This is an educational video. It is showing a real brain and spinal cord removed from a donated dead body to medical college for study purpose. It is made for medical/para medical students for learning neuro-anatomy - which is part of their syllabus.
It’s great people donate there bodies. I have convinced 8 to do the same. But in a very ODD way. With tattoos. Example. One has a tattoo on his shoulder that says. PLEASE PUT ME BACK TOGETHER AFTER YOUR DONE. Or MY EX SAID I DIDN’T HAVE A HEART. PLEASE TAKE PICTURES
It would be more educational to everyone if this video were captioned for our deaf and hard of hearing peers, me included. Would you mind turning on “auto captions” in the video editor menu?
Isn't it crazy how that was once inside a living, breathing human who once had a life of their own. Their own friends, family and experiences. I think it's fascinating. Respect to them for donating their body to science
@@pepp3rjack thank you for your generosity. could you perhaps let me borrow your liver? I challenged my buds to a drinking contest, and Ill blow him out the water as long as i have an extra liver to kill.
From someone who suffers from spinal problems and has had multiple procedure done over decade or two. This really helps me understand the biology of how the spinal chord works in detail. Thank you for sharing and to the person who now definitely dead for their anatomy to be shown this valuable lesson.
God, indian guy on youtube is helping everyone on college. I'm a data engineer whos grow up watching indian guy explaining python, big data, backend, etc. Even now they teaching the med student. Thank you guys, yall great teacher
As someone who was never gifted in biology or chemistry and medicine, my awe for the people in the field who study all this and help humanity is astounding
As a mechanic of 20 years I now fully appreciate my back and everything I put it through and Thankful there are doctors with this knowledge to mend us.
Many thanks to the family who have donated the body graciously for the purpose of medical study all across the world by helping almost 5 crore people and counting. Massive respect to who are all involved in this educational presentation 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Not a medical student but a psychology student. It is incredible to see what central neural network looks like. Truly different from these figures in my textbook.
Isn't that bad science and medicine? If it's not accurate information then why have them learn it? I'm a massage therapist and I have to learn all the individual muscles how the nervous system works, a basic pathology course, and its required I keep up to date on the lastest research and information I used to think this was common place in the medical field but I'm finding out that's not the case...
@@justicekinne1667 it's done to make easily understandable to the students like no one has seen atoms physically but we know their is something very small. then we make theories which are understandable and correct after experiments
In psychology books they are mostly simplified. We only have to understand what parts serve certain psychological process for basic understanding of physiological process behind the psychological process.
It's just my view that we all should all get the same information regardless of depths of understanding of comprehension, I'm really considering getting into psychology to help my clients as a massage therapist. Because a lot of people as your working with their body's we can come across emotional centers, where they sore feelings such of fear, or loss, or even joy and laughter. Which are normally a source of pain, or discomfort for that person. These feelings may be long represented and deeply personal, and releasing those areas also can release that deep seeded emotion. So having a psych degree would help so much with helping, to help these people so much more then just one could alone.
As an MS (Multiple Sclerosis patient, I was definitely interested in this. I never knew what a real spinal cord looked like. I had a whole different picture in my head for some reason besides the pics I've seen in books and online but seeing a real spinal cord gives me a whole new picture and better understanding of how important this is and critical to the whole function of the body. Having MS for years I've experienced how it truly effects my nerves functioning.
from teaching me how to jailbreak my iphone 4 in 8th grade to educating me about human anatomy and physiology as an adult. the indian man on youtube will never cease to teach me something new.
I am engineer, i dont know why i got this video in my recommendation, i watched it and all i can say is that my respect for surgeons after seeing this has increased a lot.
The people who were the first to figure out the working of cells, tissue, body organs, etc have put a lot of efforts so our future generations can benefit.
Med student here, always interesting to see this stuff. Got to work on cadavers in the second semester of my first year and loved it. Sadly lockdowns got in the way a little, but many more cadaver dissections are scheduled for the new year.
There was an entire human life contained in and experienced through the brain resting on that table. Respect to the guy for donating his body and doing good even after death.
Yes, all the joys and pains of life, marriages, births and death, love and loss, knowledge, wisdom and weakness. It really hurts me to even watch this video.
Wow! Truly fascinating! As a spinal cord injury patient, this was really interesting. I blew out my T12 vertebrae in a motorcycle accident in 2013. I have a spinal fusion from T10-L2, and I am a paraplegic. I have enough mobility and sensation to walk with forearm crutches.
I had some chances to examine some cadavers as an art-anatomy class student, but all of them were dried parts of skeletons and limbs with muscles because that’s all we needed to understand as art students( art anatomy only covers skeletons and muscles ) and this video is giving me a whole new level of awe that I had in that laboratory.
I am suffering from spinal Cord Injury on D-12 called Paraplegia from last 8 years and still suffering the same after watching this video I know the exactly about Spinal Cord. Thank you so much for the Donner of this body for our knowledge as Doctor Saheb who made possible for all if us. We r proud of you Doctor Saheb.
What are the precautions you are taking from getting more injury. I mean i wanna know how are your treatment going on. I also think I have also some problem with C3 - C4. Please reply
At first I thought that this is disgusting, however I kept watching, and it's really actually very important to understand this, and this is highly valuable information, to see this in person delivered by a qualified academic it would cost hundreds of pounds and likely not even available to general public,. So thank you so much for posting this for gratis learned so much.
We would've learned a lot if there was someone who could explain in English or there was at least subtitles. He's speaking on & off English. It's hard to understand him.
@@cddb5408 aye true you’re right but this is the first time I saw a spinal cord I used just think it was just that bone looking thing but it was this that’s inside of it
What a great video. Recovering from cervical surgery C3-7 (6+ hrs). Still have deteriorating lumbar - sacral to consider. I have the utmost respect for my doctor. BTW, MRIs of spine showed the problem areas. This really helped to get a better understanding of what we take for granted.
