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00:07 | So here we are, the Tuesday our first exam. No 1's excited |
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00:13 | that. That's no big deal. just an exam. Um Just a |
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00:17 | of things. First off, your extra credit is gonna become available. |
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00:22 | there's extra credit. Yes, I there was on the first day. |
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00:24 | right, so this is how the credit works. Make sure you write |
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00:27 | down because there are no extensions on credit. Alright, tomorrow tomorrow's what |
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00:33 | , Wednesday, Wednesday thursday is the . So this is true for every |
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00:38 | exam, the day before the exam six p.m. A link will open up |
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00:44 | blackboard and you'll have an extra credit . It'll take you like five minutes |
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00:49 | your life. Okay. And it's just a self assessment and ask |
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00:53 | Are you ready for the exam? you studied this? Have you studied |
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00:57 | ? How have you studied? How you think you're gonna do, Do |
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01:00 | know it? I don't care what answers are, answer for yourself. |
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01:04 | right. Because this is a self . This is something you need to |
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01:07 | doing before every exam before you walk an exam, let's say. How |
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01:11 | times have you ever got into an in your like I hope he didn't |
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01:14 | ask this question. Right, so already know that's that's kind of a |
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01:19 | self self assessment. Like I know haven't really studied this. Alright, |
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01:23 | what this is trying to do is to give you a sense of what |
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01:26 | know and what you don't know if know that going in an exam, |
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01:29 | already know how well you're going to because an exam is not a device |
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01:34 | determine what kind of person you It's a device to determine whether or |
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01:39 | you learn the information you were All right. The stuff you should |
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01:43 | studying is the stuff that we talked in class. That's where your focus |
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01:47 | be. And so when you answer questions, like I said, we'll |
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01:50 | you like five minutes you get 2.5 for your exam. Right Okay. |
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01:57 | one it closes at nine a.m. On morning. So notice I want it |
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02:02 | before you take your exam. So making you do it at the very |
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02:06 | minute and it comes due before the . Now the second one opens up |
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02:10 | a week later. Alright So once taking the exam you've had a chance |
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02:14 | look at it. We'll have a one that says all right now tell |
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02:17 | did you do the way you thought were gonna do? What did you |
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02:20 | ? What would you change? but we're not gonna worry about that |
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02:24 | because what's gonna happen if you don't that alarm on your phone, you're |
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02:29 | forget until 9 30 on thursday morning you're gonna panic and then you're gonna |
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02:33 | dr wayne. I forgot to do . I'm gonna say I'm sorry because |
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02:37 | is for that small period of So that's part of the exercise is |
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02:41 | able to remember that window. So put it in your phone and put |
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02:45 | alarm, you know right before you to bed or something. So that's |
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02:50 | the first announcement. If you didn't , just in case there's a test |
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02:54 | thursday um third today, what we're do is we're going to finally leave |
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03:02 | sort of, we're gonna get in tissue finally. Alright. Oh and |
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03:08 | in case you didn't know were already quarter of the semester done. |
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03:15 | Yeah. See there's the yay, what I was looking for the right |
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03:19 | mean so to give you a sense how fast semesters go, we're already |
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03:23 | quarter way done. And so what gonna do is we're going to walk |
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03:27 | primarily epithelial tissue and connective tissue and once again we'll dip our toes and |
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03:34 | say, oh yeah, remember there two other tissues here. But what |
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03:36 | gonna do, we're gonna look at details of these two things and everything |
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03:40 | today is going to be on the . All right. Um At right |
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03:47 | class, what time does class in ? Yeah. I mean we get |
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03:52 | earlier than that. But it's 10 , right? Is our window at |
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03:55 | o'clock. That's when another document opens on blackboard and that's just a practice |
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04:01 | , it is not a practice exam the sense that if you do well |
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04:05 | this you're gonna do well, it's practice exam in the sense of these |
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04:08 | questions that I've written. So you of get a sense of how I |
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04:10 | questions, right? So don't use as a tool to say, oh |
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04:14 | at how smart I am. And , let me see how dr wainwright's |
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04:18 | . Alright, so, these are I no longer use on my |
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04:21 | It gives you a sense of what's on. All right, so, |
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04:26 | kind of dive into this. All . So, our starting point is |
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04:29 | to be epithelial tissues. We've we've them briefly, right? We said |
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04:35 | they're basically a sheet of cells. their job is to do is to |
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04:39 | things. And if they don't cover . Typically we have another group that |
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04:43 | refer to as glandular epithelium. Their is to make up the glands of |
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04:47 | body and to secrete stuff. So typically when we think of |
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04:52 | we think of the covering epithelium. , when you look at your |
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04:55 | that's epithelium, if you open up mouth and look on the inside of |
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04:57 | mouth, that's epithelium, basically any organ. The surface of that hollow |
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05:02 | , both on the inside and on outside is epithelium all right. And |
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05:06 | have these specialized contacts. We've already of seen these. Alright, So |
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05:10 | connected by tight junction hemi does Mazzone's OEMs. And typically what they do |
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05:14 | they form these sheets over and over . Just layers and layers of of |
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05:19 | . Or it could be a single . Alright. Glandular epithelium is unique |
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05:23 | that. It doesn't do that. when we get to glands, we'll |
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05:26 | that. All right, of Alright. First characteristic of epic feeling |
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05:34 | are a vascular. Alright. A means they do not have blood vessels |
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05:40 | through them. Okay, So they typically served by blood by some sort |
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05:47 | nearby tissue, but the blood vessels don't travel through the tissue. |
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05:53 | so they're a vascular but they're meaning that nerve fibers can be found |
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05:59 | them. Now, here's a little of, you know, factoid. |
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06:04 | . You don't need to know this a test. But just in |
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06:06 | there's no cell in your body. more than 10 microns away from a |
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06:10 | vessel. Alright, If you don't what a micron is as a thousands |
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06:14 | a millimeter. So, cells are really close to blood supplies. But |
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06:19 | we talk about a tissue being a , that means there must be a |
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06:23 | supply that comes very, very And then the materials from that blood |
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06:27 | will actually penetrate between through the cells get to where it needs to |
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06:32 | All right, So, this is picture we're gonna see when we talk |
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06:35 | the integra mint. This is your . So up here this is |
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06:40 | Up here, down here. This connective tissue and you can see we |
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06:43 | blood vessels that travel right up next the epithelium. But don't actually penetrate |
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06:49 | the epithelium. Have you ever skinned knee? Your elbow, Your arm |
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06:53 | something like that? And it didn't . But you saw a lot of |
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06:56 | come off. What you did is shaved off epithelium. You didn't get |
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07:00 | to the connective tissue. All It's also a characteristic of epithelium that |
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07:07 | regenerates itself. Alright, There are unique type of cell in that they |
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07:11 | what we call contact responsive. So these cells are being lost or |
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07:18 | what happens is they're no longer touching epithelial tissue. So like when you |
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07:23 | a cut, you're basically you're separating epithelial cells. And these epithelial cells |
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07:29 | to touch other epithelial epithelial cells. so what they do is they start |
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07:33 | until they touch again. All And so that's what we say, |
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07:36 | contact responsive. So they will continue divide and multiply until they come into |
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07:42 | with each other at which point they , okay now I'm happy again. |
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07:46 | , So this is a unique thing epithelium. This is why you're able |
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07:51 | constantly replace your skin tissue. it's undergoing this constant regeneration as it |
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07:58 | it um as it lives. And you damage it does it even |
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08:03 | So, so we've talked about this little bit and epithelial tissue has polarity |
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08:11 | it has a top and a bottom are unique and different or separate from |
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08:15 | other. We refer to the exposed as the typical side. Alright. |
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08:21 | if you look at your skin, is the typical surface, the part |
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08:25 | not exposed. It's called the basil . And the ones on the side |
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08:28 | called the lateral surfaces. And then just kind of combine basil and lateral |
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08:32 | because they're very similar to one It's just direction, right? But |
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08:37 | a pickle is very very different than lateral side. Typically. What you'll |
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08:41 | in epithelium is that the typical side where you're going to be secreted materials |
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08:46 | absorbing materials. And so they have unique surfaces. They're gonna have what |
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08:50 | called micro villi. Or you might cilia on the surface of these |
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08:55 | If you don't know what those we'll get to that in just a |
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08:57 | on the basil side. What there instead is that the basil sites to |
