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00:01 | Okay, only four minutes late. just drives me up. Sleep, |
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00:06 | . But you know, we just to get on with life. All |
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00:10 | . Long time ago we talked about remember that. Did we remember everything |
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00:16 | About that hospitality. What's the what the rule? I taught you guys |
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00:21 | water and salutes wherever water goes. follows vice versa too. Right. |
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00:28 | salt water follows? Did I? told you guys the story, of |
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00:32 | , of high school politics. I tell you that story. Do |
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00:37 | remember high school politics? Oh, sure you go is interesting. |
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00:44 | Yeah, I did tell you Okay, see you guys remember |
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00:48 | All right. A lot of people at the kidney and they get |
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00:51 | really upset and they think, oh goodness, this is so difficult. |
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00:54 | , I'm never going to understand What was me? It's the end |
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00:56 | days. Uh, Right. no, no, no, |
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01:01 | Reabsorption follows all the rules we've already , right, Wherever water goes, |
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01:07 | follows and vice versa. Where studying water follows. Now, if we're |
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01:10 | the first, wherever studying goes water , then who goes after water? |
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01:17 | , well, we have a whole of other solids, don't we? |
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01:20 | have chlorine, right? We have , we have glucose and amino |
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01:26 | We have all these things that are to move as a response to or |
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01:31 | response well, in response to osmotic . So really if we know our |
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01:37 | is going we know our water's We know where water is going on |
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01:40 | here. Everything else is going All . And that's how the kidney |
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01:45 | correct. And let's go home. don't believe me. She's looking at |
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01:51 | we can go home. Yeah. don't think you think is a little |
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01:56 | more difficult than that. All Well, let's take a look and |
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01:58 | if it is more difficult. So, reabsorption is highly selective. |
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02:02 | the first the first rule. All . So, it's selective, meaning |
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02:06 | only gonna reabsorb those things back in body. Remember how we started |
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02:11 | We filtered indiscriminately? Well, there this discrimination is discrimination being things that |
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02:18 | too big will not be filtered and stay in the plasma flowing through the |
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02:23 | and on through the different arterial. anything that has a certain size and |
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02:27 | gets just filtered through. So we care what we do care. But |
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02:32 | body can't regulate what's being filtered through than by size. All right. |
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02:37 | , obviously in there, there's gonna things that the body wants. Does |
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02:41 | body want to pr glucose or did work really hard for your glucose? |
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02:47 | worked hard for your glucose, didn't ? I mean, I've stood in |
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02:50 | at Taco Bell for like five minutes and you know, listening to the |
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02:55 | in front of me. That was lot of work. You don't believe |
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03:00 | . That's there used to be a bell down there and there was freshman |
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03:04 | boy, they wine. It was . I just want to start smacking |
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03:10 | . All right, granted. I go find a wooly mammoth. |
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03:13 | But I still worked hard for that . So do I want to give |
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03:15 | my glucose? No, I want hold onto my glucose so I'm gonna |
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03:20 | glucose back of the body. All . Are there other things that are |
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03:23 | the plasma which I want to Yeah, everyone should be on their |
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03:28 | . Of course. All right. what we're gonna do is we're going |
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03:31 | selectively bring back those things that we out of the filter it back into |
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03:37 | body. This is what the process reabsorption is. Bring those things I |
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03:41 | and anything that I don't want. leave it on the curb. Someone |
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03:46 | is going to go get it You've done that, right. Have |
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03:53 | you don't want to put it on curb. Walk in the house, |
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03:55 | back out. Yeah, that's kind what the reabsorption is. We're going |
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03:59 | leave the stuff in there. All . So things that we need, |
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04:04 | going to do things we don't We don't get. So, what |
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04:07 | glamorous infiltrate basically? It's plaza minus plasma proteins that are too big to |
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04:11 | reabsorbed or to be filtered so that stay in there. And so basically |
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04:16 | gonna reabsorb those things that allow for to maintain both composition and volume of |
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04:22 | interstitial fluid. All right. Now , how much are we filtering per |
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04:26 | or sorry, per minute. Do guys remember? Okay, 125. |
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04:31 | could have said a lot that I I would accept that as an |
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04:33 | Right. How much are we re back in? Do you remember almost |
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04:38 | of it? Right. So, left behind is about a mil? |
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04:43 | . And so really what we're doing we're saying we are changing the constitution |
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04:47 | the plasma when we filter and we to return all that stuff back. |
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04:51 | necessary to maintain that. All Because we want to maintain that |
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04:55 | We want to maintain the water concentrations the most part. So, we're |
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05:00 | gonna leave a little bit back in that's really what we're doing. |
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05:03 | what we're doing is we're concentrating the that the body doesn't want into that |
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05:07 | trait which were ultimately going to turn urine. So, those two processes |
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05:11 | transport. That's basically through the So, basically it'll be trans cellular |
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05:15 | then para celular would be in between cells. All right. And which |
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05:19 | was going to be used is gonna dependent upon the permeability at that particular |
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05:23 | . Right? So water is typically both between the cells and through the |
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05:29 | . But say sodium can only go the cells. All right. |
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05:32 | it's going to use sodium would be cellular transport. Water would be whichever |
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05:37 | you can get through fastest. just as an example. And |
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05:41 | what I wanna do is I just to kind of focus in here on |
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05:45 | reabsorption because if we understand so, we understand everything else? All |
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05:50 | And so if you're looking at this Ron, what we'd say is |
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05:55 | well, sodium is reabsorbed along almost entire life, most of it about |
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06:01 | thirds of it is going to be here in the proximal convoluted tubules. |
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06:04 | when we're talking about sodium reabsorption, is what we're focusing on. Is |
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06:08 | particular uh absorptive region. All So, the amount of sodium that |
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06:15 | absorbing here plays a role in absorbing else. So, this is the |
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06:18 | amino acid, water, chlorine All that fun stuff there. I |
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06:24 | you. The loop of Henle er loop of Henle is gonna be a |
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06:26 | bit weird. All right. We reabsorb sodium there. The purpose of |
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06:29 | absorbing sodium there is to absorb water we can create this concentration gradient that |
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06:35 | can then take advantage of uh to your in varying concentrations. All |
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06:41 | So, it's a different type of and it's used in a different |
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06:46 | So, up here is what we're about when we're talking about the reabsorption |
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06:49 | interested in here is a little bit . And then lastly in the distal |
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06:53 | tubules collecting duct and collecting tubules were a role in sf volumes. All |
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06:58 | , to put that in plain When you've heard that salt causes high |
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07:02 | pressure. This is what they were on. All right. So, |
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07:06 | we're looking at here is the uh reabsorption of sodium in response to changes |
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07:13 | blood pressure. So, when my pressure drops, what do I want |
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07:18 | do is I want to put sodium my body which draws water in which |
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07:22 | my blood pressure. Okay, that's the regulatory sodium that we're looking |
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07:27 | and notice how much it is. a very very small portion of the |
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07:31 | sodium that's being involved or being So, we're focusing here first and |
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07:36 | we'll get to these a little bit today. All right. So, |
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07:41 | reabsorption. Well, there's lots of that we can do it. We |
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07:43 | go through channels. All right. can use the sodium glucose co |
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07:47 | You can see now how I'm getting across the thing. I can use |
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07:50 | exchangers and I'm just trying to look the pictures do have There's a sodium |
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07:55 | right there. All right. there's different ways that we do |
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07:59 | So, one step is always going be passive. The other one is |
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08:02 | going to be a pump. in other words, I'm moving it |
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08:06 | and then the other is using an step. Alright. And what they're |
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08:09 | is basically where that allows us to up and then back down or vice |
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08:14 | . All right. In terms of , what we're doing is removing sodium |
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08:17 | the fill trait using one of these so that sodium ends on the other |
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08:23 | . And when that happens, water going to follow for osmotic reasons. |
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08:28 | is what this slide says. Water sodium reabsorption. All right. That's |
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08:36 | . Okay. Now, remember where were in the proximal convoluted tubules? |
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08:39 | can we do this? Well, can go through Aqua porn's an approximate |
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08:43 | uh tubules. Aqua porn's are always be open. So, water is |
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08:47 | going to naturally follow sodium, but the collecting ducts and the distal |