-If I was a kid again & saw this, I definitely wonder if I would've: fought, played football, joined the Marines, did all the crazy moves, etc. This shows the spine as vulnerable to any action, with or without the vertebra. But it's strong it can, & has been through a lot.
To those who donate their bodies for science, mad respect. Love seeing how our bodies look on the inside and how it operates and that's all thanks to you guys ❤
@@REDNECKpairOdice yes because when the commandment was given in Israel, there is no access to microorganisms, bacteria and viruses. Nor is sanitizing/cleaning with chemicals such as ethylene are not known (Numbers 19:13). The only option to make them disease-free or plague-free during those times is prevention. I hope you find a better Bible resource person.
@@vonkarlmagpayo I must have missed the passage where it said "unless you cleanse yourself afterwards" cleansing isn't anything new btw, they took baths back in those days. Hyssop was used which is an antibacterial.
@@REDNECKpairOdice Oh no, sorry I guess humanity can't advance its knowledge of the human body to help people that are alive because a 2000 year old book said so. Wake the fuck up, next time you go to a hospital because you need medical attention don't forget to fret over how literally most of the things the doctor does to help you was enabled by the study of corpses. If you require treatment in the future, you might as well refuse and die because you wouldn't want to take advantage of hundreds of years of sinful research that made your treatment possible. Goodness, you lunatics really throw my logic in a loop, I can't imagine what goes through your ignorant mind.
Not gonna lie, videos like this make me want to donate my body to science. I’ve always been fascinated with anatomy and dissections, and the thought of being used to inform others interested in that field would be such an honor. If I’ll never be able to see the inside of my body, at least others will be able to.
Scrolling through and stumbled across this video, massive knowledge dump thank you. I have absolutely no medical background whatsoever but, this was fascinating 👏 now I can throughly explain to my team mates what my spine goes through when I carry the team to victory
It's fascinating to see that everything you are ,every thought you ever had, every experience, any instant of pain, love, sadness, anger, is sitting on in that organ. That is what you really are... A brain with a body as a vessel.
I was ignoring this video from last one month but UA-cam keeps on recommending this video daily but at last i just click on this video and its really a informative video
@@prepostgamer305 You are possibly making comment on someone whose interest sparked here may lead to a life enhancing medical device. But you do you little grasshopper.
I damaged my spinal cord at T10, L2 and L5(also a severe brain injury).13 broken bones in my spine altogether,I’ve been in recovery and found this video very informative.Thanks!
Not a medical student but belongs to a Genetic background though , n I'm amazed by this. Anatomy was fun n will always be fun and till date I listened to it so attentively. Thank you so much for this video❤️❤️
Hat's off for this person who had donated his/her spine for students and I praised the Lord who has created us with unique composition which is difficult to understand
A friend of mine had his spinal cord severed completely in a car wreck. Last year after being in a wheelchair for 20 years an expert was able to connect his back together!!! He is fine now after lots of rehab.
Am no medical qualification nor have I ever been a med student...but I can't stop watching this...Thank you for this very informative post, even I can make sense of what I being taught!
my brother had a tumor 5 vertebrae long when we found out he wasn’t cancer free that the doctors claimed. This messes my head up but also motivates me to volunteer or educate myself more on the bigger picture as to things we miss….
Honestly why are people grossed out by this?? It’s what’s in you, it’s intriguing and I’m in awe with how elaborately well constructed and thought out we are made all the way down to a molecular lever
After watching this video, I have decided to donate my body to medical college after my death. I dont care about what people of my community say about it. Lots of respect to the man who donated this body.
I love how the title says for medical and para medical students only but it’s uploaded to UA-cam where my curious mind led me to watch this entire video as a proud spinal chord owner
This is fascinating- makes me realise how little I really know about the human body. Huge respect to those in the medical field, and the people who donate their bodies to science. I think I will donate my body to science as well- to aid the furthering of knowledge in this field in any way would be an honour.
Even i am proud of him for teaching me after he learned it from you which was taught to you by your teacher which again taught to him by his teacher and so on…
My husband suffered a spinal cord injury 2 years ago, and even if it's so sad that he's a wheelchair user now, it's still fascinating for me how this thing work and how smart the body is.
If it was so smart there would be no need for a wheelchair. The human body is made to function barely, just enough to make children and the older years to guide those children to ensure their survival, so the cycle can repeat. A cycle that traps souls to torment in mortal bodies, to decay, to lose themselves. There is one enemy and he underestimated us, one day the sun shall shine through the clouds, through a hole in his heart made by humanity's sword. Then we will be free to forge our own fate, our own worlds.
Having had my spinal cord injury in 2005, I wondered how my spinal cord looked like. Affected my C4 to C6 and got a titanium brace. Thanks for sharing this video. Now I know how it looks!
@@rachelweekdays6539 Started physical therapy in 2007 and was walking already with a cane. But in 2008, I had my stroke, further weakening my right side and was wheelchair bound since.
@@joybernardo4887 That’s wonderful that you were able to walk again! I’m sorry to hear about your stroke though. That must’ve been emotionally taxing after what you had already been through. How are you doing these days?
@@rachelweekdays6539 Yes, it was but I owe it all to the Lord. He gives me strength and I'm spiritually uplifted, Bible reading and sharing daily. Thank you for your concern.
An accidental sighting and viewing, providing a full fledged knowledge, of a subject, much liked and desired to study, though unattained over years, till today. A vivid and fulfilling video 👌👍.
Hats off to you Sir for this outstanding video🙏.....you don't let any doubt remain in the minds of the students watching your videos....thank you so very much Sir....keep up the good work 👍
Everytime I see videos like these my passion for biology and medicine keeps going stronger. I wanna pursue medicine but not that lucky financially but I hope someday I'll achieve my dream to become a doctor
Come to Argentina, its free and of great quality, for example Favaloro was an argentinian doctor, who studied in our national university (free and public) and is the creator of the coronary bypass, a procedure used worldwide. Its an honor for us to receive foreign students, in the case of the medical careers, 1 of 3 students are foreigners.
