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00:06 | although you haven't gotten your ice cream . Thank the classmates in the group |
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00:11 | who turned that in. Yeah good guys. Um And for that you |
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00:17 | gotten any come and get some. mean come on it's ice cream all |
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00:21 | it's going to melt. And then be sad and we'll all be sad |
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00:25 | we wasted ice cream. So a of guys went to a football game |
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00:30 | be fine. Yeah. Yeah. know football is like life. You've |
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00:34 | highs, you've got lows and then the half you come out and you |
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00:38 | play and then you come back and quarter and you start playing again. |
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00:42 | So that was the last game of season. So last home game we |
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00:46 | against UConn and then against Cincinnati. we'll win out. I'm kind of |
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00:52 | between the Cincinnati game right? I I want us to beat Cincinnati because |
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00:57 | right? But if Cincinnati wins then have a better chance of screwing with |
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01:01 | C. F. P. Which like my lifelong goal. I'm really |
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01:07 | . I've never ever liked the football that we've that we've done ever |
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01:13 | Well 1998 when my my college went . That was like the second year |
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01:18 | the BCS. There are two other undefeated teams at the time. It |
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01:22 | Tennessee and I think it was C. L. A. And |
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01:26 | had all had a common opponent and all the teams to lane beat them |
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01:31 | most and we were completely ignored and was of course it means to line |
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01:36 | , you know? And so that's I first really got angry about the |
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01:39 | thing and ever since then I've held personal grudge against the BCS, the |
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01:44 | F P. O. Yeah, mean if I could, I'd hunt |
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01:46 | people down and punch him in the , but since I can't do |
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01:51 | what we're gonna do today is we're to talk about motor pathways and really |
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01:55 | the gist of this lecture is is how do we send signals from our |
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01:59 | down to our muscles? All And it's not just the muscles that |
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02:03 | can think about controlling, but also that are under involuntary control, the |
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02:07 | that are beyond just conscious thought. so, so when we look at |
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02:13 | , just kind of think in terms , okay, how do I move |
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02:16 | is really what this this lecture is about. And it's, you |
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02:21 | sometimes when you look at this I promised I wouldn't do this, |
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02:23 | I'm just gonna do it anyway. you look at the stuff it's kind |
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02:25 | like, but don't do that. . Because really what it boils down |
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02:30 | is is this right here, is there's a general pathway, All |
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02:35 | These are all polly synaptic, there's general pathways that you can understand and |
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02:40 | you understand the nomenclature then it just of falls into place and especially at |
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02:44 | level, the freshman level where we have to actually track everything and identify |
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02:48 | everything is going. Just kind of what each of these individual tracks are |
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02:53 | and where they go. That's that's all. That's where does it start |
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02:56 | ? Where does it go too? right. And what does it |
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02:59 | So it's actually a lot easier than he presented. So I probably could |
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03:03 | done to lecture in like six minutes then we can just go out and |
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03:05 | out of here and eat our ice . But if I did that, |
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03:08 | you'd be really mad because you paid lot of money to take this |
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03:11 | So we don't do that. So I want to point out here |
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03:15 | we're talking about motor pathways, what do is conscious skeletal muscle and autonomic |
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03:21 | . Alright. So remember autonomic contraction be somatic in other words, it |
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03:26 | be a muscle that you have conscious of. Right? So if I |
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03:31 | your knee, right? You do the thing, you get that |
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03:34 | reflex. That's an autonomic response. ? So that's kind of what we're |
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03:39 | about. So posture, balanced muscle is what we're talking about turning |
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03:44 | So the muscle tone, that's not you think about all day long, |
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03:49 | ? It just is right, posture balance is not something you think |
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03:54 | It just is, right? So what we're trying to get to |
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03:59 | All right. So what do we the general path we're gonna start up |
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04:02 | the cerebral cortex or the brain And it's going to be easy to |
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04:06 | which ones which. All right. gonna travel down the length of the |
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04:10 | cord and they're going to innovate a or a gland. All right. |
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04:14 | that's the idea. All right, . Forget when you press one |
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04:21 | it changes to that. All So all motor pathways All right. |
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04:27 | going to get input from the basal in from the cerebellum. Remember these |
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04:31 | the planning centers and we're going to at these planning centers and see how |
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04:34 | make this thing really complicated looking but going to kind of take that step |
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04:38 | and just say yeah, these other are involved, 2ndly. They're always |
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04:43 | always always Well, there's probably some . There's always an exception but for |
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04:49 | purposes is always to neuron chains. right. Which is kind of nice |
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04:54 | remember what we're talking about century. said there was 123 chains up. |
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04:58 | ? And now we're dealing with And so I have to change is |
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05:02 | simple. We have one that's upper . That's lower. All right. |
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05:05 | that makes it kind of easy. like all right. So I just |
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05:07 | to know where the upper is the basically begins along in the cerebral cortex |
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05:12 | in the brain stem and then it down into rates? Um the lower |
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05:18 | neuron which then goes on to the . That's kind of easy. And |
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05:23 | pathways are either going to be director . Those are the terms that they |
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05:27 | doesn't mean that I'm going directly to or indirectly. Although it kind of |
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05:31 | . But that's the terminology they The one is called the direct |
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05:34 | One is called the indirect and then some sub pathways in with within. |
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05:39 | we're gonna start with the lower motor and the lower motor neuron is going |
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05:44 | be found in that ventral horn. ? So we're going to be uh |
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05:49 | going to exit from the spinal We're gonna travel out the ventral we're |
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05:53 | to move to the muscle and then going to be one of two different |
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05:58 | of fibers. It's gonna be an motor neuron or a gamma motor |
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06:02 | All right. Now, there's something the slide that is going to be |
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06:06 | to read. And I want to it so that you're not horribly |
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06:10 | Alpha. Simple. All right. you're looking at a muscle structure, |
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06:14 | you're going to see is that the itself is actually divided into two |
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06:18 | You have fibers that are found on outside of the structure and inside you |
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06:23 | this kind of specialized capsule that has on the inside. We've talked about |
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06:29 | before. We call these the extra cell muscles and then inside we have |
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06:33 | interview cell muscles. All right. so it's a unit that looks at |
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06:37 | degree of stretch. So the outer extra Feustel muscles are the muscles that |
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06:42 | being used. And so when you you're stretching them or when you cause |
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06:46 | to them, the muscles on the are moving and the muscle on the |
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06:50 | is moving in response to the alpha the gamma. All right. ALF |
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06:54 | the outside game on the inside. it's that inside interview cell muscle that |
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06:59 | also have sensory fibers that are associated it. That you're looking at the |
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07:03 | of stretch. The stretch is too . Then the muscle contracts um to |
