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00:06 | All right, joe we continue onward the body. So I said we're |
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00:15 | of breaking our way down through, pointing out we're kind of working our |
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00:21 | through peeling peeling you apart like an . What we're doing today is we're |
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00:24 | to talk about bones and specifically we're looking at specific specific bones, we're |
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00:31 | look at generically what is bone as tissue. And then in the next |
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00:36 | lectures, I think the next lecture dem bones, dem bones, the |
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00:41 | bone's connected to the thigh bone type . Um The hardest thing about anatomy |
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00:48 | if you don't know is I mean probably figured out is that we're not |
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00:52 | with our hands deep inside a right? And so very often the |
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00:57 | that we're gonna be talking about, gonna have to kind of mentally visualize |
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01:02 | going on and so you'll notice like the last test, I mean I |
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01:06 | said these pictures you should know, ? So I'll do the same thing |
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01:10 | . It's like okay, here's something definitely need to know visually, but |
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01:14 | of the rest of it is. , can I internalize what the terms |
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01:19 | ? Can I kind of think about what this means? And this is |
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01:23 | true for the bones? I'm not to sit. Well. Well well |
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01:26 | we get there we'll get there. . And so are starting point here |
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01:29 | just all right. What's a Alright, what's the skeleton? And |
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01:32 | fact the truth is is that now don't even think of the skeleton as |
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01:36 | separate system anymore. we kind of of combine it into with the muscles |
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01:41 | when we think about movement, you , muscles can't work unless you're actually |
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01:45 | on something. So it's kind of skeletal. All right. Is we |
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01:49 | combine it together but the skeleton is actual organ system. Alright. It |
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01:55 | consists of multiple tissues that do things just playing a role in locomotion, |
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02:01 | though we kind of treat it that . Alright, so there's bones and |
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02:04 | the easy thing. Alright. Bones there. That's fine. But also |
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02:08 | of a whole bunch of other cartilage ligaments and other connective tissues are |
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02:12 | in creating your skeleton. Alright. what is its job? Well, |
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02:17 | mean, you know, basically primary framework of the body. It helps |
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02:20 | protect organs for example. Um It plays a role in some metabolic activities |
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02:27 | were going to primarily address an And P. Two. All |
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02:31 | But one of the things that it , it plays a role in producing |
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02:36 | the cells of your body that are in blood. Okay. So it's |
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02:41 | just alright, structural and protection. right now the interior capital ball bone |
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02:49 | connective tissue that's going to be called red or the yellow marrow. Red |
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02:52 | is where you're going to see bone produced. Yellow marrow is kind of |
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02:55 | um It's basically red marrow that has inactivated. Um And it's I like |
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03:01 | say in class. It's not entirely . It's primarily fatty. So when |
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03:06 | have big bones, you know that's your fat is, that sort of |
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03:10 | . All right. But yellow marrow there as well. We'll deal with |
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03:13 | . There are two basic types of that we're gonna be dealing with that |
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03:17 | found in your body. Alright. we call compact bone, compact bone |
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03:21 | what you kind of visualize when you about bone. Alright. It's very |
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03:25 | . Um It's white, it's it's smooth when you look at a |
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03:29 | , it's the part that you see the outside. All right. And |
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03:32 | makes up most of the massive It doesn't mean it makes up most |
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03:35 | the bone. It's because it's so and compact, it has greater |
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03:40 | The other type of bone is called bones. Sometimes you'll see it called |
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03:44 | , ius or tribe Picula, her but spongy is fine and this is |
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03:49 | inside the compact bone or hidden by bone. Alright, So if you |
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03:53 | a bone and broke it and look see that that spongy bone, it's |
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03:58 | very porous. It looks like a . Alright. And it's structurally supportive |
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04:04 | the body. In other words, way that it's a range allows for |
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04:07 | support. It creates great strength for bone, the denture bone. So |
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04:12 | you don't carry as much mass as would if it was all compact |
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04:18 | That's right. Alright, so we're kind of dive deep. This is |
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04:24 | long bone here, this right here the flat bone. Um And what |
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04:28 | gonna do, we're just gonna kind uses these models to kind of guide |
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04:31 | ways around these structures. Alright. you're gonna see there's four different types |
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04:36 | bones, I mean based on but these will help you kind of |
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04:41 | what's going on in the first thing need to do is understand what's going |
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04:43 | on the inside and on the outside the bone. All right, on |
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04:47 | outside of all your bones, periodicity anyone here ever eat ribs before you |
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04:51 | ribs. It's great homework if you any you know, if you needed |
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04:56 | learn about the bones, go get . I can't No, I |
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05:03 | eating the ribs in and of themselves the extra credit. Alright, I |
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05:08 | beef rib, I know something, if you get down a rib |
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05:10 | you know, if you get down and your eating, you get down |
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05:13 | that last little bit of meat, start pulling on it and you you're |
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05:16 | tearing off this kind of stretchy connective , you know what I'm talking |
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05:21 | you kind of grab it with your and you can feel it ripping away |
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05:24 | the bone that is Perrier osteo so it covers the entire external surface |
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05:31 | the bones. All right, there's different layers. There's an inner layer |
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05:36 | consists of cells that are called the janitor cells. Alright. There's also |
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05:41 | osteoclasts and osteoblasts layers. But the of these cells is to allow the |
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05:46 | to grow when you're growing bigger and . So basically they're they're to allow |
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05:51 | that expansion. And we'll talk about cells alright. But then outside that |
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05:56 | , so if you can imagine here's hard bone, we've got this small |
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05:59 | of living cells and then on the of that that's where we're gonna have |
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06:03 | this connective tissue. It's a dense connective tissue. Alright. And what |
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06:08 | does is it serves as an attachment for other things. And you're gonna |
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06:12 | here they're tearing it away. And you can see that there's there's this |
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06:16 | thin layer. So in here that be where the uh the progenitor cells |
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06:21 | . And you can see out that's the connective tissue and here they're |
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06:25 | you a vein kind of pushes up into it. So you can see |
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06:28 | is how we anchor blood vessels so they can then penetrate into the bone |
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06:33 | . This connective tissue is also what are attached to and ligaments are attached |
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06:40 | . So it basically allows for the to bind up to and to allow |
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06:45 | bones to attach to other bones. this perry Osti um becomes very very |
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06:51 | in terms of how bones are Two other structures. The other thing |
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06:56 | it has is to ensure that this isn't just like saran wrapped wrapped around |
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07:01 | is that it penetrated, has these that penetrate into the compact bone. |
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07:05 | just called perforating fibers. And so you're pulling them off here, you |
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07:09 | see those perforating fibers, that's what represent. And so again, if |
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07:13 | think about that rib and you're sitting pulling on that that that meat that's |
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07:18 | left behind, you've got to have and you're starting to tear that that |
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07:23 | layer stuff. That's the periodicity. Just on the outside, just like |
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07:28 | have this on the inside, you a layer as well. And that |
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07:32 | be the industry. Um So this here is a long bone, you |
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07:34 | see this is what is referred to the medullary cavity. Remember we said |
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07:38 | means middle. So medullary refers to middle. So within that cavity where |
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07:44 | a spongy bone, we have this internal surface that's also covered by a |
