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00:02 | Yeah. Okay. It looks like turned on. I think so, |
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00:09 | least. Yeah. Hopefully this will lecture record. If you didn't |
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00:13 | lecture from Tuesday, didn't record. go find another older semester. I |
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00:19 | about the same thing every semester. just funniest in this semester. |
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00:25 | um, today's the last day of . Yay. Ah See that's that's |
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00:32 | you get an A in the class you Oh man. Um Just a |
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00:39 | . I know some of you are to forget. So put it |
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00:41 | your phone's turning on the alarm. it triple important. Whatever your views |
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00:45 | due at midnight tonight. Get them . Alright. That's a good way |
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00:49 | lose points that are easy to Right? So get them done. |
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00:56 | , so today, what we're gonna is we're going to talk about uh |
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01:01 | itself. We've spent our time we at the male reproductive system. We |
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01:06 | out what it's supposed to do. is the male reproductive system supposed to |
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01:11 | ? Make sperm deliver sperm? What And then we talked about the female |
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01:14 | system was the female reproductive system responsible everything else, right? Kind of |
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01:20 | real life. Right? And so we're gonna do is we're gonna take |
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01:24 | two systems and understanding them and then gonna look at the process of how |
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01:28 | go about reproducing. And again, just gonna reiterate this is not a |
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01:31 | talk. I mean, this is the extent of the sex talk right |
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01:35 | . The sexual response cycle. And so we talk about this because |
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01:40 | sexual response cycle is how we get this stuff going downhill to happen. |
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01:46 | right. And so when we say response, that's the anatomical and physiological |
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01:50 | that occur that stimulate the reproductive Alright. And so both sexes have |
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01:57 | exact same stages. They go through exact same stages maybe at different rates |
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02:01 | different speeds. All right. But idea is that there's these four |
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02:05 | the first stages excitement. Then Plateau. Is that small period of |
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02:09 | just before orgasm. Then you have and then you have resolution. |
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02:15 | So in essence, to go from to the next, there has to |
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02:19 | some sort of stimulation that's going to you from one to the next. |
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02:23 | right. And so it's this continuous . So you go from excitement to |
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02:27 | . But if you remove the then you'll fall back to excitement and |
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02:32 | eventually to non arousal. And so the idea is that you're constantly moving |
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02:37 | a result sexual stimulation through these stages orgasm is reached. And then you |
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02:42 | into resolution. Now, here's the thing and one of the reasons why |
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02:47 | spend more than 30 seconds just mentioning is that females do not have what |
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02:53 | have. Well, technically, that's , but at the end we have |
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02:59 | resolution period. Men have what is a refractory period. Females do not |
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03:04 | this and what the refractory period is this period of time where in |
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03:09 | , there's no amount of erotic stimulation can cause you to return back into |
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03:15 | sexual response cycle. Right? So a short period of time now, |
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03:20 | period of time Is going to be upon age. So the younger you |
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03:25 | , you can return quicker into the . But as you age, it |
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03:28 | more and more difficult. Which makes because really the reproductive years or the |
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03:32 | years, even though males can reproduce into their 80's and probably even |
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03:39 | Um but the idea here is that basically is this period of time where |
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03:44 | you have orgasm and then you go resolution and you're stuck there and then |
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03:49 | done. Whereas women can actually go orgasm to resolution back to plateau orgasm |
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03:55 | . They can literally stay in that indefinitely. You know? Um So |
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03:59 | just one of these uh unique Now, there's lots of stipulations or |
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04:05 | hypotheses why this occurs. Um and really not important. But if you |
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04:10 | to talk about it, we can what's interesting is that, so what |
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04:15 | can go through these constant cycles that stopped. It's interesting. You |
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04:20 | you know, everyone's like, all , I'm all about orgasm, but |
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04:23 | interesting men, when we go through response, go through great refraction and |
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04:29 | all over again. Each subsequent orgasm a decrease in pleasure, which is |
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04:34 | driving force as to why we do , but also less semen during |
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04:40 | And so there's actually a finite amount semen that's actually reserved. And so |
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04:45 | you do, it's like about four . I think it's like three ejaculation |
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04:49 | how much semen we haven't reserved. it's not like we're going to do |
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04:53 | each ejaculate Instead. It's like you your first the jacket and the next |
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04:58 | like, yeah, we're not gonna you so much sperm this time. |
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05:00 | so you're gonna get like maybe 50% then you're getting 50%. So it's |
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05:05 | even less and less and less as go along now. Why that happens |
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05:09 | ? Well, how long does it to make sperm? About 80 days |
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05:14 | while you're making 80 million a if a normal ejaculate is somewhere between |
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05:19 | and 500 million, you know, gonna take you about three days to |
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05:24 | enough sperm to be able to produce full ejaculate again. So, |
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05:30 | you can kind of think it's a if again, if all the job |
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05:34 | a male is is to make sperm deliver sperm if they're delivering all their |
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05:38 | , then they've lost their jobs. that's kind of the rationale behind |
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05:43 | or at least the biological rationale whether not that's true is something entirely |
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05:49 | All right. So what we're gonna is we're asking the question is |
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05:53 | How do we make a human. so really that sexual response cycle is |
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05:59 | is really there? That's the population that we can bring these two gametes |
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06:05 | . Alright. And so obviously in Mail, we have an ejaculation. |
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06:09 | , you do not need to have orgasm to ovulate. In fact, |
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06:12 | orgasm is kind of a bonus to to sexual congress. I'm gonna use |
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06:17 | word Sexual congress. It's a fun . Picture all these people walking around |
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06:23 | and stuff and harrumphing a lot. right now. All right, So |
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06:29 | is what we're shooting for here. . And so what what we're dealing |
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06:33 | is we're bringing that over, um ovulating over which only occurs once per |
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06:37 | . So, it's a very specific within that 28 day period, when |
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06:42 | oocyte is going to be released. . And what we're gonna do is |
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06:45 | going to try to bring that with sperm and bring them together. All |
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06:50 | . So, we're gonna be restoring deployed number of chromosomes that we brought |
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06:53 | at the beginning. This deployed chromosome going to have either X from the |
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07:00 | or Y from the mail. Always X from the female. So, |
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07:02 | determining sex of the new organism at point, and we're going to initiate |
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07:06 | metadata program. So, there's a bunch of stuff that's going on |
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07:11 | Thanks. Remember how I said things kind of complicated. Alright. |
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07:15 | the first step is we're gonna have activate the sperm which is the process |
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07:20 | that activated sperm is going to have break through these protective barriers that are |
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07:24 | to protect the oocyte. You're going have to have the sperm on the |
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07:28 | side actually recognize each other. They recognize each other, They can't |
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07:33 | And remember in the epidemic we added these proteins so that the oocyte can |
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07:38 | be recognized in the first place. in fact this is one of the |
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07:42 | interesting things. One of the arguments speciation is that if there's this arms |
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07:47 | between the oocyte and sperm because they're constantly mutating these surface molecules. And |
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07:54 | if there's a point where they can't that they can't reproduce or be re |
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07:58 | can't produce offspring. So it's kind this interesting dynamic that's going on then |
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08:04 | you get that recognition then you can the two plasma membranes fuse and then |
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08:08 | gonna have to stop any other sperm coming in because you now have the |
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08:12 | complement of genetic material. So any genetic material would be problematic. So |
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08:17 | got to prevent that from happening. right. And then you're going to |
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08:22 | to remember we were we went through is one because that LH surge we |
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08:26 | the search but we still had Miles to to complete. So we've got |
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08:29 | complete that we got to get rid that excess D. N. |
