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00:03 | All right, good morning y'all. you're probably aware, we have a |
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00:08 | on thursday. If you haven't signed for your test lot, you're probably |
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00:12 | stuck in the really crappy hours? we will have an extra credit that |
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00:17 | up the night before the exam at o'clock. So if you're not aware |
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00:22 | that, just write that down, be available on blackboard. It's a |
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00:25 | . If you took A. And . One with me, you already |
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00:27 | . It's like it's basically a five at the most five minutes? Like |
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00:32 | like easy mode and all it's doing saying have you studied for the |
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00:36 | Right? It's asking you to self um before the exam to say |
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00:41 | I'm actually ready to go and take exam and then after the exam um |
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00:45 | a week after the exam, we'll up the exam at some point when |
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00:49 | when we're comfortable that everyone's taking the , there'll be a set extra credit |
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00:53 | applies to that test as well. each test has two halves, 2.5 |
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00:59 | for the 1st 12.5 points for the one on that test. Um And |
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01:04 | second one is basically um So you , you thought you studied, did |
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01:08 | get the grade you did yes or ? And then what did you miss |
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01:12 | on, what did you not know you thought you knew? And this |
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01:16 | what you should be doing naturally. so I'm trying to train you guys |
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01:19 | start thinking about when I take an did I learn what I was supposed |
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01:22 | learn, right? Did I prepare properly? And if you did, |
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01:26 | should get the grade that you And if you did, you got |
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01:28 | grade that you didn't want. And okay. Now that I know I |
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01:31 | the grade I didn't want. Why I get that grade and then |
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01:34 | what are the changes I need to in order to get the grade that |
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01:36 | want? That's really the cycle that trying to create. All right. |
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01:40 | the extra credit, like I we'll open up right before the test |
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01:45 | p.m. I think it's six p.m. On . I gotta get my days right |
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01:51 | . And the next one will be a week later. Alright. And |
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01:53 | try to remember to make announcement for 2nd 1. Okay. We'll do |
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01:56 | for every test ready for the last bit. Alright. So what we've |
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02:02 | so far, all this stuff has the cardiovascular system. We've talked about |
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02:06 | blood. We've talked about the formed in the plasma and what it all |
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02:09 | , right? Where all the different are talked about the heart and how |
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02:12 | the pumping. Right. And then now moved in the vascular chair and |
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02:16 | talked about the arteries and we talked how they're responsible for construction. And |
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02:21 | they actually play a role in blood . What we call peripheral resistance is |
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02:26 | term that you'll often hear. But basically just saying peripheral blood pressure and |
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02:30 | we're gonna do is we're gonna now at blood pressure inside the capillaries and |
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02:35 | veins and so we looked at their and so today we're kind of just |
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02:39 | all that stuff off. And the last thing we're gonna look at is |
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02:42 | gonna ask the question, how does body go about regulating your blood |
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02:46 | Both on a minute to minute, by second, millisecond by millisecond time |
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02:51 | as well as over the long In other words, day by |
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02:55 | week by week, etcetera, Alright, because those two things, |
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03:00 | have very very short term regulation and very long term regulation. And what |
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03:05 | gonna do is we're going to see couple of things that are gonna freak |
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03:07 | out a little bit because it's gonna you to think conceptually, rather than |
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03:12 | things. And this is the starting here dealing with the capillary blood |
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03:16 | Alright, so capillary blood pressure. we're doing here is we're allowing for |
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03:22 | exchange of blood and the material that's the blood with the surrounding fluid between |
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03:28 | cells called the interstitial fluid. All , So we have material in the |
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03:34 | . We have material out in the fluid and we want exchange to take |
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03:37 | . So that exchange can take place the interstitial fluid and the cells. |
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03:41 | the question is how do we do ? How do we get things between |
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03:45 | two places um in our system. , when we looked at the |
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03:50 | we had pulse style blood pressure, ? We looked at systolic diastolic closest |
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03:55 | the aorta, you're going to really it. But as you move further |
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03:57 | further away it gets weaker and weaker weaker. In terms of the |
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04:00 | pulse, utility pulsating nature. And happens is it smoothes out and that's |
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04:05 | function of the muscular arteries and the creating enough constriction or resistance to that |
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04:13 | of blood, that it basically reduces pressure so that it becomes smoothed |
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04:19 | And so by the time you're in capillaries, we're talking about smooth flow |
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04:23 | blood and smooth pressure. All In other words, there's kind of |
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04:27 | equilibrium that's taking place here. The pressure needs to be high enough |
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04:34 | that this exchange can take place but so high that it's actually going to |
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04:37 | the vessels. Remember we talked about , capillaries are itsy bitsy teeny tiny |
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04:41 | alright there as small as the cells are traveling through them. And we |
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04:45 | about how close they are, there's 10 microns between every capillary or every |
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04:51 | in the capillary that's the furthest away be. And also we talked about |
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04:55 | many miles, like there's lots and of miles. Remember that? So |
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04:59 | lots of this stuff. So we want a lot of pressure in here |
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05:03 | , The thing is is that we're to see pressure diminishing across its |
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05:07 | And this is gonna be true through vessel because of what we talked about |
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05:10 | brussels law, right? That big word. And basically said F equals |
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05:14 | P over our right. So, resistance is there, that's going to |
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05:20 | the pressure as you travel along. . So that is actually taking |
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05:25 | All right. And what we're gonna looking at is we're gonna be looking |
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05:29 | bulk flow. And so as things out, bulk flow is simply all |
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05:33 | things that are moving together. We're focusing in on one little thing. |
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05:36 | , we're not asking the question what is the oxygen doing? What |
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05:39 | the carbon dioxide doing? What are sodium doing? What are this |
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05:43 | Or that doing? We're saying, is everything doing? Which direction are |
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05:47 | moving? And again, an example bulk bulk flow using a really simple |
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05:52 | one, is at the beginning of , students are moving into a |
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05:56 | right? So there might be students out of the room. But for |
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06:00 | grand majority, most of the people moving in that would be an example |
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06:04 | bulk flow is which is the general , which flow is taking place when |
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06:09 | breathe in air that's bulk flow, though there's different things that are going |
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06:14 | your lungs that you don't necessarily want need, Right, when you breathe |
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06:19 | , what's the one thing that you oxygen? But what are you actually |
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06:23 | in everything? Well, it's So that's the word I'm looking |
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06:27 | Air. Air is nitrogen and oxygen carbon dioxide and water. And and |
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06:34 | and and if you're smoking and and and you know, so you can |
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06:38 | put all the little ants in But when you breathe in all of |
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06:41 | comes in the body that Oh no, no, no, I |
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06:44 | want the oxygen. It takes it . Alright. So, when you're |
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06:49 | bulk flow, that's what's occurring at level of the capillaries were saying what |
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06:53 | in and really what is moving through capitalism goes out of the capillaries, |
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06:57 | the interstitial space, into that intersection . And then what from that intersectional |
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07:03 | is moving back into the capillaries after exchanges take place. What we're looking |
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07:08 | here is what is called absorption Alright, filtration is when you're moving |
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07:14 | of the capillary absorption, when you're back in. All right now, |
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07:19 | still gonna see a pressure gradient. gonna see a pressure gradient until we |
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07:22 | to the heart because we're we're haven't to zero yet. It's And we're |