Huge respect do d donar ..while watching i m recollecting my memories of human body disection in our first yr of medical college ..after so many yrs i nderstood much more tq sir
I honestly had no idea the brain had another membrane around it. I always thought it was just skull and brain. So this is really cool. I'm not a med student. But anatomy was always interesting to me. Most of my mother's family is medical to some degree.
@@ItchyPilauBoto when you grow up surrounded by a wide array of medical science, you are bound to be curious. I do not need to be a med student to wonder how the human body works or how it's put together. It's simply curiosity.
@@redvalentinos1933 pretty sure itchypilauBoto was being sarcastic with his comment. I'm not a med student (yet) but I watched it anyway because I was curious too.
Where do memories go? Are they still there but nobody can get to them? do they just dissappear like a wiped computer memory? do they go somewhere else. It's fascinating to think that lump of brain and spine was once a person who affected the people and world around it.
I am so intrigued! It has been interesting to see a spinal cord in this manner. It has also been cool to see what the root nerves would look like at L4/L5 where I have had surgery. It's a good visual to understand what is actually going on. Fascinating! 😃
Hey, did the surgery give you a relief? My mother has had 2 and has worse pain than ever before. I personally wouldn’t go for surgery and would try activities and stretches as long as I live. She’s now on lyrica and it’s so sad 😞
I've also had surgery (L4/L5 and L5/S1) about 9 months ago, after suffering pain for 4 years sraight (and absolutely nothing would help...). So far, I'm completely pain free and my movement is half way back to normal. I hope I can generate a little time before this happens again by doing a lot of back - specific sports now
Beka.... I lost the ability to walk completely. My nerve roots were pinched off for over 6 months because I had to jump through insurance hoops. I had fallen down a flight of stairs and instead of going to the hospital I went to work where I worked in memory care. I still have a herniated disc at L5/S1 that I am trying to put off. I wish I could show my imaging on here. I had complications after surgery so my recovery time was twice as long as it should have been. I had my first surgery and a day and a half later I was in surgery again because I formed an internal bleed that made me lose control of body functions below the waist. Please keep in mind that my experience is not typical. I had a micro diskectomy. So my experience is also way different from someone that had a fusion or a disk replaced. I know there can be more issues taken into account with those. I did regain the ability to walk and had severe sciatic pain for a good year to a year and a half. It's gotten better but after back surgery you back is never the same. I still have spasms, cramping, sciatic. The spinal injury has left me with permanent nerve damage so I so have neuropathy. If Lyrica helps that's good. My dad was on on it for his diabetic related neuropathy. I was in the clinical trials for it. Lyrica is one that has a couple potential uses and helps many people make it through their day. I'm not on Lyrica now however because I have other medications that are more important that it interacts with negatively and my pain comes and goes. It's important to weigh out the positives and negatives when it comes to surgery and if you can get away with not having it I totally recommend that unless it's going to make things progressively worse. I was almost permanently unable to walk or use the bathroom myself so definitely speak to a Doctor about the choice to help weigh it out.
@@spulwasser Be careful and thorough in your recovery. Don’t try to do too much but continue to do your therapy and make incremental improvements. I had surgery on L5/S1 and felt so much better I overdid it and blew the crap out of my spine. Now herniated in all three regions. So don’t be sherah just be good to yourself!
What a miracle we carry in our back! and also what person who has decoded this for all of us! I was always interested to know more about spinal and correlate it with the Yogic anatom- Ida , Pingla, Sushumna. Does anyone see the correlation? Spinal Terminale was also interesting part of the tail! Thanks Doctor Viren!
Wow, I had a motorcycle crash in 2012 and I fractured my T10 & T11 and was told that my spinal cord was not severed but bent or folded over. I wish I could have seen something like this at the time. The information was very vague and no one is really emotionally equipped to take in this kind of info at the time. The spinal cord is a lot thicker than I expected and there are so many elements when you open it up. The body is an incredible structure and it’s fascinating to actually see a real, organic, example.
Wow!! 👏. First time I have seen the whole thing from the brain all the way down. Thanks to the donors who donated their bodies to science so we may learn more from. Some professionals wiring in the the human body. Amazing work. 👏
Great content sir. You have explained everything very nicely and the video quality is also very good n along with the specimen demonstration makes it interesting to watch. Thank you for uploading this.
This absolutely can't be work of nature, this (must) be a magnificent work of a superior creator ! Oh God we can't thank you enough for all of your blessings, forgive us please 😢
Im studying to become an animal doctor so I think learning about the spinal cord (particularly its function) is quite crucial to what I'm studying. I do also understand that spinal cords may be different in different species.
It's gonna be useful for animals like Monkeys, dogs, cats. But keep in mind that other animal's spinal cord has other parts not found in the human spine.
@@jokersdoll1779 Humans are mammals which are considered animals. Different kind of animal but animal nevertheless. Definition of mammal: a warm blooded vertebrae animal of a class that is distinguished by the possession of hair or fur, females that secrete milk for the nourishment of the youth, and (typically) the birth of live young.
This is an educational video.
It is showing a real brain and spinal cord removed from a donated dead body to medical college for study purpose. It is made for medical/para medical students for learning neuro-anatomy - which is part of their syllabus.
It’s great people donate there bodies.
I have convinced 8 to do the same. But in a very ODD way.
With tattoos.
Example. One has a tattoo on his shoulder that says.
PLEASE PUT ME BACK TOGETHER AFTER YOUR DONE.
Or
MY EX SAID I DIDN’T HAVE A HEART. PLEASE TAKE PICTURES
Um...good for them? I'm no medical student learning neuro anatomy but still think it's interesting...is that not good or...?
٠بمبكبأطكظ طك"كج طلجيزح
It would be more educational to everyone if this video were captioned for our deaf and hard of hearing peers, me included. Would you mind turning on “auto captions” in the video editor menu?
B
Huge Respect to the person who donated his/her body for all of us to learn🙏🏻
@Nikola Stanković respect🙏✊
Hopefully your assumption is correct.
My mom wants her body donated to science when she's gone.