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08:32 | Outside of the other side. And once all that happens then it's okay |
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08:36 | bring the two pro nuclear together. now you have this new offspring. |
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08:42 | . This new organism. So it's ovum and the sperm that are gonna |
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08:46 | fusing now. I think I'm gonna this in a little bit here down |
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08:49 | road. But I want to point out here because this is a really |
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08:52 | picture. All right this is a sperm and mouse oocyte but it's you |
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08:57 | do this as human. How do know? It's well I thought it |
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09:01 | mouse maybe not. It's hard to you mouth sperm are really easy to |
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09:06 | . Mouse and rat have these Alright so you you've seen the picture |
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09:09 | human sperm and human sperm kind of like a tadpole right? Like so |
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09:14 | sperm they look like elf shoes had weird shape to them. So you |
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09:21 | look at a picture and oh yeah a rodent. That's and then like |
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09:25 | why do they do that? I . All right. But what I |
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09:33 | you to do is you see on this is that oh site. And |
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09:36 | you can see those that that Those are the recognition proteins found on |
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09:41 | surface of the oocyte. This is allows the sperm to recognize what you're |
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09:46 | that oocyte. Alright. And you see it's everywhere except for one little |
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09:50 | there's a bald spot. See the spot that indicates that this offspring is |
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09:55 | to be bald in the future. . No, no, Actually it's |
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10:01 | site that says I don't want the to bind at this particular location. |
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10:07 | do you think is on the other of that bald spot? If you |
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10:13 | to guess if you had to why would I want sperm not to |
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10:18 | in this particular area? You can of look at the list here. |
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10:25 | . Membranes, fused sperm are blocked of diagnosis, nuclei fuse. What |
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10:34 | you think? Huh? The That's right. That's the pro |
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10:41 | And we say pro nucleus because remember a half nucleus. It doesn't have |
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10:44 | full complement of DNA. That's where the female or the oocytes pro nucleus |
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10:51 | located. And so you wanted to able to go through its division without |
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10:56 | interfered with by the sperm. So want the sperm nuclei can be anywhere |
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11:00 | for right here where we're doing a bit of work. And so that's |
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11:03 | it separates it out and that kind neat I think in the meat. |
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11:08 | . Yes, sir. No, they're more or less all round. |
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11:15 | wow, I got that super sound . Yeah, no, they're they're |
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11:20 | or less round. It's the sperm is what's unique and it's not every |
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11:25 | has. It's just there's something about rodents that create that weird shape and |
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11:29 | , I don't know why that I should know. I mean since |
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11:32 | do when you do research on you primarily you're not going around milk |
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11:35 | humans. You're Mhm. Basically getting Alright. Yeah. So he said |
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11:45 | right. Basically it is surrounded. a lot there's lots of different proteins |
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11:51 | the surface but some of them are proteins. In other words, there's |
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11:53 | be proteins specifically located not on the but on the body portion of the |
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12:01 | where that interaction takes place. So recognition proteins are there. We're gonna |
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12:05 | this a little bit later when we the plasma membrane fusion. But they're |
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12:10 | they're so those be that interaction. what we're doing is we're saying you |
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12:14 | interact anywhere on here. So we these proteins everywhere so that wherever you |
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12:20 | through the zona pellucida, there's a of recognition with the exception of this |
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12:25 | little spot right there. So there's . Yes. It's it's private |
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12:38 | So, the answer is kind of . It's part of the cellular |
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12:42 | what they're doing. So they're kind holding the nucleus often reserve until my |
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12:47 | two is complete. And what we're see we never really talked about what |
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12:50 | at the end of my Asus. . So we have my Asus one |
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12:53 | so we're getting this psychokinesis, just you see in mitosis, basically you |
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12:57 | something that gets drawn off, we that a polar body. All right |
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13:01 | you have your cell and all that D. N. A. Goes |
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13:05 | into a polar body. And so your secondary oocyte it still has excess |
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13:09 | . N. A. And so you extrude that excessive D. |
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13:12 | A. That's going to form the polar body and then now you have |
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13:17 | nucleus that's or pro nucleus that's capable being fused with and it's really not |
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13:23 | this point nucleus they're basically it's disorganized you bring the things together and you |
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13:27 | the alignment and then you start doing division my topic division. So and |
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13:33 | in there is a lot of research on this. I mean um and |
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13:37 | like what proteins are available, what . RNA is available. What things |
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13:41 | within minutes. Like minute after minute to minute three. So it's |
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13:46 | of cool but there's there's all these , this machinery in place to ensure |
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13:50 | all the right things are happening in . All right. This is again |
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13:55 | I encourage you before you graduate. you're not graduating it is take a |
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13:59 | class. It is like I said you if you like biology, developmental |
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14:04 | is one of those classes where you're you get blown away going. This |
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14:07 | incredible what goes on. It's a of molecular biology and some other types |
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14:12 | biology that you've already been exploring or least in theory have been exploring. |
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14:18 | I wanna do is I want to kind of talk about capacity ation |
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14:20 | So what we're gonna do, we're gonna kind of walk through this list |
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14:23 | all these steps and really remember one it gets next, which begets the |
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14:27 | begets the next. I have fun this particular page because remember what we |
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14:31 | , we said the sperm gets goes into the vagina. We have |
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14:35 | that fiber network that kind of pace the Sperm to the walls of the |
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14:40 | . And about 20 minutes later the plasma like material, it's called seminar |
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14:48 | basically breaks everything down now the sperm moving and they start moving into the |
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14:54 | and on into the over ducks. . And then what happens is is |
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14:58 | this quiescent period where the sperm are told to just kind of hang tight |
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15:03 | rest up. Alright now this signal actually a signal that's that's coming from |
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15:09 | female reproductive track. And basically it says sperm hang out here, we'll |
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15:14 | you know when it's time to start again. Alright, and this can |
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15:18 | for about five days. Now the process of capacity Haitian really refers to |
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15:25 | all this stuff on within the epidemic then coming into the report of the |
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15:31 | reproductive tract. Alright. And then it again. So it's kind of |
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15:34 | broad period of basically making the sperm , activating them deactivating them. And |
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15:44 | reactivating again. So that's what really . Ation covers all of that |
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15:49 | And what I want to point out is something I think is kind of |
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15:53 | . You know, if you ever a health class in texas, you |
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15:56 | had a coach who taught you that , who probably had a background in |
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16:02 | , right? And I had I've the most interesting conversation with students in |
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16:06 | . It's like one and they're there is never a bad question you |
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16:10 | ask in a class like this one asked said, I was taught that |
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16:14 | dies on the contact with air, that true? And I'm like, |
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16:19 | do you think? And you because again, you gotta think a |
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16:24 | bit like when you hear on the omicron variant, you should stop for |
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16:28 | second and say think, what does mean when it says that it's more |
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16:32 | virulent, you know, more but less dangerous. All right. |
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16:38 | those two words in your mind means something. Right? So you have |
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16:41 | understand, What does it mean to infectious? What does it mean to |
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16:43 | this? So, I asked the said, what do you think that |
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16:46 | ? You think that's true that sperm on contact with their and of course |
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16:50 | was a young woman, she's I don't know. I said, |
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16:53 | right, well let's think about sex a second. Do you think that |
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16:56 | copulation there's air in the vagina? she thinks Bedford says, yeah, |
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17:01 | think so. It's like that's You do not have an internal |
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17:05 | right? There is air everywhere. does sperm die when it goes in |
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17:09 | vagina? And she's like, And I said that's right. It |
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17:12 | die in contact with their sperm can out. You know that's normal. |
