SPINAL TRACTS MADE EASY - Spinothalamic, Dorsal Column and Corticospinal!
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- Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
- Got your mind twisted with the different spinal tracts? Finding it hard to get to grasps with decussation points and clinical features?
Join us for a concise and easy look at the main sensory and motor spinal tracts and how this links to relevant clinical scenarios! Thanks for checking out the Video!
Big thank you to Anartomy for allowing me to use the fantastic illustrations. Please check out the channel below for amazing anatomy tutorials!
Anartomy: / @anartomy
It's fascisulus cuneateus. Not cutaneous.
Very comprehensive to understand . Thumbs up 👍
Thank you so mcuh ❤️🩹
It is not fasciculus cutaneous, it is cuniatus
You are exactly my dream teacher😂 keep it up❤
nice video? keep the good work!
Great explanation, I couldn't understand this by googling at all but this video made it crystal clear!
this was so helpful!!! thank you
I dropped a like for this video! I could not understand this concept no matter how many times I read my notes. This was VERY helpful because I now understand this concept! Thank you!
It can be very confusing haha. Glad the video helped!
It was very helpful. Thank you!
Thanks
Why does everyone overcomplicate the cuneateus vs gracilis? Just remember that the gracilis muscle is in the lower body.
Haha very good point. Everyone has a different way to remember it, whatever works for you is the best method. Thanks for checking out the vid!
Peng 👌
when there is a muscle called gracilis in lower limb why use other methods to remember
Valid point haha
Lateral corticospinal tract damage seen is observed in opposite side cl side
Hi. Thank you for the comment. The corticospinal tract decussates (crosses over) at the level of the medulla. As spinal cord lesions below this level should lead to weakness on the ipsilateral (same) side. Any lesion above this (I.e. Brainstem or or cerebral strokes) leads to contralateral weakness.
U made it easy to understand . keep it up
Thank you!