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00:02 | You'll get so quiet in the I can't tell if it's that you |
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00:06 | woken up yet or you're nervous or what we're looking at. This is |
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00:13 | distribution for the second exam. Average 61. Um Standard deviation is crazy |
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00:21 | out the roof. If you don't the standard deviation is, it basically |
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00:24 | you how spread or how wide the sizes and so Very, very |
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00:30 | Usually we're shooting for about a Really good sample or really good standard |
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00:36 | would be about 12. See the grade was 94. Low grade was |
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00:40 | . The median grade is a and you can see the difference between |
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00:43 | average of the median grade. Remember grade, you guys remember how to |
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00:47 | that stuff way back when the median is lined up all the grades and |
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00:51 | work your way to the middle and the medium grade. All right. |
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00:55 | , you can look at this and can say, all right, I'm |
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00:57 | panic and freak out and run Like it's the end of the |
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01:01 | the end of the world. You , It's not actually when I look |
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01:04 | this, what I see is a of really good grades bunched up here |
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01:08 | then kind of this downward slope that kind of slides off. Alright. |
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01:13 | it's one test, who cares? 20% of your grade. No big |
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01:17 | . You're looking at me like now one it's it's more than a |
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01:21 | It's my life. I've got I've to get into school school test |
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01:25 | No, it's no big deal. . One test is not anything. |
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01:29 | is a comparison. I'll probably come to that. No, no, |
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01:34 | , actually, this is fair So, this kind of shows you |
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01:39 | over the two units. So the one, the blue is unit number |
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01:43 | . So that's that's all the grades you earned in unit one, The |
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01:48 | , all the grades you earned in two. And it doesn't include any |
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01:50 | the unit one stuff. It just of shows you how how have grades |
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01:54 | of shifted and stuff. And you see there's a slight uh shift. |
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02:00 | , I mean, technically the the aren't that far off. I |
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02:04 | I think the average between the two is like a point. But you |
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02:07 | kind of see there's this kind of that's kind of shifting this way. |
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02:10 | then a couple of people have kind given up. I mean, I |
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02:14 | know these students aren't coming to class didn't take the test. They stopped |
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02:17 | homework. So, you can almost those last two as not being part |
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02:22 | this. So, you know, there anything to be concerned about? |
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02:27 | and no. I mean, in the sense of like, are |
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02:30 | doing as well as you could be you given up if you've given |
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02:32 | stop giving up and actually try. And if you haven't given up, |
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02:37 | at your grade and say all right I doing what I want to do |
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02:39 | if not let me try harder. ? I mean we don't we don't |
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02:44 | in to win. People who coast people who strive and work hard |
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02:51 | Um I don't know how to tell anything other than that. I mean |
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02:57 | not disappointed with the grades. I the grades are just fine. They're |
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03:00 | where I expect them to be. mean I prefer all A's. I |
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03:03 | I wanna have a kegger. None you guys want keggers. And so |
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03:06 | like I've kind of resigned myself to idea that never going to have that |
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03:11 | . But anyway this is what the look like. I mean overall. |
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03:16 | if we were excluding extra credit Remember you've got to get out of |
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03:21 | brain and stop thinking that A. is failing what's failing in the class |
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03:26 | . Thank you. And so what means is you use these numbers to |
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03:30 | the range in which you fall in you can go and calculate your own |
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03:33 | and see. And then if you to throw your extra credit on that |
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03:35 | can see where that pushes you as . But it's saying look right now |
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03:39 | know A. Is still a That doesn't surprise me. This curves |
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03:43 | help out the A's. But you a regular semester. This kind of |
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03:46 | down a little bit but summer semester usually sticks around there, A.B. |
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03:52 | about a 76 right now And that's gonna change a little bit by by |
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03:56 | .1 way or the other and then begins about A. 56.7 and then |
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04:02 | D. Begins at A. 50 then anything below that. So if |
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04:05 | again if you find yourself here, not out of the running, we |
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04:09 | have 50% of our grade, in ? I mean that means you still |
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04:12 | half the class to go if you here. And let's just say you |
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04:16 | 50% better. That's gonna push you to here. A lot of people |
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04:21 | see that. A lot of people see oh my grades are bad. |
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04:24 | just gonna suck now and you you law school, that's where we get |
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04:28 | the lawyers because they can't hack it here and the real stuff. Sorry |
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04:34 | parents or lawyers. My dad's an . I get to make fun of |
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04:38 | all the time. Actually. I think he ever practiced law in his |
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04:42 | life. Um Anyway um The point is that don't get caught up in |
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04:49 | numbers, right? Your job here to learn the material. If you |
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04:55 | on learning and don't focus on I need to learn this material. |
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04:59 | don't want to go to a doctor a nurse or physical therapist who hasn't |
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05:04 | how to do blank. If that's attitude, say I'm gonna be that |
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05:09 | , I'm gonna be the person that everything. So that when someone asked |
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05:12 | a question about Covid, I'd be to answer, someone asked me a |
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05:15 | about cancer. I'll be able to . If someone asked me about how |
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05:18 | big toe works, I'll be able answer it. Alright. You strive |
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05:22 | be that person. You're great. naturally going to go up and if |
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05:25 | find that you're studying, you're studying aren't getting you where you need to |
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05:28 | , go back and look at what recommend it to do. Alright. |
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05:32 | know it works. I've seen it . I've seen it. Turn my |
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05:36 | story. I know you guys love I tell stories, right? See |
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05:39 | excited you get. I had a football player, played for the for |
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05:44 | Ravens promised his mother that he would from college had one semester to |
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05:51 | Alright. This is like eons And he was in my class and |
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05:56 | was getting D's over and over again you know, it was driving him |
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06:00 | . Because if you didn't know athletes ridiculously competitive, Alright. Competitive beyond |
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06:07 | . And so he said they're why can't I do well in this |
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06:10 | ? I know that I'm capable so . Let's see how you're studying. |
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06:12 | he told me he was like, yeah, you're studying, like you |
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06:14 | to do when you were in when people would just hand you grade |
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06:18 | that you can keep playing football stop that. Let me tell you how |
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06:21 | do it. Right. I told how to do it right. He |
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06:23 | a D into a B plus over tests. Everybody is capable of doing |
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06:30 | . Doing well. You just have want to do it. Don't get |
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06:33 | by the numbers. Ask yourself to , you learn, you'll do just |
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06:40 | that I'm not trying to beat an . Just it's humid and hot and |
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06:46 | of this. You want to have good news? There's only eight more |
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06:51 | to go. Only eight more days you having to put up with |
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06:57 | All right. I think the stuff we're moving into is interesting and |
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07:01 | It's part of the reason why you went into this in the first place |
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07:06 | . We're going to talk about muscles . We're gonna talk about muscles and |
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07:09 | rest of the entire class is about nervous system in all sorts of different |
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07:14 | . Didn't you ask me if we're to do the eye? Yeah, |
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07:17 | gonna talk about the eye how it . It's not a camera. All |
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07:24 | . Although we like to think like . All right. Anyway. So |
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07:27 | you're looking at this and you're a panicky email me come by and see |
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07:32 | if you have, you know, up an appointment, we can talk |
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07:34 | off the ledge when I say talk off the ledge. That doesn't mean |
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07:38 | you off this way means talk you this way. Okay. You know |
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07:42 | you find yourself in this area, panic just yet. You guys know |
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07:46 | the drop date is because I know of you are like sitting. I'm |
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07:48 | the class right after he turns I'm gonna drop the class. I'm |
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07:51 | run out of here. Right. you know when the drop date is |
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07:57 | looks next monday? You can literally three tests, do all your homework |
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08:03 | and then determine whether or not your good enough to move on. They |
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08:07 | do that when I was in man. If you didn't know about |
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08:09 | first test, you were screwed. just have to work your way through |
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08:12 | . All right. So don't drop harder. See what you need to |
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08:19 | . See how you can change if keep doing the same thing over and |
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08:21 | again, don't expect any changes. right. That was eight minutes of |
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08:27 | ranting 8.5. Let's learn something Pictures of sexy people. A little |
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08:36 | of cheesecake. A little bit of . All right. What we're gonna |