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17:19 | in an environment like the vagina it's going to dry out. So what |
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17:23 | it do? Well, we're gonna . But some of that sperm is |
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17:26 | find its way up into the over and they're the female reproductive track. |
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17:31 | tells the sperm this is where you . What did they tell you about |
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17:35 | female reproductive tract it wants and And if it could if it was |
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17:43 | to be pregnant, it is seeking that its purpose is to bring the |
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17:48 | and the ova together. So what doing is we're waiting for an O |
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17:53 | . So sperm can hang out for five days. That's about their lifespan |
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17:56 | they start deteriorating. All right now materials in the acro zone that are |
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18:05 | to destabilize, right? Or the . There's stuff in the reproductive tract |
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18:10 | destabilizes the aca's um So it's getting to become become become reactive prostate |
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18:15 | Remember it's going to suppress that motility And then it's gonna activate it and |
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18:18 | you get the suppression again from the reproductive track and then the female reproductive |
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18:23 | releases a signal that says, okay is the time for you to start |
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18:27 | when you think that is right after by the way, I'm sending an |
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18:34 | to you. So um Wake Alright, here's the fun part. |
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18:39 | think again this is I think is . This is why I get so |
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18:42 | about this. It doesn't just like them all up at the same |
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18:45 | Alright, let's just say you have sperms sitting in your over duct. |
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18:49 | ? It will say. Alright, 20,000 Wake up now, is it |
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18:53 | saying the 1st $20,000? Just sending signal about you know, a quarter |
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18:57 | 20% of them start becoming what it's . Hyperactive. Not like a child |
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19:02 | sugar, although more so than they . So they start swimming more |
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19:09 | And what they're like is they are to sharks on a blood trail. |
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19:15 | you ever watch Shark week? All , put blood in the water. |
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19:20 | does the shark doo boom, starts these wide swings and what he's doing |
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19:24 | trying to narrow and where do I the blood sperm is doing the exact |
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19:28 | thing. They become hyperactive. They're a chemical trail to where the oocyte |
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19:33 | . Now if you happen to swim the wrong over duct. Well, |
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19:36 | out of luck. There's not gonna a signal. You're just going to |
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19:38 | of swimming around going I don't know to go, but if you went |
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19:41 | the right one all of a sudden you have a beeline to where you |
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19:44 | to go. And this is what hyper activation is. Notice who's given |
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19:49 | signal? The female. All We did our jobs as the male |
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19:55 | the sperm and delivered the sperm. , it's the female's job to do |
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19:59 | the other work. Sorry. All . So, I like this chart |
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20:06 | it kind of gives you a real . Now, remember we're saying we're |
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20:09 | to use a simple number. We're gonna call 300,000 or 300 million |
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20:14 | Alright, it's an easy number. can be as low as about 180 |
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20:18 | about 180, maybe, maybe a bit less. That's when you become |
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20:24 | . Right? And then the top is like 500 million. Alright, |
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20:29 | sperm is gonna be deposited in the here. They're going about 180. |
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20:32 | showing you here. Right. And what you're gonna have to use that |
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20:35 | has to traverse the wall of the . Go through the cervical canal up |
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20:39 | the uterus and along the aqueduct, I already told you is not a |
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20:42 | horn tube, but basically a maze convoluted of convoluted epithelium that kind of |
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20:49 | up and down. So lots and of riga and dead end pathways. |
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20:52 | right. So what happens? Well of that sperm is gonna leak out |
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20:56 | the vagina after copulation. Some are to die in the environment. Some |
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21:00 | not motile motile. In other words they're just nonfunctional in general and then |
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21:06 | aren't even going the right direction You know you're supposed to go this |
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21:08 | but you're going that way because remember not sentient, they don't know what |
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21:12 | doing. They're just swimming. They're and there's parasol tick action that's helping |
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21:16 | moving along. So there's contracts of contractions of the geometry. Um There's |
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21:21 | in the vagina there's contraction along the of the overdose. Each of them |
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21:25 | reverse peristaltic action, drawing the sperm and upward. All right. But |
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21:33 | get to the egg you need to where it is and that's where the |
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21:36 | taxes comes in now for the longest we had no idea what the signal |
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21:42 | . All right. And it turns the signals progesterone in the context of |
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21:46 | oocyte it's releasing progesterone and there are receptors that are located on the side |
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21:53 | the sperm there called the Casper Cat C. A. T. |
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21:58 | c A. T sp er It's a calcium plus sperm receptor and it |
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22:06 | to progesterone progesterone binds it opens up channel calcium flows in. That makes |
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22:11 | sperm get all hunky dory happy and hyper activation alright and it's basically what |
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22:17 | doing is you're following that progesterone Yeah, it's amazing stronger silverback. |
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22:28 | . Take the dice rolling. Better swimmers are going to get further |
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22:33 | deeper. Right? But the argument that is this better genes? It's |
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22:38 | a better it really is the luck the draw. I mean if you're |
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22:42 | sperm that gets deposited pointed the wrong . Right? I mean, good |
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22:47 | . Now. Maybe you get yourself around to go the right direction. |
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22:50 | you you know, know, swim . So there's again, so there's |
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22:54 | there's no signal that directs the initial portion. It's just merely a function |
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23:01 | your position and how you got Right? You can have sperm that |
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23:06 | in circles. That's all they do just swim in circles. All |
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23:10 | Is that a bad? I it might have the best genes, |
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23:12 | it just wasn't correctly built when you the sperm. Right. And that's |
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23:18 | kind of thing. There are 150 chemicals in seaman. Who knows how |
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23:23 | mean, I can't even tell you many different types of proteins are on |
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23:27 | surface. And what sort of But there are a lot of |
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23:30 | The epidemic in length is six m length. If you unwind it and |
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23:36 | making modification along its entire length. lots of stuff going on there. |
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23:42 | the argument we always make right, these are the ones with the good |
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23:46 | . Not necessarily there just the luckiest . All right. The fastest |
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23:55 | Alright. So where you're trying to to is right here, is that |
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23:58 | ? Right? That's just the region different regions um As I as I |
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24:03 | . And so that's the place where takes place is in the ambulance. |
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24:08 | , when you get to the this is what this is what you |
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24:11 | to deal with. All right. , what we're looking at here, |
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24:14 | the oocyte. Alright. You can see this is where the boundary of |
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24:18 | plasma membrane is. Alright. And just outside that there's a barrier proteins |
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24:24 | the zona pellucida? There's actually three in there might be four proteins. |
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24:29 | remember off the top ZP one, two Zp three. And I think |
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24:33 | might be 1/4 1. And they up this protein barrier that serves as |
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24:37 | of like a shell. It's a barrier between the oocyte and the external |
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24:42 | . But when that oocyte was was , it went with it. A |
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24:48 | bunch of granite closest cells that we to as cumulus cells. When you're |
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24:51 | word cumulus, what do you think accumulate? What do you hear? |
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24:56 | of clouds. That's what looks It looks like a bunch of clouds |
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25:02 | the outside. All right. That's they're referred to as a cumulus. |
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25:05 | like a cloud and then they refer this structure as the corona. Radio |
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25:10 | the radiating crown. See you already off life as princesses or Princess. |
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25:18 | see. Right. But what it basically, it's a bunch of these |
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25:22 | and these cells are held together with and there's proteins that they're producing that |
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25:27 | basically allowed to expand. And so happens is the corona radio tas has |
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25:33 | it, a bunch of glycoprotein and starts breaking down. But really when |
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25:37 | breaking down like what you're seeing So all those cells right there, |
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25:40 | are these cumulus cells, you can the sperm kind of in between and |
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25:45 | . But all this clear space in is not clear space. That's a |
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25:48 | of proteins. So you're now a swimming between cells and proteins. Trying |