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07:09 | oppose that overstretching. And so, you're doing is you're you're changing the |
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07:15 | of stretch in response to two little stretch or too much stretch. But |
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07:19 | measuring inside in that interview cell All right. And so when you |
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07:24 | the word motor neuron, remember that's sending a signal to cause contraction. |
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07:30 | right. So lower motor neurons are always always, always no exceptions to |
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07:37 | rules excitatory. So, that means you're contracting a muscle you have to |
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07:43 | a signal to it if you want stop contracting a muscle, you stop |
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07:48 | the signal to it. All The alphas are the ones on the |
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07:52 | , the gammas are innovating on the . And what they're doing is that |
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07:57 | . So, this is where the part. It says innovating interventional skeletal |
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08:01 | which serve as appropriate receptors. So is the is the problem. It's |
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08:05 | bad proposition that I used right? I'm not an english major, |
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08:11 | So the witch is applying here to muscle fiber. Alright. The skeletal |
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08:16 | fiber service appropriate receptor, not the motor neuron. Okay, the motor |
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08:23 | sin signals. So it's not acting a receiving is not acting as a |
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08:29 | . The muscle fiber is acting as sensory. All right. And so |
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08:33 | the muscle fibers that detect the degree stretching the muscle. I had to |
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08:38 | that because when I read it this , like, oh good. |
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08:41 | I was just screwed it all up everybody. Okay, so lower motor |
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08:47 | innovate muscles and cause them to contract excite them, cause them to |
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08:54 | Okay, so they begin in the cord in the ventral horn and that's |
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09:00 | they travel. All right now we've about this, but I'm going to |
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09:08 | going to reiterate a couple points that already learned just so that they stick |
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09:12 | . First off the organization of the matter. Alright, so down here |
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09:18 | the ventral horn, in the lateral are going to be exhibiting some a |
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09:24 | and remember what summon utopia. Is basically demonstrates the proximity or the location |
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09:30 | where a neuron enters into the gray . So, if this is trying |
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09:36 | show look for medial collateral, you basically say, okay, immediately by |
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09:42 | the neurons are higher up than what's here laterally, which would be lowered |
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09:48 | more distal to the body. All . And so again, it's not |
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09:52 | this strange. Just jam in these and hopefully they'll they'll eventually end up |
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09:58 | they need to go. There's a degree of organization to all this |
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10:01 | which is really, really beneficial because means that we can learn what that |
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10:06 | is so that we can then learn the fibers are coming in. Going |
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10:10 | the second thing is that every motor in the body is going to be |
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10:16 | of this organization. And what is motor unit? Well, remember, |
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10:19 | that alpha motor neuron and all the that that alpha motor neuron innovates. |
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10:24 | , again, this is just a of us really understanding when we talked |
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10:28 | back then about muscle fibers, What they do? All right. They |
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10:34 | part of a muscle fiber goes in innovates a whole bunch of different |
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10:37 | And then those fibers contract in response a single signal coming down. All |
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10:42 | . And so again, not that picture is going to demonstrate this in |
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10:46 | way, shape or form, that never clustered. So it's like they're |
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10:49 | spread around the muscles so that you disperse the force so the muscles can |
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10:54 | evenly. Now with that in mind that the lower motor neuron is one |
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11:02 | innovates then we got to get down that lower one. This is where |
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11:06 | upper motor neuron is. And for of you who are late there's ice |
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11:09 | . So, if you want to down and get some you can that |
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11:11 | me. I'm not gonna take any for this awesome classmates. All |
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11:17 | Yeah. So anyway, So what the motor neuron basically it's going to |
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11:22 | the cell body is gonna be located the cerebral cortex. This is a |
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11:26 | picture. Not for you to but just to demonstrate. We talked |
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11:29 | this said, look cortex, organizer six layers And I said previously that |
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11:33 | layers have different sizes depending on where located. And this is just kind |
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11:37 | showing you that. And so here we're looking at is we're going to |
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11:41 | in layer five. And these are sells. I'm not going to ask |
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11:43 | remember Betz cells? I've never called about selling my life. But these |
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11:47 | the pyramidal cells that are in the cortex and the motor cortex that basically |
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11:53 | a role as the upper motor All right. And you can |
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11:58 | you know here in the primary motor that's a really thick area. So |
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12:02 | doing a lot of processing in that region. All right. Now, |
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12:06 | they're going to do is the motor for the most part are gonna deck |
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12:11 | state at some point when they're going to that lower motor neuron. Most |
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12:17 | them deca state. All right. you can think I'm starting on one |
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12:21 | and then at some point I have cross over so I can do the |
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12:24 | side of the body. All They're gonna directly synapse with the lower |
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12:29 | neuron or on some sort of interneuron gonna synapse directly. You're like wait |
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12:34 | second. That sounds like three motor chain. There are some exceptions to |
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12:38 | rules. All right. So primarily the lower motor, so it's upper |
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12:42 | lower and then in some very small there might be an interneuron in there |
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12:47 | well. All right. Now, what we said with the lower the |
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12:51 | is always always always always under no . Is there any thing? They're |
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12:57 | excitatory? Okay. Now this might help you understand the interneuron part. |
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13:05 | uppers can be excitatory or inhibitory. right. So if a lower motor |
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13:12 | is always excited tori and always causes . I can have an upper come |
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13:17 | and basically prevent a lower from becoming . All right. So think about |
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13:24 | muscles, right, antagonistic muscles or muscles that oppose one another. If |
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13:28 | causing one to contract what I want have the other one. Do |
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13:34 | All right. So what I can is I can send an excitatory signal |
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13:40 | to the one that causes the But I can send an inhibitory signal |
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13:45 | the one that would oppose it. I'm causing relaxation and preventing it from |
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13:51 | . So that's why you get that excitation and inhibition at the same |
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13:59 | All right. So where in the cortex do we regulate? Where do |
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14:07 | upper neurons come from? Well, first is the primary motor cortex. |
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14:11 | called M1. This is where we the conscious control of voluntary movement. |
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14:16 | want to move my hand so I'm moving my well, I should do |
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14:20 | this way. That's moving my It's doing something like that, |
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14:23 | All right. And so here you see here, is that some of |
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14:26 | typical organization, Right? That's that it doesn't exactly match the body, |
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14:31 | you can see there's organization for the in the trunk or the trunk and |
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14:36 | axis. And then when you get to the face and head, it's |
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14:40 | of swapped all around and kind of . All right. So what we're |
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14:44 | is that there are specific areas that responsible for controlling specific muscles. Um |
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14:49 | there is a certain degree of plasticity . So, for example, if |
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14:53 | were to lose your limb um then going to be, you know, |
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14:57 | areas are going to shrink down as areas compensate and start learning how to |