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09:03 | proteins to create this extra cellular matrix it can use to attach to the |
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09:09 | tissue underlying it. Right. We to this as the basil lamb inna |
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09:14 | it makes up half of what is the basement membrane. Alright. So |
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09:19 | pickle side has unique features. That's we're going to secrete or absorb basil |
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09:25 | secreting proteins so that it can attach the underlying connective tissue. So the |
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09:31 | connective tissue is connected is the underlying is connective tissue. And it's a |
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09:37 | proteins as well. It's a creating towards the epithelium and that's called the |
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09:43 | lamb Inna. Alright, so we basil lamb inna and particular lamin |
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09:48 | And they come together and they kind attached to each other like velcro. |
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09:51 | so that's why these two tissues are to attach to each other very |
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09:55 | And that's what forms what is called basement membrane. And this is what |
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09:59 | your your epithelial or epithelium in And then you can go back to |
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10:05 | example of the indian burn. And doesn't come flailing off hemi Desmond's OEMs |
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10:11 | in there. You got the Desmond's attached to the cells. But it's |
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10:15 | structures of that basement membrane. The Desmond is going into that particular laminar |
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10:21 | attaching the proteins that prevents the skin being pulled off. Now I know |
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10:28 | is texas. So I know there's couple of you in here are hunters |
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10:32 | if you ever skinned an animal, you're doing is you're separating out the |
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10:37 | from the underlying connective tissue. And of you who have not done that |
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10:41 | you've ever bought chicken with skin on , you've taken the skin off you |
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10:46 | leaving the underlying connective tissue. so if you don't know what microbial |
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10:53 | this is the example here. There a cartoon. This is a I |
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10:58 | know if that's electron micrografx. That's electron micrografx. Alright, so cells |
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11:06 | jam packed close to each other. so what that means is they have |
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11:10 | very very small exposed surface. so, if you can imagine me |
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11:14 | a cell, this is kind of space right here. Right now, |
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11:18 | I want to increase my surface I don't can't really increase myself size |
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11:23 | I'm I'm jammed in there with other . So in order to increase my |
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11:28 | area and I need to increase my area because it increases my ability to |
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11:32 | materials or it increases my area to materials. Then what I'm gonna do |
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11:37 | I'm gonna take my surface area instead it just going flat across the |
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11:40 | I'm gonna extend it up and down up and down up and down. |
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11:42 | of like Bart Simpson's hair. so, you can kind of see |
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11:49 | , this is terrible for those of in the back. But if you |
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11:52 | imagine if I have a cell that a distance like that. If I |
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11:57 | up and down multiple times what I've as I've increased my surface area |
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12:06 | right, I can be able to 100 times better than if I just |
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12:13 | a smooth surface where we really see . And this is true in a |
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12:18 | of different places, but where we see this is in the digestive |
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12:22 | Your digestive track is about 33 ft . All right. And it has |
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12:27 | these micro villi and all these other of modifications to it that allow your |
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12:34 | ft long digestive tract to be about miles long. So that's why we're |
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12:41 | to absorb food rather quickly because we this massive surface area that doesn't take |
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12:47 | a lot of space. All right , if you're not aware of what |
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12:54 | cilia is or psyllium psyllium is A cilia is basically going to be |
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13:01 | with the musician secreting cells. So you see the word music, you |
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13:04 | think of the word mucus. And correct mucus is a combination of water |
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13:08 | a bunch of proteins. These proteins primarily members of the meuse in |
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13:13 | There's a whole bunch of them, ? And so the purpose of the |
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13:19 | is to take that musician and that and that mucus in general, which |
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13:25 | binds up to stuff. It's very . Right? Everyone here is suffering |
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13:31 | allergies right now. Right? This is sticky. It's grabbing all sorts |
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13:36 | stuff in the air that you breathe its stuff in your throat, in |
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13:40 | mouth. When you chew food it that that food and turns it into |
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13:45 | bullet and kind of holds it It's sticky stuff. And the purpose |
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13:50 | the cilia is to grab that stuff to move all the things that shouldn't |
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13:54 | in your respiratory system for example. to pull it upward, it sits |
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13:59 | and goes like this and constantly pushes moves the mucus and whatever it grabs |
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14:05 | from the cells so it has this sort of movement. It moves material |
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14:10 | its surface Now bacteria and I have right here um And and oh actually |
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14:15 | gray this is not the bacterium but bacteria when you have a single cell |
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14:20 | have cilia they kind of use it a way to move. And the |
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14:24 | type of structure we have that allows to move in our bodies or the |
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14:27 | ela it's only found on spermatozoa. this is not an epithelium and its |
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14:32 | is to propel specifically sperm. Alright they're different in terms of how they |
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14:38 | and structure which will see but and terms of functionality. But actually if |
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14:43 | look on the inside structurally they're very similar. When we get to the |
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14:50 | senses we're gonna see things called And they do stick up like cilia |
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14:55 | but they're different and unique and their is to kind of help you with |
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15:00 | to equilibrium and balance there. They're similar but they're uniquely arranged so that |
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15:08 | body knows which way it's tilting. have you ever noticed that when you |
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15:13 | dizzy? I mean I don't know can feel a car move or when |
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15:16 | in an elevator going up and down stuff that's a different type of |
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15:20 | it's what is referred to as the psyllium structurally very similar, but very |
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15:25 | role. So when you look at silly and flagellum internally, they're made |
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15:30 | of micro tubules. They have some proteins in there that helped them |
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15:35 | And the really the key thing I you to understand is that their movement |
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15:38 | different. So cilia move kind of an oar if you've ever seen an |
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15:43 | in a car basically, or in car in a, you know in |
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15:46 | boat or canoe, basically what you is you kind of do it like |
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15:49 | ? Right? That kind of look , sort of? Right, |
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15:55 | so that's, it beats like This is why it's able to push |
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15:58 | . It's kind of like going, pushing it away, I'm pushing it |
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16:01 | , pushing it away, so that's silly it work. All right angle |
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16:05 | the other hand, there long and and so they have more of a |
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16:09 | like movement, which creates the very kind of a propeller like movement, |
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16:13 | is why why results in propulsion. why they're different because they create different |
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16:19 | of movements back to the epithelium Alright, so what does epithelial do |
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16:28 | epithelium do? Really? It's it's basic. Alright. First off |
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16:34 | First thing it does is protection, protects the outside or the inside of |
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16:38 | from the outside of something. It selectively permeable meaning it determines what's allowed |
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16:44 | pass from that one environment into the environment. Third, it plays a |
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16:50 | in secretion and conversely absorption. So able to, it's a cell that |
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16:56 | takes and move stuff out into an or pulls things from that would be |
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17:02 | of that selective permeability. And what we'll see is that some epithelium |
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17:07 | a role in sensory reception. In words, they're there to help monitor |
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17:11 | environment. Okay, so in this up here, remember the epithelium is |
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17:18 | this pink part up here and then come down and look at it. |
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17:22 | what we've seen before in this picture here where we can see secretion and |
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17:31 | epithelium has depending on what you're looking . Two names. Alright. First |
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17:38 | is always going to be based on number of layers right now, when |
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17:42 | say that, that doesn't mean you to count layer, that's that's kind |
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17:45 | the good news, it's either it's layer or it's two or more |
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17:50 | So if you see more than two , you you know that you're dealing |
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17:54 | multiple layers. Okay, If you see one layer then you're dealing with |
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17:59 | single layer. If you're a single , we refer to it as a |
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18:03 | epithelium. If you have more than or more, you are stratified. |
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18:10 | simple epithelium is gonna be found where or filtration is taking place. That's |
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18:15 | movement of materials across that single layer cells, when you're dealing with |
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18:21 | Typically this is where protection is Alright, Now, whenever we see |
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18:28 | the what I said is there's gonna two names. We're gonna see that |
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18:32 | stratified cells, that there may be shapes of the cells as we're going |
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18:39 | . And we're all be concerning ourselves the lowest layer when we deal with |
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18:44 | shape, because that's the second Alright. Its shape. Now, |
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18:51 | just gonna let you know now this not a panic movement. I |
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18:54 | it's not we're not a histology Okay, So when I say we're |
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18:58 | a histology class, that means I'm gonna give you some uh really, |
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19:03 | difficult things to identify. But this an anatomy class and you will need |