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08:41 | today. Sounds like I've been drinking we're gonna do today is we're gonna |
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08:47 | at how a muscle works. So there's a couple of things. |
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08:51 | going to go through the micro anatomy a muscle cell. All right. |
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08:56 | going to ask the question, How the contraction actually occur? Yeah. |
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09:01 | . And so the idea of a cell, and then we're gonna ask |
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09:04 | group questions like, how does a contract. Alright. That's kind of |
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09:10 | big picture of today. And then we're gonna do at the very end |
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09:12 | we're gonna look at smooth muscle, is boring and and and not as |
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09:17 | . We spend most of our time about skeletal muscle. All right. |
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09:21 | how many different types of muscles are ? Three? Right. If you |
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09:25 | skeletal muscle, you understand cardiac They're very, very similar. |
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09:28 | we don't go over it again. . There's it's structurally there's some differences |
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09:32 | that's about it. All right. , we're gonna be doing skeletal muscle |
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09:38 | . Smooth muscle. Second. so, that's our starting point. |
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09:42 | is the function? Remember, we ask the question first, What are |
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09:45 | trying to accomplish? Skeletal muscle has functions? The easy one. When |
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09:51 | turn on your device, There we . The easy one is to produce |
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09:56 | . And so, what we talk movement here, we're talking about |
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09:59 | Alright, So any sort of movement you're doing where your hands are gesticulating |
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10:04 | mouth is moving. That type of is what we're talking about skeletal |
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10:08 | Alright, secondly, it's there for and support. It basically holds your |
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10:13 | organs into place, particularly in the and in the thoracic region, it |
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10:18 | you maintain your posture, it stabilizes joint which we've already talked about. |
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10:22 | also generates heat Alright. So when contract it uses energy. The energy |
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10:30 | of muscles like most things in your is fairly low. So the byproduct |
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10:35 | that energy that's being converted turns into and that's what actually warms your body |
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10:42 | we don't think about it too much we also plays a role in |
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10:45 | Now you can think alright well I'm my fingers around and typing and writing |
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10:48 | and that's true and that's a form communication but really it has to do |
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10:52 | speaking and facial expressions as well as gestures. You know when I look |
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10:57 | you and I do this, what you think? Right, it's like |
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11:02 | I understand what that movement makes. you ever tried to understand somebody through |
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11:07 | ? What they're trying to trying to ? I mean I mean usually it's |
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11:12 | okay but have you ever like oh don't know misinterpreted the words that they |
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11:18 | Yeah right. It's because there's we when we communicate we use primarily facial |
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11:26 | to express our emotions. They try include Emojis but only like 30 of |
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11:32 | understand what each of those emojis We just kind of randomly throw them |
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11:35 | there hoping that someone gets an idea what that poo means right? I |
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11:42 | a friend, I was talking with . She's she's my age and she's |
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11:46 | right? And so she was trying figure out from a text from somebody |
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11:50 | she was dating whether that was a face or not. And we started |
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11:54 | different emojis down trying to determine which ab absolutely represents being flirty or whether |
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11:59 | being silly, like ha ha I mean that, right? But if |
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12:04 | tell you something and I raise my and kind of give you that kind |
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12:08 | look. You know that I'm kind joking around if I'm frowning at |
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12:11 | You know I'm angry, right? got all these muscles on my face |
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12:16 | convey communicate to convey information. All . So muscles have all these multiple |
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12:24 | Now in the lab, you'll get explore about 100 of them. And |
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12:28 | to let you know there's about 600 muscles in the body. All |
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12:32 | So depending on who your anatomy professor in the future, you're gonna have |
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12:37 | learn a lot or not a Alright? So at our level we |
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12:42 | learn that means about 100 of them they force you to learn. But |
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12:45 | you go to medical school, your in every single solitary one of |
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12:49 | I don't know about nursing school. right. For this class. We |
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12:54 | name the muscles. Alright. It's hard to just sit there and point |
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12:57 | picture and say memorize memorize memorize. I'm gonna leave that to the lab |
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13:01 | have you learn the names of the . Now, what that means is |
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13:05 | Wednesday we will talk about how muscles named. You know, it's like |
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13:11 | slide to give you a hint of to go about looking at a muscle |
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13:15 | going, okay, I can pretty figure out what the name of that |
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13:17 | is. All right. So a is going to be supported by connective |
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13:28 | . And when I say that, I mean is that when you look |
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13:31 | a muscle, if you go to store and look at a steak, |
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13:34 | what a steak or a roast is a muscle that has been removed from |
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13:38 | animal. And if you look at cross section, you'll actually see how |
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13:42 | muscle is being held by connective Alright. And your muscles are the |
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13:47 | same way and there are multiple layers this. We basically have three concentric |
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13:53 | . Now, what we're gonna do is the nomenclature gets a little |
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13:57 | All right, because everything sounds like like the nervous system where the first |
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14:02 | who are exploring it was like, these are special cells. And so |
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14:05 | gonna name everything this, we're gonna everything a prefix of my oh and |
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14:10 | you finally kind of learn it's It's all the same. It just |
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14:14 | on what we're looking at. So muscle cell is here. Alright this |
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14:21 | the muscle fiber. It's also referred as a maya site. Alright. |
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14:26 | then inside that that's where you So, it's a mile fiber or |
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14:30 | fiber. So, they're trying to it less confusing. But it's my |
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14:34 | fiber. And then there's things inside that will be mild fibrosis and maya |
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14:38 | . So, see how confusing that . It's a fiber. Alright. |
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14:44 | what we have is we have these of connective tissue that takes an individual |
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14:49 | and wraps it. So, you'll individual cells will be wrapped in uh |
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14:53 | tissue. And then what you'll do you'll bundle those up and wrap that |
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14:58 | a connective tissue, and then you that up and wrap that in connective |
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15:01 | . You bundle that up and you wrap it in connective tissue. |
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15:05 | the layers that we're most concerned about the three. We're not gonna be |
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15:08 | primarily about this sarcoma, which is plasma membrane. Alright. What we're |
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15:13 | about is the three above them. the names are really easy. |
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15:16 | So, when you're referring to this tissue, the prefixes missy. Um |
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15:21 | . Not Museum. Museum. you probably heard of a paramecium which |
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15:24 | basically a little tiny single cell That's bad for you. That's not |
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15:29 | that is. All right. you can see there's a pair of |
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15:32 | . Um All right. So, sound very similar. But they're very |
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15:35 | different. So, the outermost layer the epa macie. Um All |
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15:40 | And so when you think of a that connective tissue that wraps that whole |
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15:44 | , is that epic museum? When you're looking at a bundle of |
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15:49 | and remember fibers and single cells. , if you take a bunch of |
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15:52 | and wrap them together, what you're do is you're gonna create something called |
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15:55 | fantastical. All right. A fast . Basically just a bundle of |
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16:01 | Really? And that's kind of what done is we're going to call this |
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16:04 | tiny bundle of sticks and this tiny is surrounded by the pyramids Ium. |
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16:09 | right. And then individual cells are have the indo missy. Um All |
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16:17 | . So, you can imagine here's circle, Emma. And what I'm |
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16:20 | is I'm rapping in connective tissue. , the reason we wrap an individual |
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16:24 | with connective tissue is that these are potential cells. Alright, think of |
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16:30 | like wires. If you take a bunch of copper wires and bundle them |
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16:34 | , will each individual wire work by ? Or will they actually send charge |
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16:39 | the cells that are or the charges the wires around them? Right. |
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16:46 | want to connect and create create a wire. You just basically take copper |
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16:50 | added to copper. The charge passes one wire to the next. |
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16:54 | if I have a bunch of naked touching each other. They cross over |
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16:58 | other. So, if you want keep a charge to an individual |
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17:04 | you wrap it in insulation. And what we're doing here. Is each |
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17:08 | muscle is wrapped in its own connective so that it's separated from all the |
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17:13 | . So that when you electrically excite cell, you're not electrically electrically exciting |
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17:18 | that you don't want to excite. kind of makes sense. Now, |
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17:26 | of this connective tissue travel along the of the cell. These cells are |
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17:30 | long as the muscle itself is all ? So the bicep starts here ends |
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17:36 | here. Really, actually, starts , ends down there. That's one |
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17:41 | , right? And it's that So, the cells inside that are |