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25:54 | wiggle your way in up to the pellucida, which is in your |
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25:59 | All this stuff is in your right? It's like the cute |
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26:02 | I'm talking to the guys. It's the cute girl at the front of |
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26:04 | bar that you have to get through crowd and then get through the people |
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26:09 | the bar to be able to talk her. So you guys know what |
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26:13 | talking about. So how do we through the corona radio? Well, |
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26:21 | the tail that hyper activation is what's you through. It's the produces that |
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26:29 | allow you to press through the proteins the cells to ultimately come up to |
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26:34 | zona pellucida. When you get to zona pellucida that ac resume we built |
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26:38 | basically a sack filled of enzymes that responsible for breaking down the proteins of |
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26:44 | zona pellucida. So when it comes contact, there's proteins on the on |
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26:48 | acro zone that recognize the zona pellucida that causes the ac resume reaction to |
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26:54 | the enzymes. And what you do you start breaking it down and that |
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26:58 | the tail start working even harder. so what you're doing is you're acting |
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27:02 | of like a drill to break through proteins. And then what happens. |
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27:07 | this is not showing a good picture it is that once you get in |
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27:11 | escape through. And then what you is you lie inside like this, |
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27:17 | come in that thing because the proteins allow you to recognize the oocyte are |
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27:23 | along the body of that sperm. you get in there and then you |
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27:29 | that connection. You're lying in there then you get fusion of the |
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27:34 | All right. And so now, , the protein of the head of |
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27:37 | . It's the body of the See, I need to change my |
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27:40 | when it's proper Alright. And that's initiate that this reaction. And what |
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27:45 | slide shows units from your book. like look, there's lots of calcium |
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27:48 | stuff like that calcium is like the signal here. You can actually watch |
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27:51 | . It's pulses of calcium that that seeing that are taking place. And |
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27:56 | these calcium uh pulses that are serving signals that help the that basically signal |
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28:03 | process as we move forward. Alright notice we haven't even gotten to the |
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28:10 | down here. We're basically only at point now We only want one |
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28:19 | I don't want to sperm two sperm much d. n. a. |
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28:22 | when you hear the term Paula sperm . It's referring to more than one |
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28:27 | . So that's what we're trying We're trying to block this process. |
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28:30 | called the block to Paula sperm And so what we're gonna have is |
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28:34 | gonna have a what is called the reaction. Now, you can see |
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28:37 | here they're showing you these cortical They're literally lined up along the |
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28:42 | All right. And what these do they contain um materials that cause um |
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28:51 | to do two things first, you the organization of the zona pellucida. |
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28:57 | again, to this day, I don't know how this happens. So |
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29:01 | just have to forgive me. But pretend that the the zona pellucida proteins |
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29:06 | lying this way the coral core reaction us the zona pellucida proteins to align |
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29:11 | this. They change their shape and interaction. And so they're no longer |
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29:16 | by the sperm. So sperm can't through the zona pellucida. But sometimes |
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29:20 | get more than one sperm who break the zona pellucida and now they're actually |
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29:25 | to bind. And so it's whoever to the other side first is going |
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29:28 | be the winning sperm. So what gotta do is once someone crosses the |
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29:33 | line, you've got to make sure no finish line for them to cross |
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29:37 | future ones. Right? So the here is that the cortical reaction pulls |
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29:42 | all the binding proteins on the surface the oocyte. So that once one |
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29:48 | sperm fuses none of the others And it's an incredible reaction to watch |
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29:53 | like it's like a tidal wave that kind of occurs over the surface of |
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29:58 | cell. All right. Now, , the signal here is basically calcium |
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30:03 | that serves as that signal. All . And again, you're getting |
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30:08 | And so it's the when you watch stuff and see it in real |
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30:12 | it's like, oh wow. Each represents something. Yeah. Uh |
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30:20 | Is there a picture of? there's actual videos of it where where |
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30:26 | I'm not sure how they tagged whether the calcium is radioactive or the receptors |
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30:33 | flashing color in response. But you watch the waves of calcium wash over |
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30:39 | cells as they go through their Yes, it's actually it's like I |
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30:45 | , there's I bet you if you you look hard enough, there's probably |
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30:49 | on youtube. But again, it's or not someone was thought this was |
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30:53 | enough to post it on there. . All right. So now remember |
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30:58 | we said, we have to re mitosis. We're just going through the |
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31:01 | so we have to reinitiate reinitiate And so that's gonna trigger that second |
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31:06 | division. Alright. We're gonna shed polar body. So they're trying to |
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31:11 | you the polar bodies here. The one would have occurred after moses, |
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31:14 | at ovulation. The 2nd 1 gets here. Now sometimes you'll see a |
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31:20 | polar body and that usually means that of those polar bodies went through a |
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31:24 | nuclear division. So it went through second biotic event as well. But |
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31:28 | don't care because it's basically DNA that's going to do anything. So sometimes |
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|
31:33 | see a third one. But that's . Alright. The key thing to |
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31:37 | away from this is because I know asked this question is how many gametes |
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31:42 | from? Oh genesis? Just Right, You start off with a |
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31:50 | that goes through two divisions but you're you're shedding off these things as useless |
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31:55 | For Spermatozoa Genesis. How many Gambians you end up with four. |
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32:03 | now those two nuclei, what we to the pro nuclear because they're happy |
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32:08 | will then come together they fuse and the genetic material then starts beginning the |
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32:13 | process and so this new deployed cell a unique organism. Alright. It |
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32:19 | half the DNA of mom, half DNA of dad. It's not all |
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32:22 | D. N. A. It's completely separate organism. Alright. And |
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32:27 | we do is refer to this at stage as a zygote. All |
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32:31 | So it's a single deployed cell at point. So do we see those |
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32:37 | kind of how we go through All right. There's just a lot |
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32:40 | stuff that happens, but it happens very quickly. And so this is |
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32:44 | occurring. This these last stages from to here is probably about an hour |
|
|
32:48 | so. It's not very long I'm not giving the developmental biology |
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32:56 | I'm just gonna let you know right this is like dipping our toes in |
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33:02 | like nothing. All right. But want to do is I want to |
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33:06 | through and kind of say how do get to that full formed baby? |
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33:11 | right. And in a really really period of time. So what we're |
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33:14 | do is we're gonna, the zygote what's going to go through these nuclear |
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33:17 | . So it's you're gonna see DNA . So this is trying to show |
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33:20 | here's our secondary oocyte. We get . Now we have our oh here's |
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33:25 | two pro nuclear and then we have zygote. And then what we're gonna |
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33:27 | is we're gonna go through my topic . We go from one cell to |
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33:30 | 2-4. And then after eight, don't go to 16 at this |
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33:36 | You're already starting to see differentiation of cells. All right. And so |
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33:41 | can see anywhere between 12 and 16 at this point. So, already |
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33:47 | starting to divide the cells up into populations. And again, lots of |
|
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33:51 | has been done on this. And can actually see which proteins are being |
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33:55 | on, which proteins are being turned . Where does the maternal RNA go |
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34:00 | we turn that stuff and destroy it replace it with the embryonic or the |
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34:04 | RNA? It's again kind of Alright. But I want to point |
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34:09 | here, through all of this, still have a zona pellucida. |
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34:15 | I hate to tell you this at point in your life. You hatch |
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34:18 | that kind of cool. I actually . You're a lizard person. |
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34:23 | Maybe not. All right. And what's happening is that these cells are |
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34:28 | and they can't grow their getting stuck there. So, we get this |
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34:31 | compact structure and it's referred to as . And the the organism at this |
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34:38 | is referred to her is referred to a memorial. Alright. How many |
