Unknown Speaker 0:00 Yeah. Unknown Speaker 0:03 What is it? I don't know the revolution. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Unknown Speaker 0:06 I walked by that the other day and they were Unknown Speaker 0:10 so good. It's it's a good one. Yeah. Unknown Speaker 0:15 All right. So nice Unknown Speaker 0:19 gears and Unknown Speaker 0:23 what do I have for everybody I have stuff. And Unknown Speaker 0:31 there were some things that we didn't get Unknown Speaker 0:34 to go through Unknown Speaker 0:37 and foundations, but we'll finish that up on Unknown Speaker 0:40 Thursday. Unknown Speaker 0:43 I'll talk about the mask bags that you brought up. And I have a syllabus for Denise and I have some course materials for kidneys. It's not as involved as foundations was. So you Like that, unless you like a lot of boring information, then you'll be disappointed. And, and then we'll be able to like kind of roll into Kenny's here. Unknown Speaker 1:11 Excited about Denise, is it gonna be your favorite fans? Unknown Speaker 1:16 Sure. Unknown Speaker 1:19 I like teaching this class. Unknown Speaker 1:21 Is this one more lecture based or doing it on the tables? Unknown Speaker 1:25 Don't get on the tables as much as we do in foundations. But we do we do palpate so we can use the tables and the tables. Unknown Speaker 1:41 But yeah, we'll use them. Unknown Speaker 1:45 And I don't have to take role right because everybody's here except for obreon right. Unknown Speaker 1:54 Okay, so Unknown Speaker 1:57 see Unknown Speaker 2:01 Later Unknown Speaker 2:08 What is your experience with Denise? And a couple of words? Unknown Speaker 2:13 Tracy? Unknown Speaker 2:18 I don't know. You don't know? No. Okay. What about you, Ellie? I said teacher training or yoga teacher training. So we learn Unknown Speaker 2:27 more anatomy but then Unknown Speaker 2:28 how are we? Okay, we didn't specifically study kinesiology haha. Every said zero Yeah. Okay. Unknown Speaker 2:38 Okay. Sorry, Kara. I get there. I googled it and I've done basic research there and I'm not okay with it Amanda. I just learned how to spell it. Unknown Speaker 3:00 Go. What about you? What are you Unknown Speaker 3:07 saying? I didn't know nothing. I think you gave me a blank canvas. Awesome. Okay. Unknown Speaker 3:18 Well, it we used to have pennies three days a week. And it was and it was just one term. So it was real fast. Unknown Speaker 3:27 But now we broke it into two terms two days a week. So that's real slow. So it feels like if you need time you have it. Sometimes I feel like I have so much time I tend to squander my time and then all of a sudden, I'm like, Oh, my God. So I just don't want that to happen. There's so much time, we two days a week. There's so much study time that you can have outside of class before we like meet again. Unknown Speaker 3:59 So that So just utilize your time wise, if you need if you feel like you're going to need help get it sooner than later. Don't fall behind. It's harder to catch up. Okay, but um Unknown Speaker 4:14 it's really fun. It's like learning a new language, it kind of is learning a new language. It's not like because anatomy is very much a regular Unknown Speaker 4:26 Latin and Greek but also, anatomy tells you where things are or what they're made of, or what the size is or what it does. So there's a lot of hints in just the wording of structures and muscles. And Unknown Speaker 4:48 and it's kind of fun. If Unknown Speaker 4:53 you make it fun. It's kind of frustrating if you make it frustrating. Unknown Speaker 5:00 So it's like everything. It's all how you approach it. Everyone have course materials, and everybody has this syllabus. Alright. Unknown Speaker 5:11 So Unknown Speaker 5:13 that's for later Unknown Speaker 5:16 or later. Let's go through the syllabus. Hmm Unknown Speaker 5:27 So we're just here Tuesday, Thursdays 1130. And then I believe Fridays you must have your therapeutic relations. Class. Who do you have for that? You know, Unknown Speaker 5:37 Sarah, so awesome, girl. Unknown Speaker 5:42 You will love Sarah. Hey, Unknown Speaker 5:47 of course description can use one introduces you to the skeletal system and the muscular system Unknown Speaker 5:56 and then we're going to learn the names Basic landmarks of bones and joints. And it's going to be from the neck and the shoulder and the arm, forearm and hand. We're going to talk about origins, insertions and actions of muscles in those regions. Unknown Speaker 6:18 For the muscles that we study, we're going to learn how to palpate those elbows, how we would put them in a shortened and or lengthened position. And Unknown Speaker 6:30 we'll also talk about some different learning styles and studying and test taking strategies that may help you. Unknown Speaker 6:40 So Unknown Speaker 6:44 let's see here, trying to do too many things at once. Alright, so of course objectives. The objectives is very much like the description. It's just formatted a little differently. Unknown Speaker 6:58 We're first we're going to look at Major, we're just going to define some major regions of the body. We're going to talk about planes of movement. We're going to talk about anatomical position today, and some directional terms that are associated with anatomical position just to get you familiar with the language that we use in this class. You'll use this with each other and other practitioners. And then you'll also have to use like your regular words for your clients because your clients won't know what medial to your radio bone is your honor bone and we're at the proximal anterior aspect, like they're going to be like what and you're going to be like your forearm down by your wrist towards the inner Sir, you know, so you'll be able to talk to your, your co workers and then also your clients, different ways. We'll go through joints And we will talk about the major synovial joints of the body. And those provide more movements. And then we'll talk about really basically just muscles and how they contract. You'll go into more of the anatomy of contractions of muscles in your AP class, but we'll talk about muscle shortening and muscle lengthening. And then there's like some fancy words associated with that. Unknown Speaker 8:30 We can we'll demonstrate range of motion of joints as we go through them. So for instance, when we do the Unknown Speaker 8:40 shoulder joint, we'll talk about how the shoulder joint allows for flexion and also allows for extension and the shoulder joint allows for a reduction and adduction the shoulder joint allows for medial rotation and lateral rotation. So you'll have you'll get to know all the actions at you joints that we go through. Unknown Speaker 9:04 And Unknown Speaker 9:07 we'll do that and name and locate origins and insertions and bellies of major muscles. And the origin is where a muscle begins. You don't have to write this down because we'll go through it detailed. An origin is where a muscle begins, or like anything begins like the origin. And then the insertion is where a muscle goes to an ends. It's going to insert into a phone. And it's going to be different from the bone that it originated on. And then Unknown Speaker 9:41 and that muscle is going to create an action across a joint. And we'll talk about that in detail. Unknown Speaker 9:49 All right, and then we'll just we'll demonstrate lengthening muscles as far as shortening muscles, neck, shoulder, arm, forearm and hand that's the those are the sections that We go through and Khamis one. Here's the schedule. So today