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Nerve Whiz

edu.umich.nervewhiz

View detailed information for Nerve Whiz — ratings, download counts, screenshots, pricing and developer details. See integrated SDKs and related technical data.

Total installs
1,000+
Rating
4.3(15 reviews)
Released
July 13, 2010
Last updated
May 16, 2015
Category
Medical
Developer
The University of Michigan
Developer details

Name
The University of Michigan
E-mail
[email protected]
Website
unknown
Country
United States
Address
unknown
iOS SDKs

  • No items.

Screenshots

Nerve Whiz Screenshot 1 - AppWisp.com
Nerve Whiz Screenshot 2 - AppWisp.com
Nerve Whiz Screenshot 3 - AppWisp.com
Nerve Whiz Screenshot 4 - AppWisp.com

Description

Designed by a neuromuscular neurologist at the University of Michigan, Nerve Whiz is a free application for medical professionals interested in learning the complex anatomy of nerve roots, plexuses, and peripheral nerves. Select which muscles are weak, or point to areas of sensory loss, and the application can provide you with distinguishing features and detailed information, complete with relevant pictures and diagrams.

Features

• Nerve and Muscle Charts. This comprehensive inventory of the most clinically relevant muscles in the upper and lower extremities can be sorted by root, trunk, cord, peripheral nerve, action, or muscle name.

• Muscle Localizer. Select muscles as weak or strong, and the application provides a list of possible localizations (root, plexus, or nerve), along with distinguishing features about each.

• Nerve Diagrams. Choose any localization (root, trunk, cord, or nerve), and see a diagram of that nerve in the context of the brachial or lumbosacral plexus. Toggle to “Muscle View” and the diagram shows you the muscles supplied by your chosen nerve, and from where their innervations arise.

• Sensory Localizer. Touch a picture of an arm or leg and Nerve Whiz suggests localizations with beautiful graphic representations of the sensory distributions of nerve roots, parts of the plexus, and nerves.

NOTE: Nerve Whiz is intended to be an educational tool only. Nerve distributions vary between patients, and central or multifocal processes can mimic focal peripheral lesions. As such, this application should not be relied upon to make clinical decisions.

Designed by Zach London, MD

Department of Neurology, University of Michigan

This application was funded through the generosity of the Jerry Isler Neuromuscular Fund.