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07:51 | of cells. All right against the type of cells, the progenitor |
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07:54 | osteoblasts and osteoclasts. So their job to break down and rebuild the inside |
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08:00 | that cavity. Um And that's true inside the spongy bone, you're going |
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08:05 | see those cells there as well building destroying bone based on need. So |
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08:14 | focus whenever you think about a bone going to be on long bones. |
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08:18 | we use this because a really good to understand bone structure. So this |
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08:22 | a long bone. All long bones three parts to it. Alright, |
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08:27 | a long bone will have the end have here. You can see the |
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08:31 | end. It has this long And then in between we have these |
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08:35 | areas where growth is taking place. right. So by name, what |
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08:40 | call them are the ends are called epiphany sees hypothesis is singular. The |
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08:45 | is called the diagnosis and that region the epiphany sis and the diagnosis is |
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08:50 | metamorphosis. All right. Now the who drew. This is not a |
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08:56 | . And so or anonymous. Any , shape or form. So he |
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08:59 | left off the metamorphosis and he overlapped metamorphosis with his label. So this |
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09:05 | right here where you see that? that little line. That's the region |
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09:10 | it's the area slightly surrounding that is to as the metamorphosis. The area |
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09:15 | here. That's the epiphany Asus, ? It's not all of this. |
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09:19 | just down here up here. This be the epiphany Asus. That right |
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09:25 | would be about a facetious. because there's these areas where growth has |
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09:30 | place after the bones have been Alright, so the diagnosis is the |
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09:36 | . You can see its job is support the weight of the bone and |
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09:40 | to provide leverage for movement. you can think of your humerus as |
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09:44 | example of a long bone. There's of long bone in your body, |
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09:47 | that's an easy one. Or your is a good example of a long |
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09:52 | . The two that are at the of your leg, your tibia and |
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09:54 | fibula your own on the radius. are long bones, your fingers are |
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09:57 | bones. The bones that are in palms of your hands are long |
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10:01 | they're all over the place. And this is just a good representation of |
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10:05 | it looks like. And so that you can see if I do this |
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10:08 | it is, it's long and so pulling on different parts of that bone |
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10:13 | bones to make them move. All , so structurally what we have on |
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10:18 | outside we said is basically compact So that's what you're looking at |
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10:23 | you can see it's nice and pulling away the curiosity um Here you |
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10:28 | see it's nice and thick and hard then if you look closely and we're |
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10:32 | to look more closely, look in couple of pictures but then internally what |
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10:36 | see is we see the spongy Alright, so again, if you |
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10:39 | take a chicken leg from home, all the meat off it, boil |
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10:43 | the meat or whatever and then break bone you're gonna see there's a hole |
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10:46 | the center. Alright. And if look inside there you're gonna see things |
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10:50 | looks more like a sponge than it smooth on the outside. Alright, |
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10:54 | compact bones surrounding spongy bone. All now in Children, this medullary cavity |
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11:03 | filled with red marrow as you age beyond puberty. That cavity no longer |
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11:09 | filled with red marrow becomes being filled it becomes filled with yellow marrow. |
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11:14 | other words, the red marrow becomes and it gets replaced by this fattier |
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11:18 | called yellow marrow. All right the two things can switch back and |
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11:23 | , but once you get older it's likely that you need the red marrow |
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11:26 | as much. All right, but you're younger you are basically turning up |
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11:31 | immune cells and other types of And so the majority catholic needs that |
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11:36 | marrow. Alright, so the epiphany , right? So this particular |
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11:40 | this is your femur has three of , but basically you just think the |
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11:44 | . Alright, that's the knobby Alright. Again, the external |
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11:49 | nice big thick compact bone, but no medullary cavity instead, it's completely |
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11:54 | with the spongy bone. All Typically, what you'll see on the |
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11:59 | of long bones and you'll see uh on the outside, on the ends |
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12:04 | cartilage is to allow two long bones come together and rub against each other |
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12:08 | creating friction. Alright cartilage here is cartilage if you see a name like |
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12:15 | , you always have to ask the why is it named articular means refers |
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12:20 | articulation or movement. Alright, so you have a joint, that's gonna |
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12:25 | an articulation. So articular cartilage is on the ends of the epiphanies. |
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12:30 | right. So again, what I saying here, this is the |
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12:35 | this region in here. This little of compact bone is the epithelial growth |
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12:40 | . We'll talk about it at the of the uh lecture today, basically |
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12:44 | is what allows you to turn from little tiny kid you were in fifth |
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12:48 | to the top person you are Alright, That's where growth is taking |
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12:53 | . Long growth and when it closes it becomes all compact bone. That's |
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12:58 | point where it takes place. And that's the metamorphosis. The other bones |
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13:06 | are not long bones have this general to them. All right. |
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13:11 | nice flat surface. It might be regular but basically you have compact bone |
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13:16 | the outside and then the interior there's medullary cavity. It's all spongy |
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13:20 | When you see that spongy bone, give it a special name just to |
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13:24 | it more confusing or to have one question on the exam. It's called |
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13:28 | . Alright, that's its name. not actually why we do it. |
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13:32 | how they named it. All So compact bone, spongy bone and |
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13:37 | can kind of see it looks like pancake like that. Now. The |
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13:40 | are classified based on shape. We four basic shapes. One that's kind |
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13:47 | weird. We have the flat As you imagine. If you look |
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13:50 | a flat bone for the most it's flat. All right. It |
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13:53 | mean that it's entirely flat. There be some curve to it. Um |
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13:58 | its job whenever you see a flat is to protect what underlies it. |
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14:02 | right. So, in other it serves as kind of a shield |
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14:06 | the external side and what's what's on other side of it. So, |
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14:09 | can think of your skull, for . Right. The bones that make |
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14:13 | the skull. What is it Its flat bone? What do you |
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14:16 | it's protecting? See your brain. . There you go. That's an |
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14:21 | one. How about this 1? . Here, that's a breastplate. |
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14:25 | . What's it protecting thrasher catches specifically part. Alright, that's an easy |
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14:31 | . Right? Your ribs are flat . You think about wait a |
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14:35 | They're kind of long. Yeah. if you look at them, they |
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14:37 | a flat shape to them. What they protecting lungs as well. |
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14:43 | And so you can kind of see right, wherever I have a flat |
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14:46 | . It's got to be protecting And that's that's the idea that we're |
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14:49 | with. All right. Uh The one. This one is kind of |
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14:54 | weird one. And I put it here because typically they have flat |
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14:58 | I think your book mentioned them They're called Sesamoid. Typically speaking Sesamoid |
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15:04 | don't have names associated with them. right. There actually just kind of |
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15:08 | around the body is the only one actually named that we all have our |
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15:12 | to all have. And that's the . Alright. They're basically small, |
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15:16 | flat, very oval and all these places throughout the body. Some of |
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15:21 | have the same one, some of don't, they just kind of appear |
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15:24 | and their job is to increase muscle wherever they're located. Alright, so |
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15:29 | patella, that's your kneecap. And that's an example of a sesamoid but |
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15:33 | rest of them don't really have Alright, so these are the other |
