Knee Sectional Anatomy with MRI Insight in Axial, Coronal, Sagittal Plains
Вставка
- Опубліковано 16 лип 2024
- 00:00 - Intro
00:20 - Axial, Coronal and Sagital plains explained
01:04 - Knee joint basic anatomy, Knee joint bones, ligaments tendons , Medial and lateral Collateral ligaments
03:46 - Knee bursa
04:32 - Posterior cruciate ligament (PCL), Anterior cruciate ligament (PCL)
06:36 - Popliteal possa and knee muscles, Gastrocnemius Muscle
07:23 - Popliteal Artery, Popliteal Vein, Popliteus muscle, Tibial Nerve, Common Fibular Nerve, Soleus muscle, Semimembranosus Muscle, Sartorius Muscle, biceps femoris muscle, Gastrocnemius muscle
09:19 - Axial Plain sectional anatomy and MRI insight , Sartorius muscle
13:43 - Meniscus
17:09 - Coronal plain sectional anatomy and MRI insight
19:34 - Sagittal Plain sectional anatomy and MRI insight
22:17 - Links and references
Resource:
www.freitasrad.net/pages/atla...
In this video:🎥
00:00 - Intro
00:20 - Axial, Coronal and Sagital plains explained
01:04 - Knee joint basic anatomy, Knee joint bones, ligaments tendons , Medial and lateral Collateral ligaments
03:46 - Knee bursa
04:32 - Posterior cruciate ligament (PCL), Anterior cruciate ligament (PCL)
06:36 - Popliteal possa and knee muscles, Gastrocnemius Muscle
07:23 - Popliteal Artery, Popliteal Vein, Popliteus muscle, Tibial Nerve, Common Fibular Nerve, Soleus muscle, Semimembranosus Muscle, Sartorius Muscle, biceps femoris muscle, Gastrocnemius muscle
09:19 - Axial Plain sectional anatomy and MRI insight , Sartorius muscle
13:43 - Meniscus
17:09 - Coronal plain sectional anatomy and MRI insight
19:34 - Sagittal Plain sectional anatomy and MRI insight
22:17 - Links and references
It’s so clear ❤❤l understood everything ❤ Slides are very good❤ l love this channel and recommend to everyone 🥰🥰🥰🥰
Thank you very much❤❤❤ Thank you for encouraging me🥹❤️❤️
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Thank you for taking the time and explaining with so much depth 👍🏻
Thank you for your appreciation. I'm glad I could provide a detailed explanation.
Nice refresher. Thank you.
I have a question. Around 6:20 two central pictures - if the anterior part of the femur (upper picture) is at the top, then the cross section of tibia, shouldn't it be flipped? Because the top of the bottom picture is the posterior part. Isn't it? Please, correct me.
Hello, thank you very much for your comment. The upper image of the middle two images shows the INFERIOR cartilaginous surface of the femur, which will join with the SUPERIOR surface of the tibia, as shown in the lower image. Can you please clarify what you mean by "flipped" - whether you're referring to left and right sides or anterior and posterior sides?
@schematicmed e.g. the attachment of the tibial end of the PCL should be at the bottom of the lower picture (which would be the posterior part of tibial plateau). No?
Thank you for clarifying for me. I see where the confusion is coming from. In the bottom picture, the anterior part is at the bottom of the picture. Imagine as if we are looking at the real person's knee, and the knee is sliced in half from the anterior part and opened so that the sliced parts touch each other. Additionally, we can see the tuberosity of the tibia (tibial tuberosity), which looks like an elevation and is always on the anterior aspect of the tibia (on the middle lower image). That can help us not to confuse the anterior and posterior surfaces. And that is the anterior surface of the tibia, not posterior, and as we discussed, the PCL will attach to the posterior surface of the tibia, which is why it goes back. If there are any additional questions, feel free to ask.
@@schematicmedI understand your point now. Thank you for explaining it to me :)
@@lesio333 😊🤗🙏🏻
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