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08:54 | they're not open. Their dependent their and their availability is dependent upon the |
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08:58 | of vasopressin. So, I'm gonna and make those or I'm gonna make |
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09:04 | . Uh Aqua porn is available under conditions. All right. So, |
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09:10 | only going to absorb water under certain in the distal convoluted tubules. We'll |
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09:16 | to that in a bit. All . And they can pass through the |
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09:21 | tight junctions, as I said through the cells. All right. What |
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09:27 | chlorine? What's chlorine attracted to second that are positive. But in particular |
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09:35 | we just said in in our list things, sodium. Yeah. |
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09:41 | remember in our little our little uh play, whatever. Remember sodium is |
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09:47 | the uh girlfriend. Right? Water is well, did I get that |
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09:53 | . I can't remember how I set up. It's a long time |
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09:58 | I haven't been able to think about today other than freshman grades. Um |
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10:02 | basically it's gonna follow sodium, So if sodium goes, it's an |
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10:06 | an electrical attraction towards sodium. So gonna move down an electrical gradient and |
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10:12 | gradient to get with sodium. And it's going to move along that. |
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10:17 | right. And you can you can at all. This is so you |
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10:20 | go between cells, right? You go through sales using exchangers, so |
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10:24 | and so on and so forth. really it's a passive form of reabsorption |
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10:28 | you're just following that sodium gradients or electrical gradient that sodium is creating. |
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10:34 | about potassium? Well, potassium is . All right. Now, potassium |
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10:39 | the proximal convoluted tubules gonna follow All right. And again, this |
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10:43 | a result of water. Water goes here. That means potassium concentrations are |
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10:48 | higher in the tube. You'll And I'm going to follow water so I |
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10:53 | reach equilibrium. So it naturally follows . All right. And so this |
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10:58 | about 60-80% of the potassium being reabsorbed the kidneys is going to be done |
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11:03 | this way. All right. But also have reabsorption into Franek loop. |
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11:11 | ? And then we have also reabsorption the collecting tubules and this is the |
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11:14 | we're going to spend a little bit time talking about. All right. |
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11:18 | The Taipei interrelated cells are playing the the robot re absorbing potassium and well |
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11:25 | like I said, we'll get to in just a minute. What about |
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11:29 | ? How we get glucose in the ? We want to spend energy. |
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11:32 | it. You guys want to spend to store energy? No. So |
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11:40 | do we do it passive? sort of It's co transport. Secondary |
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11:47 | transport. Alright, so ever sodium , glucose goes all right, So |
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11:52 | is going using the sodium glucose transporter glucose to get in the sales and |
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11:56 | glucose goes down using a a different carrier to move to the other |
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12:02 | So it's going to be passive And just moving using the transporters in this |
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12:07 | . All right. That's easy. far. So good. I |
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12:12 | I'm like literally running through all this , but it's like if I know |
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12:15 | sodium is going, I know where is going and then I know where |
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12:18 | else is going. You know? about amino acids. Same thing. |
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12:22 | . We got specialized carriers for each the different types of amino acids. |
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12:26 | it's basically a sodium amino acid That's not too difficult. Alright. |
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12:31 | active transport using co transporters and exchanges right. Again, proximal convoluted |
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12:39 | Where's reabsorption mostly taking place approximately convoluted nitrogenous waste the bane of our existence |
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12:52 | uric acid and uh crowning. Remember way back and Biology one when |
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13:01 | have to learn the difference between these things. Did you have to learn |
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13:05 | differences between the 3? Okay. , constantly forget them. All |
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13:10 | Three main types Yuria Okay. Uric created in your area. Breaking down |
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13:18 | . We're going to re absorb it secreted. So not only are being |
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13:23 | but it's being reabsorbed as being secreted . It's doing weird stuff. Uric |
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13:30 | . This is when we break down acids, not nuclei acids. |
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13:33 | I can't spell. So nucleic acids what we're doing is breaking that down |
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13:37 | . And then this is also gonna reabsorbed and secreted. Um For the |
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13:41 | don't know um for people who have there's a broken mechanism in here dealing |
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13:46 | the uric acid. So uric acid build up and that's what causes the |
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13:52 | . Water follows the uric acid to to dilute it? That's where you |
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13:56 | the information. And then the crystals start poking at cells and cells don't |
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14:00 | to be poked. So that's where pain comes from. Breaking down nucleic |
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14:07 | create in me. Well, basically which we haven't really talked a lot |
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14:12 | but creating is one of the ways we store up energy and cells. |
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14:16 | so when we break down Corey 18 get creatinine. That's basically secreted. |
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14:21 | creatinine. All right. So, have different ways to get rid of |
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14:26 | out of our bodies and it's for things. Um Let me ask you |
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14:30 | question. Everything and you everything that eat. Is it is it uh |
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14:35 | ? In other words, it comes something that was living at some |
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14:41 | You're shaking your head. No. me an example of something that is |
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14:48 | three. Well, that's probably But they're still organic there. I |
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14:53 | , look back in the day, in the box was always rumored to |
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14:57 | just serving Zoo grade meat was like or something like that. I think |
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15:01 | got sued once. I had a whose father was an attorney and they |
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15:04 | Arby's And so they had to know they made their meats. They got |
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15:09 | meats and basically they got their gelatinous uh created protein. Um sludge and |
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15:18 | they compressed it down and squeezed out water. And that's Yeah, you |
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15:22 | want to know where food comes But it all comes from something living |
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15:25 | some point. A Cheeto Alright. . Cheetos Yeah. Where does it |
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15:32 | from? Corn? Yeah. Not it's good for you. Just saying |
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15:37 | came from something living. So everything consume is made up of proteins and |
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15:41 | acids. All right. And so have to have always break those |
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15:44 | We have to get rid of that nitrogen. Which is these methods. |
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15:47 | right. So, we're gonna look how do we get rid of your |
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15:50 | because your area is one of these structures or these weird molecules. All |
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15:57 | , it's freely filtered. All So basically it just follows the |
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16:01 | But when it gets in the proximal , basically 50% is gonna be passively |
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16:06 | . So basically you think about if 100% is filtered in then half |
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16:09 | it leaves again through reabsorption. And when you get down to the net |
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16:13 | loop, well you basically secrete. basically you pump out As much as |
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16:17 | can so you're back up to 100% . And then when you get down |
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16:21 | collecting tubules, your re absorbing it more time. All right. And |
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16:24 | whatever is left over is what you're eliminating his waist. All right. |
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16:30 | reabsorption along with the sodium that we're to be pumping out. Epinephrine include |
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16:36 | to establish the osmotic gradient. Now way I the way that you can |
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16:41 | about this um in a really really terms is Yuria moves like your friend |
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16:48 | understands your jokes right? We've already already talked about our slow friend |
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16:53 | Are slow friend is back, You tell your friend that joke, |
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16:57 | kind of stare at you for a and then they laugh. That's how |
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17:01 | real moves, it's like everything is in the areas like oh okay, |
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17:05 | sorry, excuse me. And then like everything's moved the other extra like |
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17:11 | just give me a second. So always moving a little bit behind everything |
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17:16 | is really the kind of the way can think about it. And so |
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17:19 | your body you have Yuria everywhere. right. It's not like it's being |
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17:24 | away and kicked out of your body , really fast. There's actually high |
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17:28 | of Yuria but not toxic levels, ? Otherwise you'd all be dead and |
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17:32 | all be dead in this conversation would happening. It's basically the removal rate |
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17:37 | enough to keep your real levels low . But your area is moving in |
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17:41 | passive manner, with the exception of you see the secretion, where it's |
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17:46 | , nope, I didn't want you . I want you over there and |
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17:48 | like, okay, but I'm going follow the water. I'm moving down |
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17:53 | concentration gradients and I'm constantly going back this pathway. That's why it's being |
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18:02 | . And when we see here in net Franek loop along with the |
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18:05 | it's this salute that we're gonna use draw water into the kidney to help |
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18:13 | concentrate out the urine. All But we're I'm not gonna say |
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18:19 | I was I was about to say was going to say this is the |
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18:21 | difficult part, but it's not it's easy, all easy now. |
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18:27 | does it make sense? Yuri follows but it has weird rules. And |
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18:32 | you're pumping it out, or you're filtering it and re absorbing it and |
