Goa Ayurveda Students Master Anatomy with Virtual Dissection Table Tech

The All India Institute of Ayurveda in Goa is pioneering the use of a Virtual Dissection Table for its medical students. This technology allows for detailed, three-dimensional exploration of human anatomy from superficial layers to deep structures before actual cadaver work. The institute has also received donated bodies, including a young fetus for congenital deformity research, to support its educational programs. This integration of traditional Ayurvedic concepts with modern digital tools aims to provide a deeper and more beneficial learning experience for future practitioners.

Key Points: Virtual Dissection Table Revolutionizes Ayurveda Anatomy Learning

  • Blends Ayurveda with digital anatomy
  • Enables layer-by-layer 3D visualization
  • Prepares students for hands-on cadaver work
  • Utilizes donated bodies and fetuses for research
2 min read

Students at AIIA in Goa learn dissection of body from Virtual Dissection Table

AIIA Goa integrates digital anatomy with Ayurveda. Students use a virtual table for layer-by-layer study before real cadaver dissection, enhancing medical education.

"Before the actual cadaveric dissection they study on the virtual dissection table... this is more beneficial for students. - Dr Ashutosh Kumar Yadav"

Panaji, January 25

The Medical Students at All India Institute of Ayurveda are learning from a Virtual Dissection Table. This technology integrates traditional Ayurveda concepts with modern digital anatomy that allows students to learn deeper structure layer by layer.

Speaking with ANI, Dr Ashutosh Kumar Yadav, who is an Associate Professor, Department of Rachana Sharir at All India Institute of Ayurveda, said, "In this dissection table, all the body structure visualise at once, superficial to deeper structures, then from organ to organ, individual or three dimensional structure is there. So our student is most likely before the actual cadaveric dissection they study on the virtual dissection table. Then every structure, minute to minute structure they learn ."

According to AIIA, the technology is part of a curriculum that combines traditional Ayurvedic anatomical concepts with modern methods, which is more useful to help students understand different and deep parts of the body.

"Before cadaveric dissection, they learn layer by layer about body parts through a virtual dissection table. But in actual cadaveric dissection, for example, first of all, they open the cranium, then open the nerve of the cranial nerve root. Then again, all the branches seen later, but virtual dissection rule at once, all the structure, so this is more beneficial for students." Dr Yadav said.

The AIIA has received ten bodies voluntarily of those who died in some accident or due to some other reason, and later family donated their body for research purposes.

Recently, the hospital has received the body of the youngest fetus, who was less than five months old, and after knowing the congenital deformity, the family decided to terminate the fetus, and later the family donated the fetus for research purposes.

"I received a four-month-old fetus whose family decided to terminate a baby after identifying a congenital deformity, like a septal defect in the heart. They decide on medical termination of pregnancy. I gave them an application for donation of the body, then both couples agreed to donate the fetus." He explained.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While the technology is impressive, I have a respectful criticism. I hope the focus on virtual learning doesn't completely replace the invaluable, hands-on experience of working with a real cadaver. There's a certain reverence and practical skill you only learn from the actual physical dissection. The balance is key.
R
Rohit P
My heart goes out to the families who made the difficult decision to donate, especially for the fetus. It's a selfless act that will advance medical science and help train future doctors. Their donation gives meaning to a profound loss. 🙏
S
Sarah B
As someone from a medical family, I can see how useful this is. Layer-by-layer visualization in 3D is a game-changer for understanding anatomy. It's great to see Indian institutes like AIIA adopting such advanced tools. Hope this becomes standard across all medical colleges.
V
Vikram M
This is the future! Shraddha to our ancient Ayurveda and embracing modern tech. Students can now revise structures anytime without being limited to lab hours. It's a brilliant solution for better learning outcomes. More power to AIIA Goa!
K
Kavya N
The article mentions only 10 donated bodies. This highlights the chronic shortage of cadavers in Indian medical education. While virtual tables help, we need more awareness about body donation to bridge the gap. Families who donate are true heroes.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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