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19:06 | identify things. So, these are be pretty straightforward, right? I'm |
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19:11 | trying to trick you when I show a picture, just kind of look |
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19:15 | and go, okay, what is obvious answer here is what we're looking |
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19:19 | ? All right. I'm gonna show how to do this when you get |
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19:22 | histology. That's where it's like. not entirely certain what I'm looking at |
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19:26 | . I've got to look for more than than the simple. Alright, |
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19:30 | , with regard to epithelium, we're name it based on its shape. |
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19:35 | so, you can see up here the cartoon, we have these three |
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19:37 | . The most common shapes are listed . The first one is gonna be |
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19:41 | flat shape. All right. This what it's called. Squamous squamous mean |
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19:46 | like. All right. And so at it's at its best. It |
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19:50 | kind of comes along and it looks , very flat, just like a |
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19:55 | . And then the next side or shape upwards is gonna be kind of |
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20:00 | shaped like a square. And this what we refer to as Q |
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20:05 | All right. Now, they're not be ever be perfect. There's no |
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20:09 | thing as a perfect looking cell. you got out measured the side of |
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20:13 | top, you see that there's a . All right. But for the |
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20:16 | part by naked eye, good you should be able to Okay, |
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20:20 | , it's definitely about the same width it is tall. So, that |
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20:24 | be considered cube oil. The third is that they're taller than they are |
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20:30 | . And those are usually pretty obvious you look at them. It's |
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20:32 | yep, that's tall and it's not wide. And this is Colombian are |
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20:39 | the key thing when looking at an is finding where that basement membrane |
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20:45 | Alright, You need to kind of and say can I see what this |
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20:49 | is sitting on top of If I find that then that's going to help |
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20:53 | make a couple of decisions about what this epithelium is All right. |
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20:59 | you can kind of see in these , they're trying to give you a |
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21:01 | base sewing look, you can see the bottom. So I'm sitting on |
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21:05 | of that. And so my shape kind of defined relative to where that |
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21:11 | . All right. That's that's Number one. Just look for what |
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21:15 | attached to. Clue number two is you look at something and you're completely |
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21:19 | totally lost, look at its the nucleus roughly mimics the shape of |
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21:25 | cell. So, if you're looking a boil one, the nucleus is |
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21:29 | be mostly round. If you look a columbus are one, you're gonna |
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21:32 | something that's more like shaped like an . It's gonna be elongated. And |
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21:37 | when you see uh squamous you're gonna kind of a flattened nucleus. |
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21:44 | So those those characteristics are going to expressed not just in the shape of |
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21:47 | cell, but in the structure inside the nucleus inside. So, when |
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21:52 | look at it, we're gonna ask questions whether it's shaped, where's the |
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21:56 | membrane? And then how many layers we see? Okay. And I |
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22:00 | to start with the three easy The three simple epithelium. Alright, |
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22:07 | , simple epithelium three types simple simple, simple Columbia. You can |
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22:12 | see based on the name how many one and then the second name tells |
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22:19 | shape. Alright now having said that your future, you're gonna come across |
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22:24 | like helium and mesothelioma and you're gonna , wait a second. Doctor Wayne |
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22:29 | show me those things. All They're just weird names for simple types |
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22:35 | epithelium. Alright, so India thallium just a special name that they use |
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22:41 | the epithelium that makes up the hollow , specifically in the lymphatic in the |
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22:46 | system. So, when you look a capillary or if you're looking at |
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22:50 | artery or any sort of the vascular of vein, you know, they're |
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22:54 | to say the end epithelium of the is blah blah blah blah. And |
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22:58 | they're really telling you is, it's the simple uh squamous epithelium. |
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23:05 | you learn eventually when you when we through the uh the cardiovascular system, |
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23:11 | that's the only thing you're gonna find it. It just has a special |
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23:15 | . Okay, it's enough. Measles, thallium is just a special |
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23:20 | for the type of epithelium that we in the serious membranes. You guys |
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23:25 | talking about serious membranes a little bit ? Talk about the friction, |
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23:31 | That that tissue there is just called . And we're just gonna leave it |
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23:36 | that and you're not gonna have to them. It's just those awards. |
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23:39 | see in the future. All So, what I wanna do is |
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23:41 | want to look at those three that there first two, up at the |
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23:50 | , simple squamous cartoon is obviously The real picture is a little bit |
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23:54 | difficult to see. Can you even a basement membrane in there, Do |
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23:58 | think? Now, first off, point out that these are really, |
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24:02 | terrible pictures. The books gives you pictures because they have to buy a |
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24:06 | to some of these pictures. And it's really hard for them to find |
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24:11 | . So, they don't all So, usually when you get a |
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24:14 | like this, it's like it's like a person 100m away. It's just |
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24:19 | easy to do. But if you at this, can you find a |
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24:23 | membrane and all of you guys kind did this kind of like, I |
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24:26 | see any basement membrane. No. right. So, what we're looking |
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24:30 | in this particular picture is the All right. And the basement membrane |
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24:35 | not real obvious in this? And you're looking at here, the |
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24:39 | Alright, so, there is basement . You just can't really see |
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24:42 | If you kind of look around, can see say, like right |
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24:46 | And these dark spots. Those are Now, you don't know that. |
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24:51 | see I told you this is not course. Right. But what you |
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24:55 | look at that and say, do cells look tall. Do the cells |
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24:59 | tall to you know, do they square to you? No. |
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25:03 | if they're not tall, they're not . What are they? They're |
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25:07 | Do you see how easy that Okay, that's the type of identification |
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25:13 | . Like I said, this is terrible picture. And I'm not gonna |
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25:16 | to trick you on exam. I'm to try to make it easy. |
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25:19 | long as you learn your definition, should be able to identify. So |
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25:23 | should be pretty straightforward when you see flat thin simple epithelium. That's |
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25:29 | squamous. Okay, again, this another one. I don't think it's |
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25:34 | very good picture. It's from your . But what you wanna do is |
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25:37 | want to kind of look in here say, okay, where are my |
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25:40 | ? So you can see all those dots. Those are nuclei. |
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25:46 | hard to see anything in here. see just layers upon layers upon layers |
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25:50 | cells. But if you look what say is Alright, well, like |
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25:54 | here, there's this kind of this stuff that sits in between and over |
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25:58 | , there's an opening over there. that's the basement membrane that right there |
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26:03 | a pickle surface. So these represent , you can do it at any |
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26:07 | if you look at those cells are of roundish or at least those nuclear |
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26:10 | of roundish. So those are a like cells. Now, when I |
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26:14 | you a picture, it's gonna be that far away. It would be |
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26:20 | , can you identify your friend a off Now? I'm gonna put your |
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26:24 | right in front of you? But that's what you see here, |
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26:28 | we're looking at around nucleus kind of box like shape. Yeah. To |
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26:35 | you on this stuff is part of homework is gonna be pictures of these |
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26:40 | of things to kind of go, , I see how this works. |
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26:44 | , so it's not just one picture you're just trying to learn here, |
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26:47 | you're not gonna see these pictures ever on an exam. These are just |
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26:50 | example of one. Okay here, can see the optical surface, it |
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26:57 | down, it comes up and goes , it comes up, it goes |
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26:59 | . These are just other organizations. are actually this is uh you can |
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27:04 | of see now that the inside of body is not perfect. And so |
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27:07 | can actually see these are extensions of uh these types of crops that are |
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27:13 | of moving off to the side like . So when they cut this |
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27:17 | you're looking at a structure that kind went that way. So this is |
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27:21 | a little further down. And you kind of see this would be the |
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27:25 | membrane as it goes up, comes , goes up and we'll just see |
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27:29 | one right there, that one right . And if you look at those |
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27:33 | , you can see up here on top, that's the top of the |
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27:36 | , that would be the basement Those are the nuclei. And if |
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27:39 | look closely at those nuclei and I from here doesn't look so easy. |
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27:43 | can see that those nuclei are nice elongate. They're taller than they are |
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27:50 | . That simple columnar. Now, Columbia exists in kind of two |
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27:56 | Sometimes they have cilia. Sometimes they . So you'd see if if they |
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28:01 | cilia, they would call it silly Coloman are epithelium. If they |
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28:05 | they'd be non silly ated. you can see it gets complex. |
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28:08 | you need it to be you will need to identify this one on the |