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18:36 | secretive and your re absorbing it And so that's It's it's you're still |
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18:41 | rid of some but you're not getting of 100%. You're only getting rid |
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18:44 | about half of what you thought you going to get rid of. If |
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18:46 | were just filtering is really what I'm to get at Mhm. Okay. |
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18:55 | secretion. So, reabsorption is Okay, we're just gonna reiterate it |
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19:01 | sodium goes. Water follows. All ? And because we're sodium is going |
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19:05 | where water is going we're going to osmotic considerations for everything else. |
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19:11 | So, that's the easiest thing that can learn about the kid. |
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19:16 | It's just like reabsorption easy mode. , creation is not that hard. |
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19:20 | just complex in its um in its . All right. So, what |
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19:28 | secretion secretion basically boils down to this you have stuff in your body your |
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19:32 | wants to get rid of faster than capable of doing. All right? |
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19:35 | , if I filter something that would however much is in the fill |
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19:39 | that's that's the most I can get of. Right? So, Let's |
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19:44 | I have 20 molecules Let's start with molecules that are in the plasma let's |
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19:50 | half of them end up in the it. Right. All right. |
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19:53 | see, nothing else happens. That just goes on. I got rid |
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19:56 | 10. But I still have 10 in the plasma and that plasma has |
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19:59 | go all the way through the body ? Show up and then I can |
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20:02 | out half. Right now, I've five and I get rid of |
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20:06 | but I still got five stuck So I have to go all the |
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20:08 | through the body. And now I'm to those weird numbers at 2.5. |
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20:12 | so it's like where does that half ? But you know, just play |
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20:16 | me. We'll just move three. ? So, I'm left with |
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20:19 | And that that's going next go Now I got to one goes and |
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20:23 | I got to go one more round now this one's gonna go which way |
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20:25 | I go? We're gonna be nice move one and it's out. |
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20:28 | that was a lot of rounds to rid of all those molecules. All |
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20:32 | . And let's say it's something that don't want in your body, something |
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20:35 | going to cause you much harm. , I need to get rid of |
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20:38 | faster. So, this is what is for getting rid of things that |
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20:44 | body doesn't want faster than you're normally of doing in the process of |
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20:49 | All right, now, there are simple ones. Protons. Alright. |
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20:55 | are secreted. That's really easy. is going to be across all |
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20:58 | And basically what we're doing, What is the acidity of the body |
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21:01 | the blood's acidity is too high. ? In other words, the ph |
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21:05 | too low. What do you want get rid of protons? So just |
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21:11 | get rid of them. They're gonna be filtered. But you know |
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21:13 | We got too many of them. let's just start grabbing them out of |
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21:15 | blood. We got carriers that can them up and throw them into the |
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21:19 | it and we can get rid of faster than the natural rate person. |
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21:23 | pretty easy. Right, okay, can do the same thing with |
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21:28 | Alright, potassium. Remember we said filtered and then reabsorbed in the proximal |
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21:34 | tubules, but in the distal this is where we're doing our |
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21:40 | All right. And what we're trying do is we're trying to make sure |
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21:43 | we have enough pet potassium in our to make sure the body's functioning |
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21:47 | So, what we're gonna do is saying, oh, well, I've |
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21:49 | too much potassium. So, I've the secretion mechanism. So, I'm |
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21:52 | to start throwing potassium back out in field trip because I've got just too |
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21:56 | of it. That's really the So, what does this look |
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22:01 | It looks like this? Not a picture. Never mind. I thought |
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22:06 | had a better picture of this. right. Anyway. Oh, it's |
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22:09 | the next slide. That's why. , so when potassium countries concentrations are |
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22:14 | in the plasma we're gonna diffuse into interstitial fluid, right, That's a |
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22:18 | diffusion and then what we're going to is we're going to take advantage of |
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22:22 | pump. Here's our pump, We're gonna pump to potassium and we're |
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22:27 | move three sodium out. Mm. a simple pathway. And what are |
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22:34 | doing? We're moving sodium in the convoluted tubules. So, what's going |
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22:37 | happen when we move sodium in when goes water follows? All right. |
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22:47 | know that tattoo I told you to this is this is one of |
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22:51 | All right. Put it right there your arm. You they can't make |
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22:55 | cover up tattoos In the end I don't think maybe they can. |
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22:58 | don't know where sodium goes. Water . Got that. You've covered like |
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23:03 | of the questions. That's biochemistry in nutshell. Alright, Wherever seven goes |
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23:07 | follows. Right. No, probably. Yeah. Okay. |
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23:14 | we're also doing because we also have exchange mechanism in here with chlorine. |
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23:19 | ? So, basically chlorine, potassium moving out together that way. We |
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23:22 | ensure that uh there's not gonna be imbalance here. Now, this is |
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23:27 | controlled through a wonderful little molecule called alone. Have we talked about our |
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23:32 | run yet a little bit. I to bitsy. So, here's Valdosta |
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23:37 | . All right. When do we start producing Valdosta own Well, when |
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23:41 | sodium levels get low, the sodium in our body are low, that |
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23:46 | our water levels are low. That our blood pressure is low. Our |
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23:52 | starts producing valdosta rhone. And what does if we're focusing on this |
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23:58 | Right, That's going to cause sodium be reabsorbed. So water is |
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24:04 | So blood pressure goes up. So austrians measures is responsible for maintaining blood |
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24:10 | . But the other place where we're to see al dossari being produced is |
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24:13 | our plasma potassium levels go up. going to cause an uptick in Valdosta |
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24:18 | production, which basically causes an increase tubular potassium secretion. Sal doctrine has |
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24:24 | major roles here. One is potassium . The other is to maintain blood |
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24:31 | in response to a drop in blood which is usually measured through one of |
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24:38 | three. Either arterial blood pressure, at volume or really a drop in |
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24:44 | ? Where do we measure the drop sodium you guys remember? Mm |
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24:52 | Let's think hard about the last time talked about sodium levels dropping. Was |
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24:58 | last class? Mhm mm. Was last class or was it before the |
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25:15 | ? Mm Students get nervous. Were paying attention? His doctor Wayne? |
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25:22 | stuff up? Yeah, the answer last class. When blood pressure increases |
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25:32 | the different arterial is detected by the cells and it produces Renan. What's |
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25:41 | other mechanism that we cause Renan to produced. We talked about little tiny |
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25:49 | . You guys remember the ducks remember ducks? We talked about ducks, |
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25:56 | said we're monitoring salt concentrations in the a medullary apparatus. We're counting the |
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26:03 | as it's going by at the sodium drop. That's an indicator and a |
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26:08 | in blood pressure. When there's a in blood pressure. I need to |
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26:12 | that blood pressure up. I'm gonna up the process of producing. I'm |
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26:17 | use the macula densest cells to talk the granular cells to tell the granule |
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26:22 | to make Renan and then Renan does and magic happens in blood pressure goes |
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26:27 | . Mhm. Remember that? You , roughly familiar the word Renan. |
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26:37 | familiar. Okay. Mhm. All . But dr wayne. I like |
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26:48 | poppy seed muffins and I got a test tomorrow. How am I going |
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26:53 | possibly get rid of all that opiate of my body. So I don't |
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26:57 | positive for my drugs. Well, body is looking out for you. |
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27:05 | right. We have a bunch of bunch of these carriers that are capable |
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27:12 | recognizing metabolites from these organic molecules, organic and ions. And what they |
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27:19 | is they bind those and when they them in the plasma, they pick |
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27:22 | up and they move them over. what do they belong to basically a |
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27:25 | metabolites, metabolic ways. Certain hormones picked up this way and there's lots |
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27:30 | different ones. Um They're showing you couple of them here but you don't |
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27:33 | to know them by name. There's a lot of them. What they |
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27:36 | is you pick them up and you're them over into the limit, |
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27:40 | So when I have metabolic waste I to get rid of faster. I |
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27:45 | have to rely solely on the Phil to get rid of that material because |
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27:52 | going to take a lot of time that to happen, right? Takes |
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27:56 | five minutes for your blood circulate Right? And so if you like |
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28:01 | said, if you had 20 molecules go 2010 five, 2.5, 1.25 |
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28:09 | six out of it. But we use whole numbers. So at least |
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28:12 | or six rotation, that's 25 minutes get rid of 20 molecules. |
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28:18 | If I could do in two wouldn't that be better five minutes or |
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28:25 | minutes instead? Would that be? that be nice? Yeah. And |
