Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery
Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery
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The Mercurial Genius of Candace Pert
Candace Pert discovered the opioid receptor, created a drug to stop AIDS in the brain, and identified stress as a cause of disease. She also inadvertently unleashed the overdose epidemic, got herself kicked out of the NIH, and was denied credit for much of her work. Pert was a trailblazing yet mercurial neuroscientist, a woman who made her male boss famous but has been largely forgotten herself. She was also a rebel, a workaholic... and a bit mad. In this episode, Pamela Ryckman, the author of a new biography of Pert, reveals some of the wilder tales about her and explains why she remains largely unknown even though her discoveries were truly life-changing. Plus... Other women in science who remain mostly hidden from history.
For more information, transcripts, and all episodes, please visit thisisyourbrain.com
For more about Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery, please visit neurosurgery.weillcornell.org
zhlédnutí: 19

Video

Dr. Phil Stieg: Meningioma in Brief
zhlédnutí 15Před 21 hodinou
Dr. Philip E. Stieg, Chair and Neurosurgeon-in-Chief of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Margaret and Robert J. Hariri, MD ’87, PhD ’87 Professor of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, provides a brief explanation of meningioma - what it is, what risk it presents, and how it can be treated. For more information about meningioma and other brain conditions, visit ...
Dr. Phil Stieg: Ischemic Stroke in Brief
zhlédnutí 13Před 21 hodinou
Dr. Philip E. Stieg, Chair and Neurosurgeon-in-Chief of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Margaret and Robert J. Hariri, MD ’87, PhD ’87 Professor of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, provides a brief explanation of ischemic stroke - what it is, what causes it, and how it can be treated. For more information about ischemic stroke and other brain conditions, vis...
Dr. Phil Stieg: Acoustic Neuroma / Vestibular Schwannoma in Brief
zhlédnutí 107Před 21 hodinou
Dr. Philip E. Stieg, Chair and Neurosurgeon-in-Chief of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Margaret and Robert J. Hariri, MD ’87, PhD ’87 Professor of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, provides a brief explanation of an acoustic neuroma (also called a vestibular schwannoma) - what it is, what risk it presents, and how it can be treated. For more information abou...
Dr. Phil Stieg: Moyamoya Disease in Brief
zhlédnutí 52Před 21 hodinou
Dr. Philip E. Stieg, Chair and Neurosurgeon-in-Chief of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Margaret and Robert J. Hariri, MD ’87, PhD ’87 Professor of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, provides a brief explanation of moyamoya disease - what it is, what risk it presents, and how it can be treated. For more information about moyamoya and other brain conditions, vi...
Dr. Phil Stieg: Thalamic Gliomas in Brief
zhlédnutí 6Před 21 hodinou
Dr. Philip E. Stieg, Chair and Neurosurgeon-in-Chief of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Margaret and Robert J. Hariri, MD ’87, PhD ’87 Professor of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, provides a brief explanation of thalamic gliomas - what they are, what risk they present, and how they can be treated. For more information about gliomas and other brain condition...
Dr. Phil Stieg: Arachnoid Cysts in Brief
zhlédnutí 46Před 21 hodinou
Dr. Philip E. Stieg, Chair and Neurosurgeon-in-Chief of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Margaret and Robert J. Hariri, MD ’87, PhD ’87 Professor of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, provides a brief explanation of arachnoid cysts in the brain - what it is, what risk it presents, and how it can be treated. For more information about arachnoid cysts and other b...
Dr. Phil Stieg: Brain Aneurysms in Brief
zhlédnutí 9Před 21 hodinou
Dr. Philip E. Stieg, Chair and Neurosurgeon-in-Chief of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Margaret and Robert J. Hariri, MD ’87, PhD ’87 Professor of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, provides a brief explanation of an aneurysm in the brain - what it is, what risk it presents, and how it can be treated. For more information about aneurysms and other vascular br...
Inside Neurosurgery: The Role of Neuropsychology in Neurosurgery
zhlédnutí 15Před 23 hodinami
Inside Neurosurgery is a video series that pulls back the curtain on the complex world of neurosurgery. In today's video, Dr. H. Allison Bender, head of the neuropsychology service within Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, talks about what neuropsychologists do for pre- and post-surgical patients (and even what they sometimes do during surgery). For more information about Neurologi...