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17:44 | long. So each individual cell is to be wrapped in connective tissue bundles |
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17:50 | those individual cells are wrapped in connective bundles of the bundles are wrapped in |
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17:55 | tissues. We call that the right? And then those connective tissues |
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18:00 | continue past those individual wrappers that we've and they form the tendon. All |
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18:08 | , So, here's the tendon. that epic museum. You can imagine |
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18:11 | paramecium is going up beyond the wrapping joining up with the epa museum. |
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18:16 | can imagine the endometrium is going past this stuff joining up with the other |
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18:21 | connective tissues. And they're forming this like structure. This tendon which allows |
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18:27 | muscle to be attached to the And the purpose of that muscle is |
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18:31 | bring the two bones that it's attached closer together. All right. |
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18:37 | that's the purpose here. So, you think about that tendon muscle itself |
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18:42 | not pulling on the bone, muscle pulling on a tendon tendon is pulling |
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18:47 | bone. So, when a muscle , it's causing the tendon to be |
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18:52 | . And since the tendon wants to stretching, what it does is it |
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18:56 | and it pulls whatever it's attached which happens to be about. And |
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19:00 | is attached the perry Osti um on bone. So, that's the |
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19:07 | And that's a big macro view. what we're gonna do is we're gonna |
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19:11 | to that mile fiber and we're going slice it and we're gonna take a |
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19:14 | inside. Alright. And the reason do this is so that we can |
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19:20 | how that electrical signal is going to in that cell shrinking squishing on itself |
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19:27 | through that contraction. Now, as mentioned in the muscle, what we |
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19:31 | is we name things with that muscle . So, we have that my |
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19:35 | , if you ever see milo just muscle and the other one is Sarko |
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19:39 | right. So, when you see plasm, it's referring to the cytoplasm |
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19:43 | you cease our kolyma, it's referring the plasma membrane. Alright. |
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19:48 | it's just fancy words for this type self. All right now. What's |
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19:54 | about the Sarko plasm here is that can see that it's jammed packed. |
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19:59 | right. This is not just an trying to shove a bunch of things |
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20:02 | here. It's really saying, there's not a lot of space in |
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20:06 | . Now, what we will see we'll see some Glick assumes like a |
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20:10 | are basically packets of stored glycogen. the reason we start glycogen in our |
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20:16 | is because we don't want to wait sugar to show up to the muscle |
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20:20 | in order for them to do their . It's easier just to keep something |
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20:24 | site if you like to eat. don't put all your food in the |
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20:29 | , you store it in the night or the nightstand, right? Anyone |
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20:35 | have a bunch of twinkies hiding in . Okay, Don't don't tell |
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20:39 | I don't want to know. All . Another thing we have myoglobin. |
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20:45 | , myoglobin is a molecule that's related hemoglobin. You've probably heard of |
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20:49 | hemoglobin is the molecule that sits in blood cells that binds up oxygen. |
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20:54 | my globe in sits in muscle cells it binds up oxygen. Again, |
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20:59 | reason being is you don't want your cell waiting for oxygen to arrive, |
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21:04 | ? If you're walking down the street a bear attacks you because that's what |
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21:08 | , right? You want to sit and start breathing gotta get the oxygen |
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21:12 | my muscles. You want to be to have the muscle to begin contracting |
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21:15 | you can fight the bear because that's you do, right? You find |
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21:19 | bear, okay, there's a whole of mitochondria. Why do I need |
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21:26 | ? What do mitochondria do in a way? Make make a T. |
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21:32 | . So in essence, what I here is the rule of thumb is |
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21:36 | you have mitochondria, you're making A . P. The more mitochondria you |
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21:39 | the more 80 P are making. we have to have energy generating |
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21:44 | And so there's lots and lots and of them. And then the weird |
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21:48 | about this is that this cell is multi nucleus itself. The reason it's |
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21:53 | nucleotide because during development, what you is you had a bunch of milo |
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21:58 | when you hear the word blast. does that mean? It's a building |
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22:02 | immature cell. It's not a mature yet. And so what happened is |
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22:05 | mile blast. Our signal to fuse one another and they begin fusing and |
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22:10 | blast our Itsy bitsy tiny cells. mean they're like the size of normal |
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22:14 | , right? And what happens they and they form these cylindrical structures which |
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22:19 | your mild fibers. So the individual that's really, really long is actually |
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22:25 | whole bunch of cells that fused together form this structure, interestingly, the |
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22:31 | that precedes a mile blast is also same cell that precedes the adipose |
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22:37 | So basically if you give the right , you can send that cell down |
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22:40 | the fat pathway or down the muscle and that doesn't mean that you can |
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22:44 | your muscle into fat and vice It's just an interesting idea that those |
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22:48 | have the same origin. Now, I want you to do is I |
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22:52 | to focus in here on a couple items inside. Now here, these |
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23:00 | right here we're going to deal with just a minute. These are your |
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23:03 | side of skeletal elements are the mild . Alright, So you can see |
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23:07 | the whole thing is just jammed full side of skeletons and it's an organized |
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23:11 | of skeleton. But surrounding these are things called the triad. Alright. |
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23:16 | collectively the triad consists of three Alright. The first item is this |
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23:22 | item that you see kind of in cartoon. It's not actually yellow, |
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23:25 | that's how the cartoonist drew it. right, this is the T |
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23:28 | the transverse tubules. This creates a that opens up from the surface and |
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23:34 | kind of is a tube that travels the way through the cell and around |
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23:38 | the other side. In essence, you have something like this, whenever |
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23:42 | have a tube through something, what done is brought the outside close |
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23:47 | right. In other words, you've more surface area and that surface area |
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23:51 | deep to whatever the structure is. when you have like a tunnel, |
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23:54 | you're doing is you're that tunnel is going into a mountain or into a |
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23:58 | , what you're doing is you're bringing inside the hill very close to the |
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24:03 | . That kind of makes sense. . Alright. Think of of of |
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24:08 | , right. Or we'll do something , we'll talk about a donut. |
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24:12 | right, jelly, donut has jelly on the inside, right? But |
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24:16 | I draw a donut and put a , that hole right there is not |
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24:22 | its outside, isn't it? And what I've done is I've brought the |
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24:27 | near to the middle of this or this uh pastry, right? Think |
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24:33 | another donut where that would be filled . Right. So now I've got |
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24:38 | lot of surface area in which I interact with the external environment and that's |
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24:43 | of what the t tubules doing, basically saying the inside of the cell |
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24:47 | to interact with the outside environment. what I'm doing is I'm bringing the |
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24:51 | environment as close to I can to inside of the cell and really the |
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24:57 | that it's trying to interact with is next structure. The sarko plasma |
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25:02 | Yeah, yeah. You already know psycho plasma articulate is, what is |
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25:08 | , what's in what's the word we for for the generic cell. |
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25:13 | Endo plastic particular. Yeah, that's right. I'm not gonna be mad |
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25:16 | you if you get it wrong, not what we do here, we're |
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25:20 | testing our boundaries and our and our a little bit. Alright, |
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25:25 | the sarko plasma particularly is a modified particularly, it's actually smooth ectoplasmic |
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25:31 | And what it does here is that surrounds each of these side of skeletal |
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25:36 | . And so you can see all blue stuff represents that S. |
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25:40 | That's abbreviation for circle plasma particularly. right. And this structure, its |
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25:47 | purpose is to store up calcium. right. So, you can imagine |
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25:52 | calcium gets in the cell, it's there's pumps that pump calcium into the |
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25:57 | plasma critical. Um And then the of the Sarka plasma critical um nearest |
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26:02 | transverse tubules called the terminal cistern. . Alright, so sister knee remember |
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26:07 | to kind of a sister in a area that's kind of flattened and and |
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26:12 | and it can hold stuff. All , so, you think of like |
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26:15 | cistern of water? Well, that's they're looking at. They're like, |
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26:19 | , it holds something and what the cistern er just those, those wider |
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26:24 | that are of the part of the Plaza particularly that are nearest that t |
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26:30 | . And so what we've done is now brought the outside near to the |
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26:36 | particular throughout the entire cell must be reason why that is necessary. And |
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26:43 | the Circle Plaza particularly holds calcium, must have something to do with |
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26:48 | All right. It would help if going the right direction. Alright, |
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26:55 | let's look at that side of skeleton quick. We call that the mild |
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26:59 | fiber. Well, depending on the , you will have hundreds to thousands |