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15:40 | . So we got the flat we've seen the long bone, they're |
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15:43 | longer than they are wide. Uh have this elongated cylindrical shape which we |
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15:48 | the diagnosis. Um They have those ends. The epiphany sees that we |
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15:53 | they're the most common shape. And you think about bones, this is |
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15:56 | you think about um they are found in the upper and the lower |
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16:00 | And the exception to that rule is the wrist and the ankles where you're |
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16:03 | to find short bounds. Okay, I already pointed out a couple of |
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16:08 | actually. Even I even said your but I didn't bother saying your |
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16:11 | Those are your long bones for the part short bones. Um They're just |
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16:17 | kind of cube ish they're not actual but they're basically as long as they |
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16:21 | wide. So they kind of have cute boy L shape to them. |
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16:26 | . Typically we're going to find these the wrists and the ankles. Some |
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16:29 | keep the sesamoid bones in the short category. Some people put the patella |
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16:34 | they've kind of separated those two So sesamoid bones just kind of a |
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16:39 | category amongst itself, the last one the regular bones. And like I |
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16:43 | very early on in this lecture or lecture, but in this class I |
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16:46 | , you know, biologists like to things in boxes right? We like |
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16:50 | categorize everything because that's how we organize universe. And so we basically |
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16:56 | these are long. They go there are flat, they go there these |
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16:59 | short, then we have these bones it's like it's not long, it's |
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17:02 | short, it's not this I don't , we're gonna throw in another box |
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17:06 | just call it a regular. And if it doesn't fall in one of |
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17:09 | three categories that goes in the regular . All right, so you have |
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17:12 | really weird shapes. So this includes vertebrae, some of the bones of |
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17:16 | skull that aren't the flat bones and hip bones which if you think about |
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17:20 | , they kind of look and go , they should be flat but they're |
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17:23 | because they have all these other aspects them. So it's just kind of |
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17:28 | well we'll put it over there. , so we classify bones based on |
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17:37 | . Now. The temptation here in class is when you see a slide |
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17:41 | this, you're gonna want to memorize on it. All right. And |
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17:44 | just gonna point out now, don't memorize everything on the next four |
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17:48 | . All right, how many guys taking the M. P. |
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17:51 | You're not You can't take a Mp lab. How many of you guys |
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17:54 | taken the Mp one lab or we'll taking it over the summer. All |
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17:59 | , because you have to write it's pre right for some of these. |
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18:02 | right. So this is where stuff this becomes important. All right. |
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18:07 | a class like this, it's used a descriptive to just kind of |
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18:10 | oh and there's this, this, this and and it's kind of hard |
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18:13 | wrap your mind around many of these . When I look at specific |
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18:17 | you'll hear me use some of these and so understanding what these terms represent |
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18:25 | more important than what they are. . And so every bone has descriptive |
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18:31 | to help to describe them. All . So, these are called the |
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18:36 | marking. So if you pick up bone and you're blindfolded, you could |
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18:39 | of feel along and you can oh wow, I feel this |
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18:43 | I feel kind of a whole, feel kind of a thing sticking |
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18:47 | I feel it being round and so and so on. And so these |
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18:52 | help to characterize each bone and help what it does. Alright. And |
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18:59 | one of the types of features that have are what are called depressions. |
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19:04 | . These depressions represent a whole bunch different things. It could be where |
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19:08 | meets a bone, it could be blood vessels or nerves travel alongside, |
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19:12 | it could be where two bones actually , not actually move. The first |
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19:17 | would be where two bones are touching other but they don't move. The |
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19:20 | one refers to an articulation. And for example, a facet would be |
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19:25 | where bone meets another bone, but no movement. That's how your ribs |
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19:29 | to your vertebrae. You know? here you can see a fossa, |
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19:34 | is a place where bone meets another . It's a it's a depression where |
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19:39 | bones are touching, but it doesn't to an articulation, it's just where |
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19:42 | meet. Um here we can see phobia. The phobia for example is |
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19:47 | place where two bones articulating. And here on the rib we have something |
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19:52 | called a costal groove and that would when you see a groove or sulcus |
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19:56 | this is where blood vessels or nerves along the inside of the rib as |
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20:00 | traveling around your thoracic cage. So structures are not just simply there because |
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20:07 | , well, that's a nice It's a nice depression or this is |
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20:11 | it developed. There's a function for of these structures. So when you |
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20:15 | words like this, they're kind of you there is an aspect of this |
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20:21 | that's doing something unique. Does that sense? It helps characterize the function |
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20:26 | the bone. And when we look these bones and we're gonna be looking |
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20:29 | specific bones, there's 216 in the . You get to learn all 216 |
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20:34 | them. I like seeing that because makes you guys panic a little |
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20:37 | It's really easy. All right, want you will be saying, here's |
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20:41 | , here's this, here's this. I went, oh, okay, |
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20:44 | that that's a depression. That means something that's going along here. Another |
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20:49 | of of classification is an opening. right, So, we have this |
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20:54 | . I mean, you look at , you want to say, meet |
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20:56 | . It's not meat. It's it's a tous, alright. I |
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20:59 | this is simply a hole that passes the bone. So, for the |
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21:05 | , this one that that's being shown is called the external acoustic or external |
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21:10 | and that's the your ear canal, where sound enters into your skull into |
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21:16 | structure. That's received sound so that can hear that would be an |
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21:21 | That's that's just one mediated. There's of Me Too. Me 80. |
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21:26 | guess another one might be where blood or nerves actually penetrate through a |
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21:32 | You'll see a term like foramen or . Foramen is a big one. |
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21:36 | big one that we're gonna learn is called the big hole for Raymond |
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21:42 | A big hole. Alright. And where your spinal cord goes from your |
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21:47 | down you're back. So the big . So those would be examples. |
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21:55 | then we have projections and projections are where there's gonna be some point of |
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22:01 | . Alright. Something's going on And so you'll see like con |
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22:05 | So the word you're gonna see here and over and over again. Might |
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22:09 | epic. Con dial. So epi above. So it's a point above |
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22:17 | projection called the con dial. So epic conduct. Right? But |
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22:22 | have con dials this thing right You know when you think about your |
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22:27 | hip, that that point is called crest of the iliac crest, for |
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22:32 | . Um On a bone you might ahead. Here's that epic condo. |
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22:36 | right there. That's a projection just . All right. So basically have |
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22:40 | shapes. They have different sizes and , but their extensions where something is |
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22:45 | place. And there's a couple of names. Um for example, the |
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22:49 | rinse on the occipital bone, for , is a point where muscle attaches |
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22:55 | that you can do this, That's just an example. Here's the |
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23:01 | . Alright. You have processes. have spines, you have trow |
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23:06 | you have Rania's it's a line of attachment. So these are just different |
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23:13 | . To help you identify one bone the next and to help identify |
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23:18 | Right? So do you memorize that of words? We just went |
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23:23 | What do we understand about bone What do they do help identify a |
