I wish I found this during my first year of medical school. This video made a whole host of otherwise loose terms come together and make sense to me for the first time. Thank you for posting this.
I have never seen a video as beautiful as this one! This man managed to explain this quite complex anatomical structures so so well!!!! Thank you so much
sir you are amaaazing .... your English is sooooo good i wish i can speak like this god bless you dr.akram your teaching is very cool and we get the idea and memorize the structure THANKS ALOOOT .
thanks a lot for this extremely helpful content. i just wanted to point out one thing to prevent confusion among my peers: around 8:19 it's been said nasociliary nerve in the audio but on the drawing it spells nasopalatine nerve (which is the correct one).
Thank you so much Dr Akram Jaffer Sir 😊😊😊... U rock🤘🏻.... U've seriously made my concept crystal clear ✨... Grt efforts Sir 🤘🏻... Sir I've a doubt related to pterygopalatine fossa can I ask u here?
Please feel free to ask questions. Meanwhile, watch this video on the pterygopalatine fossa ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-fXJHBIs_51I.html
+shaa Am there are some technical issues related to these videos and until I will solve them out I have to keep these videos as private. Thank you for your interest in the channel
I am a massage therapist ~ I have a client who was in Iraq and was hit on the left side of their head by a roof flying at 80 mph (approx.) ~ they have no sense of heat on their left side of their back, could this be from damage to the brain stem and PNS (parasympathetic . ..) not able to communicate to the CNS (central Nervous system)?
This might have resulted from a peripheral nerve injury. The back of the neck and scalp are mainly supplied by posterior rami of C2 & C3 (the greater occipital and third occipital nerves).