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15:04 | around that limb. And so you're to see areas kind of shrink and |
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15:07 | depending upon need is the idea in of plasticity. They're going to make |
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15:13 | . Yeah. Okay. Just in of the motor cortex. The primary |
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15:19 | cortex is here in the pre central . Alright, so just in front |
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15:24 | that, the yellow area is called pre motor cortex. So it sits |
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15:28 | front of it. Right. And this is where you're going to have |
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15:32 | some other types of pure middle cells do play a role in regulating. |
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15:37 | typically what it does is it's going work with the primary motor cortex to |
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15:43 | movement. All right. So what doing is we're initiating the impulses um |
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15:48 | then six sending signals up to the motor cortex. The idea is I'm |
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15:52 | to initiate what we think we want do and tell the motor cortex what |
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15:56 | do? Motor memory. You guys motor memory. Yeah, you |
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16:01 | I mean the easy one since I'm at a bunch of people with laptops |
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16:04 | if you close your eyes, put fingers on the two keys that had |
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16:07 | little bumps on there. You can without looking, couldn't you? |
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16:11 | No old people like me can't. . I'm a hunting pecker. You |
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16:17 | , I cannot pick fast. You ? All right. That doesn't work |
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16:24 | you. What's another motor running where guys have riding a bike? What |
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16:27 | have instruments? Right? Playing Yeah, I have a dance shuffling |
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16:35 | . Okay, good. I like one. That's a new one no |
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16:38 | ever offered. Yeah, taking a of cards and shuffling it. How |
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16:41 | over here? What do you guys some other memory? Yeah. |
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16:48 | yeah, you can't whistle. I actually uh for those of you just |
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16:53 | that. I mean, what did just play? Yeah, super Mario |
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17:01 | . Mhm. Uh Those those those evil evil video games, I just |
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17:06 | here. No, I didn't. . No, I mean, so |
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17:09 | mean, whenever I hear that, can I can I could literally play |
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17:12 | first level of super Mario brothers without . Yeah, the the I |
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17:22 | I played so many times. I even have to look at it. |
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17:25 | just muscle memory, Right? And are games that we all play like |
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17:31 | , right? You know, there's , basketball, soccer, right, |
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17:38 | , dancing, diving, as we , musical instruments. These are muscle |
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17:42 | all right. The other thing that , it controls muscle movement in terms |
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17:47 | context I have here. The way the high five. I put my |
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17:50 | up, that's a wave that's also five. So my brain knows what |
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17:57 | do in context because of what the motor cortex tells us we're going to |
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18:02 | . This is the situation where you to do this, right? As |
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18:06 | to doing this, That makes All right. Also it plays a |
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18:12 | in movements to visual and auditory All right, now, again this |
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18:17 | not reflexive, right? But this the idea of like when I see |
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18:21 | . This is what I'm supposed to , Right? So that's the idea |
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18:26 | their response to visual or something. right. I'm not going to call |
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18:30 | guys out. But have you ever uh like a drill team? |
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18:35 | I mean, whether it be the team in high school, you |
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18:38 | you know, doing that or maybe just a military drill team, |
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18:42 | Just watch them. I mean, incredible what they do there. It's |
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18:46 | all sound cues. They know when supposed to do whatever they're supposed to |
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18:50 | and they practice practice practice. So they have to do is hear the |
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18:54 | and they know where they need to . Right? All right, now |
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19:00 | it's not just sending signals to the motor cortex. It can send signals |
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19:04 | the spinal cord to initiate activity, it does talk to the pre motor |
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19:11 | are sorry, the primary motor Alright, Association cortex is remember are |
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19:16 | for taking information processing and sending it so that we can understand it. |
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19:21 | right. So here there's two different cortex is that becomes more important. |
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19:27 | prefrontal cortex uh places place an important on both the pre motor and the |
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19:33 | cortex and what it does is it ensures that the muscle movement behavior that |
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19:38 | doing is appropriate for whatever it is you're doing right now? I |
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19:42 | we can we can have fun with . But I mean, the idea |
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19:44 | I'm not going to raise my hand I'm trying to move my foot, |
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19:48 | ? I want to walk. I raise my hand up. I move |
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19:50 | foot forward. It would be an of that. All right. And |
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19:54 | we're talking about the posterior parietal association well. Where's all the motor stuff |
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19:58 | guys remember? Where's motor primarily all motor things that we do? Frontal |
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20:03 | . All right. So over we have the visual cortex. Over |
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20:07 | we have the sensory cortex. what we're really dealing with when we're |
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20:11 | with the posterior parietal is basically understanding what's touching us and other sensory |
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20:19 | visual and then coordinate movement with Like, have you ever touched something |
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20:24 | kind of withdrew your hands? that's gross. Yeah. All |
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20:27 | The idea is like, I'm touching cookie and then I don't want to |
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20:31 | the cookie things anymore. All That would be an example. All |
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20:37 | . This is a very complicated Don't get freaked out about it. |
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20:40 | right. Because previously I didn't have picture. So, I just now |
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20:44 | a picture. Right. And what I want to show you here |
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20:46 | All right. We said in the we have the motor cortex or the |
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20:49 | motor cortex, promoter cortex. We the association areas. What's going |
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20:53 | The brain stem from motor neurons start either the cortex of the brain |
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20:57 | Where are they starting? Well, starting to see the little green little |
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21:00 | right here. These are the vestibular found in the brain stem. All |
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21:06 | . And so it's a really good . Except that it's a really complex |
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21:10 | complicated picture without a strong background and get lost in it. All |
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21:15 | And so, I'm just trying to out here here. We are in |
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21:17 | brain stem as opposed to way up in the motor cortex. And actually |
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21:22 | is showing you hear somatosensory. it's basically saying, look how the |
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21:25 | comes up. Right? So, we're doing is just focusing down here |
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21:28 | the vestibular nuclei and this is basically group of nuclear. They are going |
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21:33 | form the vestibular nerve um uh, where that information for the upper motor |
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21:41 | in the brain. So we're gonna all right now. Also, the |
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21:44 | formation is the other area. And we're talking about here is we're talking |
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21:49 | the formation of the indirect tracks. the direct tracks are cortical the indirect |
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21:55 | . Our vestibular. All right this little picture again, going back |
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22:03 | jelly beans that you're seeing here. pulled them out and that's what that |
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22:06 | is down there is trying to shoot here's the jelly beans. All |
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22:09 | Again, picture is not so I just wanted to be able to |
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22:13 | them to you. All right. we are going to start in the |
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22:18 | stem or we're going to start in cerebral cortex for the upper neurons. |
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22:23 | how do we influence them? there are different parts of the brain |
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22:28 | are influencing both the cortex and the stem. All right. So, |
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22:36 | we're looking at here is first off the basil new clay. And what |