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28:13 | . But you should know its All right now, if you look |
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28:18 | this, it's nice and simple. your basement membrane there, right? |
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28:25 | is the top. You can actually see some silly up there. |
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28:29 | And if you look at this, that look like more than one layer |
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28:32 | you? Yeah, you can see dots. The dots represent nuclear |
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28:36 | There's a dot on top of another on top of another dot. |
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28:38 | there's one up there. All But if you went in there and |
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28:42 | those cells apart, you'd find out are all one layer of cells, |
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28:48 | is why this is not a histology . Right. This is called pseudo |
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28:55 | . Alright, pseudo stratified is a epithelium but it looks like a stratified |
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29:05 | . Alright, we find these in whole bunch of different ducks, different |
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29:09 | of glands. But when you look it you'll see that some cells make |
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29:13 | all the way to the optical Some cells don't. And so it |
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29:17 | an appearance as if it has all different layers to it. All |
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29:22 | But it is a simple epithelium. right, pause there for a |
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29:29 | So far. Are we okay with simple feelings? I mean layers and |
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29:33 | how do we identify them? Shape nucleus? Right. Find the basement |
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29:41 | . Find the optical surface and then of look between them, stratified epithelium |
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29:48 | multiple layers of cells. All And so what we're gonna do is |
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29:54 | living layer, it's I mean all could be living not all of them |
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29:59 | like in this particular case they're not gonna be what we do to go |
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30:02 | the basil layer. And we oh so this is the layer that's |
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30:06 | dividing. And what they're doing is as they divide they get pushed up |
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30:10 | from the basal layer and they go the april a pickle layer and these |
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30:14 | a major role in protection and this of makes sense that it does the |
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30:18 | layers I have, the harder it to get through that. Right? |
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30:23 | you can have like on your skin it's very difficult to have like 40-50 |
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30:28 | of cells. And the closer you to the surface, the smaller and |
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30:33 | the cells get. Now. Remember said in terms of nomenclature, we're |
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30:38 | to name them based on the basal , not on the optical layer. |
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30:44 | , if you can see up we have squamous looking cell down |
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30:48 | Right? I say that right? , no, I'm I'm sorry, |
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30:54 | that, scratch that out. We're be based on a pickle service. |
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30:56 | the surface that we can see. don't name it on the basil |
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30:59 | Right? So, what we do we say this is a squamous |
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31:04 | Doesn't matter what's down here. It what we can see up there. |
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31:12 | , here's the first one stratified This is the only squamous layer. |
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31:17 | think you're gonna need to know on exam. I'm gonna show you why |
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31:20 | just a second. I'll show you . Okay, so the primary reason |
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31:26 | that this stuff is everywhere. All , This is your skin and this |
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31:29 | the stuff that you find in those zone as you move from your skin |
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31:34 | the oral cavity, the nasal the anal cavity, vaginal cavity. |
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31:39 | there's a cavity urethral cavity as you moving into them, you have these |
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31:44 | of layers out here on the We have a tough protein that's involved |
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31:51 | giving it more strength. It's what refer to as carotene. Ized, |
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31:55 | not gonna have to distinguish between criticizing criticizes just knowing what it is. |
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31:59 | , if you took your fingernail and it across your arm, are you |
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32:02 | cause it to bleed? No, your fingernail and put it on the |
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32:06 | of your mouth and scratch it across inside of your mouth. I think |
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32:09 | gonna get it to bleed. probably. All right. So what |
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32:13 | you say is your skin tougher than inside of your mouth? Yeah. |
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32:16 | . And it's because of these So carotene eyes has these keratin proteins |
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32:22 | give strength to those structures. All . Non criticized on the other |
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32:29 | are found deeper in those internal They don't have that same keratin. |
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32:33 | they're a little bit softer. All . But you can see regardless that |
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32:39 | layer, you can see up there upper layer. It's a squamous structure |
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32:45 | low. I don't know what it . It could be Columbia, it |
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32:48 | be cube oil sometimes it's a mixture both. All right, so we |
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32:52 | care about that later. But you see there's multiple multiple layers. |
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32:57 | so the skin is a really, good example of seeing that and everything |
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33:02 | falls into this other stratified. these structures are a little bit |
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33:07 | a little bit more rare in the . Alright, so stratified cube |
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33:11 | Again, you're looking at that a layer and you'd be oh look at |
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33:14 | outer layer is kind of cube boil shape. Here's an example you can |
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33:19 | here is the outline of this There's layer, number one there's layer |
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33:24 | two, you can just kind of around. And so that that layer |
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33:28 | that is facing the a pickle surface that tube is cute, boy. |
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33:33 | at the nuclei. They're mostly So that outer layer is mostly |
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33:39 | We don't care really what it It's just that inner layer. So |
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33:43 | is typically what we see in glandular . Alright? And then we have |
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33:48 | columnar and you can see male urethral gland. So instead of being |
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33:53 | it would be elongate in that our layer. All right. But I'm |
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33:59 | gonna make you try to identify those on the exam. Alright. It's |
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34:05 | three symbols. And the one stratified . You have to identify pseudo. |
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34:14 | , but you should know what it . Here's another one. You should |
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34:18 | what it is, but you don't to identify it because this is the |
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34:21 | tissue. Look at its name, . Right? Great. When you |
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34:27 | the word, transitional, what does , what does it sound like to |
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34:30 | , changes? Yeah, great. . All right. Think about your |
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34:37 | . Your bladder is actually like a . It actually folds on itself. |
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34:42 | . And then, over the course the day, about every minute you |
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34:45 | about a millimeter to two ml of to your bladder and it slowly expands |
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34:53 | then it stretches. Right? And when you're like, I've got to |
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34:57 | up and go and then you evacuate bladder and it shrinks back down again |
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35:01 | its original deflate itself. All Those cells when they get stretched change |
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35:10 | . So they start off kind of oil in shape. But then when |
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35:14 | fill up that bladder they stretch out they look like squamous. So what |
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35:21 | they? Yeah, they're kind of . So that's what we call |
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35:25 | transitional. Alright. The a pickle varies in appearance depending upon the degree |
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35:31 | absorption or disagree of this degree of is what I was trying to go |
|
|
35:38 | . Alright, so I know what is but you're not gonna see a |
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35:44 | like this because we leave those for and when you go to nursing school |
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35:52 | get a whole class on being able identify those tissues. Yes. |
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35:59 | Questions about how we name epithelium. . Yeah like they're not right. |
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36:14 | . So so again, so the is with stratified squamous. So whenever |
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36:18 | dealing with stratified tissue you're always looking the local surface, not the basil |
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36:24 | for its nomenclature. I was I a brain fart when I was saying |
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36:27 | earlier. Alright, so you look that outer layer and say what does |
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36:31 | outer layer look like to me. , so again it's the squamous you |
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36:38 | it's scale like up here. So a squamous tissue. If it's cube |
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36:43 | right? That outer layer that we to as Q. Boil. If |
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36:46 | tall then it would be you stratified . We don't care what the bottom |
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36:51 | looks like. In fact, when look at uh the stratified columnar, |
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36:55 | bottom layer is usually two layers, layers, cube oil looking. And |
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37:00 | you have the tall ones on So again, bottom one doesn't |
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37:03 | It's only the top one. That . Only the top one matters. |
|
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37:09 | right, glands. Alright. Remember still in epithelium here. So we |
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37:17 | tissue that's protective that can absorb or . And now with glands were now |
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37:23 | longer protected. We're now primarily secretion . All right. So a gland |
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37:29 | is one or more cells. That's because we have uni cellular glands in |
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37:35 | bodies. One or more cells, secrete some sort of product. |
|
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37:42 | so secretion is to release or to to the surface. Um And the |
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37:47 | is the stuff that you're actually So typically what we're looking at is |
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37:51 | sort of acquis fluid. So it's plus stuff. Typically that stuff is |
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37:56 | but depending on what you're looking there may also be other things in |
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38:00 | , like lipids or even steroids. way we classify glands is we ask |
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38:05 | question of which direction are used to materials. If your psa creating things |
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38:10 | the surface of the skin, then we refer to. That is |
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38:16 | If I'm secreting into a hollow that's excellent. With the exception of |
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38:21 | type of of hollow organ that we're to is um let me back |
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38:27 | I'm gonna make this easier for Alright if that hollow organ is open |
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38:33 | the surface. Alright, so think your digestive track is your digestive track |