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28:29 | what this does because you can think some of these toxins that are in |
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28:32 | body that are going to cause you harm and your body doesn't want |
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28:36 | And so this is what the secretion is for get rid of those things |
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28:40 | cause great harm. So I'm increasing secretion of this substance cause me |
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28:46 | I encourage the release of ions from carriers unless they get eliminated faster. |
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28:51 | lot of molecules are carried by carriers the blood. So basically if I'm |
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28:55 | the rules of mass action right? basically if I have stuff that is |
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29:01 | versus unbound. Every time I get of my unbound, I'm going to |
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29:05 | to balance out the equation again. guys learned this in chemistry, |
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29:09 | I hope please nod your head and yes because I'm gonna have to go |
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29:13 | there. Start swinging. If if , would you like to see that |
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29:17 | ? Mhm. Me taking out dr , I might be able to take |
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29:21 | . I'm not sure. Um All now again, this is approximate convoluted |
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29:29 | . So where's secretion primarily taking Approximate convoluted tubing. All right, |
|
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29:36 | far so good. Reabsorption easy. it easy wherever sodium goes, |
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29:46 | There you go and wherever water Everything else follows. Right. That's |
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29:50 | his way to think see resources. isn't easy. Yes. Right. |
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29:57 | I don't want body has carriers that up and get rid of things that |
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30:01 | faster rate than normal filtration would take . Where does this primarily take |
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30:05 | Both of them. The proximal tubules the exception of potassium secretion, which |
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30:08 | tied to the production of testosterone distal tubules. You're like man who's going |
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30:17 | go to pharmacy school who wants to a pharmacist? Who wants to play |
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30:20 | drugs. Alright, pharmacy school. ? There's nobody in here that want |
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30:25 | go to pharmacy school when they're liars who lie. All right. |
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30:32 | not expecting anyone coming to ask for letter of recommendation apartments in school, |
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30:36 | ? I don't know. All What we're about to look at here |
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30:39 | that pharmacists really need to care about lot. All right. I'm just |
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30:43 | use this as an example so that guys can understand you have a |
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30:46 | horrible headache. So you go when take your regular ibuprofen, how long |
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30:50 | you take your next ibuprofen to get of the headache? You guys really |
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30:57 | take care of medicine, do I heard the correct answer in |
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31:01 | but you guys I heard four and . Let's let's decide for four |
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31:05 | Six hours. Put your hands up six four I think six hours has |
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31:12 | ? The answer is yes. I grow from six hours. All |
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31:16 | Every six hours you're allowed to take dose of ibuprofen. All right. |
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31:20 | talk about acetaminophen. acetaminophen is How much time between each Tylenol? |
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31:24 | are you allowed to repeat your Four hours? All right, |
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31:31 | How about I leave 12 hours? right. Why? Why do they |
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31:38 | those random numbers? They're not random the way. Right. Why is |
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31:42 | six hours for ibuprofen four hours for me. A set of benefit. |
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31:47 | hours for relief. Right. it's the rate at which the body |
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31:55 | get rid of that uh that uh drug or metabolites of that drug so |
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32:01 | you can take another dose so you build up toxicity. All right vitamin |
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32:06 | . Do you guys know how much C. You can take in a |
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|
32:10 | ? There is a limit. You actually get vitamin C toxicity. |
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|
32:14 | You know anyone. No. Because mean if you eat those tang flavored |
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32:19 | , chewy balls or oh my You go for the gummies. I |
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32:22 | that's just like candy. All I don't buy don't buy vitamins now |
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32:26 | aren't dummies. You know it's hard to sit there going I can only |
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32:31 | one If you look at the dose supposed to be two. But I |
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|
32:36 | I do 1:00 AM in the afternoon it's like a special treat. All |
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32:44 | , Vitamin C. Dose Toxicity. mg. Yeah. So you can |
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32:49 | five taps after that. You can't any more. You have to wait |
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32:53 | it leaves your body. Okay? don't want to know what when that |
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|
32:57 | , how many out. But all . But you have this horrible horrible |
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33:01 | horrible headache. Right, take your three hours later the headache is still |
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33:07 | . Can you take that ibuprofen? . Right. Because it can be |
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33:11 | . So what do you do Go take This is not medical |
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33:16 | Please do not seu doctor Wayne if do this. But this is what |
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33:20 | physician told us to do when we our little poor little Children who had |
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33:24 | fevers that wouldn't go down. It so sad and they would just cry |
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33:27 | they'd be so little hot and you're like oh how do I deal with |
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33:31 | ? I can't dunk them in a water. Anything. Now what you |
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33:34 | is you give them you go with ibuprofen and then three hours later you |
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33:37 | him acetaminophen And then you do ibuprofen hours later. Then see them in |
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33:41 | three hours later and so on so . And notice what you've done. |
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33:44 | stayed within that range of the toxicity being removed and you do it for |
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33:51 | drugs because they're two different drugs that in two different ways. Two different |
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33:55 | . They just both happen to be steroidal. Right? Anti inflammatories. |
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34:02 | right. Say. So what what you talking about this stuff? I |
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34:05 | this word picture of here by the . F. R. G. |
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34:07 | . R. Is the globular filtration . Right. And if we were |
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34:10 | to figure out how how the kidney functioning, what we can do is |
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34:13 | can look at G. F. . And determine whether or not our |
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34:16 | filtering at the proper rates. All . So what you do and they |
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34:23 | this at the doctor's office, you wonder why you pee in the cup |
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34:25 | the doctor's office? It's not because want to have p wars in the |
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34:28 | or anything like that? I don't . They might I don't know you |
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34:32 | work in hospitals. Do you guys things at each other? No. |
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34:35 | sure? I don't know about you guys wear masks and all sorts of |
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34:41 | . I don't know if we can you. All right. Know what |
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34:45 | do is they're they're looking at specific in, you know, in the |
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34:50 | that they can actually measure G fr . And there's there's a basic mathematical |
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34:54 | they use. It's similar to this they don't use this one in particular |
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34:59 | this is usually used with an agent they put in your body. Like |
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35:03 | , not insulin, insulin, which a plant sugar. It's a massive |
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35:07 | sugar that's only filtered. And so they can say, I can look |
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35:11 | the filtration rate by knowing how much put in and then how much comes |
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35:15 | . Right. And so here, This is A G. F. |
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35:18 | . Can be calculated as the concentration whatever it is that you're using |
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|
35:21 | Well, I guess this is the . So here's how much of that |
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35:25 | is in the urine. What is volume of urine that I'm measuring? |
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35:28 | what is the concentration found in the ? That's why they're also doing the |
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35:32 | at the same time. And so you can do is you can calculate |
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|
35:35 | in your GFS fr is low. they say you have kidney disease. |
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35:39 | they send you to the nephrologist who's happy to see you. No one |
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|
35:42 | goes to the nephrologist. Um, basically they can determine why you're |
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35:47 | Not functioning appropriately. All right. , what we're looking at here is |
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|
35:53 | clearance. And that's what those numbers I was talking about. You |
|
|
35:56 | the number of hours it takes. much time does it take to get |
|
|
35:59 | of this material? Now, plasma is weird in the sense that what |
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|
36:04 | doing is they're looking at the clearance the volume of plasma. So they're |
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|
36:07 | how much plasma has to go through before you're cleared of a substance and |
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36:13 | per minute. So it's not the of substance removed. It's the volume |
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|
36:17 | they're focusing on, which to me the weirdest way to measure stuff. |
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36:21 | it makes sense to them. And we'll just let it be All |
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36:25 | Just say they're measuring volume of material you're clearing. Not the amount that |
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|
36:30 | clearing from that volume. That kind makes you know, it's backwards |
|
|
36:35 | But just understand that they're measuring the that you think you would just be |
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|
36:40 | unit that you think would be. backwards. All right. So every |
|
|
36:45 | has different plasma clearance rates. We talked about that with regard to ibuprofen |
|
|
36:52 | acetaminophen in the left and I don't what I believe is what is, |
|
|
36:56 | , what's it naproxen. Yeah. . I just want to make sure |
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|
37:02 | got the sodium part. Right. was the other part. I was |
|
|
37:05 | like, I'm I don't know. All right. So, just how |
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|
37:11 | effective are you able to remove this the body? So, this is |
|
|
37:15 | it boils down to. And this the part that you actually have to |
|
|
37:18 | attention to. Right. So, real simple. And I'm saying that |
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|
37:21 | as a as a trigger. It simple. Right? Look, |
|
|
37:24 | look, if something is filtered but don't reabsorb or secrete then the plasma |
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|
37:29 | rate for that substance is equivalent to G fr. All right. |
|
|
37:34 | in other words, if all I is filter something, then the rate |
|
|
37:36 | it's filtered is its rate of It's pretty stupid. Right? |
|
|
37:42 | that's baseline. Alright. But then have some substances right? There are |