@Repent to Jesus Christ! shut up
Is he using a nintendo DS pen to poke at it?
The fact that this information is free to access and very easy for most people is truly awesome!
@Repent to Jesus Christ!I am baptised
@Repent to Jesus Christ! Jai shree Ram
@Repent to Jesus Christ! no go away
ua-cam.com/video/yqe8covBqyY/v-deo.html
@@Iamafuckingmadlad
I'm baptised by blade
Isn't it crazy how that was once inside a living, breathing human who once had a life of their own. Their own friends, family and experiences. I think it's fascinating. Respect to them for donating their body to science
no i just donated my spinal cord out of the goodness of my heart. im not dead
@@pepp3rjack thank you for your generosity. could you perhaps let me borrow your liver? I challenged my buds to a drinking contest, and Ill blow him out the water as long as i have an extra liver to kill.
@@pepp3rjack may I have one of your kidneys? For educational purposes of course, I would never sell it on the black market
@@SeyvenRoses well you did not exist before you were born and weren't bothered by it then. maybe you'll just reoccur again in another life.
@@SeyvenRoses Philosophy, baby
From someone who suffers from spinal problems and has had multiple procedure done over decade or two. This really helps me understand the biology of how the spinal chord works in detail. Thank you for sharing and to the person who now definitely dead for their anatomy to be shown this valuable lesson.
The probs you faced were not really in spinal cord but the vertebra bones. Anyways can get the feel.
@@hari.r.k6414 pls don't tell me that brain is human
@@tizanikandothers
WAS HUMAN😂💦😷🇺🇸
I hope you are okay and doing well. Hope you get well soon 👍🏻
Ditto here!!!!!
God, indian guy on youtube is helping everyone on college. I'm a data engineer whos grow up watching indian guy explaining python, big data, backend, etc. Even now they teaching the med student. Thank you guys, yall great teacher
😵code with Harry ?
Hmm yea he seems like a doctor
They can't help me in Law School though. Checkmate Indians. You can't help everybody.
@@electrify3 This, it's a huge service to humanity.
@@jameschristophercirujano6650 The masculine Indian urge to upload educational videos on UA-cam will never stop it will cover your law soon I bet
As someone who was never gifted in biology or chemistry and medicine, my awe for the people in the field who study all this and help humanity is astounding
im going to find out how to cut the pain receptors
@@mikelisteral7863 but if you're bleeding somewhere you wouldnt know where, and probably die of losing blood too much
@@mikelisteral7863 that’s pretty funny but also stupid lol
@@marshalravello i dont bleed. i take it easy in life.
@@mikelisteral7863 if you cut out pain receptors you wouldn’t feel pleasure either. You would just feel numb all over.
As a mechanic of 20 years I now fully appreciate my back and everything I put it through and Thankful there are doctors with this knowledge to mend us.
You're not a medical student. You shouldn't have watched this.
You still have to do your part to keep your back healthy
@@GothamandGomorrah yes, ours médical cult don't like that. Secrets should remain in the "family"
@@kvonkirk2340 did an engine rebuild with my buddy on his b16 (honda motor) and it was very convenient to have some bolts left over for the bolt bin
Well isn't it same as the main cord of wires that run from the ECU to all the electronics and sensors in vehicles! Very similar!
Many thanks to the family who have donated the body graciously for the purpose of medical study all across the world by helping almost 5 crore people and counting.
Massive respect to who are all involved in this educational presentation 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Not a medical student but a psychology student. It is incredible to see what central neural network looks like. Truly different from these figures in my textbook.
Same, I'm in my 2 year now
Isn't that bad science and medicine? If it's not accurate information then why have them learn it? I'm a massage therapist and I have to learn all the individual muscles how the nervous system works, a basic pathology course, and its required I keep up to date on the lastest research and information I used to think this was common place in the medical field but I'm finding out that's not the case...
@@justicekinne1667 it's done to make easily understandable to the students
like no one has seen atoms physically but we know their is something very small. then we make theories which are understandable and correct after experiments
In psychology books they are mostly simplified. We only have to understand what parts serve certain psychological process for basic understanding of physiological process behind the psychological process.
It's just my view that we all should all get the same information regardless of depths of understanding of comprehension, I'm really considering getting into psychology to help my clients as a massage therapist. Because a lot of people as your working with their body's we can come across emotional centers, where they sore feelings such of fear, or loss, or even joy and laughter. Which are normally a source of pain, or discomfort for that person. These feelings may be long represented and deeply personal, and releasing those areas also can release that deep seeded emotion. So having a psych degree would help so much with helping, to help these people so much more then just one could alone.
Unexpected recommendation, but happy to gain some knowledge about my body.
Huge respect to donor, doctors and teachers.
As an MS (Multiple Sclerosis patient, I was definitely interested in this. I never knew what a real spinal cord looked like. I had a whole different picture in my head for some reason besides the pics I've seen in books and online but seeing a real spinal cord gives me a whole new picture and better understanding of how important this is and critical to the whole function of the body. Having MS for years I've experienced how it truly effects my nerves functioning.
Less leaves...
It looks exactly like in the books. What kinda books were u reading?! Creationism science for homeschooling?!
@@hangyoutubeworkersandceos doesn’t look like this in the books we had in psychology
Please mo no I want
@@bones6896 Psychology, or physiology?
from teaching me how to jailbreak my iphone 4 in 8th grade
to educating me about human anatomy and physiology as an adult.
the indian man on youtube will never cease to teach me something new.
I am engineer, i dont know why i got this video in my recommendation, i watched it and all i can say is that my respect for surgeons after seeing this has increased a lot.
Yes same
Engineer too. But I like biology, so I thank to UA-cam algorithm.
Same
What part of "Medical students only" did you not understand?
@@MrOzzy281 what did you understand from my comment ??
The people who were the first to figure out the working of cells, tissue, body organs, etc have put a lot of efforts so our future generations can benefit.
