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Cervical Disc Anatomy Model Helps Learn About Injuries

cervical model, anatomy

Cervical Disc Anatomy Model Helps One Learn About Neck Injuries

If you’ve ever been a student of anatomy, there’s a huge chance that you spent many a night staring blankly at the pages of your text book and the photographs and drawings inside. The human body is a complicated system as millions of mechanisms are occurring at once and to understand it – even if you’re really into the science surrounding it – can be quite difficult. There are so many bones, tissues, tendons, organs, nerves, etc. and each one has its place and its purpose.
Anatomy students – as well as students of particular medical disciplines – spend a lot of time studying artists’ rendering of the parts underneath our skin. We try to picture how they’d really look if we could see them or how they’d feel if we could touch them. If you have been a student of the spine – be it a chiropractor, a spine surgeon, or perhaps a physiotherapist – you’ve certainly spent a good amount of time with those drawings, trying to understand how the parts of the spine move and what happens when things go wrong.
But perhaps those who teach spinal anatomy, chiropractic, or any number of other anatomy-related courses, could use something that would enhance the teachings of it. Rather than offering high-quality drawings of the spine to students for study, they should be prepared to offer their students something much better – 3D dynamic models like the cervical disc anatomy model and others offered by Dynamic Disc Designs.

cervical, disc, anatomy, model
Good spinal health for patients starts with good educational tools for future doctors and other caretakers of the spine. A classroom equipped with a cervical disc anatomy model, or any of the more than two dozen models offered by Dr. Jerome Fryer of Dynamic Disc Designs (ddd), is a classroom where true hands-on and  takes place.
Designed and originally rafted by a highly-experienced chiropractor, these lumbar and cervical models take learning out of the text books and put it in the hands of students, where their fingers can manipulate the discs in a dynamic way. With these models, future spine surgeons, for example, understand what they need to do to make their patients better in a patient education platform they can trust. Up-and-coming chiropractors better understand the specifics of manipulation therapy and the value of an adjustment to the spine. And physiotherapists can picture how their stretches and exercises will help their clients achieve better spine health.
“Dynamic Disc Designs spinal segmental models are unique in many ways and represent a new standard in quality and anatomical detail far superior to any of their predecessors. Their value far exceeds their cost,” explains Ara Deukmedjian MD CEO of the Deuk Spine Institute.
“The ddd models have helped me as an instructor in a DPT program show a more realistic anatomical representation of the human spine,” adds physical therapy instructor Stephen Elam. “This helps the students have a more accurate image of the spine in their head and allows them to have a stronger anatomy foundation.”

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Dynamic Disc Design cervical disc anatomy models and other carefully-crafted spine models are available individually or as a package. Choose one or several to improve how you educate the spine care professionals of tomorrow.

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