Thank you so much. I feel saved. My goal is to become a nurse. And I’m not giving up. I have two jobs, two kids and taking human anatomy. I don’t have much time to go to open lab but now I’m so happy this can totally help me. Thank you so much again ❤️
And how to relate the mnemonic phrase to the nerves that pass through the foramens? Oh - Olfative (I) - cribform plate Oh - Optical (II) - optical canal Oh- Oculomotor (III) - superior orbital fissure To - Troclear (IV) - superior orbital fisssure Touch - Trigemial (V) - SOF (oftalmic) , Rotundum (Maxilar) and Ovale (mandibular) And - Abducant (VI) - SOF Feel - Facial (VII) - Accoustic foramen and estilomastoideu A - Accoustic (VIII) - accoustic foramen Girl's - Glossopharingeal (IX) - jugular Very - Vague (X) - jugular Soft - Spinal (XI) - jugular and magnum Hands - Hipoglossum (XII) - hipoglosssum foramen
Before this video I had no idea how I was going to remember these foramen. After this video I'm like wow this was so easy. This will definitely help me in my anatomy and physiology lab. Thank you so much!
Great question! The answer is "yes." Meaning that there is variation. I think that in many specimens, they are about even regarding anterior/posterior. But in some cases, the center of f. spinosum is slightly anterior to the center of f. lacerum and in other cases, slightly posterior. However, this particular mnemonic rests on imagining two "rows" of foramina- remembering the first row names, then the second row names. Thus even if the two rows overlap slightly, one could still find and remember the names of these particular foramina using that approach. This mnemonic is meant as an oversimplified memory aid, not a definitive statement of the range of possible locations of foramina in humans. I find that the more I practice with a basic pattern, the more comfortable (and accurate) I am when encountering the wonderful variations we see among individual specimens.
Dr Farijuddin here..preparing for PG entrance and I was searching for easiest way to remember skull foramina n I got this video ..it was really helpful..thanks Doctor❤️
I've watched so many videos about skull foramen and it all blurs together.. you presented it in a orderly and rational way that made it finally make sense and not blur, thank you.
I am writing a fiction non-fiction sci-fi book, and require some medical expertise to assist with anatomically accurate procedural information, according to the theme of the story: When Axel was 5 years old, he was sold to an underground criminal organisation where an evil doctor forcibly inserted a torture-surveillance-spyware bug into one of his frontal sinuses. 40 years later, Axel has a head injury in a near fatal motorcycle accident, and when observing his skull x-ray, he finds that there is a bug in his head! By this time, the underground criminal system, has infiltrated the global medical industry, and there is no way any governmental or institutional doctor will acknowledge his situation or even try and remove the bug for fear of the criminals. If he doesn't get it out soon, it will most likely fry his mind, brain and eventually kill him! (this is the part where I need medical advice) How would he remove it? And he must do it alone!
Mona Naveed that’s intentional because my students never have trouble distinguishing it from other foramina-so no mnemonic needed. The lighter the better! Thanks for your comment.
That may be true for you. But for a beginner, those first two minutes may be the key to understanding the whole video. Each learner has their own starting point.
I include only the major foramina typically required in an undergraduate A&P course,. How about giving a try adapting this mnemonic sentence to include the foramina you need to learn? Or perhaps constructing a completely new one? Please share it here, if you do.
I include only the major foramina typically required in an undergraduate A&P course,. How about giving a try adapting this mnemonic sentence to include the foramina you need to learn? Or perhaps constructing a completely new one? Please share it here, if you do.
I'm sorry you are not having a good experience. I'm listening to the video now and can hear it clearly, so I'm guessing you're not referring to the volume or clarity of speech. However, you could be having issues with your internet connection or the volume settings. You refer to fluency of my language. American English is my first language, and I'm quite skilled in it. The English captions of my narration seem quite fluent. Can you help me understand exactly what issues you are having with my fluency or with hearing the video?
@@kevintpatton sorry sir it's my problem as i m Maharashtrian and my first language is marathi so it's a little bit difficult for me to understand your language🙂.
@@medico9796 Okay, I understand now. Is there something I can do differently in my videos to make them easier to understand for those whose first language is not English? Slower, perhaps?