S.o to cadavers
@@paindemie5491 Elsword makes you dumb dude
@@misa4294 nice pfp 👌
Med student here, always interesting to see this stuff. Got to work on cadavers in the second semester of my first year and loved it. Sadly lockdowns got in the way a little, but many more cadaver dissections are scheduled for the new year.
This is v kakoi country?
ua-cam.com/users/shortssZncwqbABO0?feature=share 👍👍👍👍
Français:moi aussi c'est pareil pour cette année qui va suivre
@@JohnDoe-ou8oh she wouldn't know, she lying
weird but respect it ✊
My biggest achievement of being a medico is understanding every word of what this man Said.
Just wish there were subtitles. His accent paired with my lack of medical terminology makes the vid interesting but hard to truly understand. :/
Good luck with that,, i think hes saying they serve this at fine sushi restaurants
@@ralphfurley404 bruhh that was dark tho
I mean as long as your field of biology involves tertropods. You should understand most of this
Same as neuroscientist…
This is educational that it’s open and free to everyone without limitations thanks for sharing!!
There was an entire human life contained in and experienced through the brain resting on that table.
Respect to the guy for donating his body and doing good even after death.
This is so morbidly deep asf. No seriously
I was thinking similar..
@@pajolee6918 same
Yeah it could be us.
We are nothing
Yes, all the joys and pains of life, marriages, births and death, love and loss, knowledge, wisdom and weakness. It really hurts me to even watch this video.
Seeing what is actually inside us, and what is a key component for our everyday life.. Makes your realize how complex and fragile our bodies are.
God created our bodies perfectly
@@evelina.gukasyan Cancer entered the chat.////
@@evelina.gukasyan cancer, disease, aging, death, disabilities, and deformities beg to differ
@@evelina.gukasyan me, with adhd: 😐😐😩
@@evelina.gukasyan our bodies are terrible, just look at our feet, shoulders or generally genetic diseases😂
"An Indian guy on UA-cam"
Probably the modern university lecturer
Huge respect 👏👏
Wow! Truly fascinating! As a spinal cord injury patient, this was really interesting. I blew out my T12 vertebrae in a motorcycle accident in 2013. I have a spinal fusion from T10-L2, and I am a paraplegic. I have enough mobility and sensation to walk with forearm crutches.
What's your opinion on motorbikes these days? Genuinely curious not Tring to be a dick
Oh damn sorry about that
I am sorry
I was also on the bike guys, if anyone was wondering
Ok
I'm a Pilates teacher and I found this educational and fascinating! Thank you!
What's Pilates maam?
Ur velcom 🤣
You are not a medical student you can’t watch this
Im not a medical student but I love science and learning.
👏😀
Me too!!! I also LOVE to watch surgery videos!!!!
Kudos! We don't need to be in academia to learn or to write; curiosity is enough reason to keep exploring :)
Yess same!!
ich auch ☝🏻aber finde es sehr interessant
I'm a teacher of human biology, Showed this video to my class. After had a quiz. All of my students passed. Thank you
I had some chances to examine some cadavers as an art-anatomy class student, but all of them were dried parts of skeletons and limbs with muscles because that’s all we needed to understand as art students( art anatomy only covers skeletons and muscles ) and this video is giving me a whole new level of awe that I had in that laboratory.
feels strange to see a serious comment coming from such a meme-heavy nickname lmao
Remarkable
I am suffering from spinal Cord Injury on D-12 called Paraplegia from last 8 years and still suffering the same after watching this video I know the exactly about Spinal Cord. Thank you so much for the Donner of this body for our knowledge as Doctor Saheb who made possible for all if us. We r proud of you Doctor Saheb.
What are the precautions you are taking from getting more injury. I mean i wanna know how are your treatment going on. I also think I have also some problem with C3 - C4. Please reply
Please can some get an epilepsy attack through a spinal cord injury?
At first I thought that this is disgusting, however I kept watching, and it's really actually very important to understand this, and this is highly valuable information, to see this in person delivered by a qualified academic it would cost hundreds of pounds and likely not even available to general public,.
So thank you so much for posting this for gratis learned so much.
How cool is it that this was once a living persons spinal cord huge respect to whoever donated this letting us learn such stuff
We would've learned a lot if there was someone who could explain in English or there was at least subtitles.
He's speaking on & off English. It's hard to understand him.
@@cddb5408 aye true you’re right but this is the first time I saw a spinal cord I used just think it was just that bone looking thing but it was this that’s inside of it
@@cddb5408 his English is clear and easy to understand. If you don't understand then there's something wrong with you.
What a great video. Recovering from cervical surgery C3-7 (6+ hrs). Still have deteriorating lumbar - sacral to consider. I have the utmost respect for my doctor. BTW, MRIs of spine showed the problem areas. This really helped to get a better understanding of what we take for granted.
We need more free educational videos like this 👍 I paid way too much for my education
Sean iv known you for 15 yrs and believe me, you didn't pay enough for your education. In fact , whatever you paid was waisted.
@@Enoch940 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@Enoch940 this statement contradicts itself.
-If I was a kid again & saw this, I definitely wonder if I would've: fought, played football, joined the Marines, did all the crazy moves, etc. This shows the spine as vulnerable to any action, with or without the vertebra. But it's strong it can, & has been through a lot.
I hope u feel ok
To those who donate their bodies for science, mad respect. Love seeing how our bodies look on the inside and how it operates and that's all thanks to you guys ❤
@@penelopewilliamselliott7353 what are you on about mate?
Even to a non medical person this explanation is vivid and clear. Excellent Dr. Jayaram Mumbai
You are a legend of anatomy, a blessing to us sent by almighty ☺️☺️☺️
And yet the Bible discourages messing around with dead bodies
@@REDNECKpairOdice yes because when the commandment was given in Israel, there is no access to microorganisms, bacteria and viruses. Nor is sanitizing/cleaning with chemicals such as ethylene are not known (Numbers 19:13). The only option to make them disease-free or plague-free during those times is prevention. I hope you find a better Bible resource person.
