😊 but trying talking louder I increased my volume so high to hear you😢
❤ 9:38
you forgot to explain what dcml pathway means
Dorsal column medial lemniscus!!
Why thu?
👏👏👏😊
Makes me uneasy when you refer to the thalamus as the thalmus
ok rdj
the video is useless but not clear you have not mentioned the name of nucleus tract will pass through but thank you please add full information in video it really mean for medico like me 🙂