|
|
37:46 | be filtered and reabsorb. So, plasma clearance rate is always gonna be |
|
|
37:50 | than the G fr example of Look at glucose. All right. |
|
|
37:57 | much glucose do you have in your ? If you're a normal non diabetic |
|
|
38:04 | . Mhm. None. Zero. glucose is valuable. You stood in |
|
|
38:11 | for it. You want to keep so, you re absorb it |
|
|
38:15 | So, as 100% reabsorption rate. . If you find glucose in your |
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|
38:20 | something is going wrong either you are processing glucose and storing it up properly |
|
|
38:26 | you're not storing a glucose properly is I can't think of anything else on |
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|
38:29 | of my head. Right. All . So, that's an example, |
|
|
38:33 | is an example of partial, What do we say? Start off |
|
|
38:37 | gets filtered, whatever that unit Right. And then part of it |
|
|
38:41 | reabsorbed and then we secrete it, though we're not supposed to put screeched |
|
|
38:45 | there. But then it gets reabsorbed . So we're only losing half of |
|
|
38:51 | area that we want to get rid that normally in our plasma. All |
|
|
38:56 | . So that would be an example this in terms of uh the substance |
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|
39:03 | filtered and secreted than its plans and rate is going to be greater than |
|
|
39:06 | G fr All right. It's If I'm filtering this much and I'm |
|
|
39:10 | more in, then the amount that getting rid of has to be greater |
|
|
39:13 | the amount that I'm filtering. I , I know these are redundant |
|
|
39:18 | but sometimes we kind of put that out. Look that I'm seeing on |
|
|
39:23 | of y'all's faces just kind of and I want to reiterate the simplicity |
|
|
39:31 | this. All right. Most of drugs that we have in our body |
|
|
39:37 | , you know, we're trying to rid of those metabolites faster than we |
|
|
39:41 | filter them. So, their plasma is greater than the G fr |
|
|
39:52 | We're talking about the renal system, just about the kidney. So, |
|
|
39:55 | need to talk about a couple of structures here. The urinary bladder plays |
|
|
39:59 | role in temporarily storing urine as you're it. All right, you're storing |
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|
40:03 | until Mick Parish in nutrition is a word for peeing. I think we |
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|
40:07 | that last on last week, There are four layers with regard to |
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|
40:12 | . And this is gonna be true a lot of our hollow organs. |
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40:14 | have a mucosa, sub mucosa, . There's an advantage to in very |
|
|
40:19 | terms, the mucosa is the epithelial . The sub mucosa is the connective |
|
|
40:24 | just underneath the epithelial layers. The says the muscle areas that can squeeze |
|
|
40:29 | tube where the hollow organ and the to is the wrapping around um |
|
|
40:34 | that structure that basically creates it from it from ripping or tearing. It |
|
|
40:39 | of creates the boundary for that Now, the bladder is interesting in |
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|
40:43 | it's epithelial to actually can increase and in terms of its size and it |
|
|
40:50 | so through two mechanisms. One is recycling, meaning that it has a |
|
|
40:54 | of vesicles that it can add to surface or take away from the surface |
|
|
40:58 | that you can decrease or increase that area. The other thing that it |
|
|
41:02 | is that it folds on itself like bunch of pleats on the skirt. |
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|
41:07 | looking at all the guys because all girls already know what I'm talking about |
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|
41:10 | . You know, pleats in a are like, let me see. |
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41:13 | I see what head in the back . Okay, I'm gonna draw it |
|
|
41:17 | for you so that you understand. right. A pleat is if you |
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|
41:23 | looking at it from like if this a flat a cloth, a pleat |
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|
41:28 | basically do like So so what would is that I fill up underneath? |
|
|
41:33 | going to happen is this will expand So I get something that's much, |
|
|
41:36 | longer. All right. So that's idea of the bladder is actually fairly |
|
|
41:41 | when it's empty. But then it expand outward in two different ways to |
|
|
41:46 | accommodate all that urine. That is filling up that space. All right |
|
|
41:53 | , if you look at a bladder can see where the ureter comes |
|
|
41:56 | So there's your to your orders. then there's a point where the urethra |
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|
42:00 | in this area underneath. Those three is the lowest point inside the |
|
|
42:05 | The lowest point being actually after but it's formed by these three points |
|
|
42:11 | . So the three points together is to as the triggerman. So basically |
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|
42:15 | in is pushing in through the your and it's basically to go to its |
|
|
42:19 | point and slowly fill upward and And that's when the bladder is going |
|
|
42:22 | expand. All right now the structures are going to innovate this. This |
|
|
42:28 | gonna be the parasympathetic and the sympathetic the parasympathetic is responsible for creating contractions |
|
|
42:34 | give you that urge to go to restroom. All right. Uh |
|
|
42:41 | Urethra is your tube between the bathroom the bladder. All right. |
|
|
42:45 | we have protective mucosa. Just to clear. The female urethra solely serves |
|
|
42:50 | a person uh solely serves the purpose the pathway between the bladder and the |
|
|
42:56 | . Whereas the male urethra, while does have that role, has a |
|
|
42:59 | role as the pathway for Stephen which we'll get to when we talk |
|
|
43:04 | the male reproductive system. So, it's dual functional in the males. |
|
|
43:09 | there are two sphincters that I want point out here. All right. |
|
|
43:12 | have an internal urethral sphincter which is a true sphincter. And we have |
|
|
43:15 | external urethral urethral sphincter which is a sphincter. True sphincters are structures that |
|
|
43:20 | uh skeletal muscle. Right? what we can do is we can |
|
|
43:25 | and regulate that. Whereas the internal is non controllable. This is smooth |
|
|
43:30 | . So skeletal controllable. Non So, what I want to do |
|
|
43:34 | is I want to paint a picture you. Make sure I don't have |
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|
43:37 | extra side. I do. All . So, when the bladder is |
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|
43:41 | the relaxed phase. All right. the bladder is relaxed, basically, |
|
|
43:45 | outlet the internally ritual sphincter is going be at its tightest. All |
|
|
43:50 | And so it's going to prevent materials leaving the bladder. All right. |
|
|
43:55 | , when the bladder is relaxed, other words, there's no pressure |
|
|
43:58 | it's empty. All right. But the external resource center is something we |
|
|
44:04 | control. Right? Have you ever to the bathroom because your parents told |
|
|
44:11 | to we're going on this road You go to the bathroom right |
|
|
44:16 | I don't need to go. You Yes, mom. And you go |
|
|
44:22 | you can right, because you do some control. All right. Or |
|
|
44:29 | the other example. You go into restroom, go to go pee. |
|
|
44:33 | . And the first thing you do you have to kind of relax. |
|
|
44:36 | relax your pelvic floor, don't That relaxation of the pelvic floor is |
|
|
44:43 | your relaxing that skeletal muscle and the begins to flow. All right. |
|
|
44:56 | is not the actual statue that's called P but it's actually very close to |
|
|
45:00 | similar to they were very popular mannequin is is I think in Belgium it's |
|
|
45:06 | actual statuette Was made in the 1600s it's a fountain. It just |
|
|
45:13 | And during the 50s everyone had them their yards. I don't know where |
|
|
45:18 | thing growing up. I was just grandparents had one of these in their |
|
|
45:24 | . Okay. All right. So Mick tradition there are two reflex of |
|
|
45:29 | reflex and a nutrition reflex basically the reflex is gonna occur during bladder |
|
|
45:37 | Now remember this is autonomic. So going to have both parasympathetic and sympathetic |
|
|
45:41 | are involved. And there's also a component that's involved. Alright, so |
|
|
45:46 | regard to the sympathetic, what you're is you're constantly causing the Patricia muscles |
|
|
45:51 | are the muscles that make up the of the bladder to relax or to |
|
|
45:55 | . So as the bladder fills, is basically saying keep relaxing, keep |
|
|
46:00 | , keep relaxing and your bladder fills . All right, simultaneously. What |
|
|
46:04 | doing is it's causing the internal urethral to be contracted. All right. |
|
|
46:11 | with those two things you're in isn't leave. So right now you're not |
|
|
46:16 | yourself because the sympathetic dominates what's going with the bladder. Alright, It's |
|
|
46:23 | its relaxation phase. But when you enough fluid in the bladder um we're |
|
|
46:29 | get to the maturation reflex now with to systematic right? We said that |
|
|
46:34 | can control the external urethral sphincter, right now we're basically contracting that. |
|
|
46:39 | if you can think of the Aretha two gates, two doors, |
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46:43 | The first door is closed, that's externally Rachel's finger and then the second |
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46:48 | is closed. That's the pair of . Or sorry, the sympathetic |
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46:52 | That's the internally research center. Right you don't need another nerve but just |
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46:57 | case that's the panhandle nerve just for . Now, time for the maturation |
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47:02 | . Alright. Four steps basically basically the volume of the bladder fills |
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47:06 | 200 300 mils. That's about that in a bottle, actually hold up |
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47:13 | bottle again. Barrett 500 mils. , we're looking from here to about |
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47:21 | there when your bladder fills up that . That's when you stretched the |
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47:27 | your muscles, the barrel receptors within producers recognize that stretch and say, |
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47:32 | , you know what time to All right. The internal urethral sphincter |
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47:38 | because of the tritium muscle stretch have been stretched. So it's not quite |
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47:43 | the flow of urine out. It , but it's like it's relaxed, |
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47:47 | state. Now right now you're sitting these chairs. If those two things |
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47:52 | right now, would you just let and just let the urine flow? |
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47:58 | . Right. I mean we're not here were like, no, |
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48:02 | it's not time to go the bathroom you start feeling that urge to |
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48:06 | Right? It's like, so what you do? Might do the little |
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48:11 | . All right, here's a couple you can do. Right? |
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48:14 | You say body it's not time for to go the bathroom. Right? |
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48:17 | you can ignore that. Right? what's happening here is that the initial |
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48:22 | the sympathetic is being down regulated, starts going up and those contraction of |
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48:28 | Patricia muscles are basically saying it's time pee And that's where the urge comes |
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48:32 | . All right now, you can that urge. Right? You can |
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48:37 | it off. It'll go away. notice that butt. Check it out |
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48:41 | a little bit. It's gonna go . No problem. All right. |
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48:45 | then about Every 200 300 mils that add to that bladder. Blatter |
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48:50 | um remember me and you can try shake it off, Right? But |
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48:56 | there's gonna be a point where the just says, uh, no mind |
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48:58 | matter. Doesn't work here. I'm boss and I'm going to win. |
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49:03 | , there's gonna be a point where body is going to win and you're |
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49:07 | to just be yourself. All That's around 500 600 mils. All |
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49:14 | . You can also, as I , you can avoid the bladder when |
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49:18 | time or whenever you're told because you control uh, your external urethral |
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49:26 | And you can also press down on bladder. That's actually what's going on |
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49:29 | you force yourself to pee. As you compress the abdominal cavity down |
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49:33 | the pelvic. So, you put pressure on the bladder. The bladder |
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49:37 | that increased pressure. And so basically causes parasympathetic contractions that allows you to |
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49:42 | you internally. Region speaker and out a year. Aren't you excited? |
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49:49 | just learned how to pee today? , Not, not not. |
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49:56 | Okay. I got bad news in couple days. We're gonna learn how |
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49:58 | poop census. All right now, I said, the body can conserve |
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50:08 | or the kidney can conserve water. . And what it can't do is |
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50:13 | you're in has been formed, you go and claim the water from the |
