How to Read Your MRI with Onis 2.5 - part I (Advanced Lumbar Spine)
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- Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
- In part one of this video, Dr. Gillard reviews the key anatomy of the lumbar spine has seen in all planes. In part two and in, he will show his eighth quarter students how to use Onis 2.5 to read a lumbar MRI disk.
Thank you so much Doc. I’m on an extensive wait list in Canada to see a spine surgeon. These 2 videos on lumbar have helped me decipher my mri. Thanks again
The show was great class. It was super useful for medicine.
Great lectures of spinal cord.
It was indeed very informative. I must say you are doing a great job👍
Nice presentation sir...
If there is Ligamentum flavum buckling and compresses the thecal sac from posterior which nerve root if affected the anterior one or posterior one ?
I have been getting MRIs for the past 4 years or so if my spine. There are multiple issues, bulging, infolding?, facet arthropathy, ilium 9mm, stenosis and much more as well as right leg nerve damage and drop foot but I have stumped doctors from Stanford to private doctors over the years. They don’t know what is happening but I keep getting worse. Spina bifida was found in a sacrum area but was labeled aperta or occulta. Do you ever accept unusual mri’s to study to look at? I’d love to hear what you think.
Good morning John, I do offer a consultation service to the general public and would be happy to speak with you and go over your MRI images with you via GoToMeeting. If you're interested, you can read all about this service right here: www.chirogeek.com/Coaching%20Service/coachingService-2.html
Great presentation!
excellent info. I wish you could take a look at my MRI. Having bilateral tightness from anterior tib to big toes. I have fissure at 6 clock and disc herniation at l4-l5.
I do have a consultation service where I review your MRI and objective findings with you via Zoom.. You can learn more about the service at either of these links:
^ Learn all about Dr. Gillard's coaching service via website:
www.chirogeek.com/Coaching%20Service/coachingService-2.html
^ Learn all about Dr. Gillard's coaching service via this RUclips video: ruclips.net/video/A0GJ_r-uvpQ/видео.html
I think the cauda equina is the worst perfused segment of the spinal cord. It gets dirty csf since it is the farthest away from where it is produced in the brain, and unlike the direct vertebral arteries feeding the spinal cord, I don’t see how these arteries could attach to all the loose nerve strands in the csf. So at least until they exit as nerve roots, it seems lumbar nerve perfusion is the weakest link in the spinal cord. Just thinking out loud.
Thank you very much!
Great Job Sir
Can you do one on all the functions of the sacral nerves?
Hello, looking for a professional to read my mri in detail.
Most lbp cases have nothing to do with spine. Hip muscles, paraspinals, QL, psoas, and leg muscles are number one culprits.
Thanks! 😊
I need cervical mri read. C6/C7
Real nice Doc
28:12 T3 weighted image you said🤔? I guess you meant 3T image. 😉🤣
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