Neurosurgery Residents: The Importance of Outside Activities During Residency
zhlédnutí 11Před 23 hodinami
Dr. H. Allison Bender, director of neuropsychology in the Department of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, has wellness advice for residents. How do you find time for outside activities during residency? Dr. Bender has some advice for residents on finding and maintaining balance between work and outside activities during this stressful time. For more about the neurosurgical residen...
Whispers & Tingles - ASMR with Craig Richard
zhlédnutí 58Před 14 dny
ASMR, or the autonomous sensory meridian response, is a state of deep calm accompanied by a sense of “brain tingles.” Not everyone experiences it, but if you do, you know what triggers it: a whisper or other soft sounds, a gentle touch or movement, even watching a Bob Ross video. Physiologist Craig Richard explains the science behind ASMR, and why in some people induces a deeply relaxing respon...
Neurosurgery Residents: How to Maintain Balance During Residency
zhlédnutí 30Před 21 dnem
Dr. H. Allison Bender, director of neuropsychology in the Department of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, has wellness advice for residents. Just how do neurosurgical residents manage to maintain any kind of balance during this intense time? Dr. Bender has some advice for residents on finding and maintaining balance during neurosurgical residency. For more about the neurosurgical ...
AI: Reverse Engineering the Brain
zhlédnutí 105Před 28 dny
We will never create true artificial intelligence (if we really want that) until we know more about how the human brain works. Tech entrepreneur and author Max Bennett explains how AI learns, where it falls short, and how it stacks up against our own intelligence. As it turns out, what's easy for humans is hard for AI, but AI is better at doing some things that are quite hard for us. Mostly, wh...
Neurosurgery Residents: The Importance of Sleep
zhlédnutí 36Před měsícem
Dr. H. Allison Bender, director of neuropsychology in the Department of Neurological Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, has wellness advice for residents. Just how important is sleep to a neurosurgical resident (who doesn't get much)? Dr. Bender has some advice for residents on staying centered during neurosurgical residency. For more about the neurosurgical residency program at NewYork-Presbyt...
Neurosurgery Residents: What Are the 3 Signs of Burnout?
zhlédnutí 38Před měsícem
Neurosurgery Residents: What Are the 3 Signs of Burnout?
Neurosurgery Residents: How to Prevent Burnout
zhlédnutí 41Před měsícem
Neurosurgery Residents: How to Prevent Burnout
Decoding Brainwaves Into Language
zhlédnutí 47Před měsícem
Decoding Brainwaves Into Language
NYC MISS 2024 Summer Master Class with Dr. Roger Hartl
zhlédnutí 306Před měsícem
NYC MISS 2024 Summer Master Class with Dr. Roger Hartl
Outsmarting Anxiety
zhlédnutí 74Před měsícem
Outsmarting Anxiety
From the Ground Up: Building Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery Into a Powerhouse
zhlédnutí 204Před 2 měsíci
From the Ground Up: Building Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery Into a Powerhouse
Exploring The Magic Mushroom
zhlédnutí 172Před 2 měsíci
Exploring The Magic Mushroom
A Memory Workout
zhlédnutí 84Před 2 měsíci
A Memory Workout
"Aiden will never know" what an amazing and complicted procedure he had; Dr. Mark Souweidane
zhlédnutí 73Před 3 měsíci
"Aiden will never know" what an amazing and complicted procedure he had; Dr. Mark Souweidane
Aiden Will Beat This Disease; Dr. Mark Souweidane
zhlédnutí 33Před 3 měsíci
Aiden Will Beat This Disease; Dr. Mark Souweidane
Do You Hear What I See?
zhlédnutí 95Před 3 měsíci
Do You Hear What I See?
See Aiden, 5 months post-surgery for choroid plexus tumor
zhlédnutí 30Před 3 měsíci
See Aiden, 5 months post-surgery for choroid plexus tumor
Dr. Souweidane on the Promise of the Choroid Plexus Clinical Trial
zhlédnutí 51Před 3 měsíci
Dr. Souweidane on the Promise of the Choroid Plexus Clinical Trial
What Are Your Hands Saying?
zhlédnutí 85Před 3 měsíci
What Are Your Hands Saying?
Dr. Phil Stieg: Hemangioblastoma in Brief
zhlédnutí 118Před 3 měsíci
Dr. Phil Stieg: Hemangioblastoma in Brief
Dr. Mark Souweidane talks about what this clinical trial had to offer
zhlédnutí 41Před 3 měsíci
Dr. Mark Souweidane talks about what this clinical trial had to offer

Komentáře

  • @patriciajackson3250

    Dr. Stieg Are there neuro surgeons in Califorina who can evaluate my headaches and the constant moving of this lump in my head? I feel a lump that moves from the top of my head to now to the left side.