we're going to Overview The course, we're going to talk about Khamis. In general, we will definitely get to positions, directions, some terminology. We'll go through regions of the body. We'll talk a little bit about bones and a little bit about palpation. When Thursday we'll talk about joints, and how they move us through the worlds and range of motion, which is just how much movement you can get out of a joint. Next week, we'll do just a basic intro to muscles as far as origins and insertions which we can refer to as attachments. And we'll talk about actions and basic muscle contraction. Unknown Speaker 10:54 And then we'll have a review Unknown Speaker 10:58 for quiz one, and we'll talk about about different ways that you can maybe study or figure out what kind of learner you are. And then on August 4, we'll take our first quiz. And then right after our quiz, every quiz day, we pretty much start the next section. And I know what it's like to start new information after quiz. Unknown Speaker 11:22 You know, but Unknown Speaker 11:25 that's pretty much how we roll in here. Unknown Speaker 11:28 Just for time sake. All right, so you can see everything that we're doing and when Unknown Speaker 11:34 and Unknown Speaker 11:37 we have quiz three, we have quizzes. I think we have four. Unknown Speaker 11:43 We have four quizzes in our five quizzes, we have five quizzes, and then we have one final. It's the same as it is in foundation every time we have a written quiz. We also have a practical quizzes and your and they will look different. The quizzes and will look different than the quizzes and your foundations. Just FYI. And I'll walk you through everything. I will give you the practical quiz a day or two before the quiz so that you know exactly what's on it. So that you feel prepared. No surprises. Unknown Speaker 12:17 All right, um, Unknown Speaker 12:22 our last day, and here it looks like it's a Thursday, October 1. We I doubt we'll have time for makeup class. I'm really good. I have a really good record on not cancelling classes. I had to do it one time. I've been teaching for 15 years. Unknown Speaker 12:44 Wow. And I had to cancel 1015 years and it about killed me to do it but I was almost dying. So I had Unknown Speaker 12:55 um Unknown Speaker 12:57 there you have it. Do you have Any questions Unknown Speaker 13:02 about that? Unknown Speaker 13:05 Yes, Amber, Unknown Speaker 13:06 it seems like our homework is mostly just studying, studying, and then Unknown Speaker 13:12 locating those, correct those particular, your homework or studying. Yeah, your homework is to study this information Unknown Speaker 13:22 in a way that makes sense for you, so that you know it. If there's no like, hand this in and fill in do that. No, it's just like you do and you figuring it out what ways works for you to study best. And then and that's it. We'll talk about that to you. But yeah, there's no homework done. Unknown Speaker 13:47 Every single class, bring your book. Okay. Yep, bring it. We definitely will be using this luck. Unknown Speaker 13:56 Joe guide, trial guide. Can you Hold up your trial guide, not the Student Handbook. The other one. Yeah, thank you bring the trail guides to class every day. The student handbook that goes along with the trail guide. That is not a require for you to bring every day it's for you to use. And it's it's not required. The student handbook is just recommended. Okay? So that handbook. See it, this student handbook. It's really helpful and fun. If you want to test yourself and test your knowledge, also test yourself in a way that it feels very familiar Unknown Speaker 14:49 because it goes along with the trail guide. Unknown Speaker 14:53 So it jives really well with the book that you have to bring class every day which is the trail guide to Buddy, we can just leave that one at home. You can leave this at home. Yeah, you leave us at home. I rarely do. Unknown Speaker 15:07 I ever use this in class because I know that not everybody has it. Sometimes I make copies of what's in here and give them to everybody. Even though I know some people have it, but I, you know, so you do not need to bring this. You do not need to buy it. But it's kind of fun to have if you want to quit yourself. Unknown Speaker 15:27 Do bring your trail guide to class because we use it like a Bible. You have in another era. Let me say that again. You have a recommended book. Unknown Speaker 15:43 No, it's just the Student Handbook. Sorry, you have a required book, in addition to the trail guide, and it's the AP books Unknown Speaker 15:52 that Tracy is holding up that AP book. Unknown Speaker 15:56 I never use that book in class. I'm never going to say let's open Whenever your a&p book to page 55 not gonna do that. Unknown Speaker 16:03 That's the same one we need for morning class. Oh, Unknown Speaker 16:09 no, that's the one me for morning is the manual. Unknown Speaker 16:15 The big big one? Unknown Speaker 16:17 The ANP. Look, what's not on the list or this term? Yeah, it is. Unknown Speaker 16:26 It is required textbooks page for scinece one style guide Unknown Speaker 16:34 applied in P. And that's the book that Tracy just held up that applied ANP that applied anatomy physiology for manual therapists. That book will give you additional information about the physiology of muscles, which we're not really going to be focusing on too much in class. But if you're like how do muscles work, there's some information in that Book. There's some reading assignments in your schedule that come from that book. But we're not going to be using that book in class. That's something you can use outside of class. That AP book, AP book you will use for cornice one can use to and your AP classes. So it's it's nice that you're using these books for more than just one class. Okay? Don't have to bring that AP book to class. What do you have to bring to nice one every day? True? trail guide? Student Handbook. No. Okay. Unknown Speaker 17:39 Okay, um, Unknown Speaker 17:43 rec. So the recommended is the Student Handbook. It's fun, only recommended not required course requirements. Unknown Speaker 17:53 Students should plan to spend an average of six hours per week outside of class on reading assignments, studying and preparing quizzes six hours outside the class. That's, that sounds Unknown Speaker 18:05 about right. Unknown Speaker 18:06 So there's six here, there was nine and a half in foundations. So times adding up and that's all outside of class time. So you're gonna have to rearrange your life a little bit to fit in. Hmm, all the new time you need to study and there's ways of studying while you're commuting or while you're hanging out with Pat so your friends or your family so we can talk about that also. I don't want to get too sidetracked. Ah, of course requirements so reading students are expected to complete reading assignments as outlined in the course schedule. Unknown Speaker 18:49 Your reading assignments are going to be from your travel guide and then from your a&p book, Unknown Speaker 18:54 your anatomy physiology from a therapist. Unknown Speaker 18:58 Hey, and then Unknown Speaker 19:01 A lot of your homework is really just going to be you studying the muscles that we learn in class. Unknown Speaker 19:07 So students are expected to study previous class materials outside of class time. Soon syllabus. You can use your student handbook, you can use just your regular troll guide. You can use muscle profiles, which we'll talk about and course materials, charts, awesome course materials. And