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22:40 | do is they look and monitor the nuclear. Remember all these different |
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22:44 | They monitor the intensity of movement initiated the motor cortex. All right. |
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22:50 | , the idea here is that every that you do should be perfectly timed |
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22:54 | the right amount of of tension, ? To produce whatever action that you |
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23:00 | . Right. When you lift up like this, you don't want to |
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23:02 | the same amount of force that you to lift up the table, |
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23:06 | That's the idea. And so the of the basil nuclear is to make |
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23:10 | that that's happening All right. That applying the right amount of tension to |
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23:14 | whatever the job is that you're trying accomplish. All right. So, |
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23:18 | they do is they inhibit antagonistic or movement. You guys heard about Parkinson's |
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23:24 | ? Yes. All right. Did talk about it last time we talked |
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23:26 | the brain stem. Yeah. So that movement If I'm trying to create |
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23:30 | smooth movement and I've got muscles that being told to control over contract in |
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23:36 | time, it makes corrections. so it's like, oh no, |
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23:40 | you're shooting too far to the you're producing too much power. So |
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23:44 | doing that. And so there's this to ensure that that doesn't happen. |
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23:48 | is why you make a smooth All right now, the brain of |
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23:52 | basal nuclei and do not actually deal with the motor pathways. They're just |
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23:58 | information up to the cortex. So the processing is taking place at the |
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24:03 | of cortex before the signal is actually . Does that make sense? So |
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24:09 | like making the checks before you actually the action. All right. And |
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24:14 | lots of structures we learn them I'm not gonna ask you to memorize |
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24:19 | all. Again, I'm just trying point out again, just as a |
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24:22 | that there is a lot of different . They have lots of different roles |
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24:27 | with regard to regulating motor activity. right now, how they work is |
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24:37 | this through these basic mechanisms. All first off, here's your motor |
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24:41 | it's producing the muscle contractions. So arrows mean, I'm stimulating through glutamate |
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24:49 | is inhibition so that when you see red line with a little at the |
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24:52 | that is telling you that I'm blocking preventing it from happening. So with |
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24:58 | regard of the motor cortex it's the that produces the muscle contraction. Motor |
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25:03 | is stimulated by the thalamus and the is always sitting out a positive signal |
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25:08 | contract contract, contract. The motor is okay, contraction, contract |
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25:13 | And it's sending that signal down to contraction. Obviously our body is not |
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25:17 | complete state of contraction all the is it? So that means that |
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25:21 | is regulating the thalamus and this is the basil nuclei come in. All |
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25:26 | . So we have the internal globus and what it does is it usually |
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25:31 | that inhibitory neurotransmitter gaba to block the of the thalamus. So we now |
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25:37 | is we have an excitatory neuron that's stimulated by an excitatory neuron that's being |
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25:43 | . That makes sense. So I do is remove the block and then |
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25:47 | allows the signal to move forward. kind of makes sense. So everything |
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25:52 | like not that I've ever done but it's like pressing the gas and |
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25:57 | it going and then pressing the brake not letting the car move and then |
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26:01 | the brake and then applying the brake and over again. All right. |
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26:07 | the idea. Now in the direct . What we're gonna do is we're |
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26:13 | to release gaba onto the internal globus . All right. Here we get |
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26:18 | . All right. So you can here that would be through the basil |
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26:20 | collect. So what I'm doing is inhibiting the inhibitor right. Two wrongs |
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26:27 | make it right. But to nose a Yes, something like that. |
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26:31 | right. So, if you inhibit inhibitor then the inhibitors no longer |
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26:36 | So now you have excitation good. is where it gets, you |
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26:40 | like, okay, just whatever. ? But what we're doing is we're |
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26:44 | the antagonistic ideas. Right? if you block the globus pilatus. |
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26:50 | ? So basically, if you block then you're blocking this. All |
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26:55 | And so that allows for this to forward. Now, the other thing |
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27:01 | can do here is the indirect right? You can see I'm blocking |
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27:03 | blocking and then I'm turning on. , if I uh somehow basically blocking |
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27:10 | , I'm not activating this. But I activate this, in other |
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27:14 | I stop that signal, then I activate through the sub thalamic nuclei just |
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27:18 | an example. All right. So idea here is if I stimulate this |
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27:23 | either indirectly or directly then what that , it releases the inhibitory neurotransmitter that |
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27:28 | the thalamus. If I block the , the thalamus can't stimulate the motor |
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27:33 | . Which means I don't get a contraction. So it's a complicated |
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27:38 | isn't it? It's basically saying I'm to have all these different controls. |
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27:43 | turning things on, sometimes turning things and then ultimately what I'm turning on |
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27:48 | off is going to affect the thalamus the thalamus plays a role in exciting |
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27:55 | motor cortex. So if I block thalamus, I can excite the motor |
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28:01 | . If I um did I say right? If I block the thalamus |
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28:06 | I am blocking the uh make sure I'm blocking the thalamus and I'm blocking |
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28:12 | pathway. If I stimulate this, I if I block this then I'm |
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28:19 | excitation to occur. All right. so really what the basil nuclear is |
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28:25 | here because I can go down this trail over and over again and get |
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28:28 | more confused for all of us. idea here is I'm regulating through the |
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28:33 | nuclear, whether or not the thalamus doing its job. That's really what |
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28:38 | ultimately trying to say here. All . So, it's a mechanism of |
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28:42 | . So other information is being You can go back and look all |
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28:46 | , what am I doing? I'm with the thalamus is adjustment of muscle |
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28:51 | , Right? So, I can through any of these other systems to |
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28:57 | whether or not this is going on it's all being done at the level |
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29:00 | the basil nuclear. So, what something like nucleus do? It stimulates |
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29:07 | to cause that to go alright, this To block that block that this |
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29:13 | happen. Other areas that do For example, the substantia nigra |
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29:17 | Good old substantial nigra that's found the stem its job is really dope them |
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29:21 | what it does, it activates the pathway and it inhibits the indirect |
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29:28 | Okay, so it's just showing you regulating this process. So maybe what |
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29:34 | should do in learning this is If the thalamus is excitatory and the |
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29:40 | global politicizes inhibitory, I just got figure out what happens if I turn |
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29:45 | one on or turn it off. I turn off this then I can't |
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29:51 | . But if I turn this on I do block. That's the easiest |
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29:55 | to say it. The other part regulating movement is the cerebellum. |
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30:08 | I'm going to pause here for a . What's that? Mhm. Makes |
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30:18 | positive for a second. All Do you remember when we first started |
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30:22 | about movement a long time ago, said with regard to the nervous system |
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30:27 | general, we like to do like throw things into boxes, right? |
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30:30 | we said, okay, if you at this area, this is what |
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30:32 | area does look at, that. is what this area does. And |