  • @harryturnbull4781
    @harryturnbull4781 Před 2 dny

    That's not true.

  • @azadyadav9319
    @azadyadav9319 Před 4 dny

    👍🏻

  • @nirajarun4965
    @nirajarun4965 Před 7 dny

    Very informative and well put together!!

  • @matriarchalprayerproject

    I can’t believe more people haven’t seen this! As a left-handed woman who comes from a left-handed family you are describing my biggest frustrations living in this society.

  • @azadyadav9319
    @azadyadav9319 Před 26 dny

    The Work-Work balance is a real deal💯

  • @Ttraye66
    @Ttraye66 Před 26 dny

    Awesome, so happy this young man is doing well and I am certain the Dr Steig had to have a wonderful feeling that this young man reached out to him after all these years !

  • @kjpajc
    @kjpajc Před 26 dny

    Amazing!! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @dr.moustafaibrahim6810

    That's a great lecture and thank you everyone. From an EDS patient prospective, I found out that NASID was not effective at all because Prolo therapy approved the opposite as promoting some tiny inflammation at some defected ligaments / Tendons came out with a very effective results as it helped in tightened these ligaments / Tendons and that's what we wanted to do for long term treatment plan. Dr. Moustafa Ibrahim

  • @Nico1952
    @Nico1952 Před 29 dny

    Please remove the 'music'! It makes understanding much more difficult!

  • @joanleblanc1193
    @joanleblanc1193 Před měsícem

    You guys don’t even know how to pronounce it. AYlers-danlos, not ERlers-danlos

  • @bootcampz
    @bootcampz Před měsícem

    This was a great lecture. Thoroughly enjoyed and learnt.

    • @colinmason8190
      @colinmason8190 Před 11 dny

      I must still take meds for a while! As I have epilepsy too. But slowly day by day. I work 3 days a week, as I need to make a living,but I still have limits, walking, swimming, lifting. I have a great psychiatrist and psychologist! Too to help with my mood swings, and ptsd, but again I am greatful for everything, my Partner, daughter

  • @adityas914
    @adityas914 Před měsícem

    i don't think it's img friendly

  • @user-xh2lc6cr5q
    @user-xh2lc6cr5q Před měsícem

    I’m so proud of you bro. TM

  • @youniseqbal7973
    @youniseqbal7973 Před měsícem

    excellent

  • @osame6802
    @osame6802 Před měsícem

    Thanks a lot John. I hope I can understand my dad's treatment better now

  • @gashousegorillas1
    @gashousegorillas1 Před měsícem

    THERES NO SUCH THING AS A COMMON SENSE democrat Like unicorns....THEY DONT EXIST

  • @amalbensaleh
    @amalbensaleh Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for this very informative presentation, very helpful 🙏.

  • @colinmason8190
    @colinmason8190 Před 2 měsíci

    I've just gone through this 2 weeks ago! Was in intensive care for 15 days! The treatment was amazing! Quick diagnostice,ctc Scans,cocktail of meds,Quick interventuion. Sonar Scans 2 away. After 14 days had last ctc scan and home! I must say i am so lucky as I am home now,a slow recovery, 3 months, but I feel no impediments,yet, just a little slow with memory for now. I thank the medication services in The Czech Republic in Brno Svarmty Anna

    • @AdilYasin-e7c
      @AdilYasin-e7c Před 11 dny

      did your aneurysm rupture? also what did they say about normal day to day activities?

    • @colinmason8190
      @colinmason8190 Před 11 dny

      I'm taking it slowly, day to day, but working 3 days a week as I need to earn a living! Not heavy lifting though for 3/4 months. I am very lucky, greatful, thankful to my support network, psychologist and psychiatrist toowith the mood swings and ptsd guidance

    • @colinmason8190
      @colinmason8190 Před 11 dny

      @@AdilYasin-e7c it just happened out of the blue???

    • @gymtunez9674
      @gymtunez9674 Před 11 dny

      @@colinmason8190Was yours an aneurysm that ruptured?