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|
38:37 | to the surface of your body. I went like this, I'd have |
|
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38:42 | tube through my entire body like a . Right? You are donuts, |
|
|
38:48 | ? Your digestive track is external to body. Okay? I know that |
|
|
38:54 | weird but you couldn't put a hamburger your mouth if it was inside your |
|
|
39:01 | , it has to be outside. . If I want to get a |
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39:04 | into your body, have to cut up and jam it in there and |
|
|
39:06 | it back up. Kind of weird system. Is it open to the |
|
|
39:12 | or open to or is it Open? I can breathe air into |
|
|
39:17 | . It's basically a big old Okay, urinary system open to the |
|
|
39:23 | . Yes. Right. Well, mean you're not peeing into your |
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|
39:27 | You're peeing out of your body, ? So these are structures that are |
|
|
39:31 | to the external environment. Alright. that are inside your body do not |
|
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39:37 | contact with the outside environment. So example, your blood vessels are closed |
|
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39:43 | there, part of your body. internal to you. They never come |
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39:47 | to the surface unless you cut a . Right? So X. Akan |
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|
39:55 | secrete externally. That means I can into the digestive track. I can |
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|
40:00 | into the respiratory tract. I can into the renal tract. The urinary |
|
|
40:06 | . I can secrete onto the surface my skin. That's all external. |
|
|
40:12 | I'm internally secreting. Alright. That be endocrine. Alright. So, |
|
|
40:18 | what we're doing is we're secreted into fluid of our bodies. So into |
|
|
40:22 | bloodstream, into the interstitial fluid. right. When we talk about endocrine |
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40:28 | , typically what we're talking about our producing glands, they're typically ducklings and |
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40:33 | typically not made from epithelium, but call them glands because they're producing a |
|
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40:39 | that gets put some place. It's secreted outward away from the gland. |
|
|
40:45 | , what we're primarily focusing on here we talk about glands are the extra |
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|
40:48 | glands. Alright. And what we is we basically name them based on |
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|
40:54 | their structure is. Alright. this is structure. We have uni |
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|
41:01 | . How many how many cells in uni cellular one. See how are |
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|
41:05 | is? Or we call the which is more than one. All |
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|
41:11 | . So, this right here is example of a uni cellular gland. |
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|
41:15 | right here, if you look at , what do we have? There's |
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41:19 | basement membrane. So, you have simple Colombian are epithelium and jammed in |
|
|
41:29 | . You have these types of They're called goblet cells. They're called |
|
|
41:34 | cells. Because they look like a . You know, the goblet is |
|
|
41:41 | it's basically like a chalice. It's a stemmed uh cup that cup holds |
|
|
41:47 | the liquid is. Right? And the goblet contains within it, the |
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|
41:54 | that they're gonna be secreted, primarily . And you can see in our |
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|
41:58 | epithelium up here there is your And if you look really closely you |
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42:02 | see a layer of mucus and you imagine what's making the mucus, the |
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42:08 | cells and it gets up there and the epithelial cells are sitting there going |
|
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42:12 | go that way. Alright, pushing around. All right. So again |
|
|
42:17 | is the process of X. Acidosis and whatever the product happened to |
|
|
42:22 | in this case it's mucus. Most glands are what we call multicellular |
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|
42:30 | They're rather complex but in a very sense they have two parts to |
|
|
42:35 | They have a duct and they have region that's responsible for producing this product |
|
|
42:41 | they're making. And that region is the escena. All right, well |
|
|
42:46 | plural escena hasina's is singular. So like this you can see here's a |
|
|
42:52 | and in this particular case the duck multiple times. You get down to |
|
|
42:56 | little ins and you can see a orange dots those are the escena. |
|
|
43:00 | that's the complex nature of a Alright. So typically these are formed |
|
|
43:07 | development when you're talking about some sort epithelium. And what it does is |
|
|
43:11 | bends downward. That's called inv Sometimes you may see ev agitation which |
|
|
43:17 | the other direction kind of bulges And then the ducks and the areas |
|
|
43:23 | the casinos are gonna be. Those going to form what are called |
|
|
43:27 | And those lobes are separated from other . Because there's connective tissue that has |
|
|
43:30 | of penetrated in. Or you can of it the other way is that |
|
|
43:34 | the imagination has penetrated into connective And so you have these things that |
|
|
43:39 | of create the unique structures, the lobes where the materials being secreted. |
|
|
43:46 | . Typically you're gonna see blood vessels nerve fibers surrounding them. Why? |
|
|
43:51 | , I need to deliver materials so can secrete it. I need to |
|
|
43:55 | it when to actually do this All right. So, we can |
|
|
43:59 | multicellular basically based on their anatomy. other words, what is their shape |
|
|
44:05 | structure? Or we can look at and ask the question, What are |
|
|
44:09 | secreted? And so structure is the part, even though these pictures are |
|
|
44:14 | , This artist really screwed this So, I'm gonna walk through. |
|
|
44:18 | right. So, what we're looking here, we're looking at ducks and |
|
|
44:21 | looking at a scene i or a . Alright. So, when the |
|
|
44:27 | is simple. So, this should be going down. So, in |
|
|
44:31 | pictures, the light purple color. that lavender? Okay, I'm just |
|
|
44:38 | know eight colors. Yeah, lavender works. Alright, so the lavender |
|
|
44:44 | ducks. Okay, So what this do, that should come down a |
|
|
44:48 | ways. The artist didn't do So that would be the duct If |
|
|
44:52 | doesn't branch. If the duck doesn't , it's called a simple gland. |
|
|
44:58 | , so over here, if you at this, you're like, |
|
|
45:00 | wait a second. I see but it's not the duck that's |
|
|
45:05 | It's the structure's branching from the Okay, So this is why that |
|
|
45:12 | right? There is simple. All . If the duct branches and what |
|
|
45:18 | should have shown here, is this off that way as well? Going |
|
|
45:22 | that way. Kind of like you in these in this picture right |
|
|
45:25 | Same thing there when the duck has branches to it, then we call |
|
|
45:30 | compound. Alright. Now again, have to probably identify one of |
|
|
45:37 | But the pictures I have on the should be easy. Alright. I'm |
|
|
45:44 | trying to trick you. I know sitting there thinking he's trying to trick |
|
|
45:48 | . No, that's not what I stuff is hard enough without having to |
|
|
45:53 | you. Okay. All right. , first we looked at the |
|
|
45:57 | Is it as simple as that branch and un branched its branches compound. |
|
|
46:01 | it's un branches simple. All In terms of the casinos, you |
|
|
46:05 | at the shape of the casinos This artist really didn't do us any |
|
|
46:09 | . All right. So if you at this, the shape of the |
|
|
46:14 | is the same shape as the In other words, it doesn't bulge |
|
|
46:19 | like a grape. It's kind of same shape as a tube. |
|
|
46:22 | If it's the same shape as a , we refer to it as |
|
|
46:26 | Alright. So if the duct in tube at the introduction the same at |
|
|
46:31 | end, look the same. It's . If it's Al Viola, that |
|
|
46:36 | that you bulged out. Kind of a grape. All right. And |
|
|
46:40 | you can see this kind of bulges like a grape. Right? So |
|
|
46:46 | would be Al Viola over here. Viola kind of looks like a tube |
|
|
46:55 | and then some ducks just want to with you. And so you'll have |
|
|
47:00 | that are Al Viola or some that tubular mess we refer to as |
|
|
47:03 | Al Viola. Alright. But you see the same structure. We have |
|
|
47:08 | mixture of both types of casinos. right. So that's how we classify |
|
|
47:15 | anatomically? Look at the ducks. they branch or no? Look at |
|
|
47:19 | shape of the casinos or the Are they roundish or are they tubular |
|
|
47:25 | nature? Secretion? Is the other ? All right. So there's three |
|
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47:34 | types of ways of secreted if your . So if you secrete one way |
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47:40 | this type. If you create another or the other way. The first |
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47:43 | is gonna be american american is what probably think about when you think about |
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47:47 | grand gland. All right. I've to sell its making product. It |
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47:50 | that product that puts it in a , vesicles floats to the surface when |
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47:53 | told to, it releases the product into the environment. So that's the |
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47:58 | of secretion via X acidosis. That be american. Alright. The product |
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48:04 | is not altered in any way whatever have inside the vehicle when it |
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48:08 | that's what you're getting. So the this would be lachrymose glands. What's |
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48:11 | lachrymose glands, Your tears good. . Soft one person. It's your |
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48:16 | ducts. So kind of think about tears kind of watery kind of stuff |
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48:21 | them. You ever notice like when taste your tears tasted tears of your |
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48:27 | . Alright, salty, bitter. , so there's stuff in there. |
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48:31 | right. Think about your salivary glands ? Mostly watery. I'm not talking |
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48:36 | the you know, that's that's mucus your throat. But basically, you |
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48:40 | , that's that I think about when walking around outside, you can get |
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48:44 | slimy, sweaty feeling, right? primarily watery. So notice what mary |
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48:49 | glands are. Its water plus Alright, african grinds a pack, |
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48:56 | glands are a little bit different. they package their materials in the |
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49:01 | But what happens is instead of having vesicles merge with the surface and release |
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49:05 | material, the vesicles is actually pinched with a portion of the cell. |
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49:10 | so now you have a vessel inside membrane bound structure. Okay, and |
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49:18 | it creates this, you're losing portions the cell as you go along. |
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49:23 | . The example of this is a gland and the cell that got pinched |
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49:27 | , it's gonna repair itself as back membrane and stuff. So, what |
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49:32 | doing here now is is it's a bit different. So, think about |
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49:36 | . Think about cream. Cream would an easier one because I'm sure not |
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49:39 | of you are familiar with mother's Right, So, cream is probably |
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49:43 | better way to think about think about thick it is, kind of fatty |
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49:47 | nature, right? Milk is very than cream is. But those, |
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49:52 | things are basically those materials separating from other. So, the idea here |
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49:57 | you're adding in materials on top of stuff that you're actually making and that |
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50:02 | you're adding on top of it is of the cell itself is getting pinched |
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50:07 | . 3rd type is the Holocron. right here, I want you to |
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50:12 | about sebaceous glands. All right. about those horrible nasty blackheads and |
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50:21 | And you wake up in the morning you've got that volcano sitting in the |
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50:25 | of your forehead. Big old white head. Right? What's happened here |
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50:30 | the cells that make up that gland actually they build up their product and |
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50:36 | that cell ruptures and releases its product into the duct of the gland. |
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50:43 | , that ceb um which is the that they've made is now in that |
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50:49 | and it slowly moves to the surface creates the oil that protects you from |
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50:53 | sorts of horrible organisms that are living on the surface of your skin. |
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50:58 | , now, why do I point blackheads and and zits and stuff like |
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51:02 | ? Because that's when that's even gets because of dirt or other things get |
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51:07 | in that in that duct. And it sits in there and then your |
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51:11 | responds by saying, oh, infection then you get swelling up and |