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23:29 | and its function? It's right. is an example of epiphany sees that |
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23:39 | been cut off so that you can in and see what's going on in |
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23:43 | spongy bone. When you hear about donating bone marrow, you have to |
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23:51 | bone marrow from some of the most to reach spots in the body. |
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23:56 | really huge, huge kudos to people donate bone marrow. This is an |
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24:00 | of one. If you want to bone marrow as an adult, you |
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24:03 | to go into the hip and you've to go into the epiphany Asus of |
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24:09 | femur, which is not an easy to get to. And you gotta |
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24:14 | right drill, baby drill. This just like getting oil, right? |
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24:18 | , this is an example of And what you can see here is |
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24:21 | marrow and you can see all we got some red marrow on the |
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24:25 | and then out here in the middle see the yellow marrow, it's kind |
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24:28 | been replaced. So red marrow is what we call hematopoietic. Alright, |
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24:33 | the first part of that word Hema to blood part remains refers to a |
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24:39 | oration or progenitor. So basically it's type of material that gives rise to |
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24:48 | cells. All right. So, in adults, we're going to see |
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24:51 | located here in the spongy bone. that's what we're looking at. And |
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24:55 | also see in the deployment of the bones. Flat bones are all over |
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24:58 | place. But they're very get to ? So it's like why can't you |
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25:04 | get the marrow from this rib right ? Yeah, but there's not a |
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25:07 | there. We got to go to deep stuff. All right. In |
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25:12 | , you're going to see it in long bones, so that modulate the |
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25:15 | that we described. Alright, so marrow, kids pretty much everywhere. |
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25:20 | marrow will replace red marrow in the cavities. In other words, you |
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25:25 | need all those hematopoietic cells, you need that tissue. So it just |
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25:30 | of becomes quiet stand or it gets and at this point it's basically fat |
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25:37 | . So it's a place to store energy. But if your body for |
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25:40 | reason is in need of actually having tissue, it can do is it |
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25:45 | reactivate and revert that yellow marrow back red marrow. So it's not lost |
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25:51 | . Once you turn to yellow it can revert but remember it's a |
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25:55 | basis, right? If you don't something, your body is going to |
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25:59 | it off. He doesn't want to energy just making red cells because you |
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26:03 | need them. So what we're gonna at is we're gonna look at the |
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26:09 | and give rise to both. there are four basic types of cells |
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26:13 | are going to see associated with Alright, so we're ignoring him A |
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26:17 | police this part. Metropolis is dealing blood cells. Were looking at osteo |
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26:23 | . Alright. Osteo osteo osteoporotic All right, so we got |
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26:28 | OsteO sites. Osteogenesis progenitors or osteogenesis and osteoblasts. Alright. And this |
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26:35 | understanding this is really, really This is the good news about |
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26:39 | And we're going to start with the it is the group of cells that |
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26:44 | all derived from the same class. , so we have the Osteo progenitor |
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26:52 | . These are a stem cell that rise to the osteoblasts. Alright. |
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26:57 | going to be found as we said that perry Osti um in that |
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27:01 | Um So if you can think of bone as a matrix that's been |
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27:06 | you're seeing these cells on the surface both on the inside surface and on |
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27:11 | outside surface. Okay, that's the the cell. And so in here |
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27:19 | the periodic, the osteo progenitor cells ? Osteo progenitor cells, Osteo progenitor |
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27:27 | . Okay, now what happens is these cells are gonna be multiplying and |
|
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27:33 | . They're not doing at a rapid but they're like, okay, I'm |
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27:36 | stay one behind, I'm gonna send my one of my daughter cells forward |
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27:41 | daughter cell has differentiated becomes an osteo . And remember when we were talking |
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27:46 | connective tissue that very first day when talking about tissues, what do we |
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27:50 | ? Blast cells Did when we when have that posts fix, they build |
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27:55 | build matrices. Right? So wherever see blast, you should see ah |
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28:00 | is an immature cell. Its job to build the matrix. And so |
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28:04 | what happens if these cells begin pumping matrix around them. And so they |
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28:11 | if you have two cells side by , those two cells get pushed apart |
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28:15 | they're building matrix towards one another. in all directions. And when you |
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28:21 | those matrices around you eventually you're it's like painting yourself in a corner |
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28:26 | black better. Better example. Go into a room and you start |
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28:30 | and you find yourself stuck in the , it's like, oh, I've |
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28:33 | painted myself and I can't get So now you're kind of stuck. |
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28:38 | when they get stuck in their matrix differentiate one more time, they don't |
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28:43 | . They differentiate and they become the site or the Osteo site. All |
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28:49 | , and when you're the Osteo site , what you're doing is you're stuck |
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28:52 | the matrix, you're not dead, very much alive. You're connected. |
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28:56 | you'll send out little tiny extensions and connect yourself to the other ostro |
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29:02 | Each osteo site is talking to other Ites, Right? And what they |
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29:07 | is they monitor the matrix around I built this matrix. I'm gonna |
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29:11 | sure it keeps going the way that designed it. That it does the |
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29:15 | that it's supposed to do. And the job that a bone is |
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29:19 | to do is create support, It's supposed to deal with the stresses |
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29:26 | life is bringing on it. So, like when you do a |
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29:30 | up or carry groceries, you're creating force against the bone. And it's |
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29:37 | those stresses that are in the bone determining whether or not the bone is |
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29:41 | enough to deal with those stresses. kind of makes sense. So, |
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29:47 | Osteo site is reading the structure and that the matrix is being maintained to |
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29:55 | with that mechanical stress. All you can see here is the Osteopath |
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30:01 | stuck inside the bone. You can it has its little tiny extensions. |
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30:06 | artist didn't drop the Osteo site, going to see this in a couple |
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30:09 | pictures. So, that's three of four progenitor cell gives rise to blast |
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30:17 | . Built built the blast gets It becomes the site. All |
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30:23 | The other type of cell that is related to those first three is called |
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30:28 | osteoclasts blast builds classed breaks. So, it's a large cell fake |
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30:41 | in nature? It does come from different type of cells. So it's |
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30:45 | the osteogenesis progenitor. It's from a based progenitor. All right. It's |
|
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30:51 | to be located on the surface of bones. And what it's doing is |
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|
30:57 | breaking it down. So, these that you find them in our kind |
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31:00 | like little tiny lakes or lagoons and what the name lacuna means. All |
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31:06 | , It's like a lagoon. So sitting in this whole or depression inside |
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31:11 | bone. And so what it's doing it's breaking down the bone matrix and |
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31:17 | absorbing the bone. Now, if hear this, you might think this |
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31:20 | a bad thing, but not if building and redesigning. Think about tearing |
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31:26 | a street that's not working right? have to part before you lay down |
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31:32 | structure on top. And that's what that's what the osteoclasts are doing and |
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31:38 | responding to the stresses and the bones ensure that the bone meets the needs |
|
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31:47 | of the body. The other thing that bone is kind of like a |
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31:52 | for your calcium. Alright. We tons and tons and tons of calcium |
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31:57 | up in our bones. And we calcium for a whole bunch of things |
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32:01 | our bodies. We're not always eating and consuming calcium. Do you guys |
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32:06 | where you get your calcium from from most part milk. Alright, So |
|
|
32:10 | get a little bit from milk. how many you guys drink milk on |