    • @colinmason8190
      @colinmason8190 Před 11 dny

      Subarachnoid hemorrhage

  • @UniqueunlimitedBD
    @UniqueunlimitedBD Před 2 měsíci

    CZcams channel video has a bad SEO score of Due to this your subscribers and views are not increasing, and the titles, descriptions, and keywords SEO should be done correctly only then you will get good results. the same problem in Video every.

  • @azadyadav9319
    @azadyadav9319 Před 2 měsíci

  • @yasserawad7822
    @yasserawad7822 Před 2 měsíci

    Hello Doctor ,,I'm 49, I have a bigger CBT 10*6*7.6 cm ,, what can I do, I'm living In Libya?

  • @kobenoah1
    @kobenoah1 Před 2 měsíci

    For me, definitely hearing loss, a little tinnitus, get light headed or muzzy headed and weird taste.

  • @ardiscapes4410
    @ardiscapes4410 Před 2 měsíci

    'promosm'

  • @samanthaanderson347
    @samanthaanderson347 Před 2 měsíci

    I have this… only 2mm at the moment that I’m aware of … I’m terrified. I have all the symptoms and have for 3 years now, no fluid build up but life has been difficult

  • @annieone-trick
    @annieone-trick Před 2 měsíci

    I know this video is old at this point so nobody is likely to respond, but what happens with the removed vomer/cartilaginous septum afterwards? is the patient just left with, like, half of their septum or was there another procedure done to replace it? I know at 5:12 it's stated that the removed septum may be used for reconstruction, but is this meant as reconstruction of the septum or reconstruction of the sella? Would be amazing if anyone could answer this!

  • @drrajeshkar
    @drrajeshkar Před 2 měsíci

    Very nice demonstration Sir for budding skull base Surgeons

  • @NgaNguyen-pz4pm
    @NgaNguyen-pz4pm Před 2 měsíci

    I have Hemifacial spasm over 5 year now and when I smiled is show crooked, I’m very worried. Can you help me how can I get my mouth normal again, I have vestibular schwannom tumors too.my eye stop twitching but my mouth is I can feel the never on my face. I do boxto every three month .

  • @farhanobsiye
    @farhanobsiye Před 2 měsíci

    Really i have colloid cysts i live uk Can you help me

  • @geofschwer1625
    @geofschwer1625 Před 3 měsíci

    Dr. Stieg, I have had what I would call Type 2 TN on v.2 and v.3, but no MRI or MRA scan find a problem. However, the pain is pretty darned obvious to me! Now, we toss in one more factor that may be a contributing cause. Just last week I had an angiogram and it did show something quite condemning to me--an 80% blocked artery. FYI, I'm 83 and swim regularly, play the tenor sax and restore old cars, so I'm not exactly dottering old man with one foot in the grave. My doctors are now saying rest, don't bend over, and resist your normal level of activity. I am not very happy about all of this. Could my TN-pain like systems be due to a blockage in my brain?

  • @PrecioustheMovie1
    @PrecioustheMovie1 Před 3 měsíci

    Very nice. These are identical conclusions that Tao/zen/buddhism came to as well.

  • @kmcquack8989
    @kmcquack8989 Před 3 měsíci

    I hate that they want to Gatekeep on fusion surgery out of fear that someone wouldnt heal well. Come on, Sir, that train left the station. It really cant get worse only better. That is the reality when you are looking fir a fusion. Its your last ditch chance. Dont gatekeep that. Before my fusion I had no quality of life

  • @2beenice
    @2beenice Před 3 měsíci

    I developed a mild foot drop two weeks ago following a lumbar fusion on disc 4 and 5. I had tingling if the toes and pain in my calf after surgery. That has gone, but I realize lifting my toes and foot up while my heal is on the ground is challenging. Is there any exercise I can do to help with restoring proper movement in my foot?

  • @Dr.Naira.Matevosyan
    @Dr.Naira.Matevosyan Před 3 měsíci

    I wrote a book about Synesthesia in 2014, inclusive of the use of this disease (or largess) in criminal justice system.

  • @Dr.Naira.Matevosyan
    @Dr.Naira.Matevosyan Před 3 měsíci

    I am in my late 50s and I precisely remember myriads of moments from my childhood to the present day. Those are the episodes where I had emotional connection to the events or situation. My guess is that emotions (good or bad) preserve and perpetuate memories on limitless spans because the recall is pushed to the limbic area as opposed to the analytic grey matter that would otherwise discard "non-important memories by analytic prioritization." I am not a specialist in the field so this was my lay interpretation.