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51:17 | All sorts of horrible things. All , But notice what the cell did |
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51:22 | . The cell didn't secrete material it at first and then the cell |
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51:28 | It released its material and it got by another cell. And that's what |
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51:33 | is. Trying to show you. cell itself ruptures and gets replaced by |
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51:37 | cell. So, that's going on the escena of these sebaceous glands on |
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51:44 | skin and also wherever you have Okay, so easiest one, american |
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51:55 | pack Quran, the weird one because cell sticks around in the last |
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51:58 | Cell suicide and release my my Okay, that's hollow. Okay, |
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52:08 | here. Questions about epithelium. just get me out of here, |
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52:17 | ? Yeah. The examples I think the best way to help. As |
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52:22 | saw that look that look on her . She looked up here and she's |
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52:24 | kind of just shook her head. like, I don't know. And |
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52:27 | really what it is the easy way do this is think about what I |
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52:30 | and then think of the example. example I think helps you best understand |
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52:36 | . Right? So use the example help you remember what it is. |
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52:44 | , connective tissues. What do you connective tissues do connect seeing that |
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52:51 | Yeah, it's I wish it was that easy. But for the most |
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52:55 | their job is to help bind things . See I have it right there |
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53:00 | support. Play a role in insulation. That includes physical as well |
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53:04 | immune protection. Um They play a in storage as well as a role |
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53:09 | transportation. So when we think of tissue, it is the most abundant |
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53:15 | in the body. It's everywhere. . And depending on where you're looking |
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53:19 | and what type of tissue you're looking . You're gonna see it arranged in |
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53:23 | unique and varying ways. All So it's not as simple as that |
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53:28 | , where you're like, oh look just layers of cells. There's different |
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53:31 | of connective tissue because they play so different roles. And that's why I |
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53:36 | of show you that picture here is are just examples of connective tissue can |
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53:41 | here. Bone cartilage, there's connective , proper blood. These all fall |
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53:45 | the category of connective tissue. We're go over these in terms of their |
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53:49 | categories Now, characteristics of connective all connective tissues have what is called |
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53:55 | ground substance. Ground substance is a word for saying the environment that makes |
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54:01 | the connective tissue. Alright, it is non living material, meaning |
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54:05 | not cells. All right. It's environment where those cells and the proteins |
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54:10 | those cells make reside. So, water plus stuff is the way you |
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54:15 | think about it. All right. , typically, it's a bunch of |
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54:19 | fibers. They make up the extra matrix. This cartoon is trying to |
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54:23 | you you can see all the fibers of going everywhere. Right? But |
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54:27 | the water and the other stuff that can't see. It's really this |
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54:32 | This pinkish space in between all the that you see here, all the |
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54:36 | that you see here. It's that that you're looking at. And if |
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54:41 | went down to the microscopic level, is really what you would see. |
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54:46 | , So large molecules that are attractive water that hold the water in |
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54:53 | So, these molecules include things called Bly cans. All right. |
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54:58 | when you see a word like you have to kind of break it |
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55:00 | and say what is So propio from glide is usually referring to sugar. |
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55:07 | ? So, it's a protein not a sugar. Protein which is |
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55:10 | confusing because those two things are different like the gasoline, your car is |
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55:14 | different from the sugars that you One is a carbohydrate, one's a |
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55:19 | . Alright, so proto black hands basically these proteins and sugars that are |
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55:25 | that have charges to them that attract and create this environment that holds the |
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55:31 | altogether. And within them they have bunch of cell adhesion molecules and that's |
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55:36 | everything is attached. So you can there's uh asian molecules right there and |
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55:40 | kind of holds everything together and it this network that is kind of invisible |
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55:45 | everything is kind of sitting in. is what the ground substances. Now |
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55:54 | connective tissues have cells within them. , So there they are living |
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56:00 | So depending on which is the primary type is going to tell you which |
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56:05 | of connective tissue you're looking at. there's a nomenclature that we use when |
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56:12 | look at a cell, it's gonna a prefix and it's gonna have a |
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56:15 | . The suffix can be blast or . Alright, blast like explosion or |
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56:24 | . When you see blast at the of a word that is referring to |
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56:28 | immature cell when you see site that's to a mature cell. All |
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56:34 | And so then what we do to at the prefix and ask the prefix |
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56:37 | us then what connective tissue we And whether we're looking at that immature |
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56:41 | cell. So, for example, connective tissue proper. The primary cell |
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56:47 | you'll see there is called a fibroblast a fiber. Oh site. If |
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56:52 | in cartilage, it's called a Kandra or a condo site. And |
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56:59 | if you're in bone osteoblasts and osteo . All right. So, you |
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57:05 | of just look at themselves. if I see this name, what |
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57:08 | am I looking at? It's either tissue proper or maybe it's cartilage or |
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57:13 | here. Maybe it's a bone. if you're looking for example, in |
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57:18 | tissue proper less. So in the two, you're gonna see other |
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57:24 | All right. So, for you might see at ePA sites at |
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57:28 | site, basically the fancy word for cell. And so you'll see things |
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57:33 | kind of hanging out now if you there and you see nothing but fat |
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57:39 | . And you're probably looking at a tissue called adipose tissue. Okay, |
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57:44 | just call fat tissue adipose tissue. a type of connective tissue. All |
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57:50 | . But you might see mesenchymal Mesenchymal cells are the stem cells to |
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57:55 | the other cells that we've just been about. So, when you first |
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57:59 | creating that tissue, when you're in , you had mesenchymal cells. And |
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58:04 | they differentiate, divide and they're still so that you can give rise to |
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58:08 | cells again. All right. And you'll have things like immune insights. |
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58:13 | kind of cruising through some that are around because this is like where they're |
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58:18 | to be watching for damaged tissue are for infection pathogens. But you might |
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58:23 | immune insights actually just kind of strolling the neighborhood, just checking things |
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58:28 | making sure everything's okay. All The other thing I'd point out when |
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58:34 | looking at connective tissue, When we about epithelium, everything all the cells |
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58:38 | all touching each other all close together tissue. The cells are distance from |
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58:45 | other. They're not all bunched up . Now. That's not always gonna |
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58:50 | true. Out of sight. You see that We'll show you some examples |
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58:53 | like wait a second. Aren't those together? Yes. But generally speaking |
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58:58 | cells or not. It's the fibers make up the majority and the ground |
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59:05 | makes up the majority of the The cells are typically separated from each |
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59:09 | . So this is kind of a example of this um of of looking |
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59:14 | how the arrangement of connective tissue kind looks. Even though I'm gonna be |
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59:19 | about fibers here. So you can their cells there here there and |
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59:23 | But they're not necessarily touching each right? You can see ground substance |
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59:29 | there and you can see we have types of cells. So here's an |
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59:32 | that would be um I think what doing there. Let's see. You |
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59:35 | those are mesenchymal cells. The purple are the fiberglass. Here's an immune |
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59:39 | site, there's fat cells at sites in this particular thing. And what |
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59:45 | can see here in this particular cartoon they're just trying to show you there |
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59:49 | three primary types of fibers. These the only fibers but they're the ones |
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59:55 | you primarily see everywhere. So we collagen fibers, they're very long. |
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59:59 | very flexible. Alright. I mean all young and tight still. You're |
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60:04 | old and floppy yet. But I think about grandma once you put your |
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60:09 | out and the bottom of her arm of does that you know that |
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60:14 | Right. I mean look at I used to be tight. I'm |
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60:17 | tight anymore. I got this going . I'm not happy about it |
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60:21 | Right? Collagen in your face begins sag. Right. But it's |
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60:29 | What is one of the things that do to tighten up our collagen |
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60:34 | Yes, Don't do that. Alright. Anyway, there's about 25% |
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60:40 | your body's protein is college. There's lot of it everywhere. Alright. |
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60:44 | what collagen fibers are. Then we little ones that kind of go all |
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60:48 | of different ways. A branch They're very tough, tough. But |
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60:51 | also flexible. We typically see these of fibers called particular fibers within |
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60:57 | And they serve as the strom a the network on which other cells kind |
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61:02 | hang out. Alright. So particular is another type of fiber that you'll |
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61:07 | short and tough. Uh Typically have glycoprotein attached to them. And then |
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61:13 | elastic fibers, they contain a protein elastin. They branch a lot. |
