I’m a student in the U.K. in my first year of medicine. Everything is online and I have been remote learning since the beginning of the academic year. I just need to say: your videos are much better than any of the lectures my teachers have given, by 10 fold. Literally. Thanks for saving the day!
I remembered when I was going to take the biomechanics exam at the Faculty of Physiotherapy and I was watching you because you are a wonderful doctor in your explanation of the information...Currently I left the college for financial reasons and study at the Faculty of Science, but I am confident that my dream will come true one day and I will become the best analysis doctor in my field All love from Egypt ♥️
I am genuinely impressed by the pedagogical finesse exhibited in this video. The elucidation and meticulous explanation won my heart. The use of self-demonstration added an extra layer of insight into the topic. It enriched my comprehension of joint movements. Kudos to the teacher. Wrote this long comment just as a try to increase the engagement of this video so that it reaches more people. ❤❤❤
More than the joint movement by eyes were fixed at his muscle contraction and got reminded of gym. The good thing is that he himself became a subject and showed all the types of movements and tried to explain the definitions, because after all we have to remember them and it will bring marks which is of utmost importance. Superb video; all my doubts are at bay, the explanation was immaculate to teach it to a layman.
Thank you for always making tricky topics so easy to understand! I think I’ll owe my master’s degree to you at this point lol. I would absolutely love to see a video on the circle of Willis 🙏🏻
Took me long enough to look for someone who does these moves in a way that makes actual sense 😭 Long enough that i'm almost done with my 1st year of med school 😭
I wanted to say a HUGE Thank you! I am training to become a massage therapist and your videos help me learn in an easier way! BTW i laugh when i see a foot behind you in the video LOL
Dr Mike, have you explained eversion and inversion correctly? I've always thought eversion is when the sole of the foot is away from the midline of the body.