If somebody fractures the surgical head of their Humerus
The axillary nerve innervates the deltoid and teres minor muscles, and these muscles are responsible for flexion and lateral rotation of the arm...

If somebody fractures the surgical head of their Humerus
The axillary nerve innervates the deltoid and teres minor muscles, and these muscles are responsible for flexion and lateral rotation of the arm...

did I mention long term follow up and sniffing out of surgical complications before they kill the patients? easy peasy babyhell don't forget diagnosis and post-surgical care

the nurses with lots of intensive care (ICU) experience were SCHOOLING the new Resident Doctors...

Impressive, we're on that unit right now.Surgery isn't debugging...
It is more like opening your CPU, looking inside for broken parts and fixing them...
"Debugging someone's body" is more to do with Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, and that is much HARDER than Medical School...My first Degree was in Biochemistry with a Specialization in Molecular Biology and Biotechnology...
If you think Medical School is hard, FORGET about Biochemisty/Molecular Biotechnology...That shyt takes MORE thinking than Medical School (which is 90% PURE memorization)...
Molecular Biotechnology and Biochemistry you need to actually UNDERSTAND before you can even begin to memorize...
In medical school, you are told the heart is the mediastinum...You don't need to understand that fact, you just have to memorize it...Pure memorization...
If somebody fractures the surgical head of their Humerus, there may be damage to the axillary nerve and posterior circumflex humeral artery...The axillary nerve innervates the deltoid and teres minor muscles, and these muscles are responsible for flexion and lateral rotation of the arm...
So, if you know somebody has a fracture of the surgical head of the humerus, you may expect that he or she will not be able to elevate or laterally rotate the arm...
How will you perform surgery? You will be taught which area of the arm to cut through so you access the humerus...If you have a good memory and dexterity then how the heck is this "hard"...?
This is MEMORIZATION people...How many USELESS rap bars do you have taking precious space in your brain, get rid of them and memorize something that WILL actually improve your life...
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If you think Medical School is hard, FORGET about Biochemisty/Molecular Biotechnology...That shyt takes MORE thinking than Medical School

My first Degree was in Biochemistry with a Specialization in Molecular Biology and Biotechnology...
I was a Physiotherapist's Assistant
So, I became a Physiotherapist...I worked in a Mental Health Hospital
So, I said fcuk it...I will go to Med School and become a doctor too
I am doing medical school right now

oh man...If somebody fractures the surgical head of their Humerus, there may be damage to the axillary nerve and posterior circumflex humeral artery...The axillary nerve innervates the deltoid and teres minor muscles, and these muscles are responsible for flexion and lateral rotation of the arm...
So, if you know somebody has a fracture of the surgical head of the humerus, you may expect that he or she will not be able to elevate or laterally rotate the arm...
How will you perform surgery? You will be taught which area of the arm to cut through so you access the humerus...If you have a good memory and dexterity then how the heck is this "hard"...?
breh
how old are you?
why did you go to PT assistant with a biochem degree?
did you use science as a PT? or was it just memorization?
what medical school are you in?
thanks![]()

1) Dude, I could just Google it...It doesn't prove anything...Impressive, we're on that unit right now.Describe the endochondral bone formation.![]()
Think before you type dude...best part is the "you just need practice"
These are the dudes who carved out your kidney when you woke up in a bathtub