there's flashcards you can create your own or you can buy flashcards, or you can download like the children's app on your phone. Whatever you want to do, I think it's kind of handy to make your own flashcards because it's fun, if you like to draw and it's just one more reinforcement when you're writing things down or drawing up a muscle. And you can buy flashcards. trail guide makes flashcards they make A box of just bones and joints and then they make a box of flashcards just muscles if you're going to buy a box of flashcards by the muscles don't buy the bones and joints because bones and joints are a lot easier to learn compared to muscles. Here's my here's my thing about the flashcards from the trial guide, they're really nice. But it's the same information that's in your book that you already paid 50 bucks for right? And the nice thing about flashcards is you're like oh, I just need the shoulder section. So you can just grab this shoulder muscles out of the deck and carry those around instead of carrying your whole block but um, you're really paying twice for Can I opinion Unknown Speaker 20:51 some people like those tools, so whatever. And then then I encourage you to make your own flashcards Unknown Speaker 20:56 also. Unknown Speaker 20:59 So whatever Whatever you have options, whatever you want to do, sometimes you'll see on the board in the kitchen that people are selling their flashcards or selling their books, so that might be an option also. Unknown Speaker 21:15 Alright, so Unknown Speaker 21:21 Okay, so, in our orientation they gave us a sample kinesiology learning strategy. And it says one of the things when you do palpitation is to use a china marker, what's a trainer marker Unknown Speaker 21:34 is Unknown Speaker 21:38 kinda like a crayon, but it writes on the skin better than a crayon, and it's longer and skinnier than a crayon, and it has like a paper and that you can peel off of the marker. Um, so it's kind of like it's very much like a crayon that writes on your body Unknown Speaker 21:57 better. It's like a lip pencil. Unknown Speaker 21:59 Basically. It's like a little pencil, huh? Where do you get the Where do you get? I have no idea Unknown Speaker 22:09 when I supply store? Oh asking the That's a really great question I don't know, but I'll find out we'll see if I can find out. But I'm guessing like any like our supply crappy place Unknown Speaker 22:29 it's fun to palpate your Unknown Speaker 22:34 pet your animals and your friends and family. And you're gonna have to practice palpating on as many different people as you can. Um, even though that's kind of hard at this at this stage of where we're at, and you can utilize your time when you're giving massages with your classmates to palpate a couple of different muscles when you're doing your traits. There are some online palpation videos that will also help you figure out where things are. Those are kind of fun to watch sometimes. And, and we'll talk more about palpation where we've helped each other in class. There's the written in the practical quizzes, they're listed in the schedule. They cover the material from previous classes, you will not really find any surprises on the quizzes, you should feel completely prepared as far as the information that I gave you. And then the final is everything from the entire course. And which makes sense. And then the study guides for written quizzes and exams. Those are in the course materials that we'll go over. Practical quizzes and exams include palpating, bony landmarks, muscles, their origins and insertions demonstrating action set of muscle creates and then Unknown Speaker 24:01 And naming those Unknown Speaker 24:02 as well. Additional information about the format and content and practical quizzes will be distributed yeah we'll go through that every time we have a written a practical bespoke review before that Unknown Speaker 24:14 professional conduct is the same as it was in foundations. Unknown Speaker 24:21 participation, same deal. And Professional Communication same as in foundations same as Unknown Speaker 24:33 foundations as far as professional dress and grooming goes also. So I'm going to cruise through all of that let's you want to go over it together. Because it was so fun the first time right. And um, of course grade, same Do you have to have 75%. Unknown Speaker 24:52 To pass this class, you have to have 75% both practical and written and you You can see how we break down the percentages, you can see how we break down the letter grades. And the attendance is the same also, except for can't miss Unknown Speaker 25:12 six classes and then start handing in makeups. How many classes can you miss before you start? I see it too. I see a four I hear a four or Unknown Speaker 25:26 544 Unknown Speaker 25:29 because it's a two day week class. So you can after you've missed four classes, you have to start handing in makeups. Do I suggest that you miss four classes? Probably No, probably not. If you miss more classes, you'll definitely get behind. Unknown Speaker 25:52 And then where does your where we might do makeup if you miss class, in our folder in your folder. Where will you find your Written quiz if you miss class on a quiz day mark, and the Student Services Office, yeah. Unknown Speaker 26:09 Okay, are we good? Do I need to go? up again? Okay. Unknown Speaker 26:17 I have a question. Yeah, Unknown Speaker 26:18 related to both classes, I guess, on days that we do practical and written quizzes. Will. Since it's a three hour class, are we going to be covering new material on those days also, or will it just be quiz? Unknown Speaker 26:36 quiz done with the class for the day? Who knows the answer to that Unknown Speaker 26:41 new material? I'm sure. Yeah. Okay. Unknown Speaker 26:51 The Unknown Speaker 26:53 Miss quizzes and exams, the attendance makeups Unknown Speaker 27:00 The same as it is for foundations The only difference is foundations you can the six classes can eat you can miss for all the same fees apply all the same, everything applies. Unknown Speaker 27:12 All right, so if you're okay with that, I'm not going to go through that in detail because I feel like we just did and Unknown Speaker 27:22 this morning class let's look at its Unknown Speaker 27:27 course materials Unknown Speaker 27:31 and just because I have so many here, everybody syllabus says, nice one, tuesday thursday 1130 and then you have Mary Gunter with my email on the front page, okay, right. Unknown Speaker 27:48 Okay, um, course material Unknown Speaker 27:57 not as much in here as Unknown Speaker 28:01 foundations grades. And this first page Unknown Speaker 28:11 you have a muscle list. Unknown Speaker 28:15 These are the lists. This is the list of muscles that you're going to be going through in this class. They're arranged alphabetically, so we're not going to go through them alphabetically. So they're not really grouped that the way you'll see them. But here it is, here's the list. And it's kind of fun to just cross these muscles off as you go. And at the end of the term, you'll have them all crossed off and it feels really awesome. So AB Doctor pollicis longus tells you is a name Unknown Speaker 28:52 is it long or short? Unknown Speaker 28:55 Gone and guess what it does. Unknown Speaker 28:59 Objects thing AB ducks Unknown Speaker 29:01 yeah it AB ducks any date and policies tells you that it's done. So AB ducks the thumb so it goes like this. Unknown Speaker 29:11 And antonius doesn't really tell you much biceps brachii I every time you hear the word