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50:18 | , this is you have to do while you're in the process of making |
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50:22 | right now. Where do we get water from what we get water from |
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50:25 | and from drink? We usually think drink, but we don't think that |
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50:28 | actually carries water and right. But mean, pete take anything that you |
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50:34 | , whether it's tofu or green beans meat. And if you squeeze that |
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50:39 | enough with liquid come out of Yeah. And it would and there's |
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50:45 | of water and most of the food we eat, all right now, |
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50:47 | lose water through our skin in our . We can see the water loss |
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50:52 | from our skin when we're sweating. easy. Houston. The sweating part's |
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50:57 | From our from our mouth. It's lot harder to see that that oral |
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51:02 | , you know, when we breathe , but when it gets cold, |
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51:04 | 50°, you know, I mean, this last weekend we all bundled up |
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51:09 | last weekend. Yeah, I went a football game. I swear to |
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51:13 | . It was Mhm. It was I rather would have stayed home. |
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51:17 | think It was like a total of with the wind. I felt like |
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51:22 | was 40. All right. So happens? You drink too much |
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51:26 | What's going to happen? Well, kidneys are going to remove the excess |
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51:28 | and we're gonna see how it does a second. But if the water |
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51:31 | too low, what it can do it can remove water from that Phil |
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51:38 | before it becomes urine and it can that water back to the body to |
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51:42 | keep the water levels high. All . And the reason the table to |
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51:47 | this is this thing that I keep about this medulla and its osmotic |
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51:53 | All right. So, this is trying to show you here's a |
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51:56 | You can see the kidney on the of the cortex. 30 milli Oz |
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52:00 | is what? Or 300 millions Right? That's like the rest of |
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52:03 | body. So everything in your body roughly $300 million mel's and then you |
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52:09 | down into the medulla and you can there goes 304 100. Yeah, |
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52:12 | got it down to about 1200 million Mel's. All right. Now, |
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52:17 | I recollect your your textbook is goes more detail about this, then I'm |
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52:21 | to talk about all right, that actually can modify and adjust it a |
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52:24 | bit. But I want you to in terms of $300 million 1200 millions |
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52:29 | . All right. And to remind just in case because this Can become |
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52:35 | on exam. If you're isotonic, means you're at roughly $300 million dollars |
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52:39 | . If your hip atomic, that you are less than meaning you have |
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52:43 | salute than you normally do. you have too much water. And |
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52:47 | here this is more solute. So great that millie as well. So |
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52:50 | too little water. So, what seeing here is we're going from an |
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52:54 | state to a hyper tonic state, ? It's getting more and more more |
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53:02 | . All right. Now, if need to remove excess water and I |
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53:06 | want to expend energy to do I just need to have an environment |
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53:09 | draws water out, Right? And what I've created here. I create |
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53:15 | environment that has a higher solute than . So, if I run a |
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53:18 | through there that has aqua por I can pull water out. Can't |
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53:24 | I don't want to pull water out the time. I only want to |
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53:26 | it out when it's necessary. And so, what we're gonna look |
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53:31 | first is how do I create And then the second I'm gonna |
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53:35 | How do I use it? All . And there's a lot of |
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53:41 | I'm seeing the tired looks on the and the shaking of the bodies. |
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53:46 | all right. I was in your . This is the part that I |
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53:51 | consider. And I told you I gonna do this, but I'm just |
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53:53 | keep doing it because I'm me and gonna be me. This is what |
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53:57 | consider the hardest part about the kidney understanding the osmotic gradient. All right |
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54:03 | , why do I say that I if it is as an undergrad, |
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54:08 | a post back as a grad So at least three times. And |
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54:13 | all three of those times, I my fingers in my ears, I |
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54:17 | la la la la la la la . Too complicated, la la la |
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54:20 | la. You can't make me learn . And then I had to teach |
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54:26 | . And I looked at it and like, oh crap, I gotta |
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54:28 | you something. And I looked at like, oh, this is really |
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54:32 | . This isn't as bad as I the engineer is gonna go nuts. |
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54:36 | gonna go like, this is the thing ever. The rest of you |
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54:40 | gonna like, I'm not as hyped this as the engineer, but what |
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54:44 | want to show you here is a that allows us to create these different |
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54:50 | of urine at will when we need . So, our starting point here |
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54:56 | looking at the loop of Henle. , the loop of Henle is a |
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54:59 | current multiplier? If the biologists in department did their job sometime during |
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55:07 | during biology to they talk about counter multipliers. Did they ever talk about |
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55:12 | of current multipliers? I'm gonna have have a talk with dr cheek and |
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55:16 | like, I don't know, it's so long. I don't know. |
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55:18 | right, then they ever talk about birds and the cold water and ask |
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55:21 | their legs don't freeze off. All right. Mhm. Got 20 |
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55:33 | . Yeah this is how it The birds have their arteries and the |
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55:38 | and arteries are going down. The are coming back up, right? |
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55:43 | arteries are carrying hot blood. The are going carrying cold blood back |
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55:49 | And so what you want to do you want to heat up the blood |
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55:52 | so that it doesn't freeze you know cause damage to the heart tissues. |
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55:56 | you also don't want um you know legs to freeze to death. So |
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55:59 | want to make sure that you get circulation. So what you do is |
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56:02 | put an artery right next to a , right? One's going down, |
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56:06 | going up and so they're right next each other. So the heat from |
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56:09 | artery heats up the blood that's going towards the heart. And the blood |
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56:15 | from the from the feet are actually down. So they basically average |
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56:20 | And so they're basically carrying warm blood the legs. And that's why the |
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56:24 | legs don't freeze off when they're sitting the pond when it's you know, |
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56:27 | cold out, right? That's counter because current going one direction is going |
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56:32 | other direction, right there next to other and they're affecting each other. |
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56:35 | when you see the word counter you need to think that the current |
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56:39 | the fluid is going in opposite directions that's what we're seeing with the loop |
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56:42 | Henley, right, the fluid first down and then it comes back |
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56:48 | Now, you also notice out we have the Va's direct to All |
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56:51 | , the Va's director is going down then it comes back up, there's |
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56:54 | current. But look at where they're counter current. The loop of Henley |
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56:59 | right next to the Va's Director, it's going up in the loop of |
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57:02 | e. It's coming the blood next it is going down is descending and |
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57:06 | on the opposite side in the loop where the fluid is going down in |
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57:11 | tube, you'll the blood is going in the Va's director. So we |
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57:16 | a lot of counter current going on . Here's me, testing it |
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57:21 | What's the purpose of the loop of E to establish the counter current |
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57:29 | And what is the VA's director to it? All right, so, |
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57:35 | structures that we're looking at here are for those two aspects of this osmotic |
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57:41 | . All right, now, why it a multiplier? Well, what |
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57:44 | gonna do is we're going to see feedback loop that basically says, |
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57:47 | I'm starting off with 300 million oz and then over time, what's going |
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57:50 | happen is I'm going to become really concentrated and then as I |
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57:54 | I'm going to become dilute again. , I'm actually changing the concentration of |
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58:00 | fluid by multiplying first and then basically some changes along the way. |
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58:05 | this is gonna be happening in the regularly. Net front where we saw |
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58:08 | vast direct us. Right, that's what we're looking at here in |
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58:11 | of structure. Now, to put in a different perspective here, you |
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58:14 | see it from this, you can see that loop of Henle a little |
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58:17 | better. We have the descending and the a sending side. All |
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58:21 | And you can see how it's diving deep. Alright. And what makes |
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58:25 | unique is that the descending side And what's found in there is different |
|
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58:31 | what's on the ascending side. And they're gonna do is we're gonna respond |
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58:35 | each other. Now, the easiest to look at this is this |
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58:42 | I've circled the ascending and the descending for you. All right. And |
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58:47 | on. The descending loop. Well, I guess I wanna start |
|
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58:50 | the a sitting side. That much . What I have here is I |
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58:54 | a series of pumps. Alright. what these pumps are doing in this |
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58:59 | down here, we're passive but up we have these active transport. I'm |