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32:12 | regular basis? I've stopped drinking I mean maybe I'll get ice cream |
|
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32:17 | I'm feeling lucky you know? But is not part of my diet, |
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32:22 | but not milk. Alright. So comes there. You get a little |
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32:26 | of calcium from spinach if you like . But for the most part we |
|
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32:29 | have a lot of calcium in our . You know one of the places |
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32:33 | we get calcium is from supplements, guys take supplements, vitamins, You |
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32:41 | do your Flintstone vitamins nice and crunchy you know you have a choice in |
|
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32:46 | . You can go gummy or you go chalk tasting. You know or |
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32:50 | can go that that nature's own that ground where it just tastes like someone |
|
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32:55 | dirt and put it in the You're right. Those calcium ones, |
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33:01 | know the little Flintstones type ones? you know where they get the calcium |
|
|
33:04 | ? In those you're going, Bones. Well that's one place you |
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33:11 | grind up bones. You know? other place Go out to the |
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33:15 | dredge up the bottom of the bottom the ocean, right? It's only |
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33:20 | out there. So you just dredge , wash off all the dirt. |
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33:23 | got a whole bunch of old shells them down. Pack him up |
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33:32 | Mm hmm. And it's organic too it's not sure it's inorganic. So |
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33:37 | next time you see, you minerals, vitamins, minerals and it |
|
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33:40 | organically sourced. It's chemical. It's inorganic. Alright. Just because I |
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|
33:47 | having fun with y'all. Here's another . You ever eat cereal that's vitamin |
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33:50 | , you know, like iron Do you know where the iron comes |
|
|
33:57 | ? You don't like that. You're love this one. Old cars, |
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34:02 | a car, grind it down into tiny filings, right? The filings |
|
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34:07 | so small that you just throw them the flour, mix it in with |
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34:11 | flour, baking flour. You got little tiny corn flake or whatever. |
|
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34:18 | . Now you're looking, I'm watching appears like, no, no, |
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34:21 | , no. It's it's it's a a mineral. Right? The other |
|
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34:26 | you can do this, go get handful of dirt and eat it. |
|
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34:30 | ? And there are people in 3rd countries that do that, right? |
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34:35 | do this. They're like, I need a certain minerals or |
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34:38 | And then they go to a specific that they know contains whatever is their |
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34:43 | is telling them satisfies whatever is that need, we we just dredge the |
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34:48 | and we grind of cars. That's an example of two of them. |
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34:53 | a lot more of the ones that fun. Those sort of just to |
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|
34:57 | let you know that. Yes, is actually true. When I was |
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35:00 | kid in third or fourth grade might probably it was probably like eighth grade |
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35:04 | we took cornflakes in a, you , like an earth science class. |
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35:08 | grounded down and we took magnet and kept rolling it over until you end |
|
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35:11 | a little tiny hairs and shavings. it's like you can do this as |
|
|
35:18 | , but it takes a long You have to use a lot of |
|
|
35:20 | and cereal is expensive. All So, what this is showing you |
|
|
35:25 | ? Why I brought that? All embassy is oh, if I need |
|
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35:28 | order, I get it. I break down the bone to do |
|
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35:31 | And then I can replenish the bone consuming foods that have calcium and I |
|
|
35:36 | put the calcium back in. This a picture that just kind of shows |
|
|
35:40 | process. This is how the bone is working. And I want to |
|
|
35:44 | out here that we recycle roughly 5-7% our bone every week. Alright. |
|
|
35:49 | many weeks are in a year? is 150. We recycle our |
|
|
35:59 | Our bones, our skeleton two times year. That doesn't mean you really |
|
|
36:05 | your entire skeleton. No, but shows you mass wise how active this |
|
|
36:10 | actually is. Now, this is process. All right. So, |
|
|
36:14 | just kind of walking through, we're gonna we're gonna start over here saying |
|
|
36:17 | broken down the bone. So now have a weak spot in our |
|
|
36:20 | And what happens is is that weak is detected through the osteo sites. |
|
|
36:25 | so osteoblasts gather around in that particular , they receive a signal says we |
|
|
36:31 | greater strength here. So Osco blast at the location where there's a weak |
|
|
36:37 | and they rebuild their structures. I love how the pictures are inky blinky |
|
|
36:42 | and Clyde from pac man, And so they rebuild the bone. |
|
|
36:47 | so now what you've done is you've the struck the strength of the bone |
|
|
36:54 | better respond to the stresses in that , notices a spongy bone, |
|
|
36:58 | You do you see how it's kind these little tiny little strands that's that's |
|
|
37:04 | to be in the spongy bone. what happens is after you lay down |
|
|
37:09 | matrix it classifies. And so here can see the ossification and the blast |
|
|
37:14 | go off their merry way and go for the next spot. Alright, |
|
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37:18 | it comes time to release calcium, come along and then they'll break down |
|
|
37:24 | bone and again they're going to not randomly pick a spot there, they're |
|
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37:28 | it in the area that is not great deals of stress, in other |
|
|
37:32 | , areas that can be broken right? But as you move and |
|
|
37:38 | and stuff like that, your bone going through that stress. And so |
|
|
37:42 | this pattern of building and breaking to your bones become stronger to do the |
|
|
37:48 | that you want to do. To it another way and It's bad to |
|
|
37:54 | around and sit on a sofa 24/7 your muscles atrophy and your bones get |
|
|
38:00 | when you go out and run your feels the stress that you're putting on |
|
|
38:06 | bone. It makes the muscles stronger you exercise. It also strengthens the |
|
|
38:12 | that you're using and the bones that using typically what we're talking about is |
|
|
38:19 | we're breaking bones down, this is the spongy bone. The compact bone |
|
|
38:24 | a little bit slower and you're gonna why here in just a second terms |
|
|
38:27 | structure. So this is what bone in a nutshell. Alright, we |
|
|
38:33 | an organic component and an inorganic The organic components are the cells and |
|
|
38:37 | matrices that they layout. So primarily going to be some collagen and other |
|
|
38:42 | . Glycogen, glycoprotein. Alright, what you do is you create this |
|
|
38:47 | but that's a soft matrix, It's very hard. And that makes up |
|
|
38:51 | a third of the matrix. Now can see here here's collagen fibers, |
|
|
38:55 | we do to get a whole bunch college and we wrap them up together |
|
|
38:58 | we get them really, really close so we end up with is something |
|
|
39:01 | looks a lot like this. But that's strong in terms of tensile |
|
|
39:08 | It doesn't twist real well, it stretch real well because that's the nature |
|
|
39:11 | collagen, it doesn't have the hardness bone has. And so the inorganic |
|
|
39:19 | of bone is what gives it its and that makes up the other two |
|
|
39:23 | . And what we're gonna do is gonna lay and this is what this |
|
|
39:27 | trying to show you here, I is the salt we're gonna lay. |
|
|
39:31 | on the collagen and the salt is phosphate. All right. We call |
|
|
39:36 | hydroxy appetite, appetite, appetite. want to see appetite, but I |
|
|
39:42 | that's not right. All right. anyway, so this calcium phosphate is |
|
|
39:45 | you integrate into and onto the soft and that's what hardens it. And |
|
|
39:51 | where it gets rigid and inflexible. so where you have things like cartilage |
|
|
39:55 | you can bend and move. Bone do that right? I can do |
|
|
40:01 | to my ear. I can't do to my bone. I don't have |
|
|
40:05 | there. All right. The other that bone doesn't do is doesn't compress |
|
|
40:11 | well, alright, collagen has water it. You know, cartilage has |
|
|
40:16 | and I can squeeze it. So putting in the organic or the inorganic |
|
|
40:23 | the organic. That's what gives it strength. And so we end up |
|
|
40:26 | this really, really, really strong that gives rise to the bone and |
|
|
40:32 | is microscopic relative to what we're looking here and this is where we're going |
|
|
40:35 | spend our time. So when you at a picture like this, it |
|
|
40:39 | kind of confusing. It's like what I really looking at? So, |
|
|
40:42 | want you to look up here All right. That would be the |
|
|
40:46 | of a long bone. Alright, think of that being your femur or |
|
|
40:50 | , your humor or your femur. then what we're gonna do is we're |
|
|
40:54 | focus in so you can see right . That would be the medullary cavity |
|
|
40:57 | there. That would be the outer . So, here's the medullary |
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|
41:01 | This is the outer surface. That's . Um being pulled away. You |
|
|
41:04 | see the perforating fibers. And so we're looking at is we're gonna be |
|
|
41:08 | in on these structures called austrians. are the functional unit of compact |
|
|
41:18 | All right. And you can see lots of austrians. All right. |
|
|
41:22 | you can see all these little circles kind of look like bull's eyes. |
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|
41:25 | you look down from the top, what it kind of looks like. |
|
|
41:28 | are the structures that all that matrix up. All right. But if |
|
|
41:34 | kind of look we're gonna see we're be focusing on this and we're really |
|
|
41:37 | be focusing on that middle one. it's oftentimes students get confused and |
|
|
41:41 | okay, I'm looking higher bone. you can see here. No, |
|
|
41:45 | pillars that have been wrapped together that this larger structure and that's what this |
|
|
41:51 | like another microscope. If you take Oscar and you can see it has |
|
|
41:55 | Bullseye feature and all those little black that you see those are where osteo |
|
|
42:01 | are. So you can see there's of cells that are trapped inside their |
|
|
42:06 | and there's organization to this matrix. , so these major sees octagon are |
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|
42:12 | bearing pillars in the long bones. is to resist origin stress. You |
|
|
42:21 | hear you ever see the movie the side. Alright. Some of you |
|
|
42:27 | For those who don't know the blindsides movie about Michael or who is a |
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|
42:33 | at, I want to say Mississippi . No, it was old |
|
|
42:36 | Alright. And basically the story begins it's his life story. So we're |
|
|
42:41 | talking about him, it's the beginning the movie that that's important because it's |
|
|
42:45 | , the woman played by Sandra Bullock narrating the story of um joe I |
|
|
42:55 | to say Heisman because joe Theismann getting by Lawrence Taylor, you know Lawrence |
|
|
43:01 | is a couple of guys in the going, Yeah, ladies in the |
|
|
43:06 | are like blah blah blah blah blah , I get to the bones. |
|
|
43:09 | . Lawrence Taylor is the biggest meanest linebacker ever. I mean he |
|
|
43:13 | Hall of Fame level football player, Theismann was his real name is Joe |
|
|
43:18 | . But when he was in they changed his name to Heisman so |
|
|
43:22 | could win the Heisman, I don't if he did, I don't think |
|
|