@@vonkarlmagpayo I must have missed the passage where it said "unless you cleanse yourself afterwards" cleansing isn't anything new btw, they took baths back in those days. Hyssop was used which is an antibacterial.
@@REDNECKpairOdice Oh no, sorry I guess humanity can't advance its knowledge of the human body to help people that are alive because a 2000 year old book said so. Wake the fuck up, next time you go to a hospital because you need medical attention don't forget to fret over how literally most of the things the doctor does to help you was enabled by the study of corpses. If you require treatment in the future, you might as well refuse and die because you wouldn't want to take advantage of hundreds of years of sinful research that made your treatment possible. Goodness, you lunatics really throw my logic in a loop, I can't imagine what goes through your ignorant mind.
69 likes 😊
I feel like Indian dudes on UA-cam have been carrying my academic career so far, so sending my thanks for helping me study 🤣🙏🏻
Not gonna lie, videos like this make me want to donate my body to science. I’ve always been fascinated with anatomy and dissections, and the thought of being used to inform others interested in that field would be such an honor. If I’ll never be able to see the inside of my body, at least others will be able to.
Hand over your eyes. Mine have too much.
Oh, neat! Well, you can donate one of your kidneys to me, because uhhhhhhhhhhhhhh my mother needs a kidney transplant
Scrolling through and stumbled across this video, massive knowledge dump thank you. I have absolutely no medical background whatsoever but, this was fascinating 👏 now I can throughly explain to my team mates what my spine goes through when I carry the team to victory
🤣🤣
Wow you got me with that last line 😂
It's fascinating to see that everything you are ,every thought you ever had, every experience, any instant of pain, love, sadness, anger, is sitting on in that organ. That is what you really are... A brain with a body as a vessel.
Adult male: 45 cm
Adult female: 42 cm
Average weight: 30 gm
31 pairs of spinal nerves
Conus medillaris: lower border of L1/disc between L1 & L2 in adult
Lumbar puncture: between L3 & L4 usually (even below in children)
Enlargements: C4 to T2, L2 to S3
Anterior, Lateral & posterior funniculus
Posterior intermediate septum
Dura & arachanoid mater terminaion: S2
Filum terminale (pia mater): 1st coccygeal vertebra
Terminal ventricle
Linea splendens (infront)
Subarachanoid septum (behind)
Denticulate ligament (21 pairs)
25:28 blood supply of spinal cord
Vasa corona
I was ignoring this video from last one month but UA-cam keeps on recommending this video daily but at last i just click on this video and its really a informative video
I'm going into manufacturing but this is still super neat. I've been fascinated with biomechanics and how things move and work for a while now
Weirdo
@@prepostgamer305 You are possibly making comment on someone whose interest sparked here may lead to a life enhancing medical device. But you do you little grasshopper.
@@Dbb27 cry more
Hats off...Kudos doc for this effort..greatly appreciated...you are one among the "gems" whom Hyppocrates expected to be. Take care many blessings.
The central nervous system...probably the MOST DELICATE/SENSITIVE system in the entire body.
Thank you much for posting this.
I damaged my spinal cord at T10, L2 and L5(also a severe brain injury).13 broken bones in my spine altogether,I’ve been in recovery and found this video very informative.Thanks!
Please give your contact
@@abhimanyukr599 what?
@@abhimanyukr599 thats pretty creepy
Your welcome
Not a medical student but belongs to a Genetic background though , n I'm amazed by this. Anatomy was fun n will always be fun and till date I listened to it so attentively. Thank you so much for this video❤️❤️
Hat's off for this person who had donated his/her spine for students and I praised the Lord who has created us with unique composition which is difficult to understand
At the age of 74 I'm clear about my spinalcord system.Thank you Dr.
It’s truly amazing handling the human body in person. The way it works in tandem and harmony is astonishing.
A friend of mine had his spinal cord severed completely in a car wreck. Last year after being in a wheelchair for 20 years an expert was able to connect his back together!!! He is fine now after lots of rehab.
Wow, that's amazing. Truly awesome what medicine can do nowadays. Gives hope again to someone in that condition!
🙏
Wow. He must feel truly blessed to able to do something 99% of humans take for granted.
Did he regain his PP abilities though.
no shit? God bless that man
Am no medical qualification nor have I ever been a med student...but I can't stop watching this...Thank you for this very informative post, even I can make sense of what I being taught!
Let's accept: Not only medical students but persons from all other technical fields are also interested here.
I don't have a field of study... But I'm into mechanics. Reminds me of the engine control harness.
Not only technical fields
Not only persons (my cat is also watching this)
Yeah me a computer science science student here too 🤣🤣
Finance 🙋♂️😂
@@rishusharma1630 👍
It's absolutely amazing to me that information like this is now publicly available - wonderful
my brother had a tumor 5 vertebrae long when we found out he wasn’t cancer free that the doctors claimed. This messes my head up but also motivates me to volunteer or educate myself more on the bigger picture as to things we miss….
Honestly why are people grossed out by this?? It’s what’s in you, it’s intriguing and I’m in awe with how elaborately well constructed and thought out we are made all the way down to a molecular lever
Wow, how nicely he explains everything! Thank you very much sir!
Hey there
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Bacteria
Hey there
ua-cam.com/video/egQs41qs6h0/v-deo.html
Brachial plexus
After watching this video, I have decided to donate my body to medical college after my death. I dont care about what people of my community say about it.
Lots of respect to the man who donated this body.
What's absolutely crazy is he's holding someone's memories,thoughts,ambitions truly crazy to think 🤔
I love how the title says for medical and para medical students only but it’s uploaded to UA-cam where my curious mind led me to watch this entire video as a proud spinal chord owner
This is fascinating- makes me realise how little I really know about the human body. Huge respect to those in the medical field, and the people who donate their bodies to science. I think I will donate my body to science as well- to aid the furthering of knowledge in this field in any way would be an honour.
V nicely demonstrated.... I feel proud to be yr teacher
🙏 Thank you ma'am.