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27:03 | it. When you talk about being and building your muscles, you're not |
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27:08 | adding more cells to the muscle. muscle basically stops growing somewhere around the |
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27:16 | of puberty. Right? So the of cells stop. They don't keep |
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27:20 | and dividing and dividing. What happens when you exercise, you're increasing the |
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27:25 | of mild fibers. The strength of cell is dependent upon the number of |
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27:30 | that are there. All right. each of these mild fi bruls because |
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27:35 | are in essence the structure that allows cell to contract. You're gonna see |
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27:41 | they extend the entire length of the cell along with that structure. And |
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27:48 | within them, that's where you're gonna the maya filaments, the actual molecules |
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|
27:52 | make up this. Now. This where we probably get into an area |
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27:55 | you've already learned something. So the filaments consist of two things. It's |
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27:59 | thick and the thin filament. And some point in your life someone taught |
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28:02 | it's like, oh the thick filament a bunch of my ascent and thin |
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28:05 | is a bunch of acting. Does sound familiar. Anyone never learned |
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28:10 | Okay. one person. That's Two people that's good. Alright. |
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28:14 | finding out who has has had really bad biology teachers because they usually |
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28:19 | of focus in on this stuff. , Alright, so you have a |
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28:23 | filament and you have a thin Alright. And really what you have |
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28:26 | are two molecules that like to interact each other. The thick filament is |
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28:32 | and so what you see here and gonna see different cartoons of this and |
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28:36 | thick filament looks kind of like a club, would you agree with me |
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28:38 | that? It kind of looks like . All right. And what these |
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28:41 | filaments are is basically it's a head this long tail. And what you |
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28:44 | is you bundle them all up. see if I have a better |
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28:46 | So you can kind of see here is all these bundles have been kind |
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28:50 | put together, right? The head what interacts with the thin filament. |
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28:59 | when you think of that myosin think if it's going to interact with the |
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29:03 | , it's gonna be something along those . And the tails. These long |
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29:07 | are basically what allows to bundle itself . Now in the head, the |
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29:12 | that interacts with accent has what we an acting binding site. And that |
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29:16 | be obvious when you see that it's act in binding site. But the |
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29:19 | thing that it has, it has A. T. P. A |
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29:22 | . And so what that means is that it acts as an enzyme. |
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29:26 | basically when A T. P. in it breaks the A. |
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29:29 | P. And releases the energy and for movement in the miocene had. |
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29:35 | the head is kind of wobbly. thin filament which we usually say is |
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29:39 | it's a bunch of acting is actually little bit more complex than that. |
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29:43 | right. Yes, there's acting And so these molecules that you see |
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29:48 | are basically um strands of acting now call it F. Act. And |
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29:53 | don't need to know that just call acting should be fine. But the |
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29:56 | we distinguishes it because each of these is G. Acting. And you |
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30:02 | see it kind of forms this really of unique helix structure kind of like |
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30:05 | D. N. A. Has helix. So acting is this is |
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30:08 | strand that's a helical structure it has its surface a binding site for |
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30:14 | We call that the myosin binding And if that site is available to |
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30:20 | then it will bind to it. don't necessarily want it to bind to |
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|
30:24 | all the time. And so what going to do is we're going to |
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|
30:26 | it. So we have another molecule triple meus intro is this green chain |
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30:33 | goes along the surface of the active . And you can imagine for each |
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30:38 | these acting there's a Myosin binding And that green strand of trouble my |
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30:42 | is blocking or hiding that mice and site. Otherwise it would interact. |
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30:50 | there's a point where we wanted to . So we gotta move it out |
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30:54 | the way. So we have another called Troponin. And troponin is kind |
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|
30:59 | like a um a hinge. And when it binds up to calcium what |
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31:07 | does, it changes the shape of and it is bound up to the |
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31:11 | mice and it's bound up to the . And what it does is it |
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31:13 | the triple my son out of the , making the mice and binding site |
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31:18 | . And if my sins their binds and you're gonna get a contraction. |
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|
31:23 | right so Acton is the confusing one it has all these parts to |
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|
31:29 | But we're going to walk through every along the way to see how this |
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31:34 | done so far. Everybody with me the molecules. So you're two filaments |
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|
31:41 | filament thin filament thick filaments. Myerson an A. T. P. |
|
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31:45 | . Has an active binding site. filament three parts acting. Triple |
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|
31:50 | Troponin troponin is the hinge. It's one that binds calcium acting binds |
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31:55 | Troponin is the blocker. I said . Excuse me. Triple Madison. |
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|
32:05 | if you were to take a slice muscle and look at it. What |
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32:10 | see is you see something that looks this you'd see kind of a little |
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|
32:13 | dark band a light band dark band little darker band dark band light |
|
|
32:18 | dark band and just kind of repeating . And of course whenever there's a |
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32:22 | pattern that means something interesting is going . And so very early on what |
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|
32:28 | did was they identified this band and , okay, we're gonna define this |
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32:33 | by looking at this dark, this of dark band and then we're gonna |
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32:37 | until we find another one of those bands. And they call that a |
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|
32:40 | here. And what this circle here is the functional unit of a |
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32:46 | When you say functional unit, remember said that the purpose of muscle is |
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32:49 | create contractions. And so what we're is that this unit is where the |
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32:54 | is taking place. And so when stimulate the muscle, you'll see the |
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32:58 | ends of the soccer mere draw near each other and so each muscle is |
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33:02 | is a series of repeating circle. as you grow larger or taller, |
|
|
33:07 | should say, or longer. You sarcasm ears to the end of your |
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33:15 | . Okay, so remember you used be this big now you're this |
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|
33:19 | So what you did was you added ears along the the muscles themselves just |
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33:24 | get longer and the soccer players don't longer longer. What you do is |
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33:27 | keep adding these little tiny units. of course when you have a |
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33:33 | you name the patterns and so there bands that are associated here, the |
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33:38 | one, the boundary lines we call Z lines. And then once we |
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33:43 | learning and understand, you'll see the sometimes used Z disc. And |
|
|
33:46 | what you're looking at here is you're at a structure from this side. |
|
|
33:50 | ? So soccer is basically like my hands. If you look at my |
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33:53 | hands, it's basically two lines, ? Until I turn and then now |
|
|
33:58 | can see my hands, Right? so that's what you're looking at, |
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34:02 | you're looking at a structure from the . That's his massive, massive latticework |
|
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34:08 | proteins that allow structure to be bound them. And so what you have |
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|
34:12 | you have micro filaments or Myo filaments are extending from the Z line and |
|
|
34:19 | the other Z line. And they're from both sides. So, what |
|
|
34:25 | did then, or what the first were looking at this did they |
|
|
34:29 | all right, well, let's start things. And so they basically |
|
|
34:32 | all right, so, right we're going to call that the eye |
|
|
34:36 | . And then where it's dark. really dark area, we're going to |
|
|
34:40 | that the a band. But there's zone inside that's a little bit |
|
|
34:44 | We're going to call that the H . And then there's this dark band |
|
|
34:47 | the middle. That's an in The in line is a lot like |
|
|
34:50 | Z line. If you turned what you'd see is there's this massive |
|
|
34:54 | of proteins to which a bunch of filaments are bound to. So what |
|
|
35:01 | they? Well, the in line the point where the thick filaments are |
|
|
35:07 | . So the thick filaments extend in directions from the in line. All |
|
|
35:13 | . The Z. Line as I , represents where the thin filaments extend |
|
|
35:19 | they extend in both directions. So eye band is a bunch of thin |
|
|
35:24 | and what we have here are a of thick filaments. And so the |
|
|
35:28 | zone is an area where you just thick filaments and there's going to be |
|
|
35:34 | between the thin filament and thick filaments where they cross over each other, |
|
|
35:38 | make a darker band. So that here the a band is where those |
|
|
35:44 | are crossing over. Okay, so kind of one of these things you |
|
|
35:52 | have to memorize. I banned thin . A band thick and thin |
|
|
35:59 | H Zone thick filament only in That's the attachment side for the thick |
|
|
36:05 | and then you just go same thing this is still H's own so |
|
|
36:08 | thick and thin thin here we are the Z line again and then just |
|
|
36:13 | repeat. Okay, so it's just you have to remember. Rise. |
|
|
36:18 | if you can't visualize this. I it's time for a visual representation since |
|
|
36:23 | near the end and easy to get . Why don't you come up here |
|
|
36:25 | quick. He's like crap. Seaworld Shamu splash some. Alright, |
|
|
36:33 | over here. Right. Don't be . I'm not gonna I'm not gonna |
|
|
36:37 | pants you or anything. All Why don't you put your arms out |
|
|
36:40 | up? No, no. Like . Alright, So he's like an |
|
|
36:43 | line. All right. We're gonna you the in line. All |
|
|
36:46 | And I'm a Z. Line. . So if he's the in |
|
|
36:49 | what does that represent? Thick or filament, thick filaments. Right. |
|
|
36:55 | I'm a Z line, what does arm represent? Thin filament. |
|
|
37:00 | I'm gonna get right here and so can now see So, I'm the |
|
|
37:03 | line. This right here is thin only. So that would be i |
|
|
37:09 | all right. It's okay. You memorized it yet. Alright, So |
|
|
37:14 | we have this point here where we're over each other. What would that |
|
|
37:19 | a band? Right? And then here from here to there, what |
|
|
37:23 | that be? H Alright, when we contract, what's going to |
|
|
37:28 | , we're going to get to a later. I'm just not going to |
|
|
37:30 | him up again. Is that when contraction occurs, the band moves towards |
|
|
37:35 | in line and so you can see , I just moved closer. |
|
|
37:39 | What happened? Which got shorter? I got shorter. What about |
|
|
37:46 | Did that get shorter? Yeah, the a band didn't change size? |
|
|
37:54 | , well, no. All Put your other arm out again. |
|
|
