History of Neurosurgery: Renaissance

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The history of neurosurgery wouldn't be complete without talking about some of the greatest anatomists and surgeons of the Renaissance. Neurosurgery could not develop without a thorough understanding of the brain and how it developed. We will be covering the contributions of the incredible Berengario, Da Vinci and Vesalius, among others.
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00:00 Start
01:07 Jiacomo Berengario di Carpi
03:15 Leonardo da Vinci
06:29 Costanzo Varolio
07:20 Andreas Vesalius
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Lol my son ran out of his room excitedly after hearing your opening 10 seconds. He was sorely disappointed. (FYI, he says Raph is the best but Leonardo has the best weapons).

MedlifeCrisis
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On a separate note, who is your favourite teenage mutant ninja turtle?

Brainbook
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I'm proud of Leonardo, what a sweetheart. He killed that frog and he knew life was more sacred than any knowledge he could attain from further vivisections.

larsfinlay
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I understand that very few people are interested in these deep topics but please come back brainbook. we need you back

oggyharamihai
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Love your videos, have you thought about the history of Neurosurgery during World War I and World War II?

Alpha_Omega_
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That's awesome mate! I was always curious of the real foundation of neurosurgery! Thank you for these information! Keep it up! Your page deserves much more attention btw. Good luck and i'm really excited for more videos😍😍 bravo!

hanichanbour
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Phenomenal like always. love you sir you are my inspiration

hamzapathan
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Damn, how did miss this upload. Your uploading so consistently

coalyboi
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Hello Brainbook! Did you see the Gmail I sent to you about me shadowing a neurosurgery operation for my duke of Edinburgh? Also, the content just keeps on getting better.

neurobot
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Hey! This is awesome everything about it such a pure way of explanation perfectly paced! I am a survivor of a traumatic brain injury as of 2015 and had a trepidation to relieve pressure to my brain, I bet we could have a pretty intriguing conversation. Keep on keeping on!

🙌🏻🤔👱🏻‍♂️😎✌🏻

franklyCorey
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Whish I had half the smarts of leonardo da vinci

coalyboi
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0:25 The end of what? I think Pythagoras would have walked circles around spinal cord injuries.

st.paulmn
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How do i find a neurosurgeon mentor, Dr? ❤️ Great video!

krishnalyn
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It makes me happy that Leonardo da Vinci became vegetarian 😊

hunterGk
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The ninja turtles comment caught me so off guard I spat out the spaghetti I was eating at the time 🤣

athenac
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I was a student pursuing Neurosurgery in Oklahoma until my funding got cut from the government without notice. Other things happened and well, I'm just healing and looking to go back to school once there is a trusted vaccine and it is safe. I really love your videos and enjoy watching every one I can. You clearly and compassionately observe every corner in the room you walk into with your thoughts, not missing an inch. Thank you for seeing and telling. I humbly appreciate you and your work. I look forward to seeing more. Also, I would love to see a history of Neurosurgery during WWI and WWII. I have numerous family members, friends, coworkers, etc., who have lost their lives fighting and serving in both of those wars. I have studied and contributed to a book on aircraft during those periods. It would be nice to learn more about the effects on the brain. You know, always learning and catching up on history. Take care. Keep on with being awesome!

emilymcmurphy
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Thank you for the enlightenment. I love neurosurgery!

kapinm
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4:05 lol we do this nowadays and we are consider psychopaths. I'm sure many people would frown at the "methods" but approve of the results. Thats why most textbooks would rather leave that part out. I find it oddly interested to understand both the methods and results as well as the mistakes along the way. No one discusses how many times these operations failed or the sheer determination these people must have had to in order to keep trying to improve the world.

anthonynwankwo