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61:18 | what they do is they have this to spring back into shape. And |
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61:21 | you can play with your ear if want to you can pull your ear |
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61:24 | like this right? And it just right back up. Okay? You |
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|
61:28 | go to sleep and it falls like ? No, you've never done |
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|
61:32 | It's terrible. Yeah. Don't do . All right. So that's |
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|
61:38 | Alright, so elastic fibers. So can see for example in my ear |
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|
61:42 | have elastic fibers, right? And cartilage in my ear. Um That |
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|
61:48 | it to to bend and stuff like same thing in my nose, |
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|
61:52 | My nose shifts back and forth because have elastic fibers and elastic cartilage the |
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|
61:59 | tissue there. You will be affected a person. Yeah. You pierce |
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62:03 | the cartilage itself. Yeah. So you're you're basically just putting a hole |
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62:09 | it's a hole punch. Mm. , no it's it's not gonna loosen |
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62:16 | . I mean over time it's going start but not as badly as |
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|
62:23 | Again look at look at look at people. Alright. Don't judge |
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|
62:28 | Just look at them be observed That's a better word, observe old |
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|
62:33 | and look at the different parts of bodies that are sagging, right? |
|
|
62:37 | know, you'll see things like your sag. It's It's sad. We |
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62:43 | get old. All right, good about connective tissue. It's pretty straightforward |
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|
62:49 | . Alright, So, we have that's called connective tissue proper. |
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|
62:53 | when you see the word like connective proper, what is that kind of |
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62:56 | about this type of connective tissue? is what I think about when I |
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63:00 | of connective tissue. All right. called connective tissue proper. Because generally |
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63:06 | , when we look at a connective , this is kind of what we're |
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63:09 | at. There are different types of tissue proper. Alright. All of |
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63:15 | , all of them feature this relatively cells and And protein fibers. |
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63:22 | The fibers are irregularly arranged. So can kind of look up there and |
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63:26 | of see that lots and lots of substance and their job is primarily support |
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|
63:32 | surround other organs or structures. three basic types are aerial or at |
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|
63:39 | post in particular. Now, notice the terms connective tissue proper. What |
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|
63:44 | looking at here is a subclass of called loose connective tissue with a name |
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63:49 | loose connective tissue. What do you ? It looks like? It looks |
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63:54 | like there's space in it. look at this. Does it look |
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63:58 | there's space in between the stuff. . Does it look like there's space |
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64:02 | between the stuff. Some of you gonna sit there? No. And |
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|
64:06 | right. There is no space in . But you can imagine the first |
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|
64:09 | they cut through fat tissue and slice it, you can't see the |
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|
64:15 | Right. It's basically comes up as the outlines of the cells. So |
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64:19 | looks like there's nothing there. But truth is actually the cells are really |
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64:23 | together. And you can see here the outline of the cell. It's |
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64:26 | filled with fat. But it gives the appearance of loose. That's why |
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64:29 | falls in that category. What about here to the cells and the fibers |
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64:34 | like they're jammed in or they look there's space in between it. Space |
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64:37 | between. All right, so, is called areola at a post. |
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|
64:42 | the primary feature of adipose? It's fat cells. Adipose, adipose |
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|
64:47 | And then right here in particular, do you think? The main feature |
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|
64:50 | particular is reticulated fibers? Okay, that's kind of its feature. |
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|
65:02 | if loose connective tissue has an appearance loose associations. Not a lot of |
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|
65:08 | . Everything. There's space in What do you think dense connective tissue |
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|
65:12 | tight. Oh my goodness. Now, again, same, same |
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65:16 | of rules. There's not a lot approach. I mean, there's not |
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65:18 | lot of cells close together instead. we have now are a bunch of |
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65:23 | proteins and those proteins are filling up creating those fibers so that the space |
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65:29 | filled up so the ground substance is . The number of fibers is |
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|
65:35 | The number of cells taste more or the same. Alright here, the |
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65:39 | is the dominant fiber. And there three basic types dense, regular, |
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65:43 | , irregular, in elastic. And you can look at the names when |
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|
65:45 | see dense regular. What do you that means versus irregular structure. So |
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65:53 | have regular organization. So again, a great picture, but you can |
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65:58 | up here the little purple dots or pink dots represent where the cells |
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66:02 | That's really the nuclei. So that's the cells are located. So everything |
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|
66:07 | up there that's pink. Our fibers look at the fibers, they're all |
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66:12 | in the same direction. Do you space for the ground substance in that |
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66:18 | ? A little bit right there, little bit right there some over |
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66:21 | you can see that and those might artifacts of of just the the slide |
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66:26 | made so there's not a lot of substance, but you can see the |
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66:31 | are all moving in the same They're densely packed moving in that |
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|
66:36 | So dense regular. Next one down dense irregular. Look at the |
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|
66:43 | they look organized to you. They're in all sorts of different directions. |
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66:49 | quite as tight. And that means there's space. But what we have |
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|
66:53 | is we have fibers kind of going way kind of going that way there |
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66:57 | arranged. Hence the name dense And the last one here, this |
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67:03 | elastic. I've been trying to figure why they call elastic for years. |
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67:08 | do you think? Elastic? they're elastic. Okay, fine. |
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|
67:13 | trying to show you this didn't rocket . You don't have to go get |
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|
67:17 | engineering degree to figure this stuff Alright, elastic tissue has elastin in |
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|
67:23 | , That means it's stretchy. so elastic fibers, so it's falls |
|
|
67:28 | the category of dense connective. And you can see the fibers themselves are |
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67:32 | dense but you are made up primarily the elastin as opposed to the collagen |
|
|
67:40 | group. So that was connective tissue . We had dense connective. We |
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|
67:45 | uh we have loose connective, we three types of loose, we have |
|
|
67:49 | types of dense on the cartilage. have three types of cartilage, cartilage |
|
|
67:56 | . What? We have our right? These Kander blasts and condo |
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68:01 | blasts are responsible for creating the They release the proteins that make up |
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68:05 | surrounding environment. And this is a solid. So the fibers are are |
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68:10 | are close knit. And so what end up happening is is you kind |
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68:13 | create this gel like substance that it the cells in them. And then |
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68:18 | the cells get trapped and they can't , you know from each other. |
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68:22 | can't make any more than they mature become the compromise. And then their |
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68:27 | is to maintain the matrix that they've . Alright, so Kander sites are |
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68:32 | mature forms. So this would be the countryside. These two right here |
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68:35 | be Condra blasted kind of close So what you see here is now |
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68:39 | pushing themselves apart and they're making matrix between them. Now here we don't |
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|
68:45 | any blood vessels. So materials that cells need to live have to travel |
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|
68:49 | the matrix in which they're found very strong, very resilient and |
|
|
68:58 | very similar to bone, but more than bone. And again, you |
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|
69:00 | play with your nose, right? primarily cartilage up here. That's bone |
|
|
69:07 | move. All right, so three . All right. They have different |
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|
69:11 | , different distribution of cells and so kind of behaviors. Alright, so |
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|
69:17 | cartilage when we think of cartilage is typically what we think of. |
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|
69:20 | they're trying to show you here are ribs, right? So that would |
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|
69:23 | cartilage right there. Highland cartilage, cartilage already showed you to my |
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|
69:28 | It's really bendy um cells, you , the structure moves fairly well. |
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|
69:33 | then we have fiber cartilage and here can see kind of this regular, |
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|
69:37 | can see little tiny cells in But what we have are these uh |
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|
69:41 | and lots of collagen that's ordered in of a fixed way when it does |
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|
69:45 | creates kind of a fiber structure. this is more stiff in terms of |
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|
69:51 | structure, it helps to resist So we see these in the disks |
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|
69:57 | are found in the there the inter disc of the of the spinal |
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|
70:03 | Alright, so that's cartilage. Living makes their own matrix. It's a |
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70:07 | like matrix. Semi solid fibers are there So far. So good. |
|
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70:13 | . Next one's bone. Oh no not blood length. Thank you. |
|
|
70:17 | so this is the weird one. . And the reason blood and lymph |
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|
70:22 | connective tissues is or uh developmentally they from the mezzanine kind. All |
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|
70:29 | But it's weird in that this is connective tissue that the cells that are |
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70:35 | within the fluid. So that would the matrix. Those cells don't actually |
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|
70:40 | their matrix, right? These cells exist within them. Alright. So |
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|
70:45 | blood itself consists of two parts. have the formed elements. So what |
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|
70:50 | what we call the cells. And reason they use the word formed elements |
|
|
70:54 | that some of these structures like accurate throw sites have been modified beyond |
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|
70:58 | cell stage. They're no longer living . They're more structural than sell like |
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|
71:05 | have cell like features but they're not living cells any longer when we get |
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|
71:11 | blood and A and P. You'll understand why. Um Then we |