37:59 | both arms out. Alright. pretend, pretend I'm moving. Did |
|
|
38:03 | a ban change sides? Does that things get bigger and smaller as the |
|
|
38:09 | band changes? Do his arm Do they shrink? Do they |
|
|
38:19 | No, his arms stay the exact length. The a band is defined |
|
|
38:23 | the point where the thick and the filaments begin crossing, Right? So |
|
|
38:28 | is where the eben begins. So I get closer to them, the |
|
|
38:32 | hasn't changed size, right? The band has the eye band has but |
|
|
38:39 | A band doesn't because when we're talking a contraction, nothing changes size. |
|
|
38:45 | the distance between the two Z. . And you can imagine there's another |
|
|
38:49 | . Line on the other side. . This is what is called the |
|
|
38:54 | filament theory. Alright. It's not theory, it's just what it was |
|
|
38:59 | . Right. And so what it's you is when a contraction is |
|
|
39:02 | and I do see your question, ? When a contraction is occurring, |
|
|
39:05 | referring to how the filaments don't change length. What they do is the |
|
|
39:12 | between the lines change length. Thank . Yes ma'am. So, so |
|
|
39:26 | A notice what the a band So, it's the point of those |
|
|
39:30 | lines or sorry, that that thick coming out to here? So, |
|
|
39:34 | my thick filament goes to there and bringing this closer, There's no change |
|
|
39:39 | that distance and that point right? the thick filament doesn't do this? |
|
|
39:45 | stays just as is And what we're see in just a minute, is |
|
|
39:50 | the thin filament is basically being pulled the length of the thick filament? |
|
|
39:55 | so the thick filament doesn't change the . The thin filament doesn't change |
|
|
39:58 | It's the distance between that Z. the M. Line. That |
|
|
40:02 | And so if the a band is by where the thick and the thin |
|
|
40:05 | begin to overlap, that thick filament changes length. It can't. So |
|
|
40:10 | this thing gets closer to that thick , the eben stays the same |
|
|
40:17 | Well, they do they always Right, let me just do it |
|
|
40:20 | way. All right. And I see your question, right. Two |
|
|
40:45 | . All right. The hard part me drawing the same length. |
|
|
40:49 | so here we have the in All right, so, notice those |
|
|
40:58 | do not change length. What I'm do is I'm gonna bring them closer |
|
|
41:05 | and we're just going to have to that it was So notice what's happening |
|
|
41:19 | contraction. All right, So, a starting point, right? There's |
|
|
41:28 | starting point, So what got I that's half an eye here's the |
|
|
41:40 | half. Right? Here's the Alright sorry, there's the M. |
|
|
41:49 | the H. Zone. Right? , did the hse change size? |
|
|
41:54 | . What about the A. Did age change? No, there is |
|
|
42:02 | exact same because remember the ages represents point of overlap where it begins, |
|
|
42:08 | of overlap begins there right there. of overlap begins right there. So |
|
|
42:13 | A band is always constant. The is the one that changes that's half |
|
|
42:25 | eye. So just remember that's the . I band is one that changes |
|
|
42:33 | is just that middle line. That's . Remember it's a latticework that sits |
|
|
42:37 | the middle on which everything is Yes ma'am. Yeah. And this |
|
|
42:43 | gonna be true for the Z. as well. We're gonna come back |
|
|
42:45 | see another picture. But the in represents a series of proteins right |
|
|
42:51 | you're looking at from the side like and those proteins are the proteins to |
|
|
42:56 | the thick filaments are bound. so if you're looking at like this |
|
|
43:00 | looks like you have a whole bunch thick filaments coming off. But if |
|
|
43:02 | turn it, what you'll see is see a latticework that looks like |
|
|
43:06 | So each of those big dots represents thick filament coming out at you. |
|
|
43:12 | , Same thing is true. It not showing you for the I |
|
|
43:14 | but the band would be very very to that. Now. There's a |
|
|
43:22 | of proteins in here and some of get kind of confusing and stuff. |
|
|
46:23 | wanted to go back and make sure understood this. Thank you for pointing |
|
|
46:26 | that I didn't explain it completely. when we're talking about a contraction, |
|
|
46:31 | talking about the two Z lines that up the circle here. Alright, |
|
|
46:35 | the Z. Line number one. . Line. Number two. It |
|
|
46:38 | matter which order. Everything in between the saarc Amir. So when you're |
|
|
46:42 | about a contraction, it's bringing those Z. Lines closer together. All |
|
|
46:48 | . And they're moving to that in . So there's the lines coming towards |
|
|
46:51 | in line. That's the line is towards that in line. So when |
|
|
46:55 | contraction occurs, what we're doing is bringing that Z line inward. So |
|
|
47:02 | causes the eye band to shrink as as that I band. And really |
|
|
47:06 | are half I bands. The eye represents the point where just thin filaments |
|
|
47:10 | located, right? So, remember we understand the definition, it makes |
|
|
47:15 | makes things a little bit more The H. Band is gonna get |
|
|
47:19 | as well. So this represents the . Band and so that half gets |
|
|
47:23 | , that half gets smaller. So get smaller itself. But the thick |
|
|
47:28 | themselves don't get any different change inside thin filaments don't change inside. So |
|
|
47:33 | happening is when you're pulling those Z , the band always stays the same |
|
|
47:38 | because the filaments themselves do not decrease length, right? All you're doing |
|
|
47:44 | pulling those Z lines closer, which that space of overlap become smaller. |
|
|
47:52 | , The thick filaments don't change You're just bringing the two Z lines |
|
|
47:57 | . So the gap between those two change in size. Does that explain |
|
|
48:02 | little bit better? Did I to ? A little bit? You can |
|
|
48:09 | no. I mean I don't mind again. Okay. Okay. Yes |
|
|
48:26 | . Work. Mhm. That's a question. I don't really know how |
|
|
48:35 | answer that. It's finding that place inside you to recruit that last little |
|
|
48:40 | of muscle. I mean, I know. I mean it probably has |
|
|
48:44 | little bit to do with the you , it's probably a sympathetic response is |
|
|
48:49 | it's life or death, you kind convince yourself to do anything to |
|
|
48:55 | And probably that's what you're you're kind digging into. But I couldn't tell |
|
|
48:59 | for certain whether if that's true or ? Yeah. Girl, your weight |
|
|
49:18 | . Mhm. Right. But so would be that would be a sympathetic |
|
|
49:23 | whenever you hear the word adrenaline, sympathetic. And again, we haven't |
|
|
49:26 | about sympathetic yet. That's like I to say it's like the second and |
|
|
49:30 | lecture in this in this uh And so what a sympathetic is fight |
|
|
49:36 | flight. It's you know, how I how do I keep myself |
|
|
49:41 | So am I gonna fight the bear am I going to run away from |
|
|
49:43 | bear? You know there's going to that time when you get cornered by |
|
|
49:46 | bear and you're going to have to it out and you're gonna do everything |
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49:50 | your power to win. And so now diving deep into those places. |
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49:55 | it adrenaline that causes your muscle to that? I don't know. It |
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49:58 | just be you know, I'm I'm to dig a little bit deeper to |
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50:04 | that last little bit work. Here go. If you want to |
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50:16 | Mhm. So, that has to with um written. All right. |
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50:22 | basically your ability to how much oxygen carry in your blood. All |
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50:27 | And so um as you go to elevations, uh the oxygen density of |
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50:33 | air gets a little bit lower, not that much lower, but it's |
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50:37 | to be effective on the body. really it's because your oxygen carrying capacity |
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50:41 | the blood is reduced. And so ends up happening is is that you're |
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50:45 | delivering enough oxygen to the muscle And so they fatigue faster. All |
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50:50 | . And so, what we're dealing here when we haven't really talked about |
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50:55 | like glucose metabolism, and we purposely over that stuff. Because I don't |
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51:00 | to frustrates you all with that. mean, it's that's more of the |
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51:05 | workings of how cells work. But essence, what happens if you don't |
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51:07 | an oxygen in your body can only through that pathway to make a teepee |
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51:12 | it's a very very small amount of T. P. And I guess |
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51:15 | talk a little bit about that And so instead what does it uses |
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51:20 | this other pathway that builds up metabolites also tell you stop doing stuff. |
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51:25 | don't have enough 80 P. if you use up all your |
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51:27 | T. P. You're gonna die we're not gonna allow that to |
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51:30 | All right. Um And I know kind of a weak sauce way to |
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51:34 | it, but that's that's also the why there. Alright, so let's |
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51:40 | on and let's get back to the and the beef cake. Because you |
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51:43 | I mean, muscle tone is uh gonna look at it in the sense |
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51:49 | you know, what's its purpose? does it represent? But it also |
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51:53 | of the things that it does when see someone that has muscle tone, |
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51:56 | kind of represents healthiness, right? we kind of know that inherently. |
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52:01 | I'm not I'm not this is not place where I'm trying to trying to |
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52:04 | you make I mean, you want talk about a person doesn't have muscle |
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52:07 | . I mean, I got plenty muscle tones just under all these layers |
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52:10 | fat, Right? Um And that's that's not what this is about |
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52:15 | What muscle tone represents is continuous and partial contraction. All right. And |
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52:21 | your muscles already in a state of . And so I'll point out first |
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52:26 | is that if you have less body , that doesn't mean you have muscle |
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52:29 | . All right. So, like roommate I had in college guy that |
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52:33 | work out with right now, He have muscle fat or sorry, muscle |
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52:37 | . He doesn't have body fats, know, in any way, shape |
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52:40 | form. He's just a thin We work out. It's really kind |
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52:43 | funny because I'm much much bigger than , but he doesn't have that that |
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52:48 | that I do, right? Because just a I'm a bigger guy. |
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52:52 | , what we say is that muscle has is an association, you |
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52:56 | So if you have lots of muscle typically associated with strength and power, |
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53:00 | ? And if you don't have much , it's usually more flexibility. |
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53:05 | So, remember how we talked about a joint becomes strengthened because the muscles |
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53:09 | it, you know, the more you have in the greater the |
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53:12 | All right. Different muscles have different . And so where tone is and |
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53:18 | it looks like, it's gonna be on uh those specific types of muscles |
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53:23 | the connective tissue that surrounds them and their shape as well as the size |
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53:27 | the tibetan to show how springy it . Right? So, remember what |
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53:31 | is is a passively contracted muscle. right. So you've probably noticed that |
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53:37 | you work out you look pretty Yeah. Right. So that would |
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53:41 | an example of an active muscle tone active response. Right? So that's |
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53:46 | result of little activity. And basically you're saying is you just have more |
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53:50 | motor units that are being stimulated given . Yeah. You don't have |
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53:59 | All right. I mean, lack better terms. So, right. |
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54:02 | your if your muscle is not already a contracted state, then that means |
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54:06 | you're able to move that structure around , right? So, I'm gonna |
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54:14 | making fun of somebody right now, hopefully he's no one in this |
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54:18 | All right. But have you ever that the true lunk? You know |
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54:22 | a lunk is there? The guy works out? 24 7? You |
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54:25 | , they wear the muscle shirts, ? If they don't have the muscle |
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54:29 | , they've cut out the sleeves and can't put their arms down. |
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54:34 | They their arms stick out like this , why is that? Why do |
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54:39 | arms stick out? Is it just they're cool, walk around and you |