breaky, I was I sound like, Unknown Speaker 29:21 like a dinosaur arm like a dinosaur Unknown Speaker 29:24 and then biceps byes to substance short for so phallic which is towards the head biceps, two heads two origins. This muscle is a two headed muscle that lives on the arm. So it has two origins. And it's your inter biceps muscle. Unknown Speaker 29:46 And brachialis brachii. I brachialis still is in reference to a muscle in the arm because that breaky I word is in there. brachialis is little muscle. That's deep device. That's right. radialis was that sound like Unknown Speaker 30:04 arm to radius and the radius is on the outside of your forearm. Unknown Speaker 30:10 And then qwirkle brachialis goes from coracoid process down the arm. deltoid is in the shape of the Greek letter, delta. So that's deltoids extensor carpi radialis brevis longus extensor carpi radialis brevis. So we already know longest means long brevis sounds like abbreviated, short, short. extensor carpi radialis brevis Unknown Speaker 30:42 QRP wrists, extends the wrist on the radio side. So it goes like this over to the radio side and it extends the wrist. extensor carpi radialis there's a there's a long and a short Unknown Speaker 30:58 extensor carpi own Eris. Unknown Speaker 31:04 I'm the owner side Inexpensiveness also. So extensor carpi radialis longus and brevis is on the radio side. extensor carpi and Eris is on the owner side and they all extend the wrist extensor digitorum that's what that does. Extend your fingers, extend the digits, yep, digits fingers. Okay, so you can get an idea of what things do or where they are or how long they are, how big they are, how short they are. Just in the name flexor digitorum super fishy Alice and flexor digitorum profundus. So they both found what sounds like they flex the digits right. Flex fingers digits. One is superficial once closer to the surface. And then once deep In from the surface. So just by looking at the word flexor digitorum profundus, flexor digitorum superficialis, which one's going to be closer to the surface, because super Cialis and profundus sounds like it's profound, it's deep, so it's deeper. So if I peel off my skin, I'll see flexor digitorum superficialis. If I peel that back, I'll see performance. Unknown Speaker 32:31 It's weird. Unknown Speaker 32:33 It's a weird way to say that but, um, Unknown Speaker 32:38 but I saved everything. Unknown Speaker 32:40 So Unknown Speaker 32:43 that's it. I just wanted to throw a couple of Unknown Speaker 32:46 muscle names out there so that you can get an idea of how things are named. They're named according to location, size, action, shape Unknown Speaker 32:57 and so on. Unknown Speaker 33:00 Do you recommend a Unknown Speaker 33:02 poster that goes all of the muscles like that? So when we're working on people or whatever almer you can kind of keep, you know, identifying muscles when you touch them. You Unknown Speaker 33:12 can I love the muscle poster and I love the skeletal poster. They come in smaller sizes. When you're working at your massage table on somebody, you might not be able to see the words very clearly. But you can still look at the picture while you're working on somebody. And it's super helpful. And they're cool. Unknown Speaker 33:34 Yeah, you see them a lot in everybody's offices. Unknown Speaker 33:39 So and they're probably we probably have for sale. Unknown Speaker 33:48 Okay, Unknown Speaker 33:49 so uh, let's see here. Unknown Speaker 33:55 Hector Allison major pectoralis minor pectorals. Everybody knows where their factorials are, or most people factorials major and minor which one sounds bigger, major, major, minor sound smaller. Usually, minors are going to be deeper. And majors are going to be more superficial. Because usually, but in anatomy, there's always exceptions. Usually bigger muscles or more superficial, closer to the surface rhomboids major and minor, which one sounds bigger? Major rhomboids is the name of a shape, which is a rectangle on an angle. And that's what round boys look like. Unknown Speaker 34:40 There's a bigger one and the smaller one. These aren't superficial indeed the ones on top and ones below. Unknown Speaker 34:48 So you'll see that too. Unknown Speaker 34:51 Okay, so I'll move on from there. Unknown Speaker 34:57 So those are the lessons that we're going to be learning today. Find lists. Unknown Speaker 35:03 There's a chart on the next page muscle origin insertion action. If you like charts, you're in luck. You can chart out your muscles. If you don't like charts, that's fine. You don't have to. We can usually muscles are in groups. So if you have a group of like wrist flexors, say you can put wrist flexors or you muscle group, it could be elbow flexors, it could be shoulder flexors, it can be whatever. You can name, the muscle that flexes, let's just keep with wrist muscle group, so wrist flexors, a muscle that flexes the wrist, you can write down like flexor carpi ulnaris you can write down the origin of flexor carpi owners and then the insertion and then the actions because the wrist flexors, they flex his wrists but they also do other things. So you can write down all the actions and then You can write down multiple muscles that flex the wrist. Unknown Speaker 36:05 So it's a nice way to categorize things and see things come together. Do the joint movement chart, let me know if you use this often, I don't see people using this too much. But Unknown Speaker 36:20 if you like it, use it, by all means. Unknown Speaker 36:25 So I could put shoulder joints and the action of the shoulder joint, it flexes and it extends, and it AB ducks and it add ducks and then you could write out the muscles that all flex the shoulder and the muscles that all extend the shoulder and the muscles at all. add up the shoulder and all the muscles that add up to shoulder and then you can if you wanted to, you could write out the antagonists Unknown Speaker 36:50 of those actions. Unknown Speaker 36:56 I'm not even going to explain that right now. Because it's not gonna make any sense. So I'm going to save that explanation for later. Unknown Speaker 37:06 These are just things you're giving us. Unknown Speaker 37:07 These are things that you can use as tools. Unknown Speaker 37:12 If you don't want to use them, you don't have to. Unknown Speaker 37:15 They can nice muscle profiles the next page. This you will see keep this handy. If you miss classes this, a lot of the makeups are like do a muscle profile. And so the muscle profile is drawing up the muscle and using arrows to show the fiber direction of the muscle, and then you're going to describe that muscle palpated on yourself palpated on a partner write down the origin, insertion and action on the back side palpate the origin and the insertion form actions. And then Unknown Speaker 37:57 for each action of the muscle, you're going to live The synergist antagonists so this you will see if you Unknown Speaker 38:10 are we gonna have access to a cadaver video the cadaver to see what a muscle looks like when up direction Unknown Speaker 38:16 the fibers are going in. Yeah, I'm actually tried to play the cadaver video take at least once per section so that you can see what these muscles look like. Mm hmm. Unknown Speaker 38:32 And then your trial guide is a pretty good description of fiber options. Also the illustrations in there pretty good. Unknown Speaker 38:41 And feel like Unknown Speaker 38:47 Yes, yes, the answer is yes. cadaver video Unknown Speaker 38:54 we have a range of motion reference sheet. Unknown