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07:27 | moving blood towards the heart. So always going to exist. Alright. |
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07:31 | , here's the capital exchange. I've kind of talking about when you think |
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07:34 | exchange sometimes, what we're gonna do we're gonna be talking about individual ideas |
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07:39 | individual molecules. We're not talking about right now, we're talking about the |
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07:43 | picture stuff, the bulk flow. so there are basically three different types |
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07:47 | exchange that can take place. We diffusion. When you're talking about |
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07:50 | you're really talking about the individual So for example, uh in a |
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07:56 | oxygen is going to the cell. there it is, it's gonna defuse |
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08:00 | inside the capillary into the interstitial space from the interstitial space that's gonna diffuse |
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08:05 | the cell. Alright, so you , diffusion is specifically talking about one |
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08:11 | , right? And you talk about , glucose doesn't diffuse, it has |
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08:16 | be moved and so it can for example, um from the capillary |
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08:23 | the interstitial space, but it has mechanism is more glucose inside the |
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08:28 | And so glucose can't just simply diffuse pass into the cell, It has |
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08:32 | be moved in the cell has to pumped into the cell. So here |
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08:36 | going to use a different mechanism to so do so. And then another |
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08:40 | of type of transport you're gonna see vesicular transport, This is where you |
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08:44 | a vest. Ical. And so that are too big to defuse must |
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08:49 | carried across through a vesicles. And what you're gonna do and this is |
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08:54 | this is trying to show you down , the little tiny dots represent |
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08:57 | And so you're picking up materials inside capillary. Inside the vesicles vesicles moves |
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09:03 | and opens up and it releases its on the other side. So, |
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09:06 | lots of different ways we can move . But ultimately, the big picture |
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09:11 | is which direction is the flow is it going out of the |
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09:15 | or is it going in and on arterial side? That's where we want |
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09:19 | see things moving out of the Alright, Because we're in the delivery |
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09:24 | of the capillary. Alright, So where you'd see bulk flow moving outward |
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09:31 | the other side of the capitol, the venus side of the capillary. |
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09:34 | you were to divide it into on venus side of the capillary, that's |
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09:37 | things are moving from the interstitial space being moved back into the capillary. |
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09:42 | would be that absorption. Alright. so here this would be an example |
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09:46 | the carbon dioxide. We're producing lots lots of carbon dioxide, we want |
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09:49 | get rid of that. So, going to use bulk flow to move |
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09:53 | things that we don't want around back of the interstitial into the interstitial space |
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09:57 | then from the interstitial space back into capillary and then the blood in the |
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10:01 | goes and joins the venue from a to a vein back to the heart |
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10:05 | yada yada yada, you kind of that whole process going on here. |
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10:09 | right, so diffusion, as I , passive event individual uh salute. |
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10:18 | what we're dealing with here is not blood and cells, there is interstitial |
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10:23 | in between and so the exchanges first from the blood to the interstitial |
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10:29 | from the interstitial fluid to the cell from the cell would be the opposite |
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10:34 | from the cell to the interstitial from the interstitial fluid back into the |
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10:38 | of the blood. Alright, that's , individual things, particular transport, |
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10:43 | is active and again, that's through sis So but what we're interested in |
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10:50 | is this both flow through filtration and . And the way this happens is |
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10:58 | to be through these unique pressures that gonna be found both on the inside |
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11:03 | on the outside of that blood Alright. And there's two basic types |
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11:09 | pressures. You need to learn them because you're gonna see them again in |
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11:13 | kidney and you're gonna see them again the lungs. You're gonna see these |
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11:16 | over and over again. Alright, the first type of pressure is gonna |
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11:19 | called a hydrostatic pressure. And the type is called the colloidal osmotic |
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11:25 | You can think it was just an pressure. Alright, and what these |
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11:29 | pressures do is they oppose one another so they drive the fluid in one |
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11:34 | or the other depending upon what's Now, we can keep it simple |
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11:38 | just leave it like that and just , okay, there's hydrostatic pressures and |
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11:41 | colloidal osmotic pressures. But the problem we have two different spaces and each |
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11:46 | has their own hydrostatic pressure. Each has their colloidal osmotic pressure. |
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11:50 | So what is the hydrostatic pressure? . A hydrostatic pressure is simply the |
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11:55 | force exerted by the fluid on the some sort of structure. So like |
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12:00 | said, I've showed it before, got my I got my drink |
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12:03 | You guys have your drinks in front you. You have fluid inside |
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12:07 | That fluid is exerting a pressure on walls of the container. It's trying |
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12:12 | to get out of the container. ? And we can take that |
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12:17 | we can apply more fluid in there it increases the hydrostatic pressure. But |
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12:22 | it doesn't say water, it's saying fluid. Alright, So the plasma |
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12:29 | a hydrostatic pressure on the inside of capillary. So we call that capillary |
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12:37 | pressure and it's measurable, right? its job for the most part is |
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12:41 | drive the fluid outwards. So what saying is is regardless of where you |
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12:46 | in that capillary, that hydrostatic pressure trying to push the fluid out. |
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12:50 | trying to promote the process of Okay. But we have interstitial fluid |
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12:59 | the outside and what does fluid have pressure. So there's a pressure on |
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13:05 | outside that's trying to push fluid back the capillary. These two. These |
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13:10 | pressures are in opposition to each So whichever one's stronger is gonna |
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13:17 | right? You can think of it this way if I pull one of |
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13:23 | one of you guys up here and we're gonna have a pushing war and |
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13:26 | who pushes the other one harder. one that has the greater strength is |
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13:31 | be the one that's gonna direct which the two of us are going. |
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13:38 | ? Does that kind of makes sort of, do you want to |
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13:41 | it in action? Some people yeah, you know, I'd let |
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13:46 | win. Alright, so these two are in opposition to each other. |
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13:50 | just abbreviate them. Different textbooks use abbreviations. I think your textbook is |
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13:55 | this and so I'm just throwing those up there so that you can see |
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13:58 | . So we have a hydrostatic pressure the capillary that's driving the fluid |
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14:04 | So it's promoting filtration. We have pressure on the outside of the blood |
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14:08 | . Hydrostatic that's interstitial fluid that's pushing . So it's trying to force absorption |
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14:15 | re absorption. So those two things in opposition to each other. All |
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14:20 | . But we have another type of all right, And this one's a |
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14:24 | bit more complex. And this is that throws the students or it throws |
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14:28 | guys a little bit. Alright, the colloidal osmotic pressure. Now, |
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14:31 | you've taken chemistry before, you know a college boy is. If you |
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14:35 | taken chemistry before you're sitting there going not sure. And some of you |
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14:38 | have taken chemistry and I still don't what Lloyd is. Don't worry |
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14:41 | It's basically it's a fluid with stuff it. And really what colloids is |
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14:46 | basically saying the particles inside of fluid attractive to fluids and so it creates |
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14:53 | osmotic pressure. That's why we call osmotic pressure. And so it's an |
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15:00 | pressure. It draws fluid towards Okay, that kind of makes |
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15:05 | So it's like this if I have whole bunch of of women, I'm |
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15:10 | use this as an example of a bunch of women together. What are |
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15:13 | attracting towards them? You should be guys. All right, that's that's |
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15:22 | nature right? Guys. See a of women, they're like I'm heading |
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15:25 | this way and I'll be cool. what colloids does. The difference is |
