27/05/2026
Neurology feels overwhelming until you stop memorizing and start mapping. Comment MAP below, and I’ll send you the link to Episode 1 so we can start building it together.
Learn neurology through stories, clinical pearls, and the occasional bad joke — straight from a real-life neurologist. Neurology doesn’t have to be scary.
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27/05/2026
Neurology feels overwhelming until you stop memorizing and start mapping. Comment MAP below, and I’ll send you the link to Episode 1 so we can start building it together.
Comment “motor” to get the full episode sent straight to your chat!
Where do you start when a patient has neurological symptoms? It all comes down to one simple question: Is the lesion central or peripheral?
In Episode 2 of the Clinical Neuroanatomy Series, we break down exactly how to figure this out at the bedside using just tone, power, and reflexes.
Comment “motor” below and I’ll send it your way!
NeurologyResident
Comment “LINK” to get Episode 1 sent to your DMs.
This is the start of something bigger.
The Clinical Neuroanatomy Series is a structured curriculum built around one idea: neurology is a logical system, not a memory test. Each episode adds one layer to the framework. By the end, you will have a complete map for bedside localisation — built piece by piece, so it actually sticks.
Episode 1 starts where every good curriculum starts. The map and the framework.
Comment “LINK” and we will send it straight to you.
15/05/2026
55 years old. 48 hours of eye pain and double vision. Now — complete vision loss.
One lesion explains everything.
Swipe through to localise it step by step, then tell me your answer in the comments.
Almost no one gets this right, and the clock is ticking.
A 55yo diabetic patient presents with rapid right eye pain, vision loss, and complete ophthalmoplegia.
Is it:
A) Brainstem stroke
B) Orbital cellulitis
C) Cavernous sinus thrombosis
D) Orbital apex syndrome
Drop your guess (A, B, C, or D) in the comments before watching the breakdown!
60 seconds. 4 questions. Can you localize the lesion?
Drop your answers in the comments as the clock ticks down! How many did you get right?
Comment “QUESTION” below and I’ll send you the next clinical case.
25/04/2026
A lot is changing with how we handle CNS infections this year. I’ve summarized the 5 biggest takeaways from my recent talk at the AAN Annual Meeting - from a new virus to watch out for, to crucial updates on steroid timing. Swipe through to read the breakdown, and save this for your next on-call shift!
Acute migraine in the ED.
Two treatments you must offer. One you must not.
The 2025 American Headache Society guidelines on parenteral therapies for ED migraine are a game changer, especially if your department is still reaching for opioids.
Full breakdown in the reel.
Level A must offer: IV prochlorperazine + greater occipital nerve block
Level A must NOT offer: hydromorphone
Level B should offer: ketorolac IV, dexketoprofen IV, metoclopramide, sumatriptan SC
Drop a comment below, why are we still giving dexamethasone on discharge for a headache?
16/04/2026
Week 2 of the Neurology Core Principles Series is here. Today, we’re breaking down Disease Tempo. Swipe through to see how we use the timeline to narrow down a diagnosis!
05/04/2026
Neurology can feel complicated, but having the right framework makes it much easier. When approaching a diagnosis, your first step is figuring out if the condition is inflammatory or non-inflammatory.
Take a minute to really read through today’s slides. I’ve put together a simple guide on decoding the diagnosis: -itis vs. -opathy.
If this breakdown makes things clearer for you, please share it with a colleague or study partner so they can learn it, too