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30:35 | we're going through and throwing things in boxes, we kept throwing things into |
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30:38 | movement box. It's just like throwing into the into everybody's box. |
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30:45 | you can see it's kind of Movement is one that's regulated. And |
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30:49 | this is just kind of showing you like, yeah, there's a lot |
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30:53 | stuff going on. The next slide really going to demonstrate this all |
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30:58 | The cerebellum, remember? Is that that kind of sits off to the |
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31:03 | that basically does the processing compare intent action. This is what I'm intending |
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31:09 | do is my body doing what I it to do. It's not |
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31:12 | calculate in real time. Send the up to the cortex to make |
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31:18 | All right. So, that's really the role of the cerebellum is. |
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31:22 | right now. Again, structurally, do we have? All right. |
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31:25 | sending information the motor cortex. We're information appropriate receptors. Sitting information. |
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31:30 | vestibular organs. That's basically things that balance and the brain stem. |
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31:35 | So, what we're doing is we parking G fibers per Kinji fibers are |
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31:39 | These are we have mossy fibers. fibers are sending information up. All |
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31:44 | . So, these are taking the to the cerebellum so that you can |
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31:48 | information. Information is processed in the in the fiber. Send information down |
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31:53 | the deep nuclei so that your cerebellum figure out what the plan is. |
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31:58 | right. And then from there, when it's sent back onto the various |
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32:02 | of the brain. And so we the vestibular nuclear, the pons and |
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32:05 | , which we're gonna talk about. nucleus of the midbrain which we're going |
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32:08 | talk about in the motor cortex which already talked about. So, the |
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32:12 | cortex remember plays a role in conscious . Vestibular nuclei play a role in |
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32:19 | movement. Alright, maintaining your All right. Have you all noticed |
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32:25 | your faces haven't hit the desk? mean some of your falling asleep? |
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32:28 | understand but for the most for the of this class you guys have been |
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32:33 | up right? Alright. That skeletal that's doing that job. All |
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32:38 | And your body is saying I'm in upright position and this is a position |
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32:42 | need to be in. Oh I'm a little tired so I'm gonna put |
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32:44 | elbow out and I'm going to hold up in this position. Right? |
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32:50 | the vestibular nuclear is making sure that don't topple off your hand or fall |
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32:55 | on your face. You don't have think about. It must set |
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32:59 | must set up. Must sit There we go. So this is |
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33:09 | fun picture. Not anything you've got memorize. It's just a fun picture |
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33:14 | show what's going on. Where does the information come from? All |
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33:18 | So here's your motor cortex, temporal . What's big, what's being done |
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33:21 | the temporal lobe? Simple question. language audition. Sound Okay, |
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33:32 | Um out here at the occipital vision. Over here in the parietal |
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33:38 | , touching right vision, some hearing stuff like that where we have the |
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33:43 | cortex. So basically information is being in all these different areas. And |
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33:48 | is that information being sent up to motor cortex. So you can see |
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33:52 | , I'm processing information. Sound, , touch all at the same |
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33:57 | All these things are being done what's done in the supplementary motor areas which |
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34:01 | the pre motor cortex and the frontal . I'm processing what my plan |
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34:07 | Right? And so all this stuff basically going through and process being processed |
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34:13 | the motor cortex and that information is sent down so that you can go |
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34:18 | vs High five. All right. all uncoordinated. Right. Everyone here |
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34:24 | uncoordinated. Have ever done the high where you completely missed the high five |
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34:28 | you ran up to and did the with right? And then it's like |
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34:34 | you kind of Yeah, that's that's correction part, right? But that's |
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34:40 | idea is like, oh, I see where you are. I |
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34:42 | that you're coming towards me. I'm to slap that hand and you |
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34:46 | all that information being processed. All . And then what about the other |
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34:51 | ? We'll remember the cerebellum, receiving from the position of the body, |
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34:56 | information of the thalamus information is being by the basil ganglia. You can |
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35:00 | here everything is going up and back and back and around and being processed |
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35:04 | reprocessed through the thalamus, the basal or the basal ganglia and the cerebellum |
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35:09 | ensure that the intention matches the action in real time. And then that |
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35:17 | sent up to the motor cortex which that information down and you're still with |
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35:24 | ? All right. That's because we haven't practiced enough. So, motor |
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35:32 | or brainstem we're going to look at motor cortex, folks. Let's look |
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35:35 | the direct pathway. Alright, so are called the pyramidal tracts. You'll |
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35:40 | that word. So when you think pathway, think pyramidal tracts, they're |
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35:44 | to be in the primary motor cortex where we're gonna start and we're gonna |
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35:48 | either to the brain stem of the cord. So there's two tracks, |
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35:53 | spinal cortical bulwark. And you all a sudden you can look at the |
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35:56 | and go, oh, so I'm in the cortex, I'm going down |
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36:01 | the spinal cord. I'm starting in cortex. I'm going down to the |
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36:05 | stem now. Why why would I in those two things? Divide your |
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36:10 | into what are the two parts of body? Yeah. Left. |
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36:17 | That's one way you can divide it my body versus my head? |
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36:25 | We mentioned all those cranial nerves. do they originate from brain stem? |
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36:32 | . So, if I want to , is that a conscious movement? |
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36:37 | right. If I nod my right, that's a conscious movement. |
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36:43 | . If I want a way that's different type, that's my lower |
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36:46 | Right. My upper body is dealing the cranial nerves. My lower body |
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36:50 | dealing with the spinal nerves. So have a cortical spinal tract, which |
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36:55 | everything from your neck downward. And we have the cortical billboard, which |
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36:59 | basically your neck upward. That's not terrible, is it? All |
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37:05 | Just has weird names attached to Why don't they just call it the |
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37:08 | tracking the body track? Because they're smart people. They like to use |
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37:15 | terms to make things complicated. So look at the cortical spinal track. |
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37:20 | right. And again, the jelly , you see a picture like |
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37:23 | What they're doing is they're trying to space and so they're putting everything on |
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37:28 | same page. Right? So you'll the jelly beans like this and you |
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37:32 | , oh no, we're just focusing here on these two things. So |
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37:36 | look and see. We're looking here the big purple jelly bean. And |
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37:39 | looking down here at the little tiny . What color? What's the |
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37:46 | Okay. We're going to turquoise. right. And we're looking at the |
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37:50 | one. Okay, notice, remember said we have a mere image. |
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37:55 | you can just divide the spinal cord half. So you can just look |
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37:58 | one half if you want to. right. So really we're ignoring all |
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38:02 | other things that are down here for now. So this is the direct |
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38:06 | . These two things. The lateral spinal tract in the ventral cortical spinal |
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38:10 | . Sometimes referred to as the anterior spinal track. All right. So |
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38:16 | we have, All right. where we originating primary motor cortex projecting |