Even i😂
Even i am proud of him for teaching me after he learned it from you which was taught to you by your teacher which again taught to him by his teacher and so on…
I feel proud to be student of both of you
Me who don't know which school u are in but good job i thought u posted this for a yr vid but u did it for school good work😁😅
My husband suffered a spinal cord injury 2 years ago, and even if it's so sad that he's a wheelchair user now, it's still fascinating for me how this thing work and how smart the body is.
If it was so smart there would be no need for a wheelchair. The human body is made to function barely, just enough to make children and the older years to guide those children to ensure their survival, so the cycle can repeat. A cycle that traps souls to torment in mortal bodies, to decay, to lose themselves. There is one enemy and he underestimated us, one day the sun shall shine through the clouds, through a hole in his heart made by humanity's sword. Then we will be free to forge our own fate, our own worlds.
@@tassadardaris7294 😟
@@tassadardaris7294 😶
@@tassadardaris7294 🤨
@@tassadardaris7294 the hell you talking about? Its a really complicated system that every creauture has and it works perfectly for our lifespan
I feel like far more than medical students watch this and I speak for all of them when I say we’re just curious. Thank you for the education
Having had my spinal cord injury in 2005, I wondered how my spinal cord looked like. Affected my C4 to C6 and got a titanium brace. Thanks for sharing this video. Now I know how it looks!
How severe is your injury? Have you regained any sensation or motor function?
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@@rachelweekdays6539 Started physical therapy in 2007 and was walking already with a cane. But in 2008, I had my stroke, further weakening my right side and was wheelchair bound since.
@@joybernardo4887 That’s wonderful that you were able to walk again! I’m sorry to hear about your stroke though. That must’ve been emotionally taxing after what you had already been through. How are you doing these days?
@@rachelweekdays6539 Yes, it was but I owe it all to the Lord. He gives me strength and I'm spiritually uplifted, Bible reading and sharing daily. Thank you for your concern.
This Sir will bring my craftsmen-skill as a joiner to a whole new level.
Thank you
What do you join?
@@bruhmoment1835
Furnitures
Really sir u r a legend in anatomy.. The way u describe everything is so systematic and smooth to understand.. Thanks a lot sir.. Stay safe🙏
Hey there
ua-cam.com/video/VJ4Bq9hOxDk/v-deo.html
Bacteria
Hey there
ua-cam.com/video/egQs41qs6h0/v-deo.html
Brachial plexus
I had a spinal injury at D3 section in 1999 , watching this video .Now I'm a paraplegic patient.Many thanks.I'm not a medical student.
An accidental sighting and viewing, providing a full fledged knowledge, of a subject, much liked and desired to study, though unattained over years, till today. A vivid and fulfilling video 👌👍.
Hats off to you Sir for this outstanding video🙏.....you don't let any doubt remain in the minds of the students watching your videos....thank you so very much Sir....keep up the good work 👍
Hey there
ua-cam.com/video/fLQZjoi1k-Y/v-deo.html
Hand blood supply
Hey there
ua-cam.com/video/-qr8SrOw5u4/v-deo.html
Shapes of bacteria
Que pena no esté en castellano español
Everytime I see videos like these my passion for biology and medicine keeps going stronger. I wanna pursue medicine but not that lucky financially but I hope someday I'll achieve my dream to become a doctor
You do good enough and they'll pay for your college. Do it.
Come to Argentina, its free and of great quality, for example Favaloro was an argentinian doctor, who studied in our national university (free and public) and is the creator of the coronary bypass, a procedure used worldwide. Its an honor for us to receive foreign students, in the case of the medical careers, 1 of 3 students are foreigners.
Of course you can become a doctor. Just small and one step at once. You can do it 👍💜
You can do it😊
Huge respect do d donar ..while watching i m recollecting my memories of human body disection in our first yr of medical college ..after so many yrs i nderstood much more tq sir
What a fantastically designed central nervous system we have (from the viewpoint of a mechanical engineer).
@Roberto Vidal Garcia bcz he is a mechanical engineer
Just throwing out the fact that I'm not in a medical field and appreciate this stuff.
@@Pfor_Podi lol he had to let us know.
Mechanical engineers are cool though 😎. Good for him.
Wow we r humans ....so good
Cause it’s all by design not a accident
I'm an Economics student, but still found this very fascinating.
So cool bro. Omg "Economics students ".
Did you want a medal 🏅?
@@sleepyjoescumbag1663 I see, you do live up to your name.
@@giulioemme5452 😂😂
@@sleepyjoescumbag1663 tell me you live in your mom's basement without telling me you live in you mom's basement:
Me too bro ❤️🥰
I’ve finally found him, after all this time I’ve found him. The Indian guy on UA-cam who explains things better than my teacher.
What a moment to be alive man… this info here for anyone? Amazing just amazing
This is very interesting, I am not a medicine student but I enjoy learning about our body, so we know how to treat it and avoid injuries
I honestly had no idea the brain had another membrane around it. I always thought it was just skull and brain. So this is really cool. I'm not a med student. But anatomy was always interesting to me. Most of my mother's family is medical to some degree.
Hey didnt you read the title “For medical and para medical students only!”
@@ItchyPilauBoto when you grow up surrounded by a wide array of medical science, you are bound to be curious. I do not need to be a med student to wonder how the human body works or how it's put together. It's simply curiosity.
@@redvalentinos1933 pretty sure itchypilauBoto was being sarcastic with his comment. I'm not a med student (yet) but I watched it anyway because I was curious too.
@@ItchyPilauBoto that's the clickbait.
I wonder if it's like a pocket that keeps the fluid in. Also it looks like garlic here.
Mad respect to the Individual that gave their body for us to learn on this video. 🙏🏾
Damn it’s super educational. Not a med student but wow. Thanks algorithm and thanks to the person that donated. Much respect and gratitude
Imagine how many memories are there in that brain 🧠
Where do memories go? Are they still there but nobody can get to them? do they just dissappear like a wiped computer memory? do they go somewhere else.
It's fascinating to think that lump of brain and spine was once a person who affected the people and world around it.
