Thank you, i truly respect your teaching style. Concise, educational, and thorough. Where can I find such a doctor for Nuerosurgery and Neurologists for me to be treated?
Thank you so much sir ....cant thank you enough for posting such a wonderful video for all our students 👏👏👏🔥🔥🔥....please keep posting more and more videos regarding neurology more frequently 👍🙂😊
4:09 I can not get this point can you please explain it more I would be grateful... What I want to ask is that for conducting pain in painful neuropathy why pain stimulus will be transmitted when large neurons are intact bcz its not there function
Depends on the duration, early stage of irritave lesion causes pain but when in late stage or nerve fibres destroyed then it results in loss of sensation ie numbness
Thankyou. Very informative.
Thank you, i truly respect your teaching style. Concise, educational, and thorough.
Where can I find such a doctor for Nuerosurgery and Neurologists for me to be treated?
Best nd easy way of teaching sir 😎
Great teaching..respect 🙏
Thank you so much sir ....cant thank you enough for posting such a wonderful video for all our students 👏👏👏🔥🔥🔥....please keep posting more and more videos regarding neurology more frequently 👍🙂😊
Wonderful and very informative 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Thanks a lot
Very concise and informative,, thanx a lot sir
Thank you so much sir for providing this much information, 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Its awesome🙏🙏
Good, thanks
Thank you so much sir 🙏 🙏 🙏
Very useful
Thank you sir
Thank u sir
Thank u sir.
👍🏻
Good, thanks
Ty u sir
Need topic on ataxia for proper explantion under one heading
It is already there--"Clinical approach to gait imbalance"
Thank you sir.
Please provide a lecture on NCV also
4:09 I can not get this point can you please explain it more I would be grateful... What I want to ask is that for conducting pain in painful neuropathy why pain stimulus will be transmitted when large neurons are intact bcz its not there function
Pain is conducted by unmyelinated or small myelinated fibres; Large myelinated fibers conduct position and vibration sense
thanku sir ..Sir why hyperalgesia and hyperesthesia absent in myelopathy? .
It is a symptom of first neuron-peripheral only
Why is there symptom of pain in small fibre neuropathy when the nerves involved are already damaged??
Depends on the duration, early stage of irritave lesion causes pain but when in late stage or nerve fibres destroyed then it results in loss of sensation ie numbness
Thank you so much sir, but what's difference between axonal and demylenated neuropathy about pathophysiology of processes
Where is doctor practicing
Can I get phone number of doctor to consult
Thank you sir
Thank you sir