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34:42 | speak spanish. What sword for Blackberry ? Same route. Right. It's |
|
|
34:53 | latin root moral. More Ebola. take a look at this sucker. |
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35:00 | kind of looks like a raspberry tea blackberry teeth kind of? Yeah, |
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35:04 | that's where he got his name. . Looks like a blackberry. |
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35:08 | Check. Move on. All Now, all these cleavages, look |
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35:12 | they're taking place. None of this taking place in the uterus. It's |
|
|
35:16 | taking place here within the over Again, poorly drawn to show you |
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35:20 | it looks like a trumpet. It's a trumpet. Not. What's interesting |
|
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35:26 | what keeps it here is the smooth in that initial segment, basically that |
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35:32 | muscles in a contracted state, not contracted, but enough to prevent anything |
|
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35:37 | going out. And basically what you're is you're holding the more Eola in |
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35:45 | over duct until the uterus is All right. The Ideal Day of |
|
|
35:51 | is seven days post ovulation. Between basically between day seven and day |
|
|
35:58 | . All right. So, you imagine. Let's say you have a |
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36:01 | moving blast it or not blast but basically a fast moving zygote. |
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|
36:06 | , And this wasn't there wasn't muscle . It would just roll on out |
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36:10 | out here and there is no place it to implant plant. No place |
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36:14 | implant. It's a failed pregnancy. , what you're doing is you're holding |
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36:21 | zygote back until there is an environment allows it to do what it needs |
|
|
36:29 | do. Which is that implantation. right, now, Memorial is going |
|
|
36:35 | continue divide stuck in there. All . And it takes about five days |
|
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36:40 | all this stuff is going on. , you're gonna get relaxation and that's |
|
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36:45 | to allow the mortadella really, at point, it's gonna be a blast |
|
|
36:49 | . It's going to be allowed to kind of move out. So when |
|
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36:53 | enters the uterus, the zona pellucida to degenerate as you can see pictures |
|
|
36:58 | it actually looks like it just kind splits and then the cells kind of |
|
|
37:03 | out and it's like oh look you hatch, it's kind of cool, |
|
|
37:07 | ? And then what you start seeing the early stages of embryo genesis where |
|
|
37:12 | can literally start seeing populations of cells out. And so what happens is |
|
|
37:17 | start seeing this formation of this fluid cavity, It's gonna be called the |
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37:22 | cavity. And what you're going to is there's a population of cells that |
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37:26 | initially inside that moral. And then happens is it gets pushed off to |
|
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37:30 | side and then that that fluid filled starts filling up and you basically have |
|
|
37:35 | group of cells on the outside. you have a group of cells on |
|
|
37:39 | to the side. So here's a of cells on the outside group of |
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37:42 | on the inside to push to one . Those cells on the outside are |
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|
37:47 | to as the trophy blast, This is an extra embryonic membrane, |
|
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37:52 | going to form what is called the a little later on in development. |
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37:57 | . In other words it's not part the embryo proper. It's a protective |
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38:02 | of cells protecting the embryo? The proper is going to come from the |
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|
38:09 | blast. Which is this inner cell , which is the other words you'll |
|
|
38:12 | hear coming with it. All These are the cells that you could |
|
|
38:16 | in there, pull them out, them apart and then you can create |
|
|
38:20 | cloned organisms from each of those. right. Not for a very long |
|
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38:25 | of time because they're going to start . But right at this point they're |
|
|
38:30 | all pluripotent. They can all become organisms. Should you want to do |
|
|
38:34 | ? Yeah, it's going to form the trophoblastic. Yeah. And this |
|
|
38:44 | the confusing part about the placenta. forms from female or the mother's tissue |
|
|
38:50 | well as the embryonic tissue. It's a combined organ between the two. |
|
|
38:58 | see that in just a second. , again, posting is a cool |
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|
39:01 | . I mean, I'm sorry I really giddy in this section. I |
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|
39:06 | . Right. I mean if your when they teach you about stuff that |
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39:10 | studied and learned, if they don't giddy about it, there's something |
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|
39:14 | Right? But when they get excited this like, Oh and that's what |
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|
39:18 | do. When I worked I worked the placenta. What we do is |
|
|
39:22 | we call over to the hospital because was over at MD Anderson. |
|
|
39:25 | We call the texas. Women's. , do you have a placenta that |
|
|
39:28 | can come get Yeah, we've just six births this morning. We have |
|
|
39:32 | placenta ready for you to come and it. You think that will give |
|
|
39:35 | a little tiny step? Oh they give you a bucket filled with |
|
|
39:39 | placenta, 9lb of tissue and all want is like it's take that and |
|
|
39:46 | I can go do my work and let's play with the present. So |
|
|
39:53 | , awesome stuff. Yeah, no, no. Well, so |
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40:03 | right now, let me let me clear here. All right. |
|
|
40:06 | you're you're starting to open a can worms in my brain. That is |
|
|
40:09 | just bad. All right. Remember trophy blast right ourselves that originate in |
|
|
40:15 | embryo. If it's a male embryo what are those cells gonna have in |
|
|
40:21 | ? Y chromosome. Are you ready the front freaky part ladies? |
|
|
40:26 | Many of you will be chimeras after give birth. What is a |
|
|
40:34 | It's an organism that has cells from different sources. All right. It's |
|
|
40:41 | , weird stuff. And you we always learn this real simple biology |
|
|
40:44 | then all of a sudden you find there's freaky things that are going |
|
|
40:47 | So basically during the process of giving there's tearing a blood vessel because you |
|
|
40:52 | a placenta cells enter into the mother's and then we'll find places to just |
|
|
40:58 | of hang out. Right. And I remember reading a story about, |
|
|
41:03 | mean there's, they talked about you go look up timers, humankind |
|
|
41:07 | And there's like stories like women you know, brain tissue where they |
|
|
41:12 | fetal cells from their offspring and how know it was from their offspring because |
|
|
41:17 | xy as opposed to being xx How is that. See if women, |
|
|
41:27 | awesome. You do everything else, . Yeah. No, intersex is |
|
|
41:37 | made up thing. We're not going talk about that. We can later |
|
|
41:44 | after class. I gotta go pick my kids. So but if you |
|
|
41:47 | are inclined to come talk about attractiveness attraction, it's a completely different animal |
|
|
41:54 | completely different field. Which is So question of intersex is deals primarily with |
|
|
42:01 | , right? I'm attracted this or not attracted to that. I'm attracted |
|
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42:05 | sorts of things. It's attraction. is distinct from sex, which is |
|
|
42:12 | from gender. But we like to it all together and call it a |
|
|
42:18 | milkshake. Yeah. Mm hmm. , I think it's just an artifact |
|
|
42:26 | just the the way that organisms in are made. I mean, so |
|
|
42:31 | have primaries um in all mammals, . But we always think of ourselves |
|
|
42:36 | being pure in whatever we are. know, I remember, And this |
|
|
42:43 | weird. And again, I'm not to get this 100% right? All |
|
|
42:48 | . But I remember seeing a story primary is um where a woman went |
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42:54 | and was trying to do like a you know a just a. |
|
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43:02 | N. A. Tested. Look parentage right? Like who are my |
|
|
43:06 | ? You know and they came back said your results came back very |
|
|
43:10 | You came back Xy. Which was because she was a mother. You |
|
|
43:15 | So it's like I know I'm X. I know I've I've given |
|
|
43:20 | and you can't do that if your . Y. All right. And |
|
|
43:24 | looked at the tissue and it turned she was chimeric and the tissue sample |
|
|
43:29 | they were taking were male. But wasn't from her child. It was |
|
|
43:32 | her father's D. N. So somehow she got father's D. |
|
|
43:36 | . A. While developing. And you know I read the story I'm |
|
|
43:42 | this is like the weirdest thing So again it's never as simple as |
|
|
43:46 | like to make it out to So what we do is we just |
|
|
43:50 | here's an example of the exception. we like to think in absolutes which |
|
|
43:55 | much easier. Which is why those on your test is which of the |
|
|
43:59 | is the best answer because there's always exception. Sorry. All right. |
|
|
44:09 | again you guys who did the question think I emailed you the few of |
|
|
44:13 | who emailed me and said wait a . I got this question wrong. |
|
|
44:16 | Let's talk about the order. What place during implantation? The first step |
|
|
44:19 | gonna be opposition. I fixed that the quiz. So just making sure |
|
|
44:23 | those of you who didn't email but you saw that? You got |
|
|
44:26 | wrong. You're like what? So the thing I want you to |
|
|
44:30 | is that what we're doing is that that blastocyst is going to work its |
|
|
44:35 | into the wall of the endometrium. . Wall of the uterus is gonna |
|
|
44:40 | its way into the endometrium. And you're going to relax the over duck |
|
|
44:44 | day five. It's slowly gonna work way into the uterus. And why |
|
|
44:50 | window is so valuable is because of is actually occurring the first stages of |
|
|
44:56 | . I want you guys to cup hands like this. All right. |
|
|
44:59 | for the majority of your of the during the cycle, this is what |
|
|
45:02 | uterus looks like. The walls are apart from each other. What opposition |
|
|
45:06 | is bringing the walls close together. , how is that doing that? |
|
|
45:12 | , you're building up the endometrium. so the endometrium are basically pushing |
|
|
45:16 | So now you have this kind of narrow area inside the middle of the |
|
|
45:21 | . Okay. And so what's going ? Is that the that cell is |
|
|
45:25 | in and it's going to find purchase either on the wall that it's coming |
|
|
45:31 | or it's on the other side. would be the roof. Right? |
|
|
45:34 | going to find one or the other it always always always in humans in |
|
|
45:39 | with the embryo blast facing the burrowing . For some reason mice is the |
|
|
45:47 | , right? So what you're doing opposition is the first thing. And |
|
|
45:51 | what progesterone is doing is causing the up of the endometrium so that you |
|
|
45:56 | surface that you can come into contact because they're close up next to each |
|
|
46:01 | , you you're gonna have a you're going to go on this side |
|
|
46:04 | on that side, right? And once you recognize once all the proper |
|
|
46:10 | markers and yes, day seven, when the surface markers starts showing up |
|
|
46:15 | to day seven, the surface markers there? So you're not gonna be |
|
|
46:18 | to implant. And so then what do is you bind to it and |
|
|
46:23 | where adhesion takes place, so opposition adhesion. And then that's gonna cause |
|
|
46:29 | trouble blast cells to start releasing these that literally break the cells open underneath |
|
|
46:35 | . And so you start destroying the and you start creating this monster |
|
|
46:40 | Alright. And you can see it , right? You can start seeing |
|
|
46:44 | up there. Alright, That's called Census EO Trophoblastic. Alright, |
|
|
46:49 | what does the word mean to help remember this? Census you remember is |
|
|
46:53 | sheet, right? So when you science issue and it's like oh there's |
|
|
46:57 | sheet. So this is the census trophoblastic, it's the sheet of trophoblastic |
|
|
47:02 | . And so what it is, not it's it's basically the cells destroying |
|
|
47:06 | cells and incorporating them and becoming a giant blob monster. And what you're |
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47:11 | is you're now burrowing through the connective , creating a bigger and bigger and |
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47:15 | cell. And when you come across blood vessel, you bust it |
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47:19 | And so you end up with these , right? These little tiny |
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47:23 | And here in the lacuna that's where is gonna be, that's maternal |