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54:42 | , why do their arms can their not go down? Their muscles are |
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54:47 | a constant state of contraction. And got these big old lattes and they |
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54:51 | move their arms down, right? don't they're not as flexible, |
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54:57 | Mhm. No, that would just like in that particular case, that's |
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55:01 | over exaggeration, right? But that's I've got so much muscle tone that |
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55:05 | muscles are in a constant state of and I'm not able to because they're |
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55:09 | bigger, I can't put my arms now. Think about my week saw |
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55:14 | Alright. Actually I'm probably a bad cause I'm old. So I'm |
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55:17 | I see. I'll get you in second. Right? So think about |
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55:22 | ? You're young, you're bendy, mostly cartilage still right and again. |
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55:28 | . I mean, how many guys yoga? Right. I can look |
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55:32 | and yoga, right. You you put me in any sort of |
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55:36 | can't even do watch this. I it's like Yeah. All right. |
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55:43 | but part of that yoga nous I think about people who do yoga for |
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55:47 | most part they're not like our lunk we talked about. They typically are |
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55:52 | bendy and more stretchy because their muscles in a relaxed state. And so |
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55:56 | more tone you have. That's not say that someone who does yoga is |
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56:00 | toned, they can be very but they have a certain degree there's |
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56:04 | certain degree of more flexibility when your not already contracted. Right? If |
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56:09 | if I'm contracting this it's hard to it backwards. But you know when |
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56:13 | relaxed. That's a stupid example. just Yeah, go ahead. When |
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56:23 | have like more muscle your muscles and . Yeah. So what we're saying |
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56:29 | is that All right. So we're use him because we can look at |
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56:32 | stomach and see Yeah. Alright. that's a six pack. All |
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56:37 | We want to go to the beach that. It's not a it is |
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56:40 | eight pack. That's right. It's a keg. Right? And so |
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56:46 | we have there is we have muscles are already in a state of contraction |
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56:50 | contracted because those muscles have been worked are in a state of optimal readiness |
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56:58 | probably the better way to put Put it. Alright, let me |
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57:01 | back there. You had a Well, that could be one of |
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57:12 | things, Right. It could be lack the flexibility, right? Or |
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57:17 | could be that I'm in a state contracted nous and I can't I mean |
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57:20 | can't do that. I got a old monstrous chest. Right? |
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57:26 | I'm just not flexible. I can't anymore anywhere. Mhm. Like because |
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57:35 | do they do all the time as stretch and flex and flex and |
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57:39 | And what they have to do is they also use muscles to actually |
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57:44 | I mean they have to they have work out and get those muscles to |
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57:48 | the things that they do, but not to build muscle strength, it's |
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57:53 | the work that they do. Their get stronger to accomplish the jobs that |
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57:57 | do. Alright, so remember the strength is dependent upon the type of |
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58:03 | you put on it. Right? you become stronger because your muscles are |
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58:07 | I have to do this kind of . Just like your bones, your |
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58:11 | bones get stronger because they say I to do this particular work. |
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58:20 | Yes, mm contraction. Mhm. . But it's a sustained contraction. |
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58:29 | not it's not contracting, relaxing. . And that's kind of what this |
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58:33 | slide, that's why it's kind of ahead because I know what you're what |
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58:36 | what you're getting stuck on. I like it. So there is what |
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58:39 | called an optimal length for a All right, and again, we're |
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58:44 | I don't want you to try to this stuff like oh it's what is |
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58:47 | ? What is the optimal length? basically sits between 80-120% of the resting |
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58:51 | . So basically what it's saying is , we want the fibers to to |
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58:56 | in a resting state where I can stretch them out a little bit more |
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59:00 | I can compress them in about 20% both directions and I'm still within the |
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59:05 | strength or the optimal length of these to produce the strength that they that |
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59:10 | need to do the work that they . But if I push them too |
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59:15 | together, I'm now not capable of further contraction. Now my thick filaments |
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59:20 | thin filaments are bunching up against the . Lines, right? I can't |
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59:24 | anything. So I can't produce a contractions already is already there. So |
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59:29 | I compress a muscle too much and stays and it starts off in that |
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59:34 | . That's too too bad. It's too it's too short. |
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59:38 | if I pull the muscle apart if stretch too far and those thick and |
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59:42 | filaments are not overlapping as efficiently or frequently as they used to, I |
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59:47 | create enough strength in order to get contraction that I need. Now. |
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59:53 | is just a dumb example. So use this as an absolute But it's |
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59:57 | that you've you can imagine if I overextended like this, it's harder for |
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60:02 | to lift something up than to start something up with my arms are already |
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60:06 | a pre contracted state, right? I have to overcome at least with |
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60:11 | arc I have to overcome, you that. Wait. And it's kind |
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60:15 | the same thing. It's like I'm able to create the cross bridges necessary |
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60:21 | create the contraction. If there is overlap or very little overlap. Once |
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60:27 | get to this point where there's plenty overlap, I can create as much |
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60:31 | as I need to create the tension I want to produce. But if |
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60:35 | jammed up, it's not gonna work . So, the point being is |
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60:39 | there is an optimal resting length for muscle. All right, and I |
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60:46 | try to do that now. What gonna do is we're gonna kind of |
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60:51 | back again to where we started things . All right, we're going to |
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60:54 | at how do I create a And we've talked about these little tiny |
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60:59 | bitsy parts, we said, we have this neuro muscular junction, |
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61:04 | have um this triad. And what going to do is this is kind |
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61:09 | the the the overview, basically what going to see is that the neuromuscular |
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61:13 | release a neurotransmitter that's going to result an action potential and then an action |
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61:18 | is going to cause the release of into the cell. And calcium is |
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61:24 | going to signal for the formation of bridges to occur. And that's basically |
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61:29 | the thick and the thin filaments to . Alright, We're just gonna it's |
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61:33 | did you guys ever play as a ? The game mouse trap was that |
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61:37 | ? No one ever really played the . What you do is you just |
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61:39 | it up and let the marble go see what would happen, right? |
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61:43 | don't think I know anyone who's ever the game, but but that's kind |
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61:46 | what this is. This is a Goldberg machine, which is what mousetrap |
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61:51 | . Right? And so what we're , we're just gonna walk through the |
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61:54 | All right. So when you learn , just walk through the steps with |
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61:58 | and kind of write it out. , so this is kind of the |
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62:01 | overview. It's not really clear when look at it, but all you |
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62:05 | do. This is probably a better . So, the idea here is |
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62:10 | going to have an action potential that's to arrive at the neuro muscular |
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62:15 | So it's here, it is on neuron. It's gonna cause a release |
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62:18 | acetylcholine. The acetylcholine is going to to receptors on the um on the |
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62:26 | cell. And what's interesting is this one of those places where we don't |
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62:30 | little tiny rises, there's so many and so much to see the choline |
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62:35 | the potential that you get here is enough to result in an action potential |
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62:41 | is going to travel along the length the cell. All right, remember |
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62:46 | is occurring at the level of the Emma. All right. Just like |
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62:49 | a neuron it's having its that exchange ions back and forth across the plasma |
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62:55 | . Alright, so you can manage there it is. It's just going |
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62:58 | the surface. But what we've done we brought that surface through the |
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63:05 | right? The tube represents surface of cell and it's just traveling through the |
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63:09 | . So even though the actual potential going across the cell, it also |
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63:13 | down the tubes. There's gonna be of tubes everywhere so far you're with |
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63:18 | . So, action potentials are simply the passing of neuro of not neurons |
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63:23 | ions back and forth across the It's going across the membrane of our |
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63:27 | but it's also going down the tubes has also membranes of our cell. |
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63:31 | right now we said that T tubules right next to the cytoplasm in particular |
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63:38 | particularly that region called the terminal So, here's the terminal cistern. |
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63:43 | you can see the circle Plaza particularly your t to be able So in |
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63:46 | two, what we're gonna do is action potential is going to open up |
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63:51 | gated calcium channels. Right. These called GHP channels. All right. |
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63:57 | their voltage gated calcium channels, all . Um And I'm I think I |
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64:04 | even bother telling you, D P. Is die hydro I can't |
|
|
64:08 | . It's not important for y'all. . But these channels that are on |