Speaker 38:58 I don't I'm not in the habit of repeating Bring the exact number of degrees for average range Unknown Speaker 39:06 of motion of each joint. So I usually Unknown Speaker 39:09 look at my Unknown Speaker 39:11 sheet here. So that's in here as well. FYI, and then review for written tests. So read quiz number one. Unknown Speaker 39:24 I love it when people look at this and they're like, Hey, I was looking through the list and we've ever went through superficial What does that mean? They'll be like, Oh great. Unknown Speaker 39:34 Let's go you know, let's talk about that. And so I love it when people look at this in case I miss anything I normally don't. But I love it because then I know that people are utilizing this. So if you want to know what's on the quiz, look at these review Unknown Speaker 39:53 sheets. So number one, it looks like a lot kind of is Unknown Speaker 40:03 And then written quiz number two, that's we're gonna get into muscles. Quiz number two is very much going to look like what the rest of your quizzes will be. Quiz number one is just kind of like this quiz about a overview of everything. Unknown Speaker 40:23 And then quiz number three, and it's gonna be on a lot more muscles than quiz number two. was number two is just like a couple of things. 123456 quiz number three is 1-234-567-8910 11 mifos. Unknown Speaker 40:43 So Unknown Speaker 40:46 there's number four is a lot of muscles also to four. Yeah, like 12. So, quiz number five is six muscles. So we add So we start with like about six muscles. And then we gained A lot of muscles, and then we end our last quizzes only on six muscles. But it's still a lot like Unknown Speaker 41:08 it's a lot. But it's so doable now that we've divided this into two terms. Unknown Speaker 41:15 And really I think can nice is all about repetition. And you have to say these things out loud. You can't really Unknown Speaker 41:24 cruise through kinesis without practicing Unknown Speaker 41:29 these words out loud Unknown Speaker 41:32 and Unknown Speaker 41:36 reviewing over and over and over. Unknown Speaker 41:40 All right, so how do you feel about that? Unknown Speaker 41:46 I'm grateful. Yeah. When we tell people that it's two terms now they're like next. Unknown Speaker 41:56 I think it's rather slow, but I'm trying to train my brain. Unknown Speaker 42:04 I think it's nice for learners to have more time Unknown Speaker 42:08 with this information. Unknown Speaker 42:12 All right, so any questions on the filibuster course materials? I believe. Unknown Speaker 42:21 Are we ready to start? Denise, do you need a minute? Do you want to stand up and stretch out? Okay, Unknown Speaker 42:29 two minutes. Unknown Speaker 42:31 not used to sitting for this. Unknown Speaker 42:34 Hard to say, I know. I hear you Unknown Speaker 42:38 don't have to know muscle origin and searching and action on our boards. Yeah, so it'd be very smart for us to really utilize this. Unknown Speaker 42:47 If you like charts. Sure. Some people will do flashcards instead of charts. Some people do flashcards and charts. I like Unknown Speaker 42:57 a little bit of everything. Unknown Speaker 43:01 Yeah, whatever works best for you. Unknown Speaker 43:12 I'm excited to learn all this. Yeah, it's fine. Unknown Speaker 43:17 And I'm excited to get a mark or mark up my kids. Unknown Speaker 43:20 Yeah, kids like to practice studying. Unknown Speaker 43:24 For sure. Unknown Speaker 43:52 I really appreciate you that Unknown Speaker 43:55 sort of a thing in this game. I appreciate it. Unknown Speaker 44:01 I Unknown Speaker 44:07 feel like for me, Unknown Speaker 44:13 I'm gonna go grab my tow guy and I'll be right back and we'll get started. Unknown Speaker 44:25 I would love to try Reiki and magical. Unknown Speaker 44:32 Reiki everyone feels a little bit differently sometimes people will like if you're in pain it takes pain levels down. Unknown Speaker 44:39 If you are Unknown Speaker 44:42 it definitely relaxing. Unknown Speaker 44:47 Healing, not just on like the muscles in the body but the the spirit. Yeah, and your emotion. And then some people feel like tingles, some people feel lots of heat and other people feel Like it traveling in your body? Yeah. Just sort of depends on how sensitive you are as a person. Unknown Speaker 45:05 Yeah, I feel Unknown Speaker 45:09 like I get people Unknown Speaker 45:12 like that are saying Actually, yeah. Unknown Speaker 45:16 And specifically, like, I don't like it as much as I should like, Unknown Speaker 45:22 sometimes I'm like, I have a lot of lucid dreams. So it was like part of it. And it gets a lot, almost to the point where I'm like, trying to ask the people in my dreams, like, what's the point of this dream? But I always get so Unknown Speaker 45:38 excited that I remembered that I lose the control of it. Unknown Speaker 45:43 I have like, Dream books. So be like, Oh, what is this craziness about raccoon and Unknown Speaker 45:49 by dreaming that Unknown Speaker 45:51 you know, how is it that I understand like 14 languages that I've never spoke before? Yeah. I'm I'm into that. Unknown Speaker 46:04 It seems really important what what does it symbolize like look it up online and yeah Unknown Speaker 46:19 definitely an impact so I pick up on lots of people's energy Unknown Speaker 46:36 definitely want to get a post it up Unknown Speaker 46:39 when your birthday on a calf question your second tip is Unknown Speaker 46:49 how about you? On September 1. mites on the six, Virgo sign Virgo Unknown Speaker 46:58 and my partner the Virgo Wow, yeah. Yeah. Unknown Speaker 47:12 All righty. I would usually have panned out Unknown Speaker 47:19 for you. And it's really just a way for us all to keep on track and be on the same page. If you don't want to use this, you do not have to. If you don't want it, you can leave it on your desk and I'll collect it and Unknown Speaker 47:42 and I usually have a handout per section that we do. Unknown Speaker 47:48 Um, Unknown Speaker 47:51 just a nice way to do it. It just helps me keep track of where I'm at. So, so this is for the person that Not here. I guess I'll actually use it. Um, so we're gonna just go through what we're supposed to on today's schedule. So the Overview The course, intro to kidneys, positions, directions terminology. That's that's mainly what comes handled that I just gave you, regions of the body bones and palpation. And Unknown Speaker 48:28 say, Unknown Speaker 48:31 we start ready to start. Yeah, we start with anatomical position. That's a great place for everybody to start from because then we're all starting from the same page in the same place. anatomical position is really not that much different than how we stand normally, except for normally, our palms aren't face out like they are in this illustration and remember We're closed. So, anatomical position palms or face forward, Iser, forward, head and neck, our forward feet or forward, everything's just forward, including our palms instead of just like this is how we normally stand. That way. We all have this same starting point. So if somebody's like, well on the medial side of the forearm, nine, I'm like, Okay, I gotta go into anatomical position, because medial is here. If I'm not standing in anatomical position, and I'm just hanging out, I don't know what medial is. anatomical position, this is always going to be media. This is always going to be the midline. This is going to be medial. This is medial. And so it's just our starting point. We all start from the same place to meet feels like