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47:28 | And it's right up there next to big giants in sitio trophoblastic. Now |
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47:34 | surrounding the embryo. Is this protective ? Alright, and again this origin |
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47:41 | also trophoblastic. And so these are side atrophied blasts. Now again, |
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47:45 | at the words inside of a So cell trophoblastic, you can look |
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47:48 | you can see oh yeah, there's whole bunch of cells there. So |
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47:51 | got this big giant sheet that's basically blob cell with multiple nuclei that gets |
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47:56 | and bigger and bigger and then there's barrier that's around it or underlying |
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48:01 | See if I can draw this So I I see the the I'm |
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48:04 | this thing all right, so here be your sido trophy blast. |
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48:11 | So you can imagine their individual cells your embryo blast. And then you've |
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48:19 | this blob cell that's getting bigger and and bigger. So there's all the |
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48:23 | nuclei in it and it's this that's bigger as it breaks down further and |
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48:29 | and it's allowing this thing to migrate that membrane and eventually it burrows its |
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48:40 | all the way in and then the closes up over it and the cells |
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48:48 | basically until you seal it in. , having said that, I want |
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48:56 | to now think about menstruation for a , what is the purpose of menstruation |
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49:00 | get rid of the endometrium? If this cell that's undergoing division fails |
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49:06 | its developmental process, it's embedded in endometrium. So if you want to |
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49:14 | for pregnancy to occur, you've got get rid of that endometrium. So |
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49:17 | is why we are menstruating organisms because need to get rid of the environment |
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49:22 | implantation occurred. If a pregnancy that kind of makes sense, sort |
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49:30 | Not a lot of fun. It's great. Okay, so I've got |
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49:33 | slough all this stuff off if something happens. But it ensures that you |
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49:39 | a clean environment and a new environment each organism that potentially implants there. |
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49:48 | , so the inner cell, let's if I can circle it again. |
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49:52 | you can see the picture the inner , you can see there's the trophy |
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49:57 | it maintains. And then you get which is the census etorofu blast. |
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50:02 | it's a single large cell with multiple serving like a blob devouring and working |
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50:08 | way downward. This is a little closer, you can kind of see |
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50:14 | little bit better. So by day you're completely burrowed in. That's when |
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50:18 | overlay it with the epithelium. And you've got a nice happy little embryo |
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50:24 | , receiving its nutrients from blood And you start producing HCG human chorionic |
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50:34 | . Now, if you never stopped think about what those words mean to |
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50:37 | out of trope in. All what is the FSH and LH it's |
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50:41 | gonadotropin. What does that devastation LH it signals for the production of estrogen |
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50:48 | progesterone. Right. So really now we have here is we have an |
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50:53 | that's releasing a chemical signal back to ovary that says, hey, guess |
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51:00 | I'm here. And I want you keep making progesterone. And so the |
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51:07 | Lutetia produces tons and tons of And so that's how you maintain |
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51:15 | No pregnancy. No HCG. HcG no progesterone. Stop the cycle |
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51:24 | . It's kind of cool. So complicated. But it all works |
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51:29 | It's kind of nice. The Oh my goodness. Yeah, go |
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51:40 | . It does, but not. there's gonna be a point where the |
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51:44 | takes over and it's it's really at the second trimester where the placenta has |
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51:50 | has become large enough to produce more uh than the the Corporate blue team |
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51:58 | . So you can really think of corpus Blue team as being responsible for |
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52:01 | first trimester and then the placenta is for the hormones of pregnancy for the |
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52:07 | and 3rd prime? Yes ma'am. . Yes, but all right. |
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52:17 | the embryo gets pretty big, doesn't ? Right. It's it's gonna get |
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52:21 | . So what happens is is it there and it begins filling out the |
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52:24 | and the uterus begins expanding. So we do is we look at it |
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52:27 | go oh look it's growing inside the . But really what it's done, |
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52:31 | grown into the cavity from its Alright. I think I have a |
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52:38 | cartoon that kind of shows that All . I mean we'll come back to |
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52:42 | slide but you can kind of see showing that it's growing into the uterus |
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52:46 | this point. Now the uterus is bigger and you can see here is |
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52:49 | placenta and it's out here. What done as you push those trophoblastic |
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52:55 | Remember the trophy blasts are out here this side. So if this is |
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52:59 | embryo and it's growing out this It's pushing this as well. So |
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53:04 | really filling up the uterine cavity. does the korean become? It's that |
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53:09 | outline and then you have the am underneath it that's filled with all the |
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53:13 | that's going to be filled in Okay. Do that kind of answer |
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53:19 | question. Yeah. Ectopic pregnancies. , well what is the definition of |
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53:27 | ectopic pregnancy first outside the uterus. right now the unique characteristic of the |
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53:34 | is one that it goes through massive and hypertrophy, right? During pregnancy |
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53:41 | then after pregnancy, it's going to through the process of evolution. Basic |
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53:45 | back to its original size. You make a fist that's the size of |
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53:48 | uterus, right? Think about a with the placenta and the baby in |
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53:53 | at full term. Big, we're talking about £15 worth of maybe |
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54:00 | worth of material. Right? £9 . That's kind of a big |
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54:05 | Right? Placenta because they're roughly the size. And then whatever the fluid |
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54:10 | . So, it gets nice and . Think about any of your pregnant |
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54:14 | , pregnant family members walking around like , right? You know, And |
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54:20 | it shrinks right back down about the of your fist. Okay. Over |
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54:24 | . And all the other organs in body do not have this characteristic. |
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54:28 | , what is an ectopic pregnancy? right, let's do it on the |
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54:31 | of the over duct. It's going go in there. It's going to |
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54:33 | that over the duck apart. And you're gonna bleed to death. Which |
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54:37 | why That's very bad. Alright, put it on the outside of the |
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54:40 | duct, instead of defend break, know, bringing it in going come |
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54:43 | this way, like somehow find its on the outside. Right, It's |
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54:47 | do the same thing. It's gonna , fill up the pelvic cavity. |
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54:49 | gonna start ripping blood vessels apart. , it doesn't work that way. |
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54:53 | why ectopic pregnancies are so dangerous because working with tissue that can't recover or |
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55:00 | designed for that growth and expansion. the uterus is and there's actually even |
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55:06 | within the uterus that are more beneficial than not. So, you want |
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55:10 | occur here as opposed to over here like say near the cervix. |
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55:19 | Yes. All right. So, is actually this is for those planning |
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55:23 | go on to medical school. This a trick question that you're attending will |
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55:26 | you, they'll go into and uh you'll you'll see um like identical |
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55:33 | And they'll ask the question, is a I can't remember the exact term |
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55:37 | is it single placental or dual Right. And the answer is real |
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55:42 | . If they're if they're if they identical, als they can share a |
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55:47 | . Usually they ask you the question other way, it's like they shared |
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55:49 | placenta, Are they identical or And the answer if they share the |
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55:54 | , they're always gonna be identical. if they have two placentas, then |
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55:58 | likely that they're fraternal okay, because each make their own, right? |
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56:03 | usually with identical. They basically it's get the split while it's inside that |
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56:08 | pellucida. And so they're growing within blastocyst separately. So they start off |
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56:15 | sharing everything. All right. Um , okay, So, coming to |
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56:22 | placenta. Alright, this is we could spend an entire lecture talking |
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56:27 | this and really what I wanted to is an organ of exchange. All |
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56:30 | . And so it's gonna have both and fetal tissue. We saw that |
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56:35 | that that those trophoblastic cells that we in and we're actually starting to penetrate |
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56:40 | and coming into contact with the And it's from that census you |
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56:45 | We're going to start producing these Alright, So, they're coming from |
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56:50 | chorionic tissue. All right now, happening here is there if you're looking |
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56:55 | this, this would be my geometry out here. And what they're trying |