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38:20 | to the spinal cord? That's where name comes from. All right. |
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38:23 | going to pass through the brain We have to Because that's just in |
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38:27 | way. But we're not stopping in brain stem. We're just going to |
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38:30 | on going down and we're going to the pyramids of the medulla. All |
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38:35 | . So, when we look at pyramids, right, This is these |
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38:39 | as they're traveling down. So, , there's gonna be devastation. All |
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38:43 | . So, where do they Well, it depends on which track |
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38:46 | looking at If you're in the lateral spinal track, the big purple jelly |
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38:51 | over here on the side. You're to cross over in the medulla. |
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38:55 | right. Where are we located? , this is referred to as the |
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39:00 | funicula. So, that's where we're . All right. And where what |
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39:04 | we doing? What are we? are we responsible for the appendix killer |
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39:09 | muscles? All right. Your arms your legs. Okay, So all |
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39:15 | fibers that go our response for the and legs are gonna travel down through |
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39:19 | lateral cortical spinal tract. Okay. not too terrible. All right. |
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39:24 | , here's that. So, now just contrasted ventral, right, down |
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39:27 | . That jelly bean deck state in spinal cord. So, they cross |
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39:32 | a little bit later. All Where they're located down here in the |
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39:36 | of ridiculous. Remember that's the ventral . And their job is to innovate |
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39:40 | axial skeleton. Is that your body your trunk? Okay? Not too |
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39:47 | right now. Just to kind of you something here that kind of help |
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39:51 | stand out, remember this. What do you think requires more neural |
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39:56 | moving your body or moving your arms your legs. Arms and legs. |
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40:02 | , now, granted this is a drawn by someone who has no biological |
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40:07 | . You know, he's copying from some other text but look at the |
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40:12 | of these two tracks. Big that would be the arms and the |
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40:19 | . Itsy bitsy turquoise, that would your trunk. Okay, So real |
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40:27 | kind of compare and contrast for All right. And that's really kind |
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40:31 | what you do when you look at things is just do the compare contrast |
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40:34 | say, okay, what's this one ? What does that one do? |
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40:36 | right now again, you're not going have to track it down the spinal |
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40:40 | . That's not going to be the thing here when you taken your anatomy |
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40:44 | or when you get on the nursing or into whatever professional thing, depending |
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40:48 | where you're going to go. Sometimes gonna get real down and dirty with |
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40:52 | neuro anatomy. All right. But good news is that if you understand |
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40:55 | you're going and where you're coming it kind of easy to figure |
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40:59 | right because when it says it's gonna found in the lateral funicula sit means |
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41:03 | literally gonna always be there and it's going to travel the same path. |
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41:08 | it's just basically okay, once I where it is, I'm just going |
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41:11 | say this area right here is where going to be. All right, |
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41:14 | we don't need to do that today the test on next thursday? |
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41:20 | that's right. Next thursday is a . Should warn you about that. |
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41:24 | the test next thursday? And then done with the class? All |
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41:32 | I mean yeah. Mhm. Except Burek also. Mhm. But you |
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41:38 | come in here and have a party 8:30 AM, no one's going to |
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41:41 | here. All right. So, let's deal with the cortical bulb er |
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41:48 | . All right. Now, they're for the skeletal muscles associated with chewing |
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41:53 | expression, tongue movement and swallowing. hmm. What does that sound |
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41:57 | Head? Alright, there we Alright, so again, there's going |
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42:00 | be the direct pyramidal pyramidal tracts. going to originate in the pyramidal cells |
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42:05 | motor cortex and project to the brain where that's where they're going to come |
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42:10 | the cranial nerves. All right. , again, if you wouldn't look |
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42:15 | the organization of the motor cortex, going to be that region of the |
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42:19 | that your face in your mouth and throat. All right. So basically |
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42:23 | the jaws, The face bearings. ton. All right. Now we |
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42:29 | to this as the indirect pathway or extra pyramidal tracts. Those are the |
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42:35 | terms that they use. All So, um wait, I'm |
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42:39 | That's a critical Bulba track. That's I was trying to get that said |
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42:42 | the face. We're in the next now. I'm sorry. Now we're |
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42:45 | deal with the indirect pathway. Again, notice we're going back down |
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42:49 | the spinal cord. All right. , what we're doing is we're originating |
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42:52 | the brain stem over here. We're in the cortex. We're just going |
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42:56 | the brain stem and then innovating the and the head. All right. |
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42:59 | why we don't spend a lot of . They're four tracks. So, |
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43:02 | we're back down here to the extra als. All right. So, |
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43:06 | have the rubio spinal, ridiculous spinal spinal. Or the vestibular spinal. |
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43:10 | are the names that we're going to here instead of olives. It's gonna |
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43:13 | Aspinall. Okay, now again, naming things for where they originate and |
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43:21 | we're going to tell you where they're to go. All right. |
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43:26 | we're gonna start with the stimulus All right. The stimulus deals with |
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43:33 | nuclei. That's why you showed me horrible picture with the green jelly |
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43:38 | Yes. All right. Because that's they originate. They originate in the |
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43:43 | nuclear. There's two tracks that are a spinal tracts. One that is |
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43:49 | one that is medial. Okay. job control balance and posture. Sit |
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43:56 | straight, stand up straight. All . How do you hold yourself as |
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44:00 | move? All right. So the motor neurons in the lateral vestibular track |
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44:05 | going to be in the lateral vestibular . What they're going to do is |
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44:09 | going to get input from the sensory of the inner ear and the |
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44:14 | What is my position of my head space? All right. And then |
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44:18 | going to protect down via the ventral Nicholas. So they're going to be |
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44:23 | here on the ventral side. And they're doing is they're going to stay |
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44:28 | literal. What does its lateral means gave you a hint they stay. |
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44:34 | collateral stay on the same side. don't cross. Right? Contra lateral |
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44:42 | the opposite side. Right? It's same sides. All right. So |
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44:48 | gonna project down the same side. . Good news. The artist got |
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44:51 | one correct. Alright. And then they're gonna do is we're gonna go |
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44:54 | synapse in the ventral horn and send information down to the right muscles to |
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44:59 | them to contract or or if you're contracting, relaxing them. All |
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45:05 | So that's the lateral medial medial vestibular . So that's pretty straightforward. All |
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45:13 | . What they're gonna do again? ear and cerebellum and what they're doing |
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45:17 | they're controlling the neck muscles. All . So this keeps your head still |
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45:24 | you walk like a pigeon? no one does that when you walk |
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45:32 | head stay still. Right. That's this is doing. The media vestibular |
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45:38 | is ensuring your head still still stay during movement. All right, ridiculous |
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45:49 | track. What do you think particular with something? We've learned? Particular |
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45:56 | . C. All right. really? There's two of them. |
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46:00 | a media in the lateral or sometimes to in this. It will make |