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64:14 | inside of the tube are closely affiliated closely associated with channels that are found |
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64:24 | this terminal cistern. And these are the are y are there called the |
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64:28 | can call them foot proteins, you call them ride eIN receptors. They |
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64:31 | all different sorts of names. But you can think of like this, |
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64:34 | got a D. H. P on the outside and it's closely associated |
|
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64:38 | I mean, they're literally interlinked. if one is stimulated the other one |
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64:42 | stimulated and so when you open up voltage gated channel over here, you're |
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64:47 | up this channel over there and when channel gets opened up, what that's |
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64:53 | do is it's gonna allow all this to flow out of the cycle Plaza |
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64:56 | particular. Um And out into the . All right. Remember the purpose |
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65:03 | the psycho plasma particular is to hold . And we said calcium is the |
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65:09 | to a muscle contraction. All right , this is a really really, |
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|
65:13 | complex picture. Yes, I'm sorry I get dehydrated. What? |
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65:47 | No. So, when you're dealing fatigue and that's really what you're saying |
|
|
65:52 | going on there, what you're doing you're having a build up of lactic |
|
|
65:56 | . Alright. And that's not entirely . That's mostly true. We call |
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66:01 | the build up of lactic acid and not through it all. But basically |
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|
66:05 | a build up of lactic acid. what your body is basically saying is |
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|
66:08 | running out of the fuels that I to keep going. Now. If |
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66:11 | become dehydrated, what you're doing is increasing the concentration of solute. Remember |
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|
66:15 | we said when we said, what the salute? It's the stuff in |
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66:19 | fluid, right? It's not defined it's this specific stuff. It's just |
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66:23 | stuff. So, if I take water, what has happened to the |
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66:27 | of my salutes? It's gone Right? So your body perceives that |
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66:34 | in a state of of high lactic or whatever it is that it's monitoring |
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66:40 | determine fatigue. And so if your is being friendly and just calling them |
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66:46 | . Right. Because if you ever to a physician, they'll never talk |
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66:50 | to you, Right. Because they presume that you're all morons, my |
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66:56 | hates me because I know this stuff so I start talking to him as |
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67:01 | I was his professor and he has go way back into like second year |
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67:05 | school to answer my questions. But idea is that what he's basically saying |
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67:10 | when you're dehydrated, you're not providing body an opportunity to to build up |
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67:16 | fuels that you need. And so you don't have those fuels, your |
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67:19 | is going to perceive you know itself being exhausted or fatigue lack of better |
|
|
67:27 | . All right. So can you me where we were since you interrupted |
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67:34 | ? Where were we? I know know that. But what what were |
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|
67:38 | steps Step one was what action potential goes through the T. Two beauty |
|
|
67:47 | . You'll you stimulate the D. . P. Receptors. Here we |
|
|
67:51 | . D. H. P receptors stimulate stimulate the ride in receptors. |
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67:55 | those stimulate they open up. When open up the right sideline receptors, |
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67:59 | flows out into the cell. All . And what's the calcium that we're |
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68:04 | in And here we are. There's miocene head. This is your thin |
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68:10 | . You can see here here's my the purple line represents the trope |
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68:14 | It's blocking the binding site. It's the chaperone at the party and it's |
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|
68:19 | letting you kiss my skin is thick in thin film. And if I |
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68:26 | I apologize. So we've got triple and then this big bunch of different |
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68:33 | represents the troponin. It's very easy confuse troponin and Trapani Yasin, |
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|
68:39 | Troponin has three parts to it. that's bound to act in one that's |
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68:43 | to triple me austin and then one a calcium binding site. You see |
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68:49 | we got here, I release calcium the psycho plasma particular. Um it |
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68:54 | to the troponin troponin. Do do want to remember? It does it's |
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68:59 | hinge and what it does is when binds to it, it gets pulled |
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69:04 | of the way and now here are the binding sites, there's one there |
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69:09 | well, you can see the head already in position when you pull that |
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69:13 | of the way it binds and now got interaction. And when the interaction |
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69:18 | , what we're gonna do is we're a cross bridge and we're going to |
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69:22 | what is called a power stroke. , you ever watch crew? What |
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|
69:27 | is no one. Yeah, I in college. What crew was, |
|
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69:32 | more popular in the Northern States where one's blowing up from the heat. |
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69:37 | crew is when you get that that's really, really long and you |
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69:39 | the people on there with the one or and it's usually like eight |
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69:44 | four people or one person I think can also do a two person when |
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69:49 | in the eight person, you're a kid on the front or a really |
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69:51 | person's going stroke stroke stroke. And they're doing is they're doing this stroking |
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69:57 | they're moving the boat into the All right, So this is like |
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70:03 | a power stroke going in and I'm a contraction I'm releasing and I'm doing |
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70:09 | over and over again. As long calcium is available, I'll be able |
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70:13 | do this. But I need something . When you think of a muscle |
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70:17 | , what do you think of? molecule? A. T. |
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70:21 | That's what everyone thinks about 80 It's like, oh, if I |
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70:23 | out of a T. P. can't do a contraction. And that |
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70:26 | true, but it's calcium that causes contraction because it makes those two sites |
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70:31 | . But what we're gonna do here we're gonna see a contraction is dependent |
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70:37 | on a T. P. what we're gonna is we're gonna start |
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70:40 | where we finished off, right, put ourselves up. You can see |
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70:44 | in a cocked position. I'm bound to the thin filament. And what's |
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|
70:48 | happen is I've already gone through the . All right. Otherwise we would |
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|
70:53 | someplace down over here. It's It is. There's the power |
|
|
70:56 | Alright, so I'm already in a state now. You can see |
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71:00 | I'm like this right here. I'm cocked and ready to go here as |
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|
71:04 | already done it. So I'm attached the first thing that happens is we're |
|
|
71:09 | to bring in a teepee. What teepee does. It allows me to |
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|
71:14 | the interaction. All right. So ATP remembers binding to the thick filament |
|
|
71:20 | I release. And then what happens is it uses its a TPS activity |
|
|
71:25 | cock and put that molecule into into so that it can then interact |
|
|
71:32 | And then when it interacts again it's to release the ATP and the inorganic |
|
|
71:37 | and create the contraction. Alright. then a teepee comes along causes me |
|
|
71:43 | release cox. Using the A. . P. A. S. |
|
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71:46 | along, bind again. Rinse repeat long as I have a T. |
|
|
71:52 | . I can separate out the two that have interacted. If I don't |
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|
71:57 | ATP they're stuck together. All as long as calcium is available, |
|
|
72:03 | not blocking their binding sites. So need calcium to allow them to |
|
|
72:07 | But I need a T. To break them apart. Alright |
|
|
72:11 | the easy way to remember this is about rigor mortis. You've heard rigor |
|
|
72:16 | , rigor mortis is the state that body gets in after you die. |
|
|
72:20 | become a It's an impolite word. weaken me stiff? Ever heard that |
|
|
72:30 | body is a stiff. Why is called a stiff? Because you're |
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|
72:39 | All right now. What happens is when a body dies, all the |
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|
72:45 | that kind of control things begin to apart, basically nothing's producing a teepee |
|
|
72:51 | . And so the A. P. That you have is what's |
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|
72:54 | the cell and it gets used There's nothing holding the calcium in calcium |
|
|
72:58 | out of the cell. Out of stark applies particularly floods in. And |
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73:01 | you can imagine I've now made the possible. Right? So I get |
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73:07 | contraction contraction and the muscles begin to up and then there's no ATP and |
|
|
73:14 | muscles are now stuck in that That's where the stiffness comes from. |
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|
73:24 | , I had a grandfather who told the story. His grandfather. So |
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|
73:28 | probably not true. But he said he was y'all's age, He worked |
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73:33 | one night in a mortuary. It during the depression. Right? So |
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73:38 | was like get a job and he to be in the night watchman. |
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73:41 | why I kind of like probably telling a lie. He said he was |
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73:46 | around and of course there's a cadaver the table and it sat up. |
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73:53 | said he dropped the flashlight and never back. Is it true? I |
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73:58 | know. But it can cause a to sit up. All right. |
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74:05 | ATP is what breaks the bond calcium what allows the interaction to take |
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74:14 | So a T. P. Is resetting and cocking, right? So |
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74:20 | break it. Right? That's presence ATP breaking the A. T. |
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74:25 | . Allows you to cock and set head in a position where it can |
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74:30 | cause the power stroke. All And when you release the A. |
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74:35 | . P. And the inorganic That's when you get the power stroke |
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74:37 | now you're available for the new TP to come in to break the |
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74:41 | one more time. All right. a complex process. But this is |
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74:49 | role of ATP. So all that we talked about over there. That's |
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74:54 | this is describing right here. That's the sliding filament mechanism sliding filament |
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75:00 | , basically the uh H. Bands talked about. So, here's your |
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75:05 | band, there's your H. The eye bands get shorter. The |
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75:09 | zone gets smaller. They've done a job of demonstrating their showing them |
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75:14 | They should never overlap. Right? then the a band stays the exact |
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75:19 | size. So how do we relax muscles? Well, you go sit |
