Clinical.neuroanatomy.made.ridiculously.simple..pdf
Clinical Neuroanatomy Made Ridiculously Simple won’t make you a neurologist. But it will stop you from crying in the library. It turns a terrifying subject into a solvable puzzle. If you want to pass your exam—and actually understand why a patient walks funny after a stroke—spend the $30 on this book.
The subtitle says "Clinical" for a reason. This isn't pure anatomy for anatomy’s sake. Clinical.Neuroanatomy.Made.Ridiculously.Simple..pdf
However, I don’t have access to that file’s contents, nor can I retrieve or reproduce the book itself. What I can do is create an original, engaging short story inspired by the and the spirit of the book — about a struggling medical student who discovers a surprisingly simple way to understand the brain’s most complex pathways. If you want to pass your exam—and actually
Sal held up his hand, fingers splayed. “Memory trick. On your face: Olfactory (I) is your nose. Optic (II) is your eyes. The rest?” He touched his eye movement, then his cheek, then his jaw. “Three for eye moves (III, IV, VI). Three for face sensation and chewing (V, VII—taste, actually—fine, it’s messy). The point is, they’re not twelve separate wires. They’re twelve delivery trucks leaving the ‘Brainstem Depot.’” However, I don’t have access to that file’s