43:26 | did alright anyway. He gets the wiseman rolls out and he's running. |
|
|
43:33 | Taylor is chasing him on the blind , can't he can't see Lawrence Taylor |
|
|
43:37 | for him. Lawrence is just going this and L T grabs him like |
|
|
43:43 | animal that he is fantastic tackle grabs and twists and rolls in the |
|
|
43:49 | takes a leg and literally twist it breaks it in a spiral fracture. |
|
|
43:57 | I got to watch that live on , that's how old I am. |
|
|
44:01 | it was just awful. I lt got up and he's literally just |
|
|
44:04 | at the sideline, you gotta you gotta come, you gotta |
|
|
44:06 | He heard the break, he felt break right? Which shows you you |
|
|
44:11 | , he's not horrible person. We just play the game. These are |
|
|
44:17 | to prevent stuff like that, which shows you how strong lt is. |
|
|
44:22 | , anything else? I think The one that was wild. I |
|
|
44:28 | again, the reason everyone remembers that I remember was a big game, |
|
|
44:33 | giants and the Redskins hated each And so when LT jumped up and |
|
|
44:38 | like, hey you sacked him, he was like, no, this |
|
|
44:40 | bad and it was like career ending them. I mean quarterbacks break their |
|
|
44:46 | all the time and I don't know Adam smith. I don't remember, |
|
|
44:48 | don't watch enough NFL to remember stuff that. But anyway. All |
|
|
44:53 | So with that in mind. Let's in on those torsion resistant structures and |
|
|
45:00 | the torsion resistant. So, notice where you are. So, |
|
|
45:05 | you can see there's the inside, the outside of the long bone we're |
|
|
45:09 | on on the Austrian. We've isolated and now we're looking at it without |
|
|
45:14 | being extended outward. What they've done they've kind of extended it outwards. |
|
|
45:17 | you can see the different parts. , you can see here you have |
|
|
45:20 | you have rings now in this case just three rings in here down |
|
|
45:24 | These are micrografx so that you can these this electron micrografx. This is |
|
|
45:28 | a standard transmission micrografx. And what have here is you can see structurally |
|
|
45:34 | rings at the center of featuring is it's called. It's called a central |
|
|
45:40 | . This is where blood vessels and are going to travel. Alright, |
|
|
45:44 | each of these austrians has materials being to them and has a way to |
|
|
45:51 | rid of waste. Alright, bone is living because obviously we're |
|
|
45:56 | delivering blood there to the cells that living All right. And you can |
|
|
46:01 | these little structures are where the Osteo . So you can see them |
|
|
46:07 | They're trying to show you the line lines represent Lomeli. Alright. What's |
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46:13 | Lomeli. So think of lamination you when you were a kid. Did |
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46:17 | ever get anything? You have your license pulled out that plastic on the |
|
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46:22 | . That's lamination. Alright. It's layer of plastic. And so what |
|
|
46:26 | do is when you hear lamination or I think I've got a layer and |
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46:31 | and layer and that's what we We have concentric layers of of bone |
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46:37 | matrix. And that bone was laid by a bunch of osteoblasts growing outward |
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46:43 | then they got stuck in their matrix they're building. All right now these |
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46:48 | rings. If you look at if you look at the fibers you'd |
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46:51 | that the one fiber is kind of this way and then the next |
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46:54 | The next fibers going this way and next fibers going this way in the |
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46:57 | ring and what the purpose of that to provide that torsion resistance to that |
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47:06 | . So basically you're creating a crisscross in this column so it doesn't |
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47:14 | It stays really, really stiff. then within their own little uh area |
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47:22 | kind of this empty zone that's surrounded fluid. Is you have the osteo |
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47:27 | . So each of those ostracized, can see that they have these |
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47:30 | The extensions allow them to communicate with cells. Um The little kind of |
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47:35 | through which their little extensions are in called curriculum which means little canals. |
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47:41 | they touched each other and they talk each other and they're talking about the |
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47:45 | so that they can say what they , oh I need more more fuel |
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47:49 | we have stress over here and so allows them to monitor and uh discuss |
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47:55 | to maintain that uh that Austrian. you can see long bones have lots |
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48:02 | these austrians here it is again, several austrians all around the length of |
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48:07 | long bones. And what we're gonna is we're gonna take those austrians and |
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48:11 | going to wrap them up and so we do is to get first to |
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|
48:15 | the blood vessels, this is what is to get the blood vessels into |
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48:18 | austrians, we have to have a to do that. So we have |
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48:21 | perforating canals that go to the central . Blood vessels can then move up |
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48:26 | down. So that's what you're gonna in several bones, as you'll |
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48:29 | perforating canals, secondly you're going to circumferential Lomeli, Alright, is that |
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48:35 | that means is I've taken all the and I've wrapped them and so you |
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48:38 | think about it like oh those cells are underneath the perry Osti um what |
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48:43 | doing is they're laying layers outside the . So that's where you get the |
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48:50 | same thing here, The ones on external side, external circumferential on the |
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48:57 | side. Internal circumferential alright. But round things don't uh butt up against |
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49:04 | other. Exactly. They have a bit of space in between And so |
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49:07 | little space in between is called an Lomeli. And so either you have |
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49:13 | build in between the cells, or happens is when you break down in |
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49:18 | and rebuild one, you may leave behind. And so interstitial Lomeli can |
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49:23 | from one of those two sources. what you end up with this |
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49:27 | solid compact bone that is very, strong, very resistant, compression, |
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49:32 | to torsion um and are capable of all sorts of stuff in terms of |
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49:42 | . Now, internally, remember we when we go back against back, |
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49:46 | over here on the inside, That's we're gonna see spongy bone. |
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49:51 | when we look at a flat we're gonna see within that compact |
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49:54 | We're gonna see a spongy bone. so this is what spongy bone looks |
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49:59 | . It kind of looks like a . You can see it has these |
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50:03 | extensions which are called to ridiculously it's . You could take a thread and |
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50:08 | could wind it through carefully between the . Now, if you took a |
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50:14 | of rich, ridiculous what you see that you'd see the same sort of |
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50:18 | that you saw when you were looking the Austrian. But structurally they're slightly |
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50:23 | . There's no central canal. All , You can see the osteo |
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50:26 | Yes, they're actually all opened up one another and then ultimately opened up |
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50:31 | the surface of the tribe Picula. you can see here, they're trying |
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50:34 | show you the particularly that are like little dots representing, oh this is |
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50:38 | it opens up. So nutrients are to get back and forth to each |
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50:43 | the individual osteo sites, directly from medullary cavity and the fluids that are |
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50:47 | there. You don't need to have vessels penetrating through. So we don't |
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50:52 | an Austrian even though it kind of like it. Alright, We just |
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50:57 | to the tropically um with this structure what we're gonna do. I don't |
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51:06 | I have it up here. I do. They're aligned along stress |
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51:13 | vectors basically. So when you put on a bone, it creates stress |
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51:19 | one of those structures. And so like, oh here's a vector of |
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51:24 | . I'm gonna build along that so can counter the stress on it. |
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51:29 | that's why they have this kind of look to them, so they can |
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51:32 | the stress throughout the bone. All . So, I'm gonna pause here |
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51:41 | I think we've covered a lot in of this, we're going to keep |
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51:43 | here in a second. But are any questions about the stuff I talked |
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51:46 | even about tearing down cars and turning into iron. Uh huh. |
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51:56 | you tell me when? Okay. No. So you can think of |
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52:07 | as basically just a really really thin hole. Alright, so if you |
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52:12 | a really tiny small hole and you a really tiny small arm that you |
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52:15 | extend through it. That's that's what looking at now. What would happen |
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52:19 | that on the other side there might another cell that I can actually connect |
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52:23 | and so you might see gap junctions . But really it's just a point |
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52:28 | crosstalk between the two cells. All , So really the idea here is |
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52:33 | curriculum are basically holds through the bone which osteo sites can extend themselves. |
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52:40 | right. So they live in they in the lacuna and they extend through |
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52:44 | curriculum. Alright. Little extensions and why they have that kind of weird |
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52:49 | space monster. Look in our little here, good question. Uh |
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53:05 | You're asking a physician level question, I don't really know the answer. |
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53:09 | right, so here's the deal when comes to any sort of vitamin in |
