Vestibular rehabilitation (VR), also known as vestibular rehabilitation therapy (VRT), is a specialized form of physical therapy used to treat vestibular disorders or symptoms, characterized by dizziness, vertigo, and trouble with balance, posture, and vision. These primary symptoms can result in secondary symptoms such as nausea, fatigue, and lack of concentration. All symptoms of vestibular dysfunction can significantly decrease quality of life, introducing mental-emotional issues such as anxiety and depression, and greatly impair an individual, causing them to become more sedentary. Decreased mobility results in weaker muscles, less flexible joints, and worsened stamina, as well as decreased social and occupational activity. Vestibular rehabilitation therapy can be used in conjunction with cognitive behavioral therapy in order to reduce anxiety and depression resulting from an individual's change in lifestyle. (Wikipedia).
Now, a look at the principles of the function of the esophagus
From playlist Acute Care Surgery
In this continuing look at the management of acute surgical conditions of the esophagus we take a look at the anatomy of the esophagus.
From playlist Acute Care Surgery
Introduction to this lecture series on perioperative management.
From playlist Perioperative Patient Care _ Demo
Just a mention of the physiology of the abdominal wall.
From playlist Acute Care Surgery
A3 Anatomy (continued) and Physiology
A look at the arterial supply and venous and lymphatic drainage of the appendix, as well as the physiology of the appendix
From playlist Acute Care Surgery
Complete Virtual Reality Course For Beginners In VR development | Session 06 | #C | #programming
Don’t forget to subscribe! This is a Complete Virtual Reality Course for Beginners In VR development. In this course, we are using C# and the Unity game engine. This course has already been taught to professional software developers new to VR development. This video series provides a mec
From playlist Virtual Reality Course For Beginners
Panel: Frontiers in Technologies
From the October 24th mediaX Sensing and Tracking for 3D Narratives Conference, this panel consisting of Jay Borenstein a Lecturer in Computer Science at Stanford University, Vincent Chang a SR. Engineer with ITRI, Nick Haber a Post Doc Scholar with the Wall Lab at Stanford University and
From playlist Sensing and Tracking for 3D Narratives
Check out Nat's video (I'm in it!) -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGLsbo2eoyE PRE-ORDER BRAINCRAFT MERCH! https://store.dftba.com/collections/braincraft SUBSCRIBE to BrainCraft! 👉 http://ow.ly/rt5IE My Twitter https://twitter.com/nessyhill | Instagram https://instagram.com/nessyhil
From playlist The Best of BrainCraft
Learning movement and relearning after stroke
Dr. Amy Bastian of John Hopkins explains normal and abnormal motor learning and how we can use this information to improve rehabilitation for individuals with neurological damage. Human motor learning depends on a suite of brain mechanisms that are driven by different signals and operate
From playlist Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Talk on inguinal Hernias.
From playlist Topics in General Surgery and Critical Care
The complications of hernias and hernia repair surgery.
From playlist Acute Care Surgery
Why Getting Dizzy is Kinda Like Temporary Brain Damage
PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateOKAY ↓ More info and sources below ↓ You can check out Google's Science Journal app at http://g.co/ScienceJournal We’ve all gotten dizzy before… but have you ever gotten WEIRD DIZ
From playlist Be Smart - LATEST EPISODES!
We Don’t Know Why Astronauts Get Motion Sick
A majority of modern astronauts experience any one of a suite of symptoms scientists collectively call Space Motion Sickness, or SMS. But despite knowing about it for nearly as long as humans have gone into space, we still don't know exactly what causes it, or how to predict which astronau
From playlist SciShow Space
The Best Science-Based Chest Workout for Mass & Symmetry
When it comes to the “best chest workout”, it really comes down to choosing exercises that allow symmetrical growth in the upper chest, middle chest, and lower chest while still providing overall mass to your chest. If your chest workout is unbalanced and favours one portion of your chest
From playlist BEST SCIENCE-BASED WORKOUT ROUTINES
Hearing (Part 3) || Sensation & Perception (PSY 286)
This is a recorded version of a livestream distance learning lecture, recorded during the coronavirus pandemic of 2020. Topics include: the ear and cochlea. I claim no ownership over any music, videos, or advertisements shown herein. All were used in a manner allowed through Educational
From playlist Sensation & Perception Lectures
Why Do We Like Being Scared? - with Brendan Walker
Humans have an odd relationship with fear and pleasure. We seek out horror movies, rollercoasters and extreme experiences on a weirdly regular basis - but why? Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe Thrill-seekers will attest to the rush we can get from being hur
From playlist Discourses
Hearing & Balance: Crash Course Anatomy & Physiology #17
Crash Course Anatomy & Physiology continues the journey through sensory systems with a look at how your sense of hearing works. We follow sounds as they work their way into the ear where they are registered and transformed into action potentials. This mechanism not only helps you hear but
From playlist Anatomy & Physiology
Intermediate Gym Workout with dumbbells - Cardio & Strength
Here are two ways you normally don't see dumbbells used - with step ups and for push ups. Have a go :) This is not an easy exercise!
From playlist Gym
Action || Cognitive Neuroscience (PSY 315W)
This is a recorded version of a livestream distance learning lecture, recorded during the coronavirus pandemic of 2020. Topics include: motor processes, basal ganglia, cerebellum, huntington's disease, parkinson's disease, motor neurons, reflexes, machine-brain interaction. I claim no ow
From playlist Cognitive Neuroscience Lectures
10b Data Analytics: Spatial Continuity
Lecture on the impact of spatial continuity to motivate characterization and modeling of spatial continuity.
From playlist Data Analytics and Geostatistics