Hello Mr.Webster. Thank you for sharing these videos for such a long time. It is very kind of you to use your time for us, those with whom you have never met nor will see, but very sincerely wanted you to know that we warm-heartedly appreciate your work.
This may show on the playlist as the last video, but still works well to pull everything together. This whole lower limb anatomy playlist has been fantastic for helping my class colleagues and I through BSc Podiatry, so, thank you. You are a fabulous tutor and your students are very lucky to have you.
An excellent tutorial for therapists working on individuals with chronic foot pain. The visual location of the posterior lower leg muscles is helpful. Thank you!
Your videos are exceptional, thank you so much for all your time and effort. I've learned so much from your videos and your light hearted way of teaching keeps me entertained.
This was such a great video on how to learn about our lower chain. I am not in sports science but passionate about body anatomy and mechanics. This was super educational. Thank you !
Hello doctor, I recently started watching your anatomy videos about the abdominal organs and I find them very useful in my medical student life!!! Thank you❤
If this comment can be my equivalent of a great review I'd like to thank you so much for making these videos and explaining everything thank you thank you!!
I was diagnosed to have brown sequard syndrome and this help me alot to understand what exercise i should do to strengthen my lower limb muscles. Thanks.
I've just been diagnosed with gluteal tendinopathy (ouch!) Where are those tendons and how do they get injured or irritated? THANK YOU for your fantastic teaching and generosity in sharing these fabulous, illuminating videos!
It would be great to mention that during gait the femur externally rotates slightly while the tibia internally rotates creating the optimal bend in the knee.
Hi Sam. The other hip movements are rotation & circumduction (a cone shaped movement). The angle of the hips is important for the career of an athlete or ballet dancer as the angle between the femur & hip bones becomes fixed at around 16 years of age and no one can move it. However, they can move & gently stretch the lower limb muscles using yoga to maintain that teenage ranger of movement. One thing that people should completely avoid is treat the knee as if it were the hip. Never a good idea. Most people hold some stress in their bodies: The hips govern the emotions (trauma). Hips don’t lie. The knees govern the ego, showing off or a refusal to yield. Knees start to give out when people get older if they don’t move the hip muscles at all. The feet govern the direction of travel, indecisiveness, being unsure of yourself. Ankle injuries start when people are young. This is often works hand in glove with their mindset so might be a good idea to ask a patient what’s going on in their world or get a general idea of how they are normally & the mindset at the time of injury.
did you know there is an advert on yt for some kind of ultrasonic fat burning device (scam) using screenshots of one of your videos and you about 30 seconds in.
@@yousifnajjar Do something for me, sit down, knees 90° flexed. Keep your leg planted on the ground and then rotate your foot inward and outward. Put a few fingers right at the joint gap where you can feel both the tibial and femoral condyle. Put another hand just on your thigh and if you tell me it's coming from the hip after that, please get checked for some kind of brain damage
@@yousifnajjar I'm a physiotherapy student and you are wrong - the knee is a modified hinge joint which allows for a small degree of medial and lateral rotation in the flexed position (biceps femoris and semimembranosus are responsible) the collateral ligaments restrict genu valgus/ varus angulation rather than rotation.
Hello Mr.Webster. Thank you for sharing these videos for such a long time. It is very kind of you to use your time for us, those with whom you have never met nor will see, but very sincerely wanted you to know that we warm-heartedly appreciate your work.
This may show on the playlist as the last video, but still works well to pull everything together. This whole lower limb anatomy playlist has been fantastic for helping my class colleagues and I through BSc Podiatry, so, thank you. You are a fabulous tutor and your students are very lucky to have you.
An excellent tutorial for therapists working on individuals with chronic foot pain. The visual location of the posterior lower leg muscles is helpful. Thank you!
You are amazing....which you were my professor 15 years ago but thank you for helping and playing a part in me passing my board exam ❤️❤️❤️
Thank you very much for your work Mr. Webster. Greetings from Bulgaria.
Your videos are exceptional, thank you so much for all your time and effort. I've learned so much from your videos and your light hearted way of teaching keeps me entertained.
This was such a great video on how to learn about our lower chain.