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59:02 | out sodium chloride on the opposite I have aqua porn's And so, |
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59:09 | happening is as sodium comes out? can imagine these are all over the |
|
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59:12 | as sodium comes out, that's gonna water because what whatever sodium goes water |
|
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59:19 | , right? And so as water , the concentration of the sodium on |
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59:23 | inside gets greater and greater and greater greater and greater and greater and greater |
|
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59:28 | greater. Right? Because water is leaving. And why is it leaving |
|
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59:32 | following sodium? But why sodium Well? First off, I'm pumping |
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59:35 | out, Right. But also because is leaving. I also have sodium |
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59:40 | out over on this side. And what I have is I have this |
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59:43 | that is basically drawing water out of system and creating a more concentrated. |
|
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59:47 | now because there's an imbalance, sodium to leave and create equilibrium, but |
|
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59:52 | never able allowed to because we also the Va's director playing a role in |
|
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59:56 | that sodium in the water around. so we end up with is something |
|
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60:00 | really, really concentrated down here at bottom and up at the top it's |
|
|
60:06 | are more similar to what's going on there in the medulla. Now, |
|
|
60:09 | saw the face back here in the and it was just more like all |
|
|
60:13 | . So, we use something like to kind of explain this. There's |
|
|
60:16 | I think a video that or a not a video. It might be |
|
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60:20 | flash animation if those still work. can't remember. It might be a |
|
|
60:24 | now that's going to be on blackboard after class. And it basically is |
|
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60:28 | to put this thing in motion so you can see this. All |
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60:31 | So, you can imagine on one got sodium being pumped out, water |
|
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60:35 | falling on the other side and it's this path pattern so that the fluid |
|
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60:40 | it travels down, getting more and and more concentrated. And then as |
|
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60:45 | traveling up, because you have all sodium, it becomes less and less |
|
|
60:48 | as it leaves. So, what's happen? I'm gonna back up by |
|
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60:52 | time the filtration gets up here in distal tubules, Its osmolarity is three |
|
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60:59 | less then when it started. I've got more watery urine. And |
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|
61:07 | only thing energy I'm using are a of pumps over. Mhm. |
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61:16 | A couple of pumps sitting on that . I don't have to use a |
|
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61:18 | of energy. I'm using osmotic gradients create this mechanism. This is the |
|
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61:28 | I wanted to go, I All right. So, looking at |
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61:31 | fill trade only I'm looking at the , filtration is getting more and more |
|
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61:35 | because water is leaving wise, water because sodium is being pumped out on |
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61:41 | other side. So, as the leaves, the concentration of this |
|
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61:45 | trade gets more and more dense, concentrated. And then As I'm moving |
|
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61:52 | up, sodium is going to be and so it's becoming less and less |
|
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61:57 | until it gets up to about 100 or sorry, Millie Oz Miles. |
|
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62:03 | . If nothing else were to happen now, I've got this tube that |
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62:07 | going to travel back down again. my collecting tubules. My collecting to |
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62:11 | travels right back through that concentration Now, if I have aqua porn's |
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62:17 | the place, water is going to out to where there's a higher concentration |
|
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62:21 | solute. Whereas the higher concentration of , it's out in this environment, |
|
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62:27 | ? But if I don't have a , porn's and the water is just |
|
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62:29 | to flow, right? Or the , going to just flow right on |
|
|
62:32 | . So, what puts the aqua in a place? Well, that's |
|
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62:35 | vast suppressant as the anti diuretic The anti peeing hormone is really how |
|
|
62:44 | think about it. So, I've got to talk about the vast |
|
|
62:48 | . So, sorry. So, ? Why the resurrected? Why is |
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62:53 | important? All right. On the over here, this would be how |
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62:57 | and I would design a blood We'd say I want to start on |
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63:00 | outside. You know, the And I want to go all the |
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63:04 | back down to where um all the and the veins are back to the |
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63:08 | , right? Because that's simple and and I can conceive that pretty |
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63:14 | All right. I'm looking at a faces going out. Sure, I'm |
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63:16 | getting you that. All right. me draw me a kidney. Here's |
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63:20 | kidney, Here's my medulla. here's my helium. So, there's |
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63:25 | artery in my vein. If you I were designing would say no, |
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63:28 | want to go straight there and just up in my vein and be done |
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63:32 | it. Right. That would be capillary system. If I could do |
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63:36 | , because that's easy. Right? it says no. If I did |
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63:41 | , then what would happen is that that I made would draw that sodium |
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63:47 | and then distributed throughout the body. then it would basically break that |
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63:51 | In other words, my osmolarity in in that region would become just like |
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63:54 | rest of my body. So, a useless tool. So, |
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63:59 | what I want to do is I to come down and then I want |
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64:03 | go back up and then I'm going join up with something that will eventually |
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64:07 | back around and get through there. that's a vein, right? That |
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64:11 | gonna allow exchange. And so, that means is that I'm traveling |
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64:15 | I might be pulling sodium out. as I'm traveling back up, I'm |
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64:22 | water and sodium along the way. , I'm maintaining the gradient that I've |
|
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64:27 | . And I'm redistributing stuff so I ensure that the gradient is always gonna |
|
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64:31 | there. It's kind of cool. , it's a little complicated. All |
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64:38 | . So, I've got a tube creates a gradient because I'm pumping sodium |
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64:43 | water sodium on one side and water following on the other and then to |
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64:49 | where the soda and the water I've got a vascular chair, a |
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64:52 | system that basically moves things around to they need to go to maintain that |
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65:01 | . So that's what's going on in you can see comes in and everything |
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|
65:08 | just being exchanged and redistributed. I love how it jumped over like |
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|
65:18 | things. All right back to the . What is that suppressing do? |
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65:22 | , it excellent distal convoluted tubules. introduces aqua porn's when we need to |
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65:28 | water back in our bodies. In words, when I'm dehydrated and I |
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65:33 | get water. I know I can on my kidneys to provide me with |
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65:37 | enough water to help maintain that blood in order to keep me alive. |
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|
65:42 | good. So, what does it ? Well, basically, I'm going |
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65:46 | act on the Luminal cells, the that make up the lumen of the |
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65:51 | convoluted tubules and of the collecting And what I'm gonna do is I'm |
|
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65:55 | insert aqua porn's into their surface. basically holding them back. They're already |
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65:59 | the vesicles and I can actually produce as well. But basically, I'm |
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66:02 | to move those vesicles onward to move to the surface. So now that |
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66:06 | aqua porn's can be useful. when I need water. Well, |
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66:11 | easy mode, all I gotta do turn the uncle porn's water moves from |
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66:15 | fill trait where there's lots of Use that concentration to draw the water |
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66:20 | and now the water is going to picked up by the vase, direct |
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66:23 | and move back into my body without the gradient. Ah But I drink |
|
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66:30 | lot of water. What's going to ? You don't get vasopressin, |
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66:34 | No. Aka porn porn that dilute just keeps or that dilute urine or |
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66:39 | trait keeps going forms. You're in out. It goes water leaves with |
|
|
66:42 | urine. And that's what these two . Here I am starting at the |
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66:47 | 300 mils. I'm adding in 300 miles becomes 1200 or millions. |
|
|
66:52 | 1200 millions miles. Goes up to million. Cosmo's got aqua porn's So |
|
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66:56 | I'm going through my concentration gradient, drawing water out. So by the |
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67:00 | that Phil trait leaves, it's at same concentration through which it just |
|
|
67:07 | I pulled the water back out of out of the filter and put it |
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67:10 | in my body. All right? , by suppressing startup at $300 million |
|
|
67:16 | mel's It says 500 but we're going keep our lives simple. It's gonna |
|
|
67:20 | the same as that over there. goes back up to 100 and 20 |
|
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67:24 | then it travels right down the tube water is not going to be |
|
|
67:28 | So what happens is that that Phil holds on to all of its |
|
|
67:32 | Water leaves your body pretty easy. look at me like, no, |
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67:40 | make it simple for you. Not it's just her. She just grab |
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67:45 | attention front row, that sort of . All right. When there's vasopressin |
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67:50 | when I'm when I'm thirsty, when need water in my body, I |
|
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67:53 | fast suppressant, I draw water out the filter instead of paying it |
|
|
67:57 | Anti diuretic hormone, I have too water in my body. Don't make |
|
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68:04 | suppressant water leaves. How does water pulled back in my body, introduce |
|
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68:10 | porn through the collecting tubules? Or it collecting tubules travel through that |
|
|
68:15 | So, the water gets drawn out that gradient. How we doing on |
|
|
68:21 | ? I'm not too terrible. All . So, sodium load. Remember |
|
|
68:26 | talked about sodium Well, we didn't sodium load simply. Is the amount |
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68:28 | salt you have in your body. many of you have been told your |
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68:31 | life if you drink or eat lots lots of salt, then you'll retain |
|
|
68:36 | . All right. We'll increase your pressure. And it does. There's |
|
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68:39 | evidence for that, but not as as they suggest. All right. |
|
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68:44 | going to put that little cabin on , but we're going to learn it |
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68:46 | way so that you understand it. , So when my salt levels rise |