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56:58 | say is over here, this would endometrium. And so you can see |
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57:02 | is the maternal portion. You can the blood vessels of the mom. |
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57:05 | can see the boundary between the mother the fetus, right? But what |
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57:11 | don't remember, we ripped through blood . We created these pools of |
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57:15 | And that's what this stuff represents in . And you can see that there's |
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57:19 | mixing of blood of oxygenated and deoxygenated . So what you have is you |
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57:23 | veins and arteries in contact with his on the fetal side. What you're |
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57:30 | is you're taking those trophoblastic cells that differentiated the Census Bureau trophoblastic, they |
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57:35 | organized and they create these structures that going to be highly vascular rise. |
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57:40 | , what we're looking at here called . and they kind of look like |
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57:43 | tiny invasions that basically are sitting in pools of blood and they're very they |
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57:49 | there's like a thin layer of cells the maternal blood thin layer of cells |
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57:55 | then you have the fetal blood in own blood vessels. And so this |
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57:59 | where the material exchanges taking place. . So what we're looking at here |
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58:04 | we're looking at a boundary that brings blood of both the mom and the |
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58:09 | fetus very close to each other. that gas can be exchanged, nutrient |
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58:14 | be exchanged and waste can be All right. Now, it's also |
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58:21 | pathogens from coming across because you're not be selective of what you're going to |
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58:24 | able to transport. All right. , that's really kind of its primary |
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58:30 | . Secondary role is that it serves an endocrine organ to produce a whole |
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58:34 | of hormones that govern pregnancy. All . And that's what we're going to |
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58:39 | at is what are those hormones. . So, so the thing to |
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58:44 | is that it's a complex dual organ from apart from baby, it brings |
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58:49 | blood close together and then you're getting exchange just like you'd expect when that's |
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58:55 | happening. But the intricate part. so these are gonna be the hormones |
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59:00 | pregnancy we've mentioned. HCG already. know about progesterone we mentioned estrogen. |
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59:05 | we were familiar with these HCG is the one that's produced by the sitio |
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59:11 | cells and it's basically telling the Corpus Team. Stick around. And what |
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59:15 | want you to do. Corporate Blue is I want you to make progesterone |
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59:17 | estrogen. Now, progesterone, you see here's first trimester, 2nd |
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59:22 | you can see projects or here's HCG . Progesterone levels are high estrogen |
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59:26 | Just keep growing up. All And we're gonna see estrogen plays the |
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59:30 | of basically allowing for contractions to occur ultimately um uh labor and delivery. |
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59:40 | right. But basically in the first it's the corpus lutein that's produced in |
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59:44 | progesterone. Alright. You don't really much of placenta. It's a little |
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59:49 | bitsy tiny thing. But you've got massive organ that's pumping out tons and |
|
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59:52 | of progesterone. But as the baby or the fetus grows. So does |
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59:56 | placenta. And so you end up more mass to produce more progesterone. |
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60:00 | so that's what it does. So corpus lithium uh ends up producing much |
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60:05 | less. It's still there. But not producing enough to be much of |
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60:09 | effect. And by the third trimester overwhelmingly by the placenta. Again, |
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60:15 | still some being produced by the the Latina, but not that much relatively |
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60:21 | . All right. Now, what progesterone do suppresses gonadotropin production, which |
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60:26 | opens from the pituitary. Alright. going to facilitate the growth of the |
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60:32 | and it's going to facilitate memory gland . Alright. Now, why? |
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60:37 | gland enlargement? What's your future after give birth lactation? Right. So |
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60:45 | you're gonna do is you're gonna elaborate tissue that is responsible for milk |
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60:51 | Okay, estrogen, on the other , it still does gonadotropin production downplays |
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60:56 | it relaxes the ligaments. Alright. what it does. It also helps |
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61:01 | prepare the body for labor and ultimately lactation. A couple of other hormones |
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61:09 | have relaxing, promotes angiogenesis. What's ? Making new blood vessels? Why |
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61:18 | I need new blood vessels? Getting and bigger and bigger. All |
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61:24 | According to trump in releasing hormone. , this plays an important role in |
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61:28 | timing of childbirth. Alright. You've about oxytocin is the primary driver of |
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61:35 | , but it all starts when crh the placenta initiates this longer program of |
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61:43 | oxytocin. I mean, so it's way downstream. So it's connected. |
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61:48 | tropic releasing or corticosteroids and releasing hormone does it HP. L. Is |
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61:53 | placental oxygen? It's going to change metabolism. Alright, so what it |
|
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61:58 | is it says ladies get your fuel your fat. All right. |
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62:04 | Well, I want to make glucose to pass back and forth across that |
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62:09 | for the fetal growth and development. , so I'm consuming fuel primarily to |
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62:15 | direct fuel to the fetus. But gonna store fuel away. So I |
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62:20 | actually have something to consume for It inhibits the effects of insulin. |
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62:29 | , there were a lot more. used to I guess I took a |
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62:31 | bunch of them off. All that's good. All right. Now |
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62:37 | a sean. We're working our way the sun's right Pregnancy. About 38 |
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62:42 | from conception. Usually when you go the doctor and you're getting your pregnancy |
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62:46 | . What they do is they want to calculate to your last menses, |
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62:50 | ? And it's like, okay, was the last time you had your |
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62:52 | ? And then they like use that the framework from which to do all |
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62:55 | math. All right. And that's always the best mathematics. But what |
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63:00 | can say is that most pregnancies on run about 38 weeks. Alright. |
|
|
63:05 | you want to do the math 4.3 or 4.3 weeks per month, you |
|
|
63:10 | ? So 38 divided by 4.3 Comes to almost nine. I know that |
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63:18 | we can say nine months of Okay. All right. Now, |
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63:22 | are lots of physical changes that occur pregnancy, as we are probably |
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63:27 | Alright, First uterus is gonna get . We talked about the fist gets |
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63:31 | and bigger and bigger. All the breasts in large. Alright. |
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63:34 | again, what they're doing is they're their ability to produce milk. |
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63:39 | This is where I'm going to have and a little bit with I guess |
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63:42 | a couple of slides weighs about breast . You know? Ladies if you |
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63:46 | know, guys really, really are to breasts. Doesn't matter if they're |
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|
63:50 | , They're big. They're obnoxiously You know? We just we like |
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63:54 | . And all the guys are sitting staring at because they quit telling our |
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63:58 | . Guys. They know, I mean when we when we walk |
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64:03 | the room and we stare, you , it's like eyes are up |
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64:07 | Yeah, Yeah, We know. right. The thing is, is |
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64:14 | a memory gland which we'll see in seconds is basically a modified sweat |
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|
64:19 | Alright. So guys were attracted to sweat glands. It doesn't make them |
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64:24 | worse. It's just good to know we're attracted to. All right. |
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64:29 | second thing is that for the most is that they are undeveloped in the |
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64:34 | that they're incapable of producing milk only the right hormones. Are there are |
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64:40 | capable of producing milk? So, we have is primarily uh if you |
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64:44 | if you're not breastfeeding right now, are or you're not pregnant right |
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64:49 | You have what are called rudimentary rudimentary glands, they need to be developed |
|
|
64:54 | to be able to produce milk. right. So, it's predominantly fat |
|
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64:58 | now is really what I'm trying to at. Alright, So, that's |
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65:03 | I'm talking when I say developed the to produce milk is we've got to |
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65:06 | the machinery inside that breast tissue to it milk producing lactate, herbal. |
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65:12 | there are nutritional requirements increases. Obviously eating for two. So you will |
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65:17 | weight gain blood volume. You actually to have the blood to be able |
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65:22 | produce those material or send those materials the fetus. You breathe more, |
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65:27 | breathing for two Urinary output increases your for two. Everything is for |
|
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65:34 | Or if you have twins for Right? And we get down to |
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65:40 | tuition. See I mean I literally just jumped over development. Right? |
|
|
65:45 | is labor and delivery. That's what more familiar with calling it. Um |
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|
65:49 | a couple of things that have to . Remember we talked about the |
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|
65:51 | Cervix looks like this. It has to it and has an itsy bitsy |