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46:03 | easier for you. The Ponti nor medullary, ridiculous. Final track. |
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46:08 | right. Where do you think the manjula spinal track starts in the |
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46:13 | Where is the major? Everyone? a doula. See this just all |
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46:17 | a sudden. It's like, oh , they really do name the things |
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46:20 | what they do. Alright, so where they originate now, what they're |
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46:24 | here is axial approximate muscle movement associated posture, local motion and reflexive muscle |
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46:33 | . So, it's not just Now, remember, the particular formation |
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46:36 | alertness. All right. So, now dealing with what am I doing |
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46:40 | regard to movement and reflexive movement. right. So, with regard to |
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46:45 | ponte in one we're going to project the medial ventral funicula. So, |
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46:50 | that means is is we're sitting here the medial side of the ventral uh |
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46:58 | . All right, ventral, But were immediately located again synapses and |
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47:03 | hore primarily dealing with extensive your So excitation of the X tensors. |
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47:10 | right here with the lateral articular spinal . That's going to be in the |
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47:15 | . It's going to be in the funicular. So the artist here screwed |
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47:20 | one up. He did draw it . It should be out over |
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47:23 | Not down through the middle. Should right there. How do we know |
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47:28 | it is right there. See that jelly bean. All right. What |
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47:38 | we doing here? We're inhibiting the . Okay. Remember, So uppers |
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47:44 | be an excitatory or inhibitory? All . That's ridiculous. Spinal rubio, |
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47:54 | . You're the weird one. Anything name with rubio, actually, |
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47:57 | it's just not obvious. All Remember the good old red nucleus. |
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48:03 | that one big structure. Big old . That Phillip read the word rude |
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48:10 | , is a prefix that means So that's where it comes from. |
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48:14 | right. So they originate the red . Their job is to innovate muscles |
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48:19 | with flexion. So ridiculous. Final extension reflection. Here's the contrast. |
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48:27 | there. All right, a So here it is red. And |
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48:33 | we're gonna do is we're going to deca state to the other side over |
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48:37 | . I'm sorry. I should have out. Um I'm going the wrong |
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48:44 | . They're just just do whatever you like computer the stimulant. Right. |
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48:51 | , notice here, we're not We're staying on the same side. |
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48:54 | this is it's a lateral. All . Here, we're crossing. That's |
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49:01 | . Yeah, we're staying on the side. It's it's collateral. All |
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49:13 | here, contra lateral cross over All right. And what we're going |
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49:19 | do is from the red nucleus. going to travel down, we're going |
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49:23 | stay in the lateral funicula. This over here on the side and then |
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49:28 | going to innovate on the contra lateral . That makes sense. All |
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49:35 | So what are we doing? flexing muscles. Last one, Detective |
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49:47 | detect. Um Remember it's going to up here in the superior curricula asses |
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49:51 | we're really going to be locating or going to be turning our head or |
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49:55 | our head in response to visual It's like, oh look there goes |
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50:00 | bird. All right, that would visual stimulus. So, superior |
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50:05 | getting input from the optic nerves were to cross over. Right. Some |
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50:11 | them aren't going to but what most them do. We're gonna cross over |
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50:15 | then we're gonna move down the anterior Ulis. Alright, and where's the |
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50:21 | ? It's going to be down there ? Our artists a terrible job and |
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50:26 | going to project and be um going to the upper horns. Are the |
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50:32 | , the ventral horns of the upper cord again. Head, neck. |
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50:39 | , so if you look at these things and get lost. Start with |
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50:45 | jelly beans. Okay, I'm down in the ventral or I'm over here |
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50:49 | the lateral and that's really as simple you need to do what am I |
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50:54 | ? What am I innovating? Well on where starting where I'm going. |
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50:58 | right. So we was final detective here, take toe moving the head |
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51:07 | neck. Alright, notice it's just upper part of the neck, |
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51:15 | All right now we're going to just of wrap things up here. This |
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51:21 | gonna be the last bit of And then when we come back after |
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51:24 | Turkey day and the consumption of much And the extra don't forget to set |
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51:30 | scales back 15 lbs. Uh Yeah. And this is why we |
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51:39 | bigger when we get back, all dealing is with the autonomic nervous system |
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51:45 | then we're done. And so this our last little bit here. First |
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51:49 | in your brain you have central pattern . Central pattern generators are responsible for |
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51:53 | rhythm, rhythm movements that your body the easy you want to think about |
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51:57 | walking. But we also chewing is rhythmic movement, breathing is arrhythmic |
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52:01 | So anything that has kind of a to it that's really repetitive. And |
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52:05 | this is kind of a combination of and voluntary movement. Alright. And |
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52:10 | we talked about the different types of um uh clusters in the neural pathways |
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52:17 | And so remember we we mentioned this what the CPG is. Um And |
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52:23 | these are gonna be inside the brain and also in the higher cortex. |
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52:26 | basically there's a pacemaker properties to them basically you can see what we're doing |
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52:31 | we're going to cause extensive hers to and we're gonna repress flexors and then |
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52:39 | is going to activate and we're going repress them. So that's why we |
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52:42 | this this pattern that's basically going back forth. It's easier to see with |
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52:48 | cat. But you do it as right? When you walk that's what |
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52:52 | doing is you're doing a repetitive pattern actually when you move your arms you |
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52:58 | it's going to work in opposite. ? So it's a pattern that your |
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53:01 | is excellent. So these are CPG that are responsible for doing that. |
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53:10 | pretty sure we may not have talked these before. Did we talk about |
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53:14 | stretch reflexes before the golgi And the the a stretch reflex? No. |
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53:22 | . So I did reserve it for and that's good. All right. |
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53:26 | these are types of muscle responses and want you to think for a moment |
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53:32 | um well we're gonna start with the reflex and I'm going to try to |
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53:36 | you a situation where you can kind see how it works. Okay. |
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53:42 | not just talking across your legs and your knee. That's fun. But |
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53:45 | not gonna be an easy way to it. All right. So this |
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53:48 | a mono synaptic reflex. All And what we're doing here. And |
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53:51 | mentioned this when we're talking about the of the interview cell fibers. Is |
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53:55 | what we're doing is whenever we have sort of movement, we're trying to |
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53:58 | the muscle with a specific degree of . Right? And so what your |
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54:04 | is looking for is to is to that. And so it needs to |
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54:09 | the stretch um as your as as happening and then adjusting in response to |
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54:17 | . All right. So, I you to picture for a moment um |
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54:22 | a book out in front of I'm not talking little tiny book. |
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54:25 | talking like a good old £12 biology . Right? And let's say you're |
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54:30 | it out like this. All And if I come along and take |
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54:34 | biology text book and put it on . Just kind of lay it |
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54:37 | What's going to happen to your It's gonna go down. But if |
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54:41 | have a gun to your head and don't move your head, your |