the inside Yes and no closer media and I'm going to give you the definition of medial and it's medial is something that's closer to the midline Unknown Speaker 50:14 and that's coming up under directions and positions. So Unknown Speaker 50:21 anatomical position, okay? Unknown Speaker 50:30 If I go through something and you're like, I don't know what to write down, you can, you can let me know. Um, Unknown Speaker 50:40 and all Oh, just one thing. Unknown Speaker 50:44 It says tgb key 20 this is your trail guide book, and it's on page 20. So you can find this in your book on page 20. If you look at the reading assignment for today, it's everything. Unknown Speaker 51:01 an intro guy, it's page one through 1013 through 18. I think you're 2232 through 33 you're like, dang, that's a lot of reading. It's all pictures. Okay, which is great. So, um, it's all pictures. So we're just going to go through the trail guide. We're going to start in chapter one. And we're just going to move through some of this general information. All right, so, page. Yeah, page 20. Well, that's interesting. This is technically on page 19. Unknown Speaker 51:40 And then region of the body is on page 20. Yeah, okay. All right. So regions of the body. Unknown Speaker 51:53 We can classify, break, break up or break down the body into different areas. regions, we can break it down into different systems. So when we look at the body regionally, it's just like, here's a specific area. Here's a specific area, or here's a specific region. So all of these different areas are named our niche names. So we have these regions of the body. There. You'll look at some of them and you'll be like, yeah, totally, that makes sense. I'm familiar with that. You'll look at some of these other ones. And you'll be like, what, I've never heard that before. I still look at some of these and I'm like, I can never remember girl, front or the back of the calf because I never use those terms. But some people use them all the time. And I use some of these terms quite often. And then some of them I'll just never use except for on this day. We're going through regions. Unknown Speaker 52:57 So some of them are a little more obvious. And others. When do you have to know that region's? Yes. So if you have your tour Unknown Speaker 53:12 if you have your Student Workbook, there's probably a picture in this book without any of these names. If you don't have the workbook, take a piece of paper, pick a blank piece of paper, cover up the names, and see if you can write in all the names. And then you'll know where to focus. If you're like, Oh, I can't remember what some of these are. And you know what to practice. If you can go through, cover up the words, name all the regions, you're good, don't spend three hours learning these regions, you're going to need that time to study other things, but become familiar with them Unknown Speaker 53:53 and have a handle on Unknown Speaker 53:56 most of them. So Unknown Speaker 54:00 For instance, everybody kind of knows this region of the body as as what do you know this as your pectoral region or your packs. Its pectoral region because it's where your pectoral muscles are and then we can just say pecs. So that's one that's pretty familiar. And everybody kind of knows where your cervical region is, what does that sound like? neck, say service and it's Unknown Speaker 54:34 cervicals your cervical region, why is this your cervical region? Unknown Speaker 54:41 Do you know why? Because your brainstem Unknown Speaker 54:44 and your brainstem is above your cervical region. And these are our this is these are our cervical vertebrae. This is our cervical region. Here's some more there vertebrae Do you know what this region is? Unknown Speaker 55:01 thoracic region, thoracic vertebrae, guess what? This region is a lumbar lumbar lumbar region. Guess what? These are lumbar vertebrae. Unknown Speaker 55:12 So, Unknown Speaker 55:15 our what's the name for shoulder blade, Unknown Speaker 55:20 scapula scapular region. Unknown Speaker 55:25 So these, these are pretty kind of like self explanatory. They become really obvious after you look at them a few times. We have our sacral bone right here, below our lumbar region. So this is our sacral region. We have our gluteal muscles living on our hip bones. Pretty big muscles. So this is our gluteal region. Unknown Speaker 55:55 Um, our pelvic bones or hip bones Unknown Speaker 56:01 It's there, like the pelvic region Really? Here's our pelvic region. Here's our gluteal region, there's not that big of a difference because our gluteal muscles live on our pelvic bones. Unknown Speaker 56:14 So if I said to you, what is this? And you said pelvic region or Ibiza gluteal region, Unknown Speaker 56:20 I say like, yeah, you're right, you're right. Unknown Speaker 56:23 So where's the gluteal end in the pelvis began. Unknown Speaker 56:28 Um, Unknown Speaker 56:31 I can make some money. I don't know if I'll be right. And I don't know if it'll ever Unknown Speaker 56:40 come up. But I say, my gluteal region ends right here by gluteal fold because that's where the glutes end and that's where the fight begins. And then my gluteal region Unknown Speaker 56:57 was here. Unknown Speaker 56:59 And what Without blue your muscles and then here's the pelvic region, which would be like right here on this side. So where does it end? Where to begin with question? I'd say this is all pelvic region. And then this is gluteal. region. There one, but they're very, I mean, the glutes Unknown Speaker 57:20 are on the pelvic bones. What about the scapular and that acromial What's the difference between those two, Unknown Speaker 57:27 so your scapula, your shoulder blade, is our whole scapular region. The End portion of the scapula Unknown Speaker 57:39 is is the acromion. So the acromion is just this part right here and this is the chromeo region. This whole thing is scapular region. This is like shoulder region in my brain. This specific spot on the scapula is the bromance with the appropriate region. I do not focus very much on these regions. But it's nice for you to become more familiar with them so that you can go to that region and then you can pinpoint even more specifically a bone or a muscle or structure. Unknown Speaker 58:20 So, you know, you have the two indentations just above the gluteal region is that in the sacral area, Unknown Speaker 58:27 those two indentations are like the dimples. Yeah, yeah, so those dimples are Unknown Speaker 58:37 the pelvic bone. there's a there's a little bump on the pelvic bone. And then there's some muscle layers and then some muscle overlapping and then that creates that little dimple. So those dimples are part of the pelvic bone themselves. And isn't it? It's right next door to the safe ground. So is it sacral region or pelvic region? I mean, I guess technically I would say pelvic region because those dimples are on the pelvic bones. But this pelvic bones join up with the sacrum. So it's not like you're never going to be like, you know, like, here's this line and here's this line of starch another region, it's not going to be like that. It's just become familiar with the different regions around the body. So that I can be like, let's go gluteal region, and then let's help a gluteus maximus. Unknown Speaker 59:31 And then I'll give you more information than that. Unknown Speaker 59:34 But you will see a couple quick questions that say, Unknown Speaker 59:38 What's the name of the region Unknown Speaker 59:42 where we have Unknown Speaker 59:45 seven cervical