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75:27 | the pool, order a cool Yeah. So that is what causes |
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75:40 | . So you can imagine each what am I doing is I'm pulling |
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75:43 | thin filament with the head so each of those brings the sarcoma here a |
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75:48 | bit closer. So as long as have calcium available and as long as |
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75:52 | a teepee available, you'll keep bringing circum ears until they can't move. |
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76:01 | that's a that's a really. So we're trying to what you're trying to |
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76:04 | is you're trying to translate something that's into something that's macro and that's |
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76:10 | Alright, so think about a right? A muscle is a whole |
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76:15 | of bundles of bundles of individual cells each type of those, each of |
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76:20 | individual cells are thousands of sarcoma So what you're looking at is you're |
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76:25 | at a whole bunch of these cells a result of other soccer mares shrinking |
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76:33 | terms of contracting in size. So what you're doing is you're contracting and |
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76:38 | you're doing is you're pulling on that , the tendon causes the bone to |
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76:43 | until you say stop and you get . That answer. So what is |
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76:50 | relaxation? Well, it's just basically all the things you just started, |
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76:55 | ? So no more action potentials. , if you don't have any action |
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77:00 | in acetylcholine, they see the colonists there. That's that enzyme that says |
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77:04 | , chop, chop chop chop and destroys everything, but you get no |
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77:07 | potential. If there's no action then you can't stimulate the cycle plasma |
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77:13 | . So calcium is not leaving the instead. What you have is you |
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77:17 | a bunch of pumps, they're called pumps. And if you want to |
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77:20 | what circus stands for this smooth into a particular calcium pump. So, |
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77:25 | mean, that's that's how we name in biology. So whenever you see |
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77:28 | sort of abbreviation kind of look for obvious, right? But we have |
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77:32 | pumps that are associated with uh circle particular um that are constantly turned on |
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77:39 | they're constantly pumping calcium into the circle critical. Um So if I have |
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77:44 | leaving, that means it's all going . And so you're removing calcium from |
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77:48 | environment. If there's no calcium available , then what happens is that you |
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77:53 | no longer get interaction between the thick the thin filament. There's no interaction |
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77:57 | the thick and the thin filament. just goes back to its original |
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78:08 | How we doing on time? Got 10 minutes More or less. |
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78:14 | eight minutes. I know. All . So we've said ATP is important |
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78:20 | it's not what causes the contraction calcium what causes the contraction allows it to |
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78:25 | place. All right. The thing that your body stores A T. |
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78:30 | . It has limited stores it makes and then it just kind of stores |
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78:33 | away. And it can there's different that we can kind of increase the |
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78:39 | not the A. T. Itself, but the the the punitive |
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78:44 | basically how much we can actually And so we're gonna use these three |
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78:48 | systems. We have foss vision We have anaerobic celebration or cellular respiration |
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78:55 | we have aerobic cellular respiration. So probably most familiar with these if you've |
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79:00 | taken a biology class and we're not to go into all the details of |
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79:03 | of these steps. We want you just kind of understand conceptually what we're |
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79:08 | . All right. So you can we've got short and we have prolonged |
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79:12 | so when we're talking about short, is what we're kind of talking about |
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79:16 | phosphate jin systems. When you're phosgene basically saying, how do I make |
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79:21 | easily available energy in the form of . T. P. All |
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79:24 | I don't need any sort of What I can do is if this |
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79:28 | my normal reaction right here, I this stored up in terms of |
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79:31 | T. P. If I take 80 p, I can break it |
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79:34 | release that energy. So with what have stored you have about five seconds |
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79:38 | energy available to you. All And not very much. Alright. |
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79:45 | one of the things I can do I can take that byproduct that. |
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79:48 | And if you're not familiar, A . P. Is simply a |
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79:52 | Oh, sugar draw this poorly. that nitrogenous base. Right. And |
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80:01 | it is is a series of phosphates off onto the side. So that's |
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80:05 | denizen triphosphate 123 phosphates. So when break it, what I'm doing is |
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80:10 | breaking that bond right there. And that bond gets broken now I have |
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80:14 | D. P. Di phosphate. see and if I broke the last |
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80:18 | then I'd end up with mono Alright. So what I'm doing is |
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80:22 | of those bonds represents amount of energy being able to be released. |
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80:28 | if I have this molecule, what can do is I can break that |
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80:32 | send that phosphate back to another molecule looks like this. I can create |
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80:36 | A. T. P. what that means? I'm gonna have |
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80:39 | gonna take more work to get back making my pool of A. |
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80:42 | P. But at least it's a of energy. And so it gives |
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80:44 | about two seconds worth of energy. , now I'm up to about eight |
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80:49 | . So, when that bear is me, I can get away for |
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80:51 | five seconds. It's like Alright, add another two seconds on top of |
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80:55 | . But we also have this. right. And this is another way |
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80:58 | store up energy in a different Alright, So, I'm just gonna |
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81:02 | up numbers here. So, don't these numbers for But let's say I |
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81:05 | hold 100 80 P molecules. All . But let's say I also have |
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81:10 | molecules of creatine in my muscle So, what I can do is |
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81:14 | can do a reaction where I can the energy from a T. |
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81:17 | That last phosphate. Right? And I can do is I can send |
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81:21 | phosphate over here to creatine to create phosphate. And this now serves as |
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81:27 | storage pool for energy. So, I can do is I can store |
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81:32 | , you know, energy into 100 is to make 100 creatine phosphate and |
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81:37 | I can rebuild my A TP back . And so now I have 100 |
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81:40 | P 100 creatine phosphate. That's like 280 P. I've doubled my |
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81:46 | I've just stored it in a different . And if that's not clicking for |
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81:49 | , think about it like this you can have $100 and you can |
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81:52 | buy $100 worth of gold. Let's that it doesn't change its value. |
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81:58 | now you have $100 worth of You can earn another 100 bucks and |
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82:00 | you have $200 worth of of Right? So this is just basically |
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82:06 | energy assets. So I can burn my A. T. P. |
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82:12 | boom boom boom. And then once burned through my A. T. |
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82:14 | . I now have this and so can now transfer that phosphate back. |
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82:18 | I now have new A. P. So I have more ATP |
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82:23 | . That gives me another 10 So now I've sprinted away from the |
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82:28 | And for 15 seconds maybe that's enough get away. If you want to |
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82:40 | these steps, you need to go a biology class, they'll spend plenty |
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82:44 | time talking about all these steps. other two systems are how we go |
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82:49 | um using or making energy. So long term basically requires oxygen and multiple |
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82:57 | , you have glucose metabolism, you pyrite oxidation, you have the citric |
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83:03 | cycle or Krebs cycle. You probably those two terms. And then at |
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83:07 | end of all that you have the transport chain. Do any of those |
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83:10 | sound like things that you've heard Even if you don't know the |
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83:14 | Right? Great. So, lots steps. Lots of time, lots |
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83:19 | energy. All right. But in pinch, if you don't have oxygen |
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83:24 | if you need to get energy you can bypass the latter stages and |
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83:29 | do the first step, the glycol step. And then you can use |
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83:33 | different pathway to recycle some of the you need. You can still get |
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83:39 | teepee out of it. You don't a lot of it. So, |
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83:41 | that might produce somewhere between 34 and molecules of a teepee. This will |
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83:46 | about four molecules of ATP. this will take you a little |
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83:51 | but not very far. That will you far right. That's the stuff |
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83:58 | for marathons. That's the stuff you for long distance or long term energy |
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84:05 | . Lots of oxygen and glucose you can take the glucose, but |
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84:10 | don't use oxygen. You don't get much. This is the last |
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84:14 | That's what our body when it's in last little stages of I don't have |
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84:17 | available. That's where I'll go. I didn't even get to muscles |
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84:23 | we're gonna stop here. And the we're gonna stop here is because if |
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84:26 | start talking about smooth muscle right I mean, we're already falling |
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84:30 | right? Yeah. When we get , we're gonna talk about smooth muscle |
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84:38 | I'm just gonna give you a preface you're wrapping things up here with smooth |
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84:42 | , many of the same things that just learned are happening. But because |
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84:46 | it's very different. We're gonna see tweaks to the system that make it |
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84:50 | of weird. Just gonna warn you . Yes. Have fun in the |
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84:56 | |
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