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53:13 | body or even mineral, your body absorb what it needs and it will |
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53:17 | rid of what it does doesn't There's a really if you guys watch |
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53:20 | Bang Theory uh In in syndication, a great um line in that we're |
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53:27 | and Sheldon our grocery shopping and she grabs a whole bunch of vitamin |
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53:34 | She says, oh you're buying He says basically you're just gonna pee |
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53:39 | all out or you know, you're paying, you're paying for for paying |
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53:43 | all out. Said well maybe that's I'm going for? He says oh |
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53:45 | you want that then you want manganese it's lots of money and you don't |
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53:49 | you don't need a lot of And it's true for most of the |
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53:52 | . And so the idea is that take supplements because generally speaking our diets |
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53:57 | . Alright maybe not you guys, diet sucks. If I could live |
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54:00 | cheetos I would. And the truth your body can probably survive just fine |
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54:04 | 30 or 40 or 50 days on solid diet of cheetos. But notice |
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54:10 | a limit there, right? And what happens is your body starts going |
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54:14 | run out of the things that I've away. And so so the purpose |
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54:17 | the supplement is to ensure that you're what's your what you need. So |
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54:21 | example like right now, I mean as an example, I mean I |
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54:25 | lots of vitamin D. Literature basically I think I told you high correlation |
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54:29 | good health and vitamin D. And is more important is that the vitamin |
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54:32 | . Gives good health or does good good high vitamin D. We really |
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54:36 | know. But you know it's easy and they taste like cherry gummies so |
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54:41 | that's easy. Alright but why do have to take that supplement? I |
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54:45 | make my own vitamin D. And talked about this But how many of |
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54:49 | guys spend 12 hours a day outside the sun? Yeah exactly. I |
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54:56 | no the answer is I spend zero the most sun I get is from |
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55:01 | I walk from here to my to garage that is the extent of the |
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55:05 | I probably get during the day. maybe that might be a good way |
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55:10 | me to get that supplemented. So the best calcium? You know what's |
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55:14 | best way to do that? Well off are you getting enough calcium in |
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55:17 | diet? If the answer is no supplement it, How do you want |
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55:21 | supplement? Well you don't want to eating bones like your dog does. |
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55:25 | . The best thing to do is pop a couple of pills you know |
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55:28 | let your body decide because you're just pee it out if you don't need |
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55:31 | . And that's the good news. it feels like a waste. |
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55:40 | Well so how you absorb things through body is going to be kind of |
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55:46 | . Right? So you have things are lipid soluble, you have things |
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55:48 | are water soluble. Anything that's lipid has special mechanisms in which it's going |
|
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55:53 | have to be absorbed. So the you put something into your mouth that's |
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55:57 | soluble it gets absorbed. All Which is kind of interesting. |
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56:01 | So if you've ever seen the videos the people in the third world, |
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56:04 | know where they're all lined up getting vitamin drops underneath their tongue, that's |
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56:07 | soluble vitamins, you can do that they can absorb it right away. |
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56:11 | most of the stuff that we absorb you can go and look at the |
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56:13 | list of all the vitamins, most this stuff is water soluble and so |
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56:16 | has to go down to the digestive , go into the small intestine, |
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56:19 | picked up body then decides, do really need this or not? And |
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56:23 | if he doesn't need it out, goes lipid soluble stuff will be broken |
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56:27 | . It won't be like it doesn't through the urine that way. I |
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56:31 | I probably didn't answer your question. just kind of okay, blah blah |
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56:35 | . See the good news. We have like eight slides. So, |
|
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56:38 | know, we get to run down tracks every now and then it's okay |
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56:42 | ask questions like that. Nine times of 10 if you ask me anything |
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56:45 | , I guarantee you, I probably know the answer. So go ahead |
|
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56:48 | stump the chump. It's it's easy . All right, ready to learn |
|
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56:52 | to how we make both. All right, so bone is formed |
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|
57:01 | the process of what is called You might see the term ossification as |
|
|
57:06 | . So like right now, believe or not, you are still generating |
|
|
57:12 | . All right right here, the process, I'm trying to find it |
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57:17 | there zip process at the end of sternum up until about your all's age |
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57:23 | still cartilage and then it slowly turns bone. Alright, So mine is |
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57:29 | and now we yours is all soft squishy. It might be going towards |
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57:36 | heart. So it begins process of begins while your name bro. It |
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57:43 | continue on through childhood and mostly through and be done there. But there |
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57:48 | parts of the body that's still undergo long type. Now there are two |
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57:53 | ways that we're going to form One is called intra member Nous. |
|
|
57:57 | speaking, when you see intra member we're talking about flat bones, but |
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58:00 | not the only way that remember intra Nous works. The other is indo |
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58:08 | . Alright. So, if you at those two terms, they kind |
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58:10 | tell you already what you're looking Intra inside Member Nous membrane inside of |
|
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58:19 | . All right, indo inside ecto be outside. So, indo |
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58:25 | And then con droll is the hard . That's cartilage. So, when |
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|
58:29 | see Condra, it's dealing with So, what we're gonna do is |
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58:33 | gonna use a a cartilage bone to another bone. All right. |
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58:40 | those are the two methods. So, this typically the long bones |
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58:44 | the pelvis vertebrae so unused into So, we're gonna start with intra |
|
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58:49 | business. It's easier and the truth that intra member This is how we |
|
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58:53 | get those cartilage bones. Alright. you can kind of see how this |
|
|
58:58 | of builds because the other one doesn't kind of address this like well how |
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|
59:01 | this cartilage bone begin in the first ? Well, it's kind of through |
|
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59:03 | methodology very similar to this. All . And so we're going to be |
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59:08 | with a member in this environment. remember connective tissue, we're going to |
|
|
59:12 | in the mezzanine time during embryology. we I know we didn't talk any |
|
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59:17 | but mesen kind is what gives rise the different types of connective tissue. |
|
|
59:21 | you have this member nous structure this . Alright. And it's going to |
|
|
59:26 | through these four simple steps. So you are, you are inside the |
|
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59:30 | kind. And a cell will differentiate become uh a osteogenesis cell. That's |
|
|
59:37 | the first step. It's like okay becoming this osteogenesis cell. And so |
|
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59:42 | gonna start dividing and creating more osteogenesis . And then what they're gonna do |
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59:46 | we're gonna start making matrix. Remember they make matrix they start pushing away |
|
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59:50 | each other and they kind of get and that's kind of what's going on |
|
|
59:53 | , you can see here we got osteo osteogenesis cells that have are still |
|
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59:59 | living matrix. But here we got cells trapped. And what's happened is |
|
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60:04 | that asteroid that matrix that they're making calcified. And so now they're not |
|
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60:10 | just trapped because of the Matrix, created their trapped because that matrix has |
|
|
60:15 | calcified. So, these cells would the OsteO sites. And out here |
|
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60:20 | got osteoblasts. And so what they're is they're now growing away from each |
|
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60:25 | and they're growing within that that Now the other cells in that matrix |
|
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60:30 | now being pushed aside. They're being down. All right, well, |
|
|
60:36 | do we find on the outside of bones and all bones? We called |
|
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60:41 | the Perry Osti. Um All We have a layer of connective tissue |
|
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60:45 | that's what's going on. Is you're pressing it down, pressing down. |
|
|
60:49 | creating curiosity. Um So, where you have your osteoporosis or your Osteo |
|
|
60:53 | ? There now on the outside, matrix that you began has grown even |
|
|
60:59 | . It's called woven bone at this . It's not organized because it hasn't |
|
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61:03 | to deal with stressors yet. But idea is like, okay, I've |
|
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61:07 | this this matrix and then cells get inside that matrix are outside the bone |
|
|
61:14 | , but within the structure itself. so they basically now are becoming um |
|
|
