Good visual embryology resources?

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nope80

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Anyone know of online videos or programs that allow one to actually visualize all of the various embryologic processes? I get so lost in all of the names of the various cell groups and what they develop into and how they move....😕 Any recommendations?
 
Hey there, you might want to check out this site:

http://simbryo.stanford.edu/

I used it for studying embryology and it really helped (it's animated) and if you get a copy of Langman's embryology, the same program comes on a CD and the book is really good and simplified (you can finish it very quickly)....good luck!!!
 
Anyone know of online videos or programs that allow one to actually visualize all of the various embryologic processes? I get so lost in all of the names of the various cell groups and what they develop into and how they move....😕 Any recommendations?

Langeman's Medical Embryology 10th edition comes with one of the Simbryo animation sets that is somewhat useful as an introduction. I like many animations at the links below much more. Also, I personally like Moore and Persaud, The Developing Human: Clinical Oriented Embryology 7th edition (not a video or animation) and Larsen Human Embryology 3rd edition (also a book). You should be able to find stuff online as well. Here are some of my links. Embryology is a bit of a big topic. If you have something specific you are having trouble with, you could probably ask for that.

Embryology Reviews:
Overall Embryology Timeline
http://www.embryo.chronolab.com/time.htm (ultra-cool with slider !!!)


Circulatory Embryology
http://mednote.co.kr/ANATOMY/embryonote/CIRCULATORY%20SYSTEM.htm


Respiratory Embryology
http://www.embryo.chronolab.com/respiratory.htm

Here are some additional embryology links:
http://embryology.ch/genericpages/moduleembryoen.html
http://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryo.htm
http://cna.uc.edu/embryology/contents.htm
http://www.med.uc.edu/embryology/contents.htm
http://www.med.upenn.edu/meded/public/berp/
http://www.indiana.edu/~anat550/embryo_main/index.html
http://stemcells.nih.gov/info/scireport/appendixA.asp
 
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Before We Are Born by Moore & Persaud is good indeed but it gets very confusing in the later chapters (the first 4-6 chapters are really good though). I'd say if you have a lot of time on your hands, then it would be better to read this book as your main text and use Langman's as your reference. I read the first 5 chapters from Moore's and the rest from Langman's along with some material online (and a few of those sites have already been mentioned by OncoCap).
 
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