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54:43 | you're gonna want to keep those hands , Right? But there is a |
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54:47 | response because right now your muscles are a particular degree of stretch in response |
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54:53 | the weight that's on it. And you're doing is you're getting this instantaneous |
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54:57 | increase in weight that your body hasn't experienced. So if you're going to |
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55:00 | this natural, Oh, I don't enough tension. But I'm gonna bring |
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55:04 | create enough tension to hold the books . That kind of makes sense. |
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55:08 | , this is the stretch reflex. basically measuring how much stretches in that |
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55:15 | . And when the stretch becomes too . It basically says, oh, |
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55:17 | , no, no, too much . Let's contract more so that we |
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55:21 | bring the right amount of tension in to put the mussels exactly where we |
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55:25 | them. And that's what we're describing . All right. So, the |
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55:29 | is being regulated or monitored by this called the muscle spindle. All |
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55:34 | And this is where that extra fuselage intra Feustel comes in. So, |
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55:38 | can see here here's electron micrografx. , this isn't just some guy |
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55:41 | well, I think this is what's . They've actually got in and look |
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55:44 | these things and you can see it's it's a structure within the entire |
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55:48 | So it's not the muscle itself. these things inside there's portions within the |
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55:54 | monitoring and looking at the degree of through this little tiny thing called the |
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56:00 | spindle. All right. So, you look at the muscle spindle, |
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56:03 | have the extra fuel cell muscle fiber . You have the interviews all muscle |
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56:08 | , you have alpha neurons that are extra fuel cell. So, they're |
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56:11 | ones that are playing a role in sending signals to cause contraction. And |
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56:16 | , on the inside you have the motor neurons that are sending signals to |
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56:20 | contraction of that interview cell fibers and wrapped around it. You also have |
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56:25 | uh sensory neurons that are sitting there the amount of contraction that's taking place |
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56:31 | the amount of stretch that's taking Interview silly. All right. And |
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56:35 | it's going to do is if you that interview cell muscle fiber, you're |
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56:39 | to detect it. So you're going cause the whole thing to contract. |
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56:43 | right. So, that's what you're is internally to it. All |
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56:46 | Now, the interview cell, they're in connective tissues. So they're kind |
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56:50 | separated out. And you're doing this that you can you can innovate just |
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56:55 | . All right. So, when muscle spindle this structure is stretched, |
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57:01 | sensory neurons in there are going to that stretch of that interview cell fiber |
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57:06 | sends a signal outward. Right? then causes contraction of the alphas as |
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57:12 | as the gammas which we're not really about. All right. So, |
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57:16 | , when I put the weight on , I'm stretching the muscle more than |
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57:20 | was I detected internally at the interview , which is going to send a |
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57:26 | right back to the spinal cord which going to stimulate the alphas to cause |
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57:30 | to bring the arm back into the amount of stretch. Uh huh. |
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57:35 | the stretch reflex. All right there's also a reciprocal inhibition going on |
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57:44 | well. But we just kind of that. Alright. So they are |
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57:47 | sending a signal to the other muscle as one is stretching the other one |
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57:51 | going to be contract or relaxing. what you're doing is you have to |
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57:56 | those two signals simultaneously. The second of reflex, It's a motor reflex |
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58:07 | to do with the Golgi tendon Now, this is going to be |
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58:11 | in the tendon of the larger All right. So remember, at |
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58:14 | end of each muscle you have this and so there's gold uh tendon structure |
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58:19 | measuring the degree of stretch inside that . So, again, I'm going |
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58:23 | paint the picture. We have you the books right? And I put |
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58:28 | put the £12 buck. We put £12 book and we keep stacking £12 |
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58:32 | . Alright, Again, gun to head. You know, you got |
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58:35 | hold those books up and eventually what's to happen is is, you |
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58:39 | you're strong enough but you're going to muscle is contracting more and more and |
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58:44 | . I remember when the muscle what is it? Pulling on, |
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58:48 | on the tendon which is pulling on bone. And so each time the |
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58:51 | contracts it stretches the tendon a little more creates greater tension in that and |
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58:57 | causes stretch on the bone or pull the bone and what you're monitoring here |
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59:02 | the stress on the tendon. If put too much stress on attendant, |
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59:06 | gonna eventually terror, right? And what you're doing is you're protecting the |
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59:11 | . So what the Golgi tendon is to do is it's looking at the |
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59:15 | of stretch here so that if you , it's going to protect the muscle |
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59:20 | the tenant and say no, you do that and you're going to inhibit |
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59:24 | alpha neurons and prevent them from So, think about when you are |
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59:28 | too much. What do you tend do? Your muscles basically relax and |
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59:33 | drop whatever it is that you're Okay, That's the idea here. |
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59:38 | again, I use the example of gun in your head because when things |
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59:41 | too heavy for me, I'm just , I'm not gonna let them |
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59:44 | right? That's normal. But you think about think about like if you're |
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59:47 | your buddy move for the 47,000 times all done this. Remember you made |
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59:52 | vow, I will never ever ever anyone ever move again. And you |
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59:56 | that phone call, you're like, it. And you go and help |
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59:59 | and you're lifting up that box and all that china, right? And |
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60:03 | like, it's too much and you're like, so what do you |
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60:05 | You come out, right? And you put it down, it's |
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60:09 | right? Because your muscles basically given , there's something done. All |
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60:14 | So what the Golgi tendon is doing it's protecting that muscle. So it |
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60:17 | tear And it doesn't tear that tendon the bone. All right. |
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60:21 | when the muscles contracting the tendon is , your detecting the degree of stretch |
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60:27 | in the Golgi tin or in the itself that sends information up to the |
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60:31 | cord, spinal cord says all not a problem. But when the |
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60:35 | in here gets too great, what going to do is it's going to |
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60:39 | or interfere with the contraction here. , it's an inhibitory effect. Too |
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60:46 | stretch of the tendon. Danger, . Stop the signal muscle relaxes. |
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60:53 | right. Now again, there is activity there as well. There's ice |
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61:02 | up here for those who haven't had . All right. So, we |
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61:07 | one more lecture that's next Tuesday. , thursday, right. We have |
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61:14 | exam, booze. All right. , thursday we eat as much food |
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61:21 | we possibly can as humanly possible. know? It doesn't have to be |
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61:26 | . It could be tofurkey. Mm . You know, or ham. |
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61:31 | your for truth toe for ducky. my goodness, That would be |
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61:36 | Would that be tofu duck and Or would be tofu duck and tofu |
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61:42 | , totally. I mean, I what you're ducking. Mhm. And |
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61:49 | , yeah. So you just do and then stuff it with like a |
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61:55 | stuffing. That's one. And yeah. And then wrap it on |
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62:04 | . Yeah, yep. And thank all for showing up on a Tuesday |
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62:11 | no one wanted to show up I didn't even want to be |
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62:14 | You're welcome, you, |
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