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71:15 | like Lucas sites, these are the insights um that are in circulation. |
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|
71:19 | are blood cells. So the ground called plasma plasma is made um by |
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|
71:28 | structures. And so it's not made the actual cells, lymph is the |
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|
71:36 | that has leaked through the capillaries and picked up into the lymphatic system. |
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|
71:41 | it's basically the same fluid. It's now in a different place. And |
|
|
71:45 | difference is is that because the fluid move but the proteins in the plasma |
|
|
71:50 | . It's it's basically plasma minus its proteins. Alright. And what we're |
|
|
71:55 | is we're just taking this and we're it back into the body and this |
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72:00 | a function of how our capillary system . Which we don't need to understand |
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72:04 | that lymph and blood are more or the same thing. They just limped |
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72:09 | missing plasma proteins that the plasma actually . Alright, this is what we |
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72:15 | the fluid connective tissues. Last one , just make sure I'm getting this |
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72:22 | . Yeah. Last connective tissue is tissue, what we call bone. |
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72:27 | . So it's very very similar to . The difference is very very hard |
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72:32 | much more rigid and the reason for is that when it's being made it |
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72:38 | into that matrix, what are called salt? It's calcium carbonate. |
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72:43 | And so we get this really, strong stiff structure. Now we're gonna |
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72:49 | this in more detail after the test we talk about bone. But these |
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72:54 | black dots right here represent where living are actually located. Your bone tissue |
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73:00 | a living tissue. It has living in it. And those living cells |
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73:05 | nutrients and they do stuff to the bone. Alright, So it's not |
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73:10 | hard stiff tissue, it's very much . So we have osteoblasts that make |
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73:18 | ground substance and build the structure of . And then once they become |
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73:23 | those cells mature become osteo sites and job is to maintain that structure to |
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73:30 | that the the structure is able to what it's designed to do which is |
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73:34 | support your body and provide for Now here we're gonna see like in |
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73:41 | particular locations that there are blood vessels are traveling through it to bring nutrients |
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73:46 | by. All right. So we that bone is both vascular arised and |
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73:52 | . Alright. Has nerves help you that? It has nerves. Have |
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73:56 | ever been kicked in the shin? you felt it? You felt |
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74:00 | Because there are nerves there. Alright. We're getting down towards landing |
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74:09 | plane. I looks like I talked , really slowly there. Um So |
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74:15 | regard to muscle and muscle, there's much to say here just plays a |
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74:19 | in movement. There are three different . They have unique features. We're |
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74:24 | talk about all the different types of . Later with regard to the nervous |
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74:28 | , there are two major types. already mentioned these before. We have |
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74:32 | . They play a role in transmitting . Glial cells basically support nerves. |
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74:38 | neurons that play a role in Alright. But there's a couple of |
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74:44 | here at the end that become Alright. I think I can get |
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74:47 | them in the last five minutes First thing is tissue repairs alright, |
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74:54 | repairs itself. Almost all tissue in body repairs itself. Um Some does |
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74:58 | very, very slowly to the point that slowness actually looks like it's not |
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75:02 | repairing itself and some does it fairly . But the two major types are |
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75:06 | be what is called regeneration and When you're dealing with regeneration, what |
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75:11 | doing is you're replacing the destroyed tissue the same type of tissue. So |
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75:14 | restore functionality. Fibrosis is when the is so severe that the underlying connective |
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75:20 | actually fills in for the damaged And so what you end up with |
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75:24 | fiber in those particular locations. for example, um if you cut |
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75:30 | right, and it's not a deep , what you'll see is that the |
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75:33 | kind of forms and goes back and doesn't look like you've ever been |
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75:38 | That would be an example of But if you end up with a |
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75:41 | cut that ends up with this large that sticks with you for the rest |
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75:44 | your life, you know, one down here and it's right there actually |
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75:48 | That's just one of several of stupid that I did in my life. |
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75:52 | what you end up with is that end up with this structure that doesn't |
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75:57 | the same functionality as when it Now when you're dealing with the |
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76:01 | that's not gonna be the same But I'll give you an example of |
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76:03 | student in class a couple years He said, well doctor in a |
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76:06 | of years ago, I got hit the head with an ax. |
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76:10 | And I said what happened there? it's like nervous tissues, one of |
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76:13 | that goes through fibrosis rather than the . So the neurons that were destroyed |
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76:18 | replaced by the glial cells and they up that space and then the brain |
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76:24 | of works around that that scar that would be an example. And |
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76:29 | , you know, you that scar can't function like nervous tissue. It's |
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76:33 | scar tissue, but it filled up space just like fibrosis does that would |
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76:38 | an example of that, you Well, it was actually in in |
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76:43 | brain tissue. Yeah. You So there's some cognitive stuff that he |
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76:49 | that he struggled with and stuff, for the most part, it worked |
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76:52 | way around that all right now, way that wound healing works in |
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76:56 | So this is what we're looking at kind of the skin, but this |
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76:59 | gonna be throughout the body. This kind of the general thing step one |
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77:02 | whenever you get a cut you're gonna inflammation. That's a natural response. |
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77:07 | like when you get bit by a , that's inflammation is the first |
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77:10 | So what you're doing is you're bringing and sites and you're allowing if there |
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77:15 | a cut blood vessel, you're allowing into the area so that it attracts |
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77:20 | those things that are there to fight and to remove destroyed cells when blood |
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77:25 | into that area, the clotting proteins well as the thrombin sites. The |
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77:31 | cells that are responsible will create a in that area to create a |
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77:35 | So nothing can get in and nothing escape and protect that area while you |
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77:40 | on it. So in this picture kind of this step two is the |
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77:44 | of the clot. So here you the clot and then the immune, |
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77:47 | sites that have kind of migrated What they're doing is like this is |
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77:50 | and destroyed. I'm gonna remove that and clear it all out. Stage |
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77:55 | is when we build new blood vessels angiogenesis and this attracts in fibroblasts and |
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78:01 | types of cells to rebuild the surrounding . And that's what's going on there |
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78:06 | we're gonna see fibroblast migrate in and start laying down new ground work when |
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78:11 | dealing with epithelial tissues. Epithelial tissues pushing in and start working towards one |
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78:17 | to layer over that. And finally final step is okay. now the |
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78:23 | tissue has grown in. You've rebuilt connective tissue, you've repaired those |
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78:28 | You destroy those things you don't need you allow for macrophages and stuff to |
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78:33 | out. Now. Having said all . Let me see here. I |
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78:37 | have two minutes. My young fresh , right? There's one last little |
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78:45 | that I want to cover here. definitions just to make our lives |
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78:50 | Alright, very simple. Everyone say word after me. Apoptosis. |
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78:57 | not apoptosis Apoptosis. Thank you. . Alright, I had a professor |
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79:03 | you said it wrong man, he got angry. All right, So |
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79:08 | apoptosis apoptosis or cell suicide. Cell . Program Cell death. This is |
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79:12 | way that cells are told you're being problem or you shouldn't be here and |
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79:17 | need you to go die in a . And that cell says okay. |
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79:21 | so what it does is it self and destroys itself in an organized manner |
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79:25 | that the materials inside it don't go your body and cause problems. |
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79:29 | so while you're developing between your you all had webs just like |
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79:35 | You don't have them now, do ? Because program Cell death apoptosis occurred |
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79:40 | get rid of those things. That's . We've seen the word autopsy gee |
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79:44 | autopsy gee is how we destroy proteins the body or inside cells to make |
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79:49 | that they don't cause problems to the tautology. These last three terms can |
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79:53 | a little confusing. Atrophy is what did during the pandemic, when you |
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79:57 | around on the sofa and watch youtube day long. Right? Basically. |
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80:01 | is when you don't use something. body is not going to waste energy |
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80:05 | maintain it at its size and so shrinks as a function of disuse. |
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80:11 | hypertrophy is when something grows as a of overuse. Typically when you hear |
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80:18 | and even this other term is Um you're gonna usually hear those associated |
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80:23 | cancer but these can be normal So hypertrophy is when I get over |
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80:29 | . So during puberty your cells were hypertrophic. They were growing and getting |
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80:35 | and then they were dividing massively at accelerated rate. That's hyperplasia. So |
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80:42 | plastic cells are cells that are dividing an accelerated rate. What do we |
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80:50 | tomorrow night at six PM extra credit then test on Thursday. Remember we |
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80:55 | have class on the days of Please don't show |
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