I am so intrigued! It has been interesting to see a spinal cord in this manner. It has also been cool to see what the root nerves would look like at L4/L5 where I have had surgery. It's a good visual to understand what is actually going on. Fascinating! 😃
Hey, did the surgery give you a relief? My mother has had 2 and has worse pain than ever before. I personally wouldn’t go for surgery and would try activities and stretches as long as I live. She’s now on lyrica and it’s so sad 😞
@@bekabeka71 i feel your mothers pain. Pray for her. In jesus name. When doctors fail you onlg God can save yoy
I've also had surgery (L4/L5 and L5/S1) about 9 months ago, after suffering pain for 4 years sraight (and absolutely nothing would help...). So far, I'm completely pain free and my movement is half way back to normal. I hope I can generate a little time before this happens again by doing a lot of back - specific sports now
Beka....
I lost the ability to walk completely. My nerve roots were pinched off for over 6 months because I had to jump through insurance hoops. I had fallen down a flight of stairs and instead of going to the hospital I went to work where I worked in memory care. I still have a herniated disc at L5/S1 that I am trying to put off. I wish I could show my imaging on here. I had complications after surgery so my recovery time was twice as long as it should have been. I had my first surgery and a day and a half later I was in surgery again because I formed an internal bleed that made me lose control of body functions below the waist. Please keep in mind that my experience is not typical. I had a micro diskectomy. So my experience is also way different from someone that had a fusion or a disk replaced. I know there can be more issues taken into account with those. I did regain the ability to walk and had severe sciatic pain for a good year to a year and a half. It's gotten better but after back surgery you back is never the same. I still have spasms, cramping, sciatic. The spinal injury has left me with permanent nerve damage so I so have neuropathy. If Lyrica helps that's good. My dad was on on it for his diabetic related neuropathy. I was in the clinical trials for it. Lyrica is one that has a couple potential uses and helps many people make it through their day. I'm not on Lyrica now however because I have other medications that are more important that it interacts with negatively and my pain comes and goes. It's important to weigh out the positives and negatives when it comes to surgery and if you can get away with not having it I totally recommend that unless it's going to make things progressively worse. I was almost permanently unable to walk or use the bathroom myself so definitely speak to a Doctor about the choice to help weigh it out.
@@spulwasser Be careful and thorough in your recovery. Don’t try to do too much but continue to do your therapy and make incremental improvements. I had surgery on L5/S1 and felt so much better I overdid it and blew the crap out of my spine. Now herniated in all three regions. So don’t be sherah just be good to yourself!
Huge respect to those people who donate their body for furthermore clarification .🙏🙏
ຸເດປີກຳຫຳປາແຈມີ
This video is very helpful not only for the medical students but all the common man who enthusiastic about human body. Thanks so much
What a miracle we carry in our back! and also what person who has decoded this for all of us! I was always interested to know more about spinal and correlate it with the Yogic anatom- Ida , Pingla, Sushumna. Does anyone see the correlation? Spinal Terminale was also interesting part of the tail! Thanks Doctor Viren!
Finally got a fantastic doctor + person + teacher..... Really sir... Mza a gya
A 33 Minute video taught me more than my teacher with 33 years of experience.
Wow, I had a motorcycle crash in 2012 and I fractured my T10 & T11 and was told that my spinal cord was not severed but bent or folded over. I wish I could have seen something like this at the time. The information was very vague and no one is really emotionally equipped to take in this kind of info at the time. The spinal cord is a lot thicker than I expected and there are so many elements when you open it up. The body is an incredible structure and it’s fascinating to actually see a real, organic, example.
Me at 1.30am: This should definitely help my career as a real estate developer.
Never seen such crisp information on spinal cord . Even better than marrow
The fact he's using a 2DS touchscreen pen to move around the nerves makes him an even bigger legend.
Wow!! 👏.
First time I have seen the whole thing from the brain all the way down.
Thanks to the donors who donated their bodies to science so we may learn more from.
Some professionals wiring in the the human body. Amazing work. 👏
Thank you Sir! Am not a medical student but an fascinated to learn!
I work in a local butchery but I completely understand what you talking about. Thank you for an interesting video
Monster!
@@psychoticannibal6125 Shut up.
@@psychoticannibal6125 we have ourselves a vegan..
@@davemustaine9687 I think they're making a joke about M H butchering people.
Great content sir. You have explained everything very nicely and the video quality is also very good n along with the specimen demonstration makes it interesting to watch. Thank you for uploading this.
This absolutely can't be work of nature, this (must) be a magnificent work of a superior creator ! Oh God we can't thank you enough for all of your blessings, forgive us please 😢
Me, a grocery store manager: Ah yes, an Anterior Median Fissure.
LOL you beat me to the manager part 😂
I'm a kangaroo-dolphin 🐬 hybrid 🦘 and as the proud owner of human spinal cord I feel this video was immensely helpful. Thank you for the accessibility
That was amazing. Such a comprehensive and detailed anatomy video. Thank you for your work.
Hey there
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Brachial plexus
Hey there
ua-cam.com/video/pdPFBhBXbog/v-deo.html
Clavicle Bone anatomy
Preciouss stuff you are holding there. More precious than gold. And yet we put money above health and human life.
Im studying to become an animal doctor so I think learning about the spinal cord (particularly its function) is quite crucial to what I'm studying. I do also understand that spinal cords may be different in different species.
Maybe you should actually watch a video on an animals spinal cord and not a human one… you know we are humans not a n I m a l s
It's gonna be useful for animals like Monkeys, dogs, cats. But keep in mind that other animal's spinal cord has other parts not found in the human spine.
@@jokersdoll1779 Humans are mammals which are considered animals. Different kind of animal but animal nevertheless.
Definition of mammal: a warm blooded vertebrae animal of a class that is distinguished by the possession of hair or fur, females that secrete milk for the nourishment of the youth, and (typically) the birth of live young.
@@fpszombie1 I’ve learnt more in a comment section then I learn at school thank you.
Humans are animals but we arent the same as other animals so u should check better specializations about those animals