vertebrae, you're gonna be like, Oh, that's the back or the cervical region or, or a quiz question might be like, Unknown Speaker 59:57 above the sacral region. Lower thoracic region, what's the region, lumbar region? What's the name of the region and where we have our lower jaw and that's going to be the mandibular region. So cranial region pretty easy, right? Unknown Speaker 1:00:19 Sir cervical region, neck, a chromeo region that's not super easy. That's that little spot that we're going to learn about. scapular region. That's pretty easy shoulder blade, thoracic, upper back, Unknown Speaker 1:00:35 lumbar region, low back sacral region, where our sacral bone is held at region hips, glial region, full thickness gluteal region, not a huge difference. Unknown Speaker 1:00:51 hog lineal that's probably a new term for most of you. Unknown Speaker 1:00:56 Have lineal is behind me. That's what that Means, or like me, but political specifically is behind any, you'll see a political muscle, you'll see a political nerd, you'll see a political blood vessel. And this whole area is like an area of caution. So we want to be really careful in this space, but we can also work there because there's muscles, political region, go ahead. If somebody Unknown Speaker 1:01:27 is knees hyperextend is that in the popliteal? Is that like a muscle cause or is that a nerve? Cause Unknown Speaker 1:01:35 it's a joint. Unknown Speaker 1:01:37 Yeah, it's usually a joint thing. And then if it's a joint thing, those muscles will accommodate that. So it also becomes a muscular thing. Unknown Speaker 1:01:46 And Cyril Unknown Speaker 1:01:49 behind back of calf, I can never remember that. I'll ask you. Everyone's all worried. Unknown Speaker 1:01:58 sorrow is posterior. Unknown Speaker 1:02:03 carpel region Where's that? Right here wrist your wrist, digit digital region, you'll never hear me say that again. Sure digits or your fingers, I never say let's go into different region and then the dorsal surface or the dorsal region of the hand. Unknown Speaker 1:02:25 If the backside, Unknown Speaker 1:02:28 the backside, Unknown Speaker 1:02:31 anatomically, that's the side. Unknown Speaker 1:02:34 The dorsal region of your feet is here. Oh, Unknown Speaker 1:02:41 because we stand on the palms that our feet, the plantar surface Unknown Speaker 1:02:46 is this surface of our feet as we stand on the palms of our feet. The polymer surface of the hand is anatomically it's in the front Palmer dorsal Unknown Speaker 1:03:03 So phallic towards the head. Unknown Speaker 1:03:08 Number one, I said biceps status was short for symbolic the balance towards the head. Unknown Speaker 1:03:15 And so there's that word in full. And Unknown Speaker 1:03:21 stop that for a moment. Do you have any questions or comments or thoughts? You want to share? Unknown Speaker 1:03:32 You don't really have to write any of this down. You can be like regions see page 20 laps, take notes on this. Unknown Speaker 1:03:39 Can you play on this skeleton where the dimples would be? Unknown Speaker 1:03:42 Yeah, right here. Okay, yep. Right. So right Unknown Speaker 1:03:46 now outside of the sacrum. Unknown Speaker 1:03:49 Yep. Okay. Yep. Unknown Speaker 1:03:52 So if people that don't have those dimples, take notes more likely to be because of the thickness of like the skin and the fat RG think that their hips are closer or aligned differently? Could be Unknown Speaker 1:04:06 well, all of it, okay, more more dense layers of connective tissue or, or muscles. And some of some of our pelvic bones are rotating in one way more so than another way. And that's going to shift this. And some people's dimples are just more obvious than others. Yeah. Unknown Speaker 1:04:33 So it could be a little bit of all those things combined. Unknown Speaker 1:04:39 Um, facial region. Unknown Speaker 1:04:43 And then the other facial region are mandible or lower jaw bones pretty big region. So it's it gets its own region, its mandibular region. Super supraclavicular Supra. Unknown Speaker 1:05:00 Supra is superior to clavicular region clavicle so above the clavicle is the supraclavicular region I that's another one I never say except for Unknown Speaker 1:05:14 right now. I'm pectoral we did axillary Unknown Speaker 1:05:20 armpits. axillary region Unknown Speaker 1:05:26 is your armpit which sounds drum. brachial region is arm. Anytime you hear, brachial. Unknown Speaker 1:05:34 You think arm. Unknown Speaker 1:05:38 Just upper arm, not forearm, arm. This is our arm, okay? This is our forearm, okay. Unknown Speaker 1:05:49 If you say upper arm, I'm going to say oh like appear. If you say lower arm, I'm going to come down above the elbow. Unknown Speaker 1:06:02 So, brachial arm axillary armpit, pectoral packs chest supraclavicular above the clavicle. mandibular region is your mandible. And then abdominal region pretty obvious Unknown Speaker 1:06:23 antecubital and cubital humeral elbow antecubital breath of elbow, and I was I could that's another one I can never remember. And then I was like Auntie anterior anterior oboe da took me like 15 years to figure that out. Front. Unknown Speaker 1:06:48 side Unknown Speaker 1:06:51 of elbow antecubital Unknown Speaker 1:06:55 little bite sized elbow. Unknown Speaker 1:07:00 Domino just talk about England. So we have this inguinal ligament, and it goes from your hip bone over to your pubic bone. So that's your inguinal region. Unknown Speaker 1:07:15 On this skeleton, Unknown Speaker 1:07:22 markers ligament goes from the hip or to the pubic bone, a little region, even a ligament Unknown Speaker 1:07:32 and Unknown Speaker 1:07:34 your hip crease. So that space right there Unknown Speaker 1:07:40 for an abduction, what was that ligament do, what does that ligament do? It is there Unknown Speaker 1:07:51 for muscles to attach to Unknown Speaker 1:07:57 and it's there for stability. Unknown Speaker 1:08:01 And ligaments Connect bone to bone. And so it's connecting the ilium does a pubic bone. And then it's also serving as an attachment for Unknown Speaker 1:08:13 a lot of us. Unknown Speaker 1:08:17 So if you have tight hip flexors that would be in the inguinal region. Unknown Speaker 1:08:21 Your tight hip flexors. Yeah. Yeah. Unknown Speaker 1:08:27 So you said ligaments Connect bone to bone. Yep. And then what are joints in relation to that? Unknown Speaker 1:08:36 I'll connect muscle to bone. So ligaments Unknown Speaker 1:08:40 everywhere where you have two bones joining like the humerus to the owner, or the radius or to the owner. Unknown Speaker 1:08:50 or wherever, wherever you have two bones connecting or joining. There's going to be a ligament connecting this phone to this phone. There's going to be another ligament from this phone to the stump so that it reinforces and helps stabilize joints, and then the move and then when I have a muscle, I have a muscle that starts here, that muscle is going to cross this joint, and then it's going to end below that joint. And if it's here, it's going to allow me to plus, it's that muscle is in the back of my arm, and it goes from here and across his elbow, it's going to extend Unknown Speaker 1:09:31 so the joint is that connection and the ligament is what is Unknown Speaker 1:09:35 connecting, and the ligaments of the ligament connects bone to bone to reinforce and stabilize that joints. And then the muscles are going to create the movements because there's going to be a muscle crossing this joint here to allow us to flex there's going to be a muscle in the back of this joint