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65:55 | tiny hole. The size of a head is roughly the size of a |
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|
65:58 | grapefruit or a large orange. I'm not going to fit through |
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66:04 | So we've got to do is we to dilate that. So that's number |
|
|
66:08 | again, it's thick. And so we gotta do is we gotta thin |
|
|
66:12 | and that's what dilation and effacement deal is bringing that size so that you |
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|
66:18 | now pass through it down into the canal or the vagina. All |
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|
66:22 | you're gonna have contraction of the uterus Miami atrium. And this is kind |
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|
66:26 | just showing you what the basic one with oxytocin and stuff and we'll get |
|
|
66:29 | this in just a second. But gonna keep it simple. We're not |
|
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66:32 | talk about how crh acts on to this downstream event. All right. |
|
|
66:39 | so there's going to be maternal and oxytocin. Oxytocin is the hormone that |
|
|
66:45 | the production of prostaglandins. Prostaglandins are ones that actually do the muscle |
|
|
66:51 | So what's happening is is that oxytocin released from both the fetus and from |
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|
66:56 | mother and they're gonna act um uh cause the production of prostaglandins which are |
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67:01 | to tell that my mama tree um begin to contract. And it's also |
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67:05 | to tell the cervix to begin to through this process of dilation and |
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67:14 | Now what's happening is that the contractions the mama tree um are pushing the |
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67:18 | against the cervix. You're getting That resistance is detected in the |
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67:23 | Cervix sends a signal up to the says there's resistance produce more oxytocin. |
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|
67:29 | the hypothalamus produces more october causes the of more oxytocin from the post your |
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67:34 | that causes the production more prostaglandins which further effacement and dilation and further contractions |
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67:41 | keeps pushing the baby and you can how this just becomes a cycle so |
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67:45 | they're getting stronger and stronger and stronger terms of contractions. Now that baby |
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67:51 | gonna go through the cervix until the is ready. I love this |
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67:56 | I think this is the best picture all of picture done Alright because you'll |
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68:01 | it all the time. You hear the Cervix going, you know when |
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68:04 | reached 10 cm of dilation? That's it's going to pass. Well how |
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68:07 | is 10 cm? This picture shows all right. So remember the cervical |
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|
68:14 | not even a centimeter. It's it's teeny tiny. The size of the |
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68:18 | is about a centimeter Slice of about three cm cracker soda can size |
|
|
68:25 | a bagel is what we're looking Alright, that's how big dilation has |
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|
68:32 | be in order for a basement or order for the baby to pass into |
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68:37 | birth canal. All right. So dilation happens to be the longest stages |
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68:41 | when you think of someone going through and they're doing the who who he |
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68:45 | stuff right? And there, you , you eat the chips and you |
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68:49 | the ice chips and stuff like They're really talking about this. They're |
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68:53 | through the pressure on the cervix because like get this thing out of me |
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68:58 | there's no path to get out. so that's why the contractions are getting |
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69:02 | and harder and harder Now. I'm gonna pretend I know what that's |
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69:06 | No, no guy is ever gonna they know what this is like, |
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69:09 | well we might say it like oh . You know, we know |
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69:13 | it's like Mhm. Yeah, 10 cm right? But during this |
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69:21 | of time, that's when you are through, when you think about |
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69:26 | This is what you're really thinking The actual expulsion time is not very |
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69:30 | . So once you get dilation and , once you thin that out and |
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69:34 | got this big giant gaping hole, actual giving birth doesn't take that |
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69:40 | Now I saw a paper just a of weeks ago talking about the anatomical |
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69:45 | of the birth canal. And humans the weird species because we have to |
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69:50 | a 90° turn in the birth right? So the baby comes down |
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69:55 | and then turns and then comes out basically shoulders out and then comes |
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69:59 | We're the only organism that does But we're also the only organism that |
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70:05 | upright. And the reason they finally out using models to figure out what |
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70:11 | . And it's basically our upright posture order for us to have us. |
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70:16 | what our birth canal had to If we have slight modifications, then |
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70:20 | gonna be hunched over like chimps. we're going to have to use our |
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70:24 | to help us move like chimps. of course, all right. But |
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70:29 | makes it very difficult, relatively Yes, ma'am. Well, that's |
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70:36 | you can give birth squatting. But , there needs to be an |
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|
70:42 | So, I've actually seen, I , and you can do this |
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70:45 | I'm sure it's on youtube. You watch a gorilla giving birth. I |
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70:48 | and we we make the joke is you know in the third world you |
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70:51 | you're in the rice paddy and you kind of squat and you give birth |
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70:54 | know you've you've if you've heard those maybe not alright but gorillas literally do |
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70:59 | , it's like okay it's time to birth. They just kind of |
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71:02 | they reach down and they literally give to themselves, they catch the baby |
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71:08 | then they just throw it on their and they keep moving. Humans can't |
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71:13 | that. I mean we we kind joked that they can there needs to |
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71:17 | a significant amount of assistance. Now we be able to do that? |
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71:21 | but notice we are a very social and what happens is is that we |
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71:27 | ask assistance and we get assistance otherwise be killing each other off. I |
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71:32 | up until this century childbirth was the one killer of women go team. |
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71:39 | know? And so I don't know we lay on our backs because it's |
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71:43 | easier but we should be able to and be able to do it. |
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71:46 | again it's you come down sideways and you shift so that you're facing downwards |
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71:54 | in other words you'd be facing backwards and then you have to shift out |
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72:01 | how long this lasts? 30 90 . One of my closest friends um |
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72:06 | went through a 24 hour L. . D. Just took forever. |
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72:12 | know? And finally they were like was she had a doula. It |
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72:14 | gonna be one of those water birds know the whole Granola nine yards No |
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72:18 | . And finally after about 22 hours like get thee to a hospital because |
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72:23 | can't make this happen. So drugs her back the whole thing. All |
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72:33 | my wife Superwoman, I'll never stop about her first pregnancy gave birth to |
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72:39 | girls are two eldest twins In under minutes. I mean the L. |
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72:44 | D. Part was like six hours the expulsion part one boom. Yeah |
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72:52 | never forget my first son coming out he grabbed onto the the attending and |
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72:58 | hung there like a monkey. I like yeah that's about right. All |
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73:04 | . Usually this is where we kind stop and think are right there is |
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73:07 | but we also have a placental The placenta has to be given. |
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73:10 | have to give birth to the placental but no one pays attention to that |
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73:13 | all the hard part's been done. like now I get to hold the |
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73:16 | right? You know and so you're there holding the baby and there's some |
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73:20 | sitting down there going okay dr wayne a placenta you know And that takes |
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73:26 | 15-30 minutes because Uterus is still going contractions and it's separating out the placenta |
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73:32 | the Uterine Wall. This is what call the afterbirth. It's just pictures |
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73:39 | it, right? So he knows he is coming down sideways, flipped |
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73:43 | and then shoulder shimmy shimmy and then it comes and then here's the expulsion |
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73:48 | . Right? But you can see this is where the cervix has not |
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73:52 | through dilation right here. You see . You see effacement that birth canal |
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73:57 | very long, is it? Here there's still some length to |
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74:02 | And really what you're doing is you're out and that's why the birth |
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74:06 | It doesn't do that. All so this is the mammary glands. |
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74:11 | but no. Males and females have glands. All right. And when |
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74:15 | not talking I'm not talking structural mammary . Some males do. Yes. |
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74:20 | need to wear bros I think that's Seinfeld. Right. Call him the |
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74:29 | . Alright. But typically with the hormones only in females are they functional |
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74:36 | there is and there is evidence of lactation. All right. But it's |
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74:40 | abnormal thing. It's not like, well you know, we have the |
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74:44 | hormones to kick everything up when we the hormones that are pro lactating. |
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74:49 | prolactin. They have actual different effects our bodies. They don't really actually |
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74:54 | our our mammary glands to develop. I said, modified sweat glands. |
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74:59 | female very