  • @bundabergflorist4670
    @bundabergflorist4670 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you ... this is very interesting ... may i ask why some of us are sensitive to the frequencies from cell Towers ... I know its not thermal ...we are all biologicly different ...just like some are alergic to peanuts ...our Brains are electrical and the interferance from EMF ... can and is torture ... can anything be done to stop this my body has become exhausted from these Frequencies...... Thank you in advance

  • @cht2162
    @cht2162 Před 3 měsíci

    I'm 84!!!! My whole life. Weak ankles had to be wrapped as toddler so I could walk. Asthma and allergies at 10 and now have COPD. At 15, both knees dislocate playing football. Continue to dislocate thru life even with many surgeries. Develop IBS in 20s. Constant joint pain. Many anxiety and depression issues over the years. Carpal tunnel surgery. Open heart surgery in 70s. I can't believe the connections with connective tissue disease. These symptoms are shared by my children and my sister's children. WoW.

  • @alitawfik836
    @alitawfik836 Před 3 měsíci

    If you bilateral one is cut and other side is laryngeal paraganglioma what is your plane??

  • @LindaMariano
    @LindaMariano Před 3 měsíci

    Iyengar yoga has taught me just because i can, doesn't mean i should. The balance of getting hypermobility under control by awareness awareness.

  • @orthospinechannel9450
    @orthospinechannel9450 Před 3 měsíci

    Good educational video.

  • @kardste8114
    @kardste8114 Před 3 měsíci

    Is anyone trying nutritional therapy with plants to slow cancer tumor growth or paraneoplastic problems?

  • @azadyadav9319
    @azadyadav9319 Před 3 měsíci

    👍🏻

  • @itsnevertoolatetodotherigh3271

    Why this doesn't have many views, quite interesting

  • @SouthMiamiMartialArt
    @SouthMiamiMartialArt Před 4 měsíci

    What surgery? This video says nothing.

  • @robertmassucci1
    @robertmassucci1 Před 4 měsíci

    im 62, my mother died delivering me of a hemorrhaged uterus. My knees would dislocate starting around the first grade. No one had a clue. After many subluxations, dislocations and injuries ive had 14 different surguries to repair damage, arthritis, and relieve pain. Both knees, elbow, shoulders, wrists, hands, cervical and lumbar spine, even my keister. I always had it, so I've adjusted over the years. I often say that if it hit me all at once, the pain would make me want kill myself. Worst thing is i gave it to my kids. At least they know and take easy physically. I didn't find out til my mid 30s. I drove a oil tanker tractor trailer, a redimix cement truck and studied Krav Maga for many years. I should have been playing chess

  • @anamarialorenzgregor
    @anamarialorenzgregor Před 4 měsíci

    I recommend Casa Colina Rehabilitation Hospital. The PT department has EDS trained professionals. I am very please with their care and highly recommend Casa Colina Rehabilitación Hospital, Pomona, California

    • @anamarialorenzgregor
      @anamarialorenzgregor Před 4 měsíci

      I was recently diagnosed at age 72 Y/O with EDS by Dr Newman, rheumatologist at Eisenhower Medical Center. I had received PT at Casa Colina Rehabilitación Hospital after Hip replacement and shoulders surgery.

  • @justinreilly1
    @justinreilly1 Před 4 měsíci

    I heard u get hella ripped at the Corny Bootcamp!

  • @justinreilly1
    @justinreilly1 Před 4 měsíci

    Cadaver heads for every resident! Baller!

  • @joveec3873
    @joveec3873 Před 4 měsíci

    Will see you in 9 yrs, Cornell! I’ll be a resident there.

  • @catc8927
    @catc8927 Před 4 měsíci

    I always knew I was flexible, but nobody told me I was extremely hypermobile until my 6th physical therapist ever, on my 4th round of PT, at age 37. It wasn’t until I began looking into hypermobility and stumbled upon Dr. Linda Bluestein (on Dr. Glaucomflecken’s Knock Knock Hi) show that I realized my IBS-C, SIBO, neck pain, disc problems, hip issues, eczema, skin scarring problems after surgery, fibromyalgia, chronic pain, severe chronic fatigue, migraines, allergies that only got worse despite 12+ years of immunotherapy, and asthma that never really responded to albuterol were ALL interconnected. Currently hoping the rheumatologist I’m meeting soon will be able to help figure out where along the hypermobility spectrum I belong.