You are awesome. As a cardiology fellow your heart and peripheral arterial videos made me a much better physician. Thank you so very much. I can’t believe this is free😅 with much respect from Egypt
You're the best, thank you for posting such informative, interesting videos. This is the best video on heart anatomy I've seen on RU-vid, especially since you started with the anatomical variations and included imaging modalities too. Thank you!
So now I got abdominal arota and branch along with venal circulation, limb blood supply, finally got coronary artery and their branch, well...thankfully ✍
can literally sense when u make videos with a fresh and lively mood and when u r tired r depressed. anyway, ur videos are amazing but ur smile makes our day hero so keep making ur usual jokes :)
Hi Sam, Can you do a video on heart anatomy/ pathology using echocardiogram looking at ventricular and atrial systole diastole, ejection fractions, heart sounds, normal muscle thickness and dilated Cardiomyopathy? Thanks Alan
First I complement you for explaining anatomy with a 3D model. That is very helpful to spatial learners. So far you are the only presenter using a 3D model. The animator move too fast and are still flat. My apologies for making suggestions in public. There was no other way to communicate to you. In the spirit of helpfulness, I just realized that this video is six years old, and may have been some of your earliest presentations. Therefore you may have already incorporated the below suggestions. As a spatial visual learner and an instructional technologist, I highly recommend that the model remain motionless as much as possible. This can be done by taking close ups of the model showing what the student need know. Then inserting them into the video for at least 6 seconds. This will allow the viewer time to fix attention on what you want them to know. Bouncing the model helps you think about what you are going to say next, and those segments give the students time to process the information you are showing them. However, you may want to verbally announce to the student that you are about to orient them to the anatomy you are about to explain. It adds to the amount of editing you have to do, but it's best for the student. Another way to present visual information is, after your introduction (giving the teaching objectives), narrate, (voice over) the images that you want the student to know. Orient the student by a slow rotation of the model from the front position each time. Then the student has time to process the orientation, as well as the nomenclature and follow the mechanics that the anatomy represents. A little repetition is good.
Aorta Coronary artery Left Anterior Descending coronary artery Right posterior Descending coronary artery Anastomosis of LAD & RPD Cardiac vein Great cardiac vein (drain left myocardium into coronary Sinus) Middle cardiac vein Middle cardiac vein (myocardium of both ventricles) Small cardiac vein (runs in the groove between right ventricle right Atrium and ventricles) Coronary Sinus drains into right Atrium
Thank you for explaining about the arteries, I had two heart stents fitted , One on the left and one on the right, I only now realise how small the arteries are and they look not much bigger than spaghetti for example.
Page 73 Estrogen has been found useful in the treatment of men who have had coronary attacks, but its side effects have made it undesirable for some men.
Great tutorial and now I can remember better than trying it on imagine it or memorize it! I am in the healthcare field. The Anatomy books are good however your lecture is better for visualization and functionality of the heart circulation. Thank you
I've been subscribed to your channel since I was in my first year of medical school. I wouldn't have understood anatomy well without your explanations, and I probably wouldn't have passed this subject. I'm a doctor now, but I still come back to your videos when there's something in anatomy I need to brush up on. Thank you for your hard work ❤ You're helping people a lot more than you know