I am not in sports science but passionate about body anatomy and mechanics. This was super educational. Thank you !
You’re awesome, I appreciate you so much! Thank you for sharing your time, energy and knowledge! My best wishes to you
Hello doctor,
I recently started watching your anatomy videos about the abdominal organs and I find them very useful in my medical student life!!!
Thank you❤
You are incredible, thank you so much!
Excellent .. sounds simple and straight forward. Well done.
Really good presentation of muscles and explanation💯💯
I have exam in the lower limb on Sunday and I just wanna say I predicate what you do for us and love you so much doctor ♥️
Thank you for this most needed video! I needed this.
If this comment can be my equivalent of a great review I'd like to thank you so much for making these videos and explaining everything thank you thank you!!
Thank you so much for posting! I have a muscle lab exam in 4 days and this helped me a lot!
Superb as always! Thank you Sam, kind regards. 🙏💫
We have just started to learn about this at uni, so thank you!
Thank you very much for this excellent explanation 🦋💗
I like this doctor for anatomy he makes very easy 🙂↔️💙
I was diagnosed to have brown sequard syndrome and this help me alot to understand what exercise i should do to strengthen my lower limb muscles.
Thanks.
Awesome, I watched it twice ❤
Thanks to you Sir for this very informative video ☺️.
Thanks God bless you ❤️
I've just been diagnosed with gluteal tendinopathy (ouch!) Where are those tendons and how do they get injured or irritated? THANK YOU for your fantastic teaching and generosity in sharing these fabulous, illuminating videos!
this guy is amazing
Is it only me watching the video cuz I love his videos and
not for my exam
It would be great to mention that during gait the femur externally rotates slightly while the tibia internally rotates creating the optimal bend in the knee.
hmmm.. great point
Nice to see the popliteus mentioned sam !
Thank you! I'm studying for my Mblex and this is very helpful!
thank u professor
I want to do a master's in Anatomy because of you.
Thank you sr
Flexion and abduction these two parts of my joints I keep on moving during exercise or exposing myself to sunshine.
Hi Sam. The other hip movements are rotation & circumduction (a cone shaped movement). The angle of the hips is important for the career of an athlete or ballet dancer as the angle between the femur & hip bones becomes fixed at around 16 years of age and no one can move it. However, they can move & gently stretch the lower limb muscles using yoga to maintain that teenage ranger of movement. One thing that people should completely avoid is treat the knee as if it were the hip. Never a good idea.
Most people hold some stress in their bodies:
The hips govern the emotions (trauma). Hips don’t lie.
The knees govern the ego, showing off or a refusal to yield. Knees start to give out when people get older if they don’t move the hip muscles at all.
The feet govern the direction of travel, indecisiveness, being unsure of yourself. Ankle injuries start when people are young.
This is often works hand in glove with their mindset so might be a good idea to ask a patient what’s going on in their world or get a general idea of how they are normally & the mindset at the time of injury.
Sam Webster; The hip guy ;)
did you know there is an advert on yt for some kind of ultrasonic fat burning device (scam) using screenshots of one of your videos and you about 30 seconds in.
Hi
Hi
❤❤❤❤❤
🎉
Always hungry for lower limbs anatomy
💕💕💕💕😍
Thank you I need to pass my bio exam🥲
5:30 Gluteal muscles
12:26 Hamstring/posterior thigh
13:35 Calf/posterior leg muscles
best proffy poo ever
. 13:48
You are hip and your videos are hip!
Lol 🤣🤣
But what about knee internal and external rotation?
@@yousifnajjar Bro what? No, you have rotation in your knee joint too, but only when flexed
@@yousifnajjar Do something for me, sit down, knees 90° flexed. Keep your leg planted on the ground and then rotate your foot inward and outward. Put a few fingers right at the joint gap where you can feel both the tibial and femoral condyle. Put another hand just on your thigh and if you tell me it's coming from the hip after that, please get checked for some kind of brain damage
@@yousifnajjar I'm a physiotherapy student and you are wrong - the knee is a modified hinge joint which allows for a small degree of medial and lateral rotation in the flexed position (biceps femoris and semimembranosus are responsible) the collateral ligaments restrict genu valgus/ varus angulation rather than rotation.