to allow us to extend so the muscle belly Unknown Speaker 1:10:01 provides the the force and the energy for our muscles for bones and joints to move. Unknown Speaker 1:10:08 And a joint is anywhere that we bend. Essentially, Unknown Speaker 1:10:11 a joint can be anywhere that you've bent. Sure, however, there are joints, like in our head connecting all of our cranium bones, but they're not bending. Unknown Speaker 1:10:23 So they don't move. So there are some joints that provide little to no movement, like our cranial bones so that they can help protect our brain. We don't really want our Unknown Speaker 1:10:38 cranial bones to move around a lot. So those are all these are all joints between all these bones, Unknown Speaker 1:10:45 but there's no movement. Okay? Unknown Speaker 1:10:53 What does that look like when you have like an answer? Is that where the stuff and yeah yeah, cuz Those cranial bones haven't fully formed so that their heads can Unknown Speaker 1:11:06 shape themselves in a way that they can move through the canal. Yeah, yeah. Unknown Speaker 1:11:13 Hammer. Did I answer your question? Unknown Speaker 1:11:15 I'm just kind of trying to figure out exactly what the definition of a joint Unknown Speaker 1:11:19 is. Okay. So don't suppose we're going to spend Thursday on joints. Okay, cool. All the joints and it'll make so much sense. Okay. So if we could just let that go for a second. I will answer all your questions about joints. Unknown Speaker 1:11:38 And Unknown Speaker 1:11:41 but let me just finish by saying it's where two bones meet. That's where two bones come together. And I'll just leave it at that. So cute little Unknown Speaker 1:11:53 cornerback of elbow Unknown Speaker 1:11:56 antecubital from France Do we go through all of pubic bones? Who's our This is where our pubic bones are. We have one that goes like this. And when it goes like this, and they're joined together by disk, their pubic region, Unknown Speaker 1:12:14 our femur is our longest heaviest bone in the body Unknown Speaker 1:12:21 is our femoral region. Unknown Speaker 1:12:23 What's the difference in pubic bone between male and female? Unknown Speaker 1:12:26 What's the difference? between male and female pubic bone? It's Unknown Speaker 1:12:30 anything most difference in space or anything? Unknown Speaker 1:12:34 No. Unknown Speaker 1:12:36 You have hormones that you produce that allows for more space between the pubic bone joints. When you're Unknown Speaker 1:12:46 pregnant and or delivering. Unknown Speaker 1:12:48 you produce hormones to allow that to widen, Unknown Speaker 1:12:51 but no like, in general, pelvic bowls. Goals are a little wider on females and less than one On males, and but the budget of bones in the shape is pretty much the same. Unknown Speaker 1:13:08 So for Morrow region, Unknown Speaker 1:13:12 patella, kneecap, patella region, what's behind the patellar region on the backside of the knee opens. Unknown Speaker 1:13:22 To probably do whatever you want to say, sometimes you'll say something. You might go Yeah, pop up video and I'll go Yeah, problem deal. I'm not trying to correct you, we all say things differently. Unknown Speaker 1:13:36 Curl friends and pass path. Unknown Speaker 1:13:40 And then dorsal surface is the on the feet is the top surface because we stand on the palms of our feet. This is the dorsal surface of my hands. And then I look down at the top of my foot. That's the dorsal surface of my Unknown Speaker 1:13:54 butt's. Unknown Speaker 1:13:56 So become familiar with these terms. Like I said, you could just take a piece of paper in your book and cover up these words and see if you can fill in where that line is pointing to. And then you'll know where you stand. If you're like, wow, I don't know any of this. Practice it, say the words out loud, go back and put another blank piece of paper on. And then you'll be able to fill in more and more. Hey, that's it. And we're going to move on. Unknown Speaker 1:14:27 And Unknown Speaker 1:14:30 kind of just go into the order of your book instead of the order of this handout that I gave you, but we'll go through all of it. And I'm noticing that it's Unknown Speaker 1:14:41 Is it time for a break? Are y'all needing a break? Unknown Speaker 1:14:46 Yeah, okay, well, we finished 232 Unknown Speaker 1:14:49 Well, 215 we take only one break. if that's okay with us. Yeah, I'm sorry. If I ramble on, and you're like, oh my god. Josh Hamrick, like, Unknown Speaker 1:15:06 you can make a Unknown Speaker 1:15:09 noise with your body. And Unknown Speaker 1:15:12 I have a question that may not be super relevant, but I'm gonna be so curious. All right, so I'm looking at the femoral region. And I know that like, we've got the femoral artery, and we've got the tibia as the bone and that kind of stuff. How come there are other regions? Like, with the pearl, we call that bone, the tibia? And I don't know that there's a major artery that goes through there, but is there a reason why in certain parts, the names are more related, and then other parts? They're more arbitrary, if that makes any? Yeah, that does make sense. Unknown Speaker 1:15:47 So, um, I know like, why isn't there a fibula region? Why isn't there a tibial region? Yeah, yeah, that's because those are just bones right? There's two bones. And the leg. Yeah. Okay. Um, there's only one fibo and and that's the femur. So this is the memorial region. Unknown Speaker 1:16:08 So, um, Unknown Speaker 1:16:11 it's a good question. I don't have an answer to that. Sometimes it feels weird. And sometimes anatomy makes complete sense. And I will say that I have to look up Unknown Speaker 1:16:25 what these mean? So that I can answer your question better. Because I'm guessing it means something like front of leg. And I'm guessing that this means back of cat. But I have to look that up. Unknown Speaker 1:16:41 Ah, Unknown Speaker 1:16:43 yeah. anatomies. Interesting. And then if you look up, if you do look up what words mean? It'll usually like, Oh, that Unknown Speaker 1:16:51 makes sense, Unknown Speaker 1:16:53 because a lot of this is coming from Latin and or Greek. And sorry, go ahead. I was just saying Sterling Unknown Speaker 1:17:00 tibula I don't know. I'm like, picking up on us like Unknown Speaker 1:17:05 you're picking up in a slight way. Unknown Speaker 1:17:06 It. I don't know if I can see possibly are they? Unknown Speaker 1:17:11 Yeah, so let me look. Unknown Speaker 1:17:16 Let's see if it's in here. If it's not in here, I'll go grab my dictionary. Unknown Speaker 1:17:22 And I will say, sir Oh, Unknown Speaker 1:17:26 oh, I just as a pronunciation key. Um Unknown Speaker 1:17:32 It doesn't give you what it means. That's funny because Platon I mean it's black blatner. It's Latin. Oh, Latin. Yeah. Unknown Speaker 1:17:41 Corollas belonging to the legs equivalent equivalent to cruel system of Cronos plague. from the 1590s to the 1600s. That's the origin of it. Unknown Speaker 1:17:56 Okay, that was curl. Yeah. Okay. Unknown Speaker 1:18:01 Girl Unknown Speaker 1:18:02 Yeah, give it without money. Unknown Speaker 1:18:05 Um, Unknown Speaker 1:18:07 let's take a break. Oh, let me finish my sentence. Medical dictionary used house five bucks, really fun and easy to look things up and you're like, Unknown Speaker 1:18:17 Oh, that makes sense. Now. Is that the same thing as like a physicians? Desk Reference or is it just a dictionary? Unknown Speaker 1:18:24 Just a dictionary? So 51 Let's be back at Unknown Speaker 1:18:30 five, six after six after. Okay. Okay.