Plastic vs Real Pelvic Bones: Learn Integral Anatomy with Gil Hedley
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- čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
- www.gilhedley.com In this video I share observations from two human hemi-pelvises and compare them to a plastic pelvis, and cover basic bony anatomy of the human pelvis.
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Your videos are a fountain of creative and elegant means to display the marvellous beauty of the human body
Thank you so much Om!!
Your videos are invaluable Gil. Thank you for all the truth you bring to the world. All the light-hearted curiosity. The genuine respect. So grateful.
Thank you so much Suzanne, I appreciate your comment here, warming my heart!
So amazing to see the bone growth over the replacement! Thank you for sharing. I look forward to sharing this with many of my clients in celebrating the uniqueness of our bodies :D
That's awesome Greer, I'm glad this video will prove useful to you and your folks!
Thank you! I love how the body embraces changes interventions and repairs, thank you for making this so tangible .
Thanks Gil!
Thank you Aviva, we are crazy adaptable, 'eh?!
You may be impressed with your models, but we’re IMPRESSED with you❤ Thank you Gil for our Monday morning inspiration!
You are most kind DG, thank you!!
Thank you! So cool to see the different angle of orientation of Anna's acetabulum and obturator foramen compared to the plastic model and Z.
Thank you for watching Laura! I too am fascinated by the differences one bone to another...this was the case for every single bone! I am almost done editing all the bone videos I filmed of Anna and Z, it has been a serious education!
Great video! I also hoped you would explain something about the direction of te acetabulum, because Anna seems to have a twist in the pubic bone in relation to the ilium. I can imagine this also has a major consequence in the position of the femoral head and neck and gait movement and mobility patterns.
That is an excellent point Frank, thank you for bringing that up here, it does indeed make a big difference!
Hi Gil. Wow what incredible forms. I’m so grateful to have a glimpse of the uniqueness of real pelvises. One question- do you think the changes in Z’s SIJ occurred as an adaptation after surgery? Thank you! 🙏 Meran.
Good question Meran and, hard to say! He had many osteophytes, bone spurs and fused vertebra as well, hard to say which comes first sometimes, form/function...thanks for watching!
Loved this, Gil! Your reverence for the wonders of the human form shines through!
Thanks watching, I appreciate your interest Matthew!
Amazing offering!!! Thanks Anna and Z!! So grateful for your gifts Gil!
Thank you Gabe, and, thank you Anna and Z!
I love these videos! This was very cool to see the hip replacement and the difference between the different forms. Thank you for sharing and Thank you Anna and Z for the gifts of learning from your forms.
Indeed, thank you Anna and Z, and their families~
Thank you for these different aspects of the same teaching. It's always a pleasure to learn from you-and-from Anna and Z. I'm grateful for their generosity and yours!
You are most welcome Stephanie, and, thank you Anna and Z!
Yay hip reconstruction surgeons! Thank you Gil, Z and Anna
Thank you my dear, and yes, thank you Z and Anna!
Loving the bite-size Gil knowledge. Thanks Gil, always enthusing and informative!
Thank you kindly Jay, I appreciate your enthusiasm!
Thank you for sharing this comparison.
So helpful in furthering my understanding.
The see-through parts was a new idea -fascinating!🎉
Cool, right Nancy?! I love shining lights through the tissues, adds to my already kindled amazement factor!
Thank you, Gil, for this comparison. I won't look at my plastic pelvis in the same way again! I'd love it if you did the same for other bones too. You make learning anatomy a pleasure. Subscribing to your library as an explorer is the best decision I've made this year. I highly recommend it to everyone. Thank you Gil, thank you Anna, thank you Z.
Hi 'Movement au naturel," I actually do have one other like this one, comparing the scapula, here is the link, enjoy! czcams.com/video/FZ-9EBb_9h8/video.html
@@somanaut Perfect, thank you Gil. Isabelle
Fascinating Gil...thank you
Thank you Angel, I appreciate your sustained interest :)
Such wonderful education! Thank you, always grateful to learn with you.
You're most welcome Laura, thank you for watching!
Truly amazing video!
Thank you kindly Angelika!
thank you for your amazing videos!! love you!!
Aww thank you so much Diana, I love you back, and appreciate your interest!
Gil, how "original" is the colouration of the bones of Anna and Z? Is that what they looked like while the donors were living or has there been some aging or discolouration of their bones since death occurred? Thanks for this comparison!
It took me well over a year of working with those two bodies to get them to a skeletonized state, living bone looks quite different, though we rarely see that exposed as cleanly as we do these, which represents many hours of work. Still, the color differences between them speak to Anna's osteoporosis, which renders the compact bone less dense as compared to Z's, and therefore a bit redder as we can "see" inside to the trabecular network of the spongy part of the bone more easily. Thank you for your question Carol, and for watching!
thank you!!
I appreciate your interest ZJ!
From Biology to Botany via Tennyson ca 1863
Flower in the crannied wall,
I pluck you out of the crannies,
I hold you here, root and all, in my hand,
Little flower-but if I could understand
What you are, root and all, all in all,
I should know what God and man is.
Beautiful Barry, thank you for sharing those delightful and fitting lines, and, thank you Tennyson! :)