61:21 | industry. Um And so you have that can now work on the outside |
|
|
61:26 | then it starts organizing itself and you see here as that as you form |
|
|
61:31 | curiosity. Um you're now creating layers compact mode. And so that's what |
|
|
61:38 | there. The inside that spongy bone then start responding to stressors. And |
|
|
61:44 | basically grow itself in such a way those ridiculous are now pointing along the |
|
|
61:49 | lines. All right. So we refer to that woven bone as lamelo |
|
|
61:55 | bone, blood vessels are gonna be along the way because these cells are |
|
|
61:59 | to die if they stay too far from sources. So they also, |
|
|
62:03 | of the signals they do is they draw blood vessels to the bone. |
|
|
62:08 | that's where you're going to see before hardens up and becomes more organized. |
|
|
62:12 | going to see that happen. it's kind of a basic structure. |
|
|
62:17 | if you can't visualize, I understand it's it's kind of hard, you |
|
|
62:20 | , it's like okay, I've got mess of cells someone differentiate and then |
|
|
62:24 | start organizing themselves and starting to push other way. And in the midst |
|
|
62:28 | that they create this woven bone. if you can visualize what the Lomeli |
|
|
62:33 | like, what those ridiculously look you can kind of see how it's |
|
|
62:37 | end up if it starts off as like that. Okay, That's the |
|
|
62:44 | one. The cool one is this because this is your skeleton. I |
|
|
62:49 | in the in the broader sense doesn't that intravenous isn't your skeleton as |
|
|
62:54 | but you can see here during one of the first things that forms |
|
|
62:59 | early on is a cartilage skeleton. right. And so the way that |
|
|
63:03 | happen is very similar to what we saw. But without the osteopath being |
|
|
63:09 | . Okay, In other words, not going to create a calcified |
|
|
63:13 | We're going to create a matrix of that is this. And then what's |
|
|
63:20 | to happen is as that field cartilage formed and develops that's very early on |
|
|
63:24 | first couple of weeks, eight eight week 12. Then as a |
|
|
63:32 | gonna happen is you're gonna start seeing . In other words, cells are |
|
|
63:36 | start coming in or you're gonna start calcification. So cells are gonna start |
|
|
63:40 | in and they're gonna start replacing the cartilaginous cells, the condor sites and |
|
|
63:47 | condor blast with osteoblasts that will then osteo sites. So, the first |
|
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63:53 | that forms is what is called the osteo collar. That's what you see |
|
|
63:58 | , blood vessels begin to penetrate So the primary ossification center is gonna |
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64:04 | along the diagnosis and then blood vessels through. And then you're gonna see |
|
|
64:09 | of the epiphany sees. And so you end up with. So there's |
|
|
64:13 | ossification. So you see the diagnosis the epic Asus are what are going |
|
|
64:17 | first form as bone. That region between stays as cartilage. Now, |
|
|
64:27 | can see here, where are we in the toddler stage. It's always |
|
|
64:32 | watching new mothers, New mothers are concerned about their Children. Their baby's |
|
|
64:39 | not so much, There's even a gag, I think on, you |
|
|
64:42 | , it's like a a meme where like how high can dad throws their |
|
|
64:46 | babies? And you watch the mom panicking, you're seeing that Alright. |
|
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64:52 | Why don't why are dads less Are they less invested? No, |
|
|
64:57 | we know inherently that their big bags cartilage. All right, watch child |
|
|
65:03 | down the stairs. Who freaks out , are you okay? Baby looks |
|
|
65:07 | , sees mom panicking, starts Dad sees baby tumbled down the |
|
|
65:13 | toughen up. You're tough as baby looks up, tough as |
|
|
65:17 | I'll do it again. One of , I have four kids, |
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|
65:24 | One of my kids fell out a . My research dad. Alright, |
|
|
65:30 | see if it works, it looks . Okay? Just go back out |
|
|
65:33 | go and play two weeks later. wrist still hurts. Maybe we should |
|
|
65:36 | take it and go take a compression fracture. Thank you. My |
|
|
65:47 | went and fell down something upstairs, as nails. I'm tough as |
|
|
65:58 | All right. So, then we of move on past the toddler |
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|
66:02 | right? So, you can now we've got that bone is now starting |
|
|
66:06 | replace all the cartilage. You're not so much cartilage now, you're actually |
|
|
66:09 | little more fragile. Um Bone is tough, but you know, it |
|
|
66:13 | break. Um But you can see we still have these regions that is |
|
|
66:19 | and that's what is called the epithelial alright. And it's here where we're |
|
|
66:23 | to actually see growth. Alright. you will continue to have cartilage in |
|
|
66:30 | bones. Up through. No depending when you go through puberty and how |
|
|
66:35 | it lasts for you. I mean plate will close at a certain |
|
|
66:40 | So there are some people who stopped when they're about 25. I used |
|
|
66:44 | work for N. C. Double basketball team you know tutoring years and |
|
|
66:48 | ago and they would have freshman you who would be like six ft 10 |
|
|
66:53 | we're expected to grow for another three right? Because they had closed that |
|
|
66:59 | plate. Some of you particularly some you young women You know went through |
|
|
67:05 | and was like I stopped growing when turned 16. That was the epithelial |
|
|
67:09 | . It closed. All right. so it just depends when it |
|
|
67:14 | right? So you're lengthwise growth is upon how long that stays cartilage. |
|
|
67:20 | we have two different types of growth . Yeah. Mhm. Um Typically |
|
|
67:27 | won't do that but you could go get an X ray and see you |
|
|
67:30 | you'd see that that plate you know they're not going to do it unless |
|
|
67:34 | like concerned. Yeah. So this there's two different types of growth that |
|
|
67:40 | have to deal with when you're dealing bone. So you can imagine if |
|
|
67:43 | bones stayed the same size. It when I was a toddler, it |
|
|
67:46 | be really, really tall and really thin and probably not very |
|
|
67:50 | Right? So, there is a growth. That's what this is. |
|
|
67:53 | interstitial growth. So interstitial means within , there's growth within the bone, |
|
|
67:59 | it's referring to the epithelial plate. , we'll deal with that. And |
|
|
68:04 | there's growth that causes the bone to wider. All right. And that |
|
|
68:09 | be oppositional growth, which is what gonna talk to you next. |
|
|
68:12 | here, what this is trying to you is like, okay, I've |
|
|
68:15 | this epithelial plate, it has cartilage what it's doing. It's laying down |
|
|
68:19 | and it's pushing the epiphany sis away the diagnosis. So, you can |
|
|
68:23 | I'm going this direction. As I down cartilage, I'm pushing the epiphany |
|
|
68:28 | further and further away from the but that diagnosis is causing calcification of |
|
|
68:35 | lower layers of the cartilage. it's slowly trying to catch up with |
|
|
68:39 | living layers of the top cartilage and catch up. And when it |
|
|
68:43 | then you now have that closure. epiphany, that's what this is trying |
|
|
68:48 | show you is like, I'm growing this direction, and this part down |
|
|
68:51 | is getting calcified. All right? that's what this picture is trying to |
|
|
68:55 | you here, is showing you the zones. So, down here, |
|
|
68:59 | would be where the diagnosis is. where ossification is taking place up |
|
|
69:03 | This is the area where you have . And here it's proliferating. So |
|
|
69:08 | growing and it's pushing this upward and away from that area, right? |
|
|
69:14 | can imagine it's running that direction, right. But as you move further |
|
|
69:19 | further away from your blood sources, when you get that calcification and then |
|
|
69:24 | the calcification takes place and then it back and the contra sides died, |
|
|
69:29 | replace it with actual both tissue. right. And so when the diagnosis |
|
|
69:37 | that zone of I should back that zone of ossification catches up with |
|
|
69:41 | resting cartilage because it kind of speeds eventually they'll catch up and then you |
|
|
69:46 | that resting cartilage and it all becomes . You stop growing around the |
|
|
69:54 | So here you are, as an , you can see very, very |
|
|
69:57 | . So, on the outside, that curiosity, um you have the |
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70:01 | creating more and more and more circumferential . So you're getting wider and wider |
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70:06 | wider and wider, which would also that the bone itself is getting thicker |
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70:11 | thicker and thicker. And so you'd I'd have a very, very small |
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70:15 | cavity when I'm really, really But when I'm bigger, I don't |
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70:19 | have a fairly large medullary cavity. that also means on the endoscopy um |
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70:24 | have osteoclasts breaking down the bone. I've got something growing, making it |
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70:30 | . But on the inside I also something that is breaking it down to |
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70:33 | the inside bigger as well. The is is that the rate of growth |
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70:38 | the outside is faster than the rate absorption on the inside. So we |
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70:43 | up with a nice thick, strong , even though we're breaking down. |
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70:50 | that kind of makes sense? Okay, so bonus living, it |
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70:58 | some very unique structure to it, ? It undergoes growth over the course |
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71:03 | your life, it gets replaced all time. And so you just kind |
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71:08 | need to know structurally what does it like? Right? What does what |
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71:13 | compact bone look like? What does bone look like you do that? |
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71:18 | easy. The next part sees is easier. It's the dim bones. |
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71:23 | I said knee bone's connected to the bye. Except we're gonna learn their |
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71:28 | names. All right. Questions. . Yeah. So what we're saying |
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71:37 | , the rate of adding bone on outside is greater than the rate of |
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71:41 | on the inside. So what that is that if you look at |
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71:44 | it's a it's a relative thing. ? So if you're thinking of a |
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71:47 | tiny bone on on an infant would about this big and then your femurs |
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71:52 | sorry, is roughly about that Right? So it's thicker. But |
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71:57 | you're doing is you're growing faster on outside and instead of breaking down on |
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72:00 | inside. So you're not gonna have same thickness of bone that you did |
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72:04 | a as an infant, you're gonna a thicker bone as an adult because |
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72:09 | that. Those two different rates faster the outside, slower on the |
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72:13 | So even though I'm breaking it this is it's not as fast, |
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72:23 | . Yeah. So what would What you can think about there is |
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72:27 | am I breaking it down? one is structural there for structural |
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72:31 | But I also need calcium for other in my body. And so the |
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72:36 | where I'd be breaking it down or those cells are gonna be most |
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72:40 | I'm not gonna break down things in middle of my solid bone, I'm |
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72:43 | do it on its surfaces. Alright guys, it's a weekend. |
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72:50 | least for this class. I will you on Tuesday, where we will |
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72:55 | do the bones. Yes, So, mm |
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