By the end of this session, medical students will understand the basic concepts of human anatomy, including anatomical terminology, body planes, structural organization, and major organ systems.
By the end of studying head anatomy, medical students will be able to identify and describe the bones, muscles, blood supply, cranial nerves, and key functional regions of the head.
By the end of this session, medical students should be able to identify and describe the bones, joints, muscles, vessels, and nerves of the upper limb. They should understand their functional relationships.
By the end of this session, medical students should be able to describe the anatomical boundaries, fascial layers, major vessels, nerves, lymphatics, and clinically relevant spaces of the neck.
By the end of this session, medical students should be able to describe the boundaries, compartments, and major structures of the thorax, explain the anatomical relationships of thoracic organs.
By the end of this session, medical students will be able to describe the anatomical organization of the abdomen, identify key structures and their relationships, understand peritoneal spaces, vascular supply, and innervation.
By the end of studying pelvic anatomy, medical students should be able to identify the major bones, muscles, vessels, and nerves of the pelvis, describe their spatial relationships, explain key differences between male and female pelvis.
By the end of this session, medical students should be able to identify and describe the major bones, joints, muscles, vessels, and nerves of the lower limb, explain their functional relationships in movement.
By the end of this session, medical students should be able to identify and describe the major muscles, bones, joints, ligaments, nerves, and blood supply of the back, explain their functional relationships.
By the end of this session, medical students should be able to identify and describe normal microscopic structure of human tissues and organs, correlate histological features with physiological function.
By the end of this module, medical students should be able to describe the key stages of human embryonic development, including fertilization, gastrulation, organogenesis, and fetal growth.
Anatomy leaps to life with imaging! X-ray, CT, and MRI unveil hidden structures, guide procedures, and diagnose disease. Explore their strengths and weaknesses to become a master diagnostician.
Identify the anatomical positions, surfaces, and key landmarks of organs across all systems; distinguish structural divisions and functional zones; recognize supporting ligaments, mesenteries, and peritoneal reflections; understand major vascular and lymphatic supply.