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68:50 | my body. What's going to happen I'm going to retain water. So |
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68:54 | this natural reabsorption of salt in the convoluted tubules, but there's also me |
|
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69:01 | salt leave the body when salt leaves body, Water is going to flow |
|
|
69:05 | it natural. All right, But say I'm becoming dehydrated down the water |
|
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69:12 | . My body is getting low and blood pressure is dropping. Well, |
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69:15 | I need to do is I need get water back in my body, |
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69:18 | ? So what do I want to ? Well, I want to move |
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69:22 | into my body and then the water going to naturally follow. This is |
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69:26 | the distal convoluted tubules for. I promise you, we're gonna talk |
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69:29 | three of them. So, we've the first one. We just finished |
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69:32 | second one, the loop of Henley the sodium reabsorption. And now we're |
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69:35 | at the distal convoluted tubules. so how do I get sodium to |
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69:40 | back into my body. Well, got this hormone sitting around just doing |
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69:44 | in south Australia. Valdosta introduces sodium channels or post, sorry, put |
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69:50 | potassium pumps. I pump in sodium follows. I pump out potassium because |
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69:56 | don't need it. We'll go eat banana later. I don't know if |
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70:01 | true. All right, So sodium . What we teach is that it |
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70:08 | with SCF volume. In other words salt I eat. You know the |
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70:13 | by sf volume because of that relationship sodium and water. We're going to |
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70:17 | this entire system through is the rain uh angiotensin Valdosta own system called the |
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70:23 | . A. S. Ren. we've already learned about briefly, we |
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70:27 | we have these granular cells that are on the different arterials right there, |
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70:32 | muscle cells. And what they're doing when you stretch them, they produce |
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70:36 | . Renan is an enzyme that goes the blood and then affects the next |
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70:41 | downstream. Sii angiotensin. Alright, , what this is going to do |
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70:46 | going to ultimately result in the reabsorption sodium. Right? And that's |
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70:51 | All right. That's ultimately what it's do. But Renan itself doesn't do |
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70:54 | . It's dependent upon the other hormones to do this. So what it's |
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71:00 | , what Renan is specifically doing is changes a plasma protein called angiotensin angiotensin |
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71:07 | , is converted into a molecule called one 81 81 now is circulating in |
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71:14 | body but it has spent a lot time there when that blood goes into |
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71:17 | lungs, there's a hormone or an enzyme there that converts angiotensin one |
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71:23 | angiotensin two. What's the name of hormone? Or that enzyme? Come |
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71:28 | someone. What's the name of the zone? It's like crap angiotensin converting |
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71:38 | ace. It's not just a place the helpful hardware, man is we |
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71:45 | about ace this last year. What we know about ace? Don't mess |
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71:51 | . Well, it's actually the target this horrible little virus that keeps rolling |
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71:55 | in our bodies. Right? Is right? Am I getting it |
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72:05 | I'm counting on you guys know the so I can make statements. All |
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72:12 | . Angiotensin two does a whole bunch stuff. Alright, there's actually an |
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72:16 | three and an angiotensin for which we don't understand all that much. It |
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72:20 | be a metabolite. It might actually stuff we don't know. Ace isn't |
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72:23 | found in the lungs. Also. angiotensin converting enzyme is primarily found in |
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72:29 | . But as we've looked harder and for it, we find it's all |
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72:31 | the place. So aces everywhere. lungs is like the like the big |
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72:36 | . All right now, what angiotensin does it stimulates the secretion of Valdosta |
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72:41 | . So notice what we have We have the Renan angiotensin Aldo Austrian |
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72:45 | . It tells you what the order . Right? So you just kind |
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72:48 | walk those through. So what does Doctorow do? Well, we told |
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72:52 | write it increases sodium reabsorption and just the collecting ducts. Right? That's |
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72:57 | we just saw. It promotes potassium . So if I'm re absorbing our |
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73:03 | , which is where we're focusing now what's going to happen is I'm going |
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73:06 | draw more water in and when I more water in. I'm increasing blood |
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73:11 | . So you can kind of think the whole pattern that looks like |
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73:14 | And you can use something like this look um I got my rent |
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73:17 | where did I get the running That was the drop in blood |
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73:21 | right? Which is measured by So what I'm gonna do is I'm |
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73:24 | convert this plasma protein into another protein gets converted by ace and the and |
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73:30 | attention to the X on the Plans produce valdosta. And what is |
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73:34 | stones to? It basically acts back the kidneys that says, hey, |
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73:37 | start re absorbing sodium using the sodium pump. And that brings water back |
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73:44 | angiotensin. Does a whole bunch of stuff as well. I know you |
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73:49 | are desperate to get out of but I've got one little thing |
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73:51 | Alright, stimulates thirst. Have you when you're thirsty, what do you |
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73:56 | ? You drink water? And what trying to do is you're responding to |
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74:00 | osmolarity in your body. So basically water uptake, increases blood pressure. |
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74:05 | stimulates there's the other molecule vasopressin. right, so what am I doing |
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74:10 | vasopressin? I'm basically trying to draw out of my blood and back into |
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74:15 | out of my filtration back into my and then also I vase a construct |
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74:20 | increases blood pressure. So what are seeing here? We're seeing an increase |
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74:24 | volume, you know, a fluid or blood volume? We're seeing an |
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74:28 | in pressure. So what does Renan ? Elderhostel own play a role in |
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74:35 | blood pressure? Long term blood Not minute to minute, but more |
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74:40 | day to day, hour to hour blood pressure. This is just putting |
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74:45 | all together and then we have this little bit right here and then I'll |
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74:51 | to the last thing on the next . H. O. Natural credit |
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74:56 | . If I turn something on I to have a mechanism to turn it |
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75:00 | rent an angiotensin, testosterone increases blood , increases fluid volume. So the |
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75:06 | I'm going to detect that increase in is in the heart and my |
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75:10 | Right? And so that a tree a molecule hormone called atrial natural diuretic |
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75:17 | . And what atrial natural peptide does it blocks the activity or really blocks |
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75:22 | production of Renan so that I block those other steps so that I can |
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75:27 | drop my blood pressure and then drop blood volume. So you can think |
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75:31 | it this way angiotensin. Elderhostel alone a VP or a th or whatever |
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75:37 | wanna call it. Just call the A's. Is counter to uh the |
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75:42 | natural peptide A. And P. forays of the Apocalypse one is Is |
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75:49 | the other three before I'm going to . I mean we can talk |
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75:54 | oh no, there's one slide with help. All right, sorry. |
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75:57 | is really really simple basically what this is look in those tubular segments that |
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76:01 | permeable to water, where I'm going reabsorb something, it's always gonna be |
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76:08 | by comparable water reabsorption where sodium goes follows. Thank you. All |
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76:15 | Second one solid excretion is always going buy a comparable water excretion because of |
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76:19 | considerations. All right, Wherever sodium , water follows. All right, |
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76:24 | , you can throw anything at us you want to in there. But |
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76:26 | , that's what it's trying to glasses. If you have a gain |
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76:29 | loss of pure water that's not accompanied a uh a salute deficit, then |
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76:35 | can lead to changes in your CCF . Alright? Or E C. |
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76:40 | . Osmolarity. Now, that's a statement basically says, look, if |
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76:42 | put water in my body without putting the comparable salutes, then I'm changing |
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76:47 | osmolarity. And that should make But I just want to give you |
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76:49 | example of this. All right. I go to the beach and I |
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76:53 | a whole bunch of beer because beer my thirst. What's going to happen |
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76:59 | you don't really have a buy You rent beer and so you're gonna |
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77:02 | out a lot of water because alcohol um vasopressin. And basically you basically |
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77:10 | out all this water. So even you think, for example, you |
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77:15 | be encountering the thirst issues and the of water actually compounding it because you're |
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77:22 | something that doesn't match with this, the uh dehydration is what we're trying |
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77:29 | get at. And if you drink lot of water, you're gonna be |
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77:31 | a lot of water. There you . There you go. That's that's |
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77:35 | kidney now, as you're leaving and up. Just let you know everything |
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77:39 | here on out, I think, even easier than this. You're looking |
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77:45 | me like, this wasn't easy. , if this wasn't easy, then |
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77:47 | have things to look forward to digestive . Food in my back mouth, |
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77:52 | on the other side, I And then the last two is reproduction |
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77:56 | reproduction. Which is what I live . If I could talk 27 x |
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78:01 | reproduction, I would I do teach class like that. All right, |
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78:07 | guys you have a great day. |
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