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15:30 | that it's attractive to water molecules. , It's pulling water towards it. |
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15:37 | so inside the capillary we have a of plasma proteins that would be collide |
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15:43 | we don't say what the particle We just say there's particles. It |
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15:47 | be any sort of salute that happens be in the fluid is attractive to |
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15:52 | . So if we have a caller osmotic pressure inside the capillary is a |
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15:56 | of all those proteins and stuff that water back into the capillary. So |
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16:03 | osmotic pressures pull water towards it. the capillary colloidal osmotic pressure. Which |
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16:11 | man, that's just a whole bunch letters there. So the blood is |
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16:14 | water to its promoting reabsorption. And conversely out in the interstitial |
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16:23 | we're gonna have an automatic pressure. that pulls water towards it. In |
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16:27 | words, it's promoting filtration. The is is that we don't have a |
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16:32 | of protein sitting out in the interstitial proteins we don't want just floating around |
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16:38 | you know, doing whatever they That's kind of a dangerous proposition, |
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16:41 | are sequestered. That's why you'll find in the blood. Why you find |
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16:46 | and sell. But you don't find really in the interstitial fluid but there's |
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16:50 | potential osmotic pressure here as a So typically when we go and measure |
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16:54 | which usually around zero. But in spaces it may actually go up a |
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16:59 | bit. So while you see that present it may actually have a value |
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17:05 | zero. So it basically is Okay. But it's helpful to keep |
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17:11 | in your calculation to understand what you're now to determine which direction blood is |
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17:17 | flow. Is it flowing outward or it flowing inward? We just have |
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17:20 | compile all the four pressures. We looked at what we refer to as |
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17:25 | net filtration pressure. All right there's math here, but I'm not |
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17:31 | make you do math. You just to understand relationships. Alright. So |
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17:34 | it helps you to do the math little bit then that's fine. The |
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17:38 | are there to help you understand Alright. And so with the net |
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17:42 | filter that the net filtration pressure is just the difference between the two hydrostatic |
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17:49 | minus the two collide osmotic pressures. right. And so, you could |
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17:54 | it mathematically this way. All You can say here's the capital A |
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17:58 | pressure minus the hydrostatic the interstitial And you subtract from it. The |
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18:04 | osmotic pressure in the capillaries versus the pressure of the interstitial fluid. |
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18:08 | the way I was taught is through formula, but I'm not going to |
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18:11 | through. It's just pressure in versus out. So, you have to |
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18:13 | of rearrange that stuff. That's just associative property stuff. You remember that |
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18:18 | properties like way back in fourth you learn the names of those |
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18:22 | Probably never used them ever again. all that is. And really the |
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18:27 | thing is whenever your net filtration pressure positive. So, if you could |
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18:31 | in values and it comes out that means you have flow out of |
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18:35 | capillary. And if your net filtration is negative, that means you have |
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18:40 | into the capillary. That's all it all right. And so again, |
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18:45 | not gonna make you do math on test, right? Because math can |
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18:48 | scary sometimes. But what I do you to do is I want you |
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18:52 | understand what these relationships are and what looking at. If you think about |
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18:56 | capillary capillary is an arterial, And you have that meta arterial that |
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19:01 | between them to the venue and then have your capillary bed. So in |
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19:04 | , what we have is we have of the capillary that belongs to the |
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19:07 | , half of the capillary belongs to venue. All if we ask the |
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19:10 | , All right, what's going on arterial side? We can go in |
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19:13 | do some measurements. And so these actual values that you can see up |
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19:17 | and I just plug them in. there's that equation, I just gave |
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19:20 | the hydrostatic pressure of the capillary hydrostatic in the interstitial fluid. The colored |
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19:27 | pressure of the capillary colored osmotic pressure the interstitial fluid. I just plugged |
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19:31 | in. So over here, 35 the hydrostatic pressure and capillary, the |
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19:37 | fluid. Hydrostatic pressure is zero. , I want you to understand what |
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19:42 | means is relative to the atmosphere. , this is an easy thing to |
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19:47 | if I poked you and did not an actual artery. But if I |
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19:51 | poked a hole into your body into interstitial space. Would water comes spraying |
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19:56 | of you like a cartoon character? you've seen those right? Where Daffy |
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20:00 | gets shot like 30 times and that happen to you, right? You |
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20:05 | have holes that leak out water because pressure inside your body is a quill |
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20:11 | with the atmospheric pressure. Right? when you increase the pressure, that |
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20:15 | does that fluid wanna do wants to where there's less pressure. Very |
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20:20 | That's the idea what we're doing is we're saying look relative to the outside |
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20:25 | . The pressure inside the interstitial spaces zero. So we can do |
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20:30 | And then we say, all well, uh your textbook is showing |
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20:33 | is what is the color osmotic Well inside the capillary there's a lot |
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20:38 | plasma proteins. So the pressure there 26 mm of mercury. And then |
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20:43 | says outside, it's about one it's really closer to zero. But |
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20:47 | just go with what the book is you. Okay, just so that |
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20:49 | know, you just do your 35 gives you 10 of mercury. |
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20:54 | that number positive or negative? So on the arterial side we're getting |
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21:01 | and so all those materials are getting out in bulk out into the interstitial |
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21:06 | . That means the cells are going be exposed to oxygen and glucose and |
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21:11 | sorts of little tiny ions and whatever to be in the blood that is |
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21:15 | pushed out through that bulk flow. then as the blood is leaving, |
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21:21 | have reduced pressure. And so we go back and we can measure and |
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21:24 | we we can see here we can along the whole length. But what |
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21:28 | doing is just measuring on this side we just plug in the numbers |
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21:31 | notice over here with regard to the osmotic pressures. The pressures don't |
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21:36 | do they? Right. And the for that is because plasma proteins don't |
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21:40 | out. They stay there. And you're not gonna see a change. |
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21:44 | there's nothing that's changing with reference to colloids inside the interstitial space. So |
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21:49 | value stays the same. But because have fluid leaving, that means we |
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21:53 | pressure that's dropping because fluid has left a result of that bulk flow pressure |
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21:58 | dropped. And we can measure and comes out to about 17. So |
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22:03 | 17 0 from outside. Right? doesn't change all that much. We |
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22:08 | do the math. And now we about eight of mercury and notice what |
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22:12 | uh signal or sign is on this is negative. So what that's saying |
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22:17 | that now there's a pressure that drives fluid back into the capillary. |
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22:23 | what's going on outside? Is that with the cells. So carbon dioxide |
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22:28 | oxygen are being exchanged, glucose is taken up waste is being produced and |
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22:33 | out into the blood. And so that stuff is moving through bulk flow |
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22:37 | into the blood along with I mean a result of this pressure, |
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22:42 | So you can see now on the in the capillaries where exchanges taking |
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22:46 | Remember we said capillaries are vessels of . So at the level of the |
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22:50 | , because of these four pressures you materials nutrients going to the cells via |
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22:58 | interstitial fluid and then all the waste being produced is now being moved back |
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23:03 | the interstitial fluid back into the blood be released or removed from the |
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23:08 | And it's because of these four So all you gotta do is you're |
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23:13 | here looking at me, what do have to know about this? What's |
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23:16 | the test dr wayne? All No. The four pressures. Hydrostatic |
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23:21 | both in and out. What do do? Filtration, reabsorption, colored |
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23:25 | pressures. What are they what do do? Filtration, reabsorption. How |
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23:30 | I calculate net filtration pressure is a between these four pressures. You do |
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23:35 | ? You understand flow inside the So, I'm a positive for a |
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23:42 | other questions. Yes. Yes and . Yes. At least let me |
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23:51 | in theory, you know, in in a healthy body. The question |
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23:55 | , is the arterial side always gonna positive? Is the capital or the |
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24:00 | side is always gonna be negative in healthy body. The answer should be |
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24:05 | . Right. Because that's the only that exchange can occur if this side |
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24:10 | here was not negative then blood and would accumulate in that area and ultimately |
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24:16 | pressure would become so great that it flip it back over. All |
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24:22 | Yeah. Mhm. Okay. So asking what is really in the |
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24:41 | Right. That's basically what you're What is really in this fluid? |
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24:44 | . So, remember we're talking about fluid. So, that's the |
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24:49 | Alright. So, that means all cells are being ignored here. All |
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24:52 | formed elements are not leaving. what's left in that plasma are plasma |
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24:56 | . Plasma proteins are too big. , those don't go. So, |
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24:59 | least the fluid plus whatever things that small enough to pass through. |
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25:04 | what does this include molecules as big glucose? Glucose is not a very |
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25:08 | molecule. It's really tiny. So, your your sugars the nutrients |
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25:13 | are monomers that can be in the that your body's gonna use for for |
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25:20 | . That's gonna be one thing oxygen carbon dioxide are gonna be plus |
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25:25 | but nitrogen doesn't do anything. we just ignored. All right. |
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25:28 | any of the dissolved gasses. I'm gonna say that term very carefully |
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25:32 | , dissolved gasses. Because where is normally carried, which were in the |
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25:39 | red blood cells, but they're also in all of your tissues. All |
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25:45 | cells have oxygen them all the blood oxygen dissolved in it. It's not |
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25:50 | carried by the red blood cells. oxygen just isn't enough for you to |
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25:55 | . And we're gonna talk about the and what that means, and how |
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25:58 | lungs deal with um or really kind packing your blood full of oxygen. |
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26:03 | kind of goes with that conversation. right. So you're dissolved gasses are |
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26:07 | . And then the other thing that's in the blood is a whole bunch |
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26:11 | salutes like sodium and potassium and calcium phosphate and yada yada yada. So |
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26:17 | any sorts of ions carbon, the one is bicarbonate is another one. |
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26:22 | all that stuff is there in that . And there's other things that are |
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26:26 | . They're small that can transport but don't we're not really concerned about |
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26:31 | But for the purposes of what you're is is basically glucose and oxygen are |
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26:36 | carried into from the capillaries down to cells that need them through the interstitial |
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26:43 | . And then on the other what is it? What is the |
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26:46 | produce? They produce carbon dioxide and as waste byproducts. And so that |
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26:51 | is then carried back into the interstitial and then back into the blood the |
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26:55 | direction. Plus all the other And I saw back there then then |
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26:59 | here then there. So yeah. that again, colloidal. Right? |
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27:06 | the word colloids refers to a fluid stuff in it. Milk is a |
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27:12 | for example. I mean, you there's there's things floating in suspension. |
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27:17 | what we're looking at here is called is basically saying something that has things |
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27:21 | in it and then osmotic refers to attractiveness of that, that that suspension |
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27:27 | draw water towards it. So that's it comes from, colloidal osmotic. |
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27:31 | then I saw, okay, right could provide yes. Because if you |
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27:39 | know that, then all these things just talked about for the last 10 |
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27:42 | is useless, right? So the here is understanding what these pressures |
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27:48 | right? And why I say that because we're gonna see these net filtration |
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27:53 | repeat themselves in other organs. This the fun part about all right, |
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27:57 | just gonna I'm gonna just put this here right now, you have your |
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28:01 | are like, let me put things categories and I'm just gonna shove it |
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28:04 | that little spot. And then this the spot where I find that information |
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28:08 | is the day that we're gonna start things that are gonna be applied over |
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28:12 | over and over again. So, they are are things that I can |
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28:15 | back to regardless of which system I'm , Right? And that's kind of |
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28:19 | cool stuff is once you start stop things in a little tiny box and |
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28:23 | realizing this actually goes to a whole of different things. It makes learning |
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28:27 | lot easier right now, you're gonna figuring this out as you go |
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28:31 | Like you're gonna see it again, like, oh, that's right. |
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28:34 | talked about that like three weeks Okay so but that's what we're doing |
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28:38 | , we're talking about something we're gonna multiple times. Alright so learn your |
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28:45 | now. Makes your life easier in long run. Any other questions about |
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28:52 | ? So I think right now this pressure stuff and just recognizing those relationships |
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28:58 | probably the hardest thing because it's not that you can just look at right |
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29:02 | say okay I can you have to of think about what each of them |
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29:05 | doing right? It's it's not directly , you have to kind of draw |
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29:10 | pictures, draw your and I encourage to that draw a simple capillary like |
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29:15 | , draw your arrow in, draw arrow out and say okay what's going |
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29:18 | here? Could I figure out what's on? And I think that's the |
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29:21 | way to learn this. Alright flat memorization you're gonna confuse yourself especially because |
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29:25 | have called osmotic pressure. I. . Call it as my pressure blood |
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29:30 | you know sometimes it's easy to forget doing what. All right, great |
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29:36 | on. Now we've talked about blood in the artery, we talked about |
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29:40 | pressure in the capital and what their are and now we're dealing with one |
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29:44 | . We got venus blood pressure and is that big giant chart. And |
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29:47 | it's showing you look out here you see the arterial pulse pressure is going |
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29:51 | and down up and down up and . So we have systolic diastolic, |
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29:54 | smoothed out down here in the So we don't see that postal |
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29:58 | We're now in the capital as we see that pressure drop really rapidly and |
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30:02 | finally get to the venus system and have very little pressure left. But |
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30:07 | still have pressure, right? So h remember has no pressure. And |
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30:13 | no matter where you are in your there's still pressure to drive fluid from |
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30:19 | it is through the venous system back the heart. The thing is this |
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30:22 | not a really really strong pressure. it needs some help. All |
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30:26 | And that's what we're gonna be looking is we're going to see the different |
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30:29 | of health. So we say it's sufficient to drive the blood to the |
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30:32 | . If you're lying on your back it would do just fine. But |
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30:35 | you lying on your back all the ? No, I mean I guess |
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30:39 | could say lying on your stomach It doesn't matter which, Right? |
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30:41 | if you're flat it would be But you stand up we are organisms |
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30:45 | are upright and so we need to that part of our body. The |
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30:52 | return to get back to it All now. Part of the reason is |
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30:55 | because we're trying to overcome the effect gravity. And this is what I |
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30:59 | kind of talking about on thursday last . I was like, look, |
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31:02 | know, if you think of a of blood, you can just make |
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31:04 | at any side. It has a and you can just start stacking those |
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31:09 | on top of each other. And what that means is that the weight |
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31:13 | each of those things is being applied all the blood that that sits underneath |
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31:18 | . If you're a person who's scuba before you've experienced this, the further |
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31:22 | you go, you can feel the pressure of the fluid around your pressing |
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31:26 | on your body. I'm looking for who's scuba dive going, Yeah, |
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31:31 | true. All right. If you scuba dive, that's okay. I'm |
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31:35 | to death of going under the water you can't breathe under it. |
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31:39 | it's just weird. All right. , the idea is I've got to |
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31:45 | this and we have a whole bunch countermeasures. We've talked about the |
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31:48 | right? The valves play play a in basically breaking up the that that |
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31:53 | of fluid. But we still have little pressure serving as a driving force |
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31:59 | move it forward. And so what gonna do is we're gonna use three |
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32:02 | mechanisms that are physiological that help us blood forward. Alright. And what |
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32:07 | have is we have those valves. have what is called the skeletal muscle |
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32:10 | . And we have what is called respiratory pump. All right. |
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32:15 | the easiest one, we've talked about valves, we're gonna leave that back |
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32:17 | we talked about it, we're gonna here at the skeletal muscle pump. |
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32:19 | I refer to this a little I said, while you're sitting in |
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32:22 | chairs, you probably don't even know perceptively. You can feel your muscles |
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32:26 | and stuff. You can kind of of sit and watch for a little |
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32:29 | every time you step, every time move, every time you make any |
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32:32 | of movement, you're contracting a Most of the veins in your body |
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32:36 | deep, they're not superficial, there superficial veins, but most of your |
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32:41 | veins are deep. And so every you move, that muscle contracts and |
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32:46 | up against that vein. And what doing is you're squeezing the vein and |
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32:51 | drives the fluid from that little tiny between the two valves to the next |
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32:55 | with two valves. And it does along the entire length of that blood |
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32:59 | . So the veins are assisted by just simply moving around when you don't |
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33:06 | around. Well, you don't give a lot of help. And that's |
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33:10 | you get the varicose veins and yada yada. Alright, so skeletal muscle |
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33:15 | contractions. That's what we refer to a skeletal muscle pump. It's a |
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33:19 | contractions on the blood vessels. It blood in the veins towards the |
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33:24 | And it also acts kind of like valve in the sense that it can |
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33:28 | . So when I squeeze the blood , if I squeeze a vein, |
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33:31 | , I've interrupted the column of so there's left wait below and I'm |
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33:36 | the blood forward. This is a bit. This is a concept that's |
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33:42 | little bit more complex because when we talked about the lungs and we haven't |
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33:47 | about respiration, but basically the respiratory helps to assist by creating kind of |
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33:53 | bellows system that acts on the Alright, now, we're gonna just |
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33:58 | ahead a little bit and talk about we do when we breathe in and |
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34:01 | out all right, and we'll go detail later when I breathe in, |
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34:05 | I'm doing is I'm expanding my chest , So I'm expanding my thoracic cage |
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34:10 | I'm dropping my diaphragm downward. In doing so I've increased the volume |
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34:15 | my thoracic cage. So when I the volume, that also drops the |
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34:21 | which draws air inward, so that's breathing in is and when I do |
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34:25 | opposite, when I compress the cage pushed my diaphragm upward, I'm exhaling |
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34:30 | right, So I just gave away a lecture for you all right in |
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34:34 | , in that two sentences, we're look at how it's happening, but |
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34:37 | in essence what's going on, So I'm decreasing when I breathe |
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34:41 | I decrease pressure in my chest, I breathe out, I'm increasing pressure |
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34:45 | my chest. Now let's take a and see what's going on. So |
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34:48 | going on in the thoracic region down the abdomen. What's going on when |
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34:51 | breathe in? Alright, so I've my chest and I'm dropping my |
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34:54 | So I'm reducing the volume in my . Right when I'm breathing in and |
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35:00 | I'm breathing out, my diaphragm lifts up so I'm increasing the volume in |
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35:06 | abdomen. All right now, notice just talking about the space. I'm |
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35:10 | talking about all the organs, I'm talking about anything else here. I |
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35:14 | blood vessels that travel through the abdomen up towards the heart. So, |
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35:20 | I decrease the pressure around those blood , that's the external pressure so that |
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35:28 | vessels no longer being pressed up Now it's allowed to relax. And |
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35:33 | that means the pressure inside the blood has dropped. So it pulls blood |
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35:37 | where there's less pressure now, similarly, at the same time, |
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35:42 | putting pressure on the abdomen. basically, I'm squeezing on the blood |
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35:46 | in the abdomen, which pushes the towards the heart. So I'm pushing |
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35:49 | from the abdomen towards the thoracic cage I'm breathing in, right? So |
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35:55 | sucking it up to the chest And then when I exhale, I'm |
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36:00 | on those blood vessels which now have blood in them. And so that |
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36:03 | the blood to the heart and it the space in the abdomen, which |
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36:07 | blood from the extremities up into the . That's your respiratory pump. Notice |
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36:14 | not actually acting on the blood vessels . It's just an indirect action as |
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36:19 | function of you creating a bellows in chest, Kinda Cool. Huh? |
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36:26 | . So that's number two. So of these things are assisting the movement |
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36:30 | blood back towards the heart. Number . Which isn't in that first list |
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36:35 | your part itself serves as a suction . We talked about the heart being |
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36:41 | pump to drive blood into the Right. That makes sense because that's |
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36:46 | it does. It squeezes through Sicily push blood out. But when the |
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36:52 | constrict, the archer are the not excuse the atria kind of bulge |
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37:00 | right? Because it's like squeezing one those uh those stress toys, |
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37:04 | You're squeezing the stress toys The the eyes bulge a little bit |
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37:08 | right? That's what's going on. squeezing the ventricles. So the atria |
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37:12 | no sincere in a relaxed state. just kind of go, huh? |
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37:16 | when they go, huh? That they've increased their volume when they've increased |
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37:20 | volume, the pressure drops. And that pulls blood into the atria right |
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37:25 | acting as a section. So this the suction pump that's occurring. And |
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37:33 | during ventricular die oscillate. What's happening is those those atria become uh uh |
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37:41 | . And so that's going to push blood into um my goodness. |
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37:50 | so in essence, what's going on is we're just basically pulling blood into |
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37:55 | heart through the natural constriction and Constriction and relaxation of the uh the |
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38:04 | . So, think of the heart a suction pump. So, are |
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38:08 | good with those four things? Were three things valve skeletal pump makes |
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38:18 | See I'm pushing blood back up to heart. Yeah. Makes sense. |
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38:26 | , we're good back there. Kind sort of I'll take the one not |
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38:30 | the back. Yeah. Alright. like that two thumbs up is even |
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38:34 | . That just makes me feel good . All right. All right. |
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38:38 | far, that's that's how we regulate move blood or not regulate. That's |
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38:44 | we move blood. We're using that . So, flow is remember is |
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38:48 | result of the resistance, right? , if we increase resistance, we |
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38:52 | flow. If resistance drop, flow up. So F. Equals delta |
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38:57 | . The delta P. Is the in pressure between the two points that |
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39:00 | measuring divided by the resistance. And a simple way to understand it. |
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39:06 | we can look at length. We look at radius vessels. You gotta |
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39:09 | And the the viscosity of the blood all that together. Plus, what |
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39:14 | just learned here really deals with size vessels. And what I wanna do |
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|
39:19 | I want to change our conversation and to regulation. All right. When |
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39:28 | talk about blood pressure regulation, what doing is we're talking about two different |
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39:33 | . All right. If you have blood pressure, what that's in reference |
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|
39:38 | is the long term. Alright. short term refers to is what is |
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|
39:44 | body's need? Right, this very . And how do I modify what |
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39:48 | need is at this given time? , that kinda makes sense. |
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39:54 | So, short term use our quick . We're talking very, very short |
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39:59 | that are taking place to create homeostasis the right now. So, this |
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40:04 | like seconds, milliseconds, minutes, sort of thing. And what we're |
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40:09 | is we're altering your cardiac output and total peripheral resistance. And we're using |
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40:15 | nervous system. Alright, So, nervous system, fast response. The |
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40:22 | term is what we're dealing with, days, hours. I have minutes |
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40:27 | . But it's really these larger periods time. And here we're going to |
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40:34 | the presence of salt or the presence water as a result of changes in |
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40:39 | hormones are present in our bodies. right, So, let's deal with |
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40:46 | Euro. €1 is actually pretty We have in our medulla a region |
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40:51 | the cardiovascular center. All right. in the cardiovascular center, they have |
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40:56 | different structures. The first is gonna called the cardiac center. The other |
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40:59 | called the vas a motor center. so, what we're doing here is |
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41:02 | can see cardiovascular when you see that cardio means heart vascular means blood |
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41:09 | All right. So, we have cardiac center is going to be responsible |
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41:12 | regulating the heart. And the VA's motor would be regulating blood vessels. |
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41:19 | right. So, that's what it's to these two different areas. |
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41:24 | we've got a big area cardiovascular with cardiac center in a vase, a |
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41:27 | center. These are autonomic. You make your heart beat faster or |
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41:32 | You cannot make your blood vessels relax constrict by just willing it to |
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41:37 | It doesn't happen. Okay. the cardiac center is responsible for regulating |
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|
41:43 | cardiac output. That's your heart Alright? And there's two different halves |
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|
41:47 | it. One that accelerates one that accelerates, alright. Or inhibits. |
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|
41:51 | right. So, when we're talking acceleration, we've already sent this. |
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41:54 | talking about sympathetic, sympathetic acting on s a note on the myocardial. |
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41:59 | doing two things. We're increasing heart and the force of contraction when I |
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42:04 | heart rate. Or if I increase volume through that force of contraction, |
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42:09 | increasing cardiac output. And then the is gonna be true as well. |
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42:14 | I'm doing parasympathetic s a no on A V. Node, what I'm |
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42:16 | is I'm putting the brakes on the at which my heart is beating. |
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42:20 | , my heart rate goes down and gonna basically slower cardiac output. Because |
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42:26 | relationship of cardiac output cardiac output equals heart rate times the stroke volume. |
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|
42:32 | right. so notice And this is I Or said when we're talking about |
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42:37 | heart, when I speed up my I'm speeding up both the rate and |
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42:42 | strength. When I'm slowing down. just putting the brakes on the heart |
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42:48 | . Not worried about the strength strength take care of itself because of frank |
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42:55 | frank Starling law. Sorry if that's clear. Alright, so far these |
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43:00 | . Okay. Alright, okay. on motor. Alright, so here |
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|
43:05 | gonna be dealing with a degree of in the blood vessel. So, |
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43:10 | talking about resistance now. All right this is where it gets a little |
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|
43:15 | . And I think I mentioned this thursday. I think I mentioned |
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43:20 | Alright. I might have been just to one person so I can't remember |
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|
43:24 | , you know. All right. , what we have is we have |
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43:28 | different types of receptors that are found blood vessels that respond to sympathetic |
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|
43:35 | Remember it's sympathetic stimulation and the degree sympathetic stimulation that results in vessel constriction |
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|
43:41 | dilation. The more sympathetic stimulation. greater the constriction, the less less |
|
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43:47 | stimulation. The less constriction. So get Visa dilation. Now these two |
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|
43:53 | are the alpha receptors. These are are epinephrine receptors. Right? So |
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|
43:59 | have alpha and we have beta Now these alpha receptors are found pretty |
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44:06 | throughout all the blood vessels in your . Alright. They're basically everywhere where |
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|
44:11 | don't see them is when we get to the skeletal muscles and down to |
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|
44:17 | coronary vessels. This is where you're see the beta receptors. And I |
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44:21 | I describe this and what happens here what we're trying to do is we're |
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44:26 | to in response to sympathetic stimulation. want to get blood very quickly to |
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44:32 | tissues that need the blood, So if I'm running I want that |
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44:37 | to get to my leg muscles, ? And I want my heart to |
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44:41 | hard. All right. And so I'm gonna do is the hard |
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44:45 | that's the easy but the blood vessel wanted to constrict and when I constricted |
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|
44:49 | flow of blood through that vessel is much faster. Even though I've increased |
|
|
44:54 | , it's going faster. And now do. I remember I talked about |
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|
44:57 | , talked about the hose right? right. But when I get to |
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45:02 | tissue, I don't want it to zipping by. Right? I don't |
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45:06 | it to be like I'm just sprinting . Good luck getting any oxygen from |
|
|
45:11 | . I want to slow down. . And so here because we have |
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|
45:16 | different type of receptor those vessels actually as a function of their stimulation. |
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|
45:24 | so in the skeletal muscle they relax so the blood slows down exchange can |
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45:31 | place at the capillaries and then back they get out of the capillaries, |
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|
45:34 | have our veins constricted again So we push that blood back to the heart |
|
|
45:38 | , very quickly and so it moves to where it needs to go. |
|
|
45:41 | it slows down, does its thing it goes back off quickly as it |
|
|
45:46 | . All right, So, the here is we get an increase in |
|
|
45:50 | resistance. We get more blood in . It's not sitting around and hanging |
|
|
45:55 | in the veins anymore. It's actually because we have constricted the veins. |
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45:59 | then what happens is we end up more blood in the skeletal muscles, |
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46:03 | blood to the heart so that the can take place. All right. |
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46:08 | this is a function of the visa center to determine the degree of sympathetic |
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46:14 | so far so good. Alright. uh way that we regulate blood flow |
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46:25 | looking at the amount of pressure that's on. All right, So, |
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46:29 | two different types of receptor locations. are for barrow receptors. Barrow refers |
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46:35 | pressure. Right? So, if think of a barometer, you've heard |
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46:38 | barometer that measures pressure. Atmospheric pressure receptor is simply a receptor in the |
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46:44 | vessel that looks at the degree of and pressure. That is in that |
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46:48 | vessel. We have two of We have one that's found in the |
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46:51 | arch, one that's found in the artery. Right, So the carotid |
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46:55 | . So, think right where blood exiting the heart and up here trying |
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47:00 | determine how much blood is going up the brain. Now, why do |
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47:05 | think that's important? Brain is Right? If you don't get blood |
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47:11 | the brain, you're gonna die. right. It's real simple, |
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47:14 | And that's what it's looking for. right. And again, these are |
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47:19 | at the degree of pressure to to the vezo motor center whether or not |
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47:24 | need to be activated, in other , increase the pressure to drive things |
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47:28 | . So this is how we're monitoring pressure. So, right now, |
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47:32 | your bodies, you don't have a of blood pressure going on because you're |
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47:35 | around doing nothing other than listening to in a couple of minutes, you're |
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47:39 | stand up and your pressure is gonna the same as it was when it |
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47:42 | sitting down. And your body's gonna this is not good. I need |
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47:46 | increase my pressure to get blood up my brain. And so your blood |
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47:52 | will go up. It will rise match the need of the body. |
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47:56 | this would be an example of where is short term. Alright? So |
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48:02 | always sending a signal. And if increase that signal, right? If |
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48:06 | increase the rate that basically a signal , hey um that's an increase in |
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48:12 | . And if the pressure drops then slow down the rate at which I'm |
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48:16 | to the Visa motor center. And what they're doing is just simply adjusting |
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48:21 | degree of sympathetic activity? Parasympathetic activity the blood vessels and to the heart |
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48:27 | match the need of your body. this is kind of what it looks |
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48:31 | . If we consider all those things . And I've got to just look |
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48:35 | the picture. So here's your blood if your blood pressure drops, barrel |
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48:38 | recognize that since signals to the cardiac torrey center basically to your heart, |
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48:45 | it to the Visa Motor center and blocks the car cardio inhibitory center. |
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48:50 | as a result of that basically your rate goes up a degree of strength |
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48:54 | the heart. Uh it contracts harder the blood vessels that causes an increase |
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49:00 | cardiac output and increase in resistance and an increase in blood pressure. And |
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49:05 | you can just do the reverse. not gonna walk through all the |
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49:07 | but it's just the reverse. I'm cardiac output by basically activating the cardio |
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49:14 | center and I'm blocking basil motor and celebratory systems and so blood pressure goes |
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49:21 | when the blood pressure rises. And at any given moment right now your |
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49:24 | is sitting there going I'm trying to out and trying to figure and so |
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49:28 | body is sending these signals over and . I guess if you stood up |
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49:32 | sat down, stood up, sat . You kind of notice that you |
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49:36 | a little lightheaded, This is another to look at, It's a little |
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49:41 | more expanded. Its just kind of through where is it detected? What |
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49:44 | the signal? What is the So it's the same thing that you're |
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49:47 | here, right? It's just a . And it tells you what the |
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49:51 | is. So showing you when the pressure rises and when the blood pressure |
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49:56 | and notice the difference here is above below. Normal. Alright, |
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50:00 | if this does chart doesn't make sense you want a little bit more |
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50:04 | You can use this chart, but the exact same thing, They have |
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50:07 | exact same information. Another thing we're talk about this when we get into |
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50:14 | lungs is there are also chemo receptors are there looking at the amount of |
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50:19 | , the amount of carbon dioxide and amount of ph what? How |
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50:22 | what's your protons in your body? is your ph really, really |
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50:26 | or is it high or whatever? this is really just an indication of |
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50:31 | of oxygen use in your body. , as carbon dioxide, carbon dioxide |
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50:35 | rise, ph drops and your oxygen drop. And your body is really |
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50:41 | not with the amount of oxygen, really with the amount of carbon |
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50:44 | because that's really the indicator of your of oxygen. And so it's measuring |
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50:50 | and when that happens, it's also to send signals to the motor center |
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50:56 | it's going to do it through one two ways either through the karaoke bar |
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50:59 | , which is through the glass, nerve or through the aortic body, |
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51:03 | is gonna be the vagus nerve. think I said that over here |
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51:06 | But I didn't actually pointed out. glossy differential vagus nerves. All |
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51:13 | What he's doing is basically saying, , when this when your carbon dioxide |
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51:18 | rise, we need to increase sympathetic because we need to get oxygen to |
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51:22 | systems. That's really all I'm Right? So, think about when |
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51:26 | start exercising, right, What Heart rate go up? Yeah. |
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51:33 | . You become a little bit That's because you're pushing blood up to |
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51:36 | surface and stuff. And that's because this. It's oh we're running out |
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51:40 | oxygen. Let's let's or we're using because carbon dioxide levels Alright. And |
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51:46 | , increase peripheral resistance and shifting from blood reservoirs which are the veins towards |
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51:54 | blood back to the heart. another way you can look at this |
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52:00 | just say, all right with regard parasympathetic and sympathetic activity. What's actually |
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52:04 | on? Alright, Parasympathetic is really only on the heart. It doesn't |
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52:09 | for the most part on the blood . Its primary remember sympathetic is primarily |
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52:14 | vessels. So parasympathetic acting on heart heart rate. If I drop the |
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52:18 | rate. That means I'm dropping cardiac , which means my blood pressure is |
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52:23 | down. We're dealing with sympathetic heart , veins, what am I doing |
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52:29 | the heart, increasing heart rate and strength, which means I mean also |
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52:33 | stroke volume, which means cardiac output going up. Those relationships are all |
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52:38 | going to result in an increase in pressure with regard to the arteries and |
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52:43 | veins, arteries and veins are veins, and veins are constricting when |
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52:47 | constrict, that's increasing peripheral resistance, is an increase in blood pressure. |
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52:52 | , if I'm constricting here in the , that's increasing venous returns, increasing |
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52:57 | volume, increasing cardiac up. But is the same thing you see up |
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53:01 | , which is increasing blood pressure. , collectively what we're looking at sympathetic |
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53:08 | is going to result in an increase blood pressure is really what we're trying |
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53:12 | say, but it's not acting just the heart, it's acting on all |
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53:17 | of the vasculature as well. So . So good. Alright, that's |
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53:22 | easy part. And I think this little bit is not terrible. But |
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53:25 | look at and go, oh, lots of big names and that makes |
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53:27 | scary. All right. So, we're looking at here now is the |
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53:37 | for long term regulation. What do do on a day to day basis |
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53:43 | you woke up this morning, Were thirsty and you started doing what drinking |
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53:49 | ? In theory it's water. But everyone drinks water what your body is |
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53:53 | when it's thirsty, It's it's craving that thirst is a function of a |
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53:58 | in blood pressure. Your body is , not just saying, oh, |
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54:01 | mouth is dry. Your body is the blood pressure overall in my body |
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54:06 | low. I need to bring it . What is the best way I |
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54:10 | increase the pressure of blood in my , add more fluids. So I |
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54:15 | more volume and that pressure goes Now. Your brain is not actually |
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54:19 | . That's just that's the natural And there are hormones that play a |
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54:24 | in regulating your blood pressure. This three of them. We're gonna learn |
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54:29 | . Four of them. Alright. confusing thing. They all start with |
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54:33 | letter A all right. So, like, oh, crap. I've |
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54:38 | to know which one does which. , so the first one is called |
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54:42 | diuretic hormone. Anti means against write . Is is you wanna know |
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54:52 | That's when you think of it as . But diaries. Is is the |
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54:57 | of urine. Okay. And then is just hormone. So this is |
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55:02 | anti urine producing hormone. That's an way to remember it. Okay, |
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55:08 | , what is it actually doing? has another name. It's called |
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55:11 | Um And we're not gonna do it much more right now. Will come |
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55:16 | . But what it does, it , hey, um I have water |
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55:19 | my body and your body, your are always trying to get rid of |
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55:23 | water and your kidneys never stop So, they're always producing water. |
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55:28 | what we're going to learn when we about the kidneys is once you're in |
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55:31 | actually made, you can't extract anything it. So, before you're in |
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55:35 | actually made if you need water back your body, you need to grab |
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55:39 | before the urine, it actually becomes and it becomes urine once it leaves |
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55:43 | kidney. And actually it's a point the kidney that it's like, |
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55:46 | this is now you're in you can't it. All right. And so |
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55:50 | this is doing is it acts on kidneys before the urine is made of |
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55:54 | . And it says, you know um you're getting rid of too much |
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55:58 | . I want that water back and kidney says, oh yeah, |
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56:01 | Here you go. And it puts back into the blood and that's how |
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56:04 | hold it back in there. So its job is to conserve water |
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56:10 | of paying it out anti diary Okay, now it does some other |
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56:18 | . It plays a role invasive Alright, so this is under under |
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56:23 | specific conditions. And so this results an increase in blood pressure as a |
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56:29 | of an increase in peripheral resistance. number one anti hormone. And here's |
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56:34 | thing. All of them will tell what they do. So, you |
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56:36 | have to kind of know what the mean. Alright, Second one. |
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56:39 | . Tencent. When you hear the angio you should be thinking heart |
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56:44 | Or blood vessel. It deals with vasculature. And then the second word |
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56:49 | the second half of this is Which is actually two words jammed |
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56:53 | So. Tencent really is tension and I. N. At the end |
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56:59 | protein. I. N. Is the protein at the end of |
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57:03 | So this is the vascular tension All right now what it does that |
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57:11 | vaso constriction. All right now notice has a two. There's angiotensin |
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57:18 | There's an angiotensin one. If there's angiotensin two. There has to an |
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57:22 | one. And I'm just gonna tell this. Don't write this down. |
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57:24 | a three and a four and we know what they do. Okay they're |
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57:29 | they're still trying to figure it Alright. And we've ignored it. |
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57:32 | it's probably like the most important protein our body. We just don't |
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57:35 | Okay that's how it always works. . So what this does is it |
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57:41 | a role in basal constriction but it releases another hormone called Valdosta rhone. |
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57:46 | we will look at in just a and it's responsible for the release of |
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57:51 | first hormone. We just looked at H. The anti peeing hormone is |
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57:56 | president or anti diuretic hormone. All now when you're thirsty. This is |
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58:02 | bad boy. That's telling your body you're thirsty. It stimulates you and |
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58:07 | you know what we need to increase in our bodies. So what I'm |
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58:11 | do is I'm gonna go wake up two hormones that are responsible for increasing |
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58:15 | pressure. But I'm also gonna tell brain that you're thirsty. So go |
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58:19 | some water so I can at least some water in my body so I |
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58:22 | increase the blood pressure. Now this part of a larger system which we're |
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58:27 | see on the very last slide for day is called the rent an angiotensin |
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58:31 | or that's what your book calls I'm more familiar with the rent an |
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58:35 | out das theron system so it kind puts it all together. So so |
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58:40 | we have two that promote the increase blood pressure. All right. We're |
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58:46 | see that angiotensin also plays or not valdosta plays a role, increasing blood |
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58:51 | . So three of them are for blood pressure and then there's one that |
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58:58 | alright. We have one that drops pressure and that's this one that you're |
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59:02 | here. The last one. Atrial heretic peptide. That's a tough |
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59:06 | Atrial. What does it refer to . Alright so this is where it's |
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59:11 | produced? Alright in the atrium of heart naturally. This is the harder |
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59:16 | of the word naturally. What do think that means? It has to |
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59:20 | with a chemical what chemical begins with in and an a sodium. Everyone's |
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59:28 | what sodium it starts with an No, naturally you're naturally um It's |
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59:34 | is where I think it's german so where that in a symbol comes |
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59:37 | if you've ever wondered. But that's that word is naturally. And then |
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59:41 | edit refers to your area. All . So it's also order your resources |
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59:46 | so what it's referring to is And what this does is it promotes |
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59:51 | excretion of water by promoting the secretion salt. Because there's a principle that |
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59:56 | going to introduce to you right now you're gonna just sear this in your |
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60:00 | . Water follows salt. Alright. that with me. Water follows |
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60:08 | Say it Water follows Salt. Once you learn that principle, everything |
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60:16 | in physiology makes 100% sense. when we get further down the |
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60:23 | I'm gonna tell you the story about school and I'm gonna flash you back |
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60:27 | the relationships that exist in high school once you remember that you will remember |
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60:32 | how water behaves. But we're not that today. All right. Just |
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60:37 | waterfall assault. Okay, so with to the rented angiotensin system, we're |
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60:44 | have a th we're gonna have angiotensin we're gonna have valdosta rone. They're |
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60:50 | uh an increase in blood pressure by water back into the body. |
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60:57 | Atrial natural peptide opposes the rain. Valdosta phone system. Angiotensin valdosta phone |
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61:04 | . Okay. It's trying to push out of the body to lower blood |
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61:09 | . So when your blood pressure increases heart, recognize it and says wait |
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61:12 | second. Uh let's start excreting So it drives salt out. The |
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61:18 | follows and that's how your blood pressure over the long haul and then you |
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61:23 | dehydrated because you're naturally pushing that And that's when the rent in system |
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61:28 | , hey, okay, I'm gonna the kidneys go, I'm gonna produce |
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61:31 | . Renan is simply an enzyme that out into the blood and it looks |
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61:35 | a plasma protein that's already existing that's in circulation made by the liver. |
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61:41 | plasma protein angiotensin. Oh jin ! when you see the region at the |
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61:47 | , just means it's an inactive So angiotensin already exists in the |
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61:52 | it's just not active. And so going to cause the conversion of angiotensin |
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61:57 | into angiotensin one and that goes into lungs plus other tissues but in your |
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62:07 | and there's an enzyme there called angiotensin enzyme, which is a really long |
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62:14 | . So we shrink it down into that's easy to manage. We call |
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62:18 | a space and ace converts angiotensin one angiotensin two. Then angiotensin two is |
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62:28 | circulates and activates the production of a and the production of Valdosta rone al |
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62:36 | theron is made in the adrenal It is a steroid and its job |
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62:45 | simply to increase sodium reabsorption. So of peeing out sodium kidneys go, |
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62:52 | okay, well I'll pump that back the body and when I pump salt |
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62:56 | into my body, what does water ? I'm gonna go follow the |
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63:01 | And so that's why the water goes into the body and why your blood |
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63:04 | increases. So you see we have mechanisms to do this. One is |
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63:11 | for pumping water, one is responsible pumping salt. So the water will |
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63:16 | to go right or it creates a so the water will go right and |
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63:22 | we have let's see oh and then also are going to increase thirst through |
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63:27 | And we're gonna create Visa constriction. this chart looks scary but it's not |
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63:35 | right. It's actually just showing you structure. So here we got angiotensin |
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63:40 | . Renan is the enzyme that comes , converts it into 81. There's |
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63:44 | second enzyme and lungs converts it to to 82 increases the production of vasopressin |
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63:50 | increases water reabsorption, makes us So we bring in more water by |
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63:55 | and we also create vessel constriction These three things are going to increase |
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64:00 | pressure. What does valdosta own It acts on the kidney and |
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64:03 | hey absorb the water wherever sodium Water follows all of those together are |
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64:08 | to increase blood pressure by increasing blood And then when it gets too |
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64:17 | what does the atrium do the atria ? It says we don't want |
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64:22 | push the water out, push the out so it causes salt to be |
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64:25 | . Water goes and you pee out stuff and your whole life is spent |
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64:28 | working along these hormones back and forth make sure that your blood pressure is |
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64:35 | statically balanced. Now before you go is just an aside, anyone here |
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64:43 | that hormonal or that that enzyme at . You guys watch enough, you |
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64:50 | don't watch tv, you guys are Tiktokers. Alright, alright so very |
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64:57 | if you have a family member who high blood pressure they give them first |
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65:02 | blockers, we saw beta as with to those receptors and then after beta |
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65:08 | don't work we give them ace inhibitors basically blocks this so that you can't |
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65:16 | your blood pressure. Oh that's where names come from. Yeah that's because |
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65:21 | exist. Alright. Remember test is or sorry test is thursday that's two |
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65:27 | from today. Extra credit opens up at six. Alright, it will |
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65:34 | open till nine a.m. So if you to get it done, I don't |
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65:38 | it. Alright, it takes just couple of minutes. Yeah that's |
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