Amit Sharma
St. George's University
10 Papers
3 Citations
Amit Sharma is an academic researcher from St. George's University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Skull. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications.
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Papers
The development of a core syllabus for the teaching of head and neck anatomy to medical students.
R. Shane Tubbs,R. Shane Tubbs,Edward P. Sorenson,Amit Sharma,Brion Benninger,Neil S. Norton,Marios Loukas,Bernard J. Moxham +7 more
TL;DR: The goal is to provide guidance for program/course directors who intend to provide the optimal balance between establishing a comprehensive list of clinically relevant essential structures and an overwhelming litany, which would otherwise overburden trainees in their initial years of medical school with superficial rote learning.
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Neuroanatomy of the female abdominopelvic region: A review with application to pelvic pain syndromes
Mohammadali Mohajel Shoja,Amit Sharma,Nadine Mirzayan,Chris Groat,Koichi Watanabe,Marios Loukas,R. Shane Tubbs +6 more
TL;DR: The current review outlines the anatomy of the nervous system of the abdominopelvic region with special attention to this anatomy in the female.
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Ossification of the petrosphenoidal ligament: unusual variation with the potential for abducens nerve entrapment in Dorello’s canal at the skull base
TL;DR: Clinicians might consider ossification of the petrosphenoidal ligament (also called Gruber’s ligament) in patients with unexplained cases of abducens nerve palsy.
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The Clinical Anatomy of the Coronary Arteries
TL;DR: The normal anatomy of the coronary arteries is described as well as the common variations with potential clinical effects, which are associated with an increased risk of accelerated atherosclerosis and perfusion defects.
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External cortical landmarks and measurements for the temporal horn: Anatomic study with application to surgery of the temporal lobe.
TL;DR: The temporal horn was generally directed anteroinferiorly and best marked externally by the inferior temporal sulcus and may help neurosurgeons better localize this part of the lateral ventricular system.
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