Kiley, I am so glad. If you are still in the dental school or you have graduated, continue with other short videos. I think those will help you with your interpretation skills. Diagnosis is critical for patient management, and ultimately your success in your clinical practice. Best wishes.
Hello Julie! Great question! The nasal cavity starts from the incisor area (nares area) and continues to the nasopharynx. Sometimes, it is also possible to see the floor of the orbit on a periapical radiograph, only when the positive vertical angle of the x-ray tube is too much (the tube is too high pointing downwards). In such an error, you will not record the crown of the teeth. Also, the floor of the orbit is a little bit thicker, as Nature wants to protect our eyes. If you happen to see the orbit, you will also see the floor of the nasal fossa. Finally, the floor of the orbit is not quite horizontal. I hope this explains. Best wishes!
@@mansurahmad1952 Thank you so much. I understand now. I was thinking of it in 2-D instead of 3-D. Thanks for explaining the differences between the floor of the nasal cavity and the the floor of the orbit. I will now continue with the rest of your videos!
Thanks so much for these excellent videos! You are a great teacher!
Thank you so much Dr. Ahmad. Excellent, precise descriptions. Exactly what I was looking for!
I appreciate the hardwork you have put in. Great video 👍
Thank you, Dr. Bashir.
Today I again saw your video and again I learnt a lot
thank you again Dr Momsur highly apprecaited. 👋👍
Thank you so much sir... From India. U explained every landmark so well..
Glad that you found the video helpful.
Thank you so much your videos are the only thing that has helped me really understand the anatomy I am so happy and grateful!
Kiley, I am so glad. If you are still in the dental school or you have graduated, continue with other short videos. I think those will help you with your interpretation skills. Diagnosis is critical for patient management, and ultimately your success in your clinical practice. Best wishes.
Excellent lecture. Stay blessed. Dr. Rashid🇵🇰
My knowledge has increased Sir thank you
So happy to hear that!
Thank you for the excellent explanation
Amazing!!I looked for books and online contents about radiographs. This totally gave me more confidence , especially for indbe.Thanks .
I'm so glad!
Very nicely explained Sir
We can’t find a well explained video like this 🌹
Dr. Shaker, glad it was helpful!
This was super useful with all the contents covered thanks dr!
Dr. Atabay, Thanks for stopping by. Now, your time for the mandibular anatomy :-)
THANK YOU DR THIS IS SO HELPFULL
Dr. Bassam, glad it was helpful!
sir so great thx u
Thank you Sir
Question: At 11:10 does the floor of the nasal fossa extend so far back to the molar region? Could that be the floor of the orbit?
Hello Julie! Great question! The nasal cavity starts from the incisor area (nares area) and continues to the nasopharynx. Sometimes, it is also possible to see the floor of the orbit on a periapical radiograph, only when the positive vertical angle of the x-ray tube is too much (the tube is too high pointing downwards). In such an error, you will not record the crown of the teeth. Also, the floor of the orbit is a little bit thicker, as Nature wants to protect our eyes. If you happen to see the orbit, you will also see the floor of the nasal fossa. Finally, the floor of the orbit is not quite horizontal. I hope this explains. Best wishes!
@@mansurahmad1952 Thank you so much. I understand now. I was thinking of it in 2-D instead of 3-D. Thanks for explaining the differences between the floor of the nasal cavity and the the floor of the orbit. I will now continue with the rest of your videos!
Thank you sir , very helpful ,keep going
Thank you, Dr. Hideri!
These have helped so much
Kiley B. Thank you. I am happy that this video helped you in your anatomy review.
Thank you!!!!
You're welcome!
Best
يادكتور ياخي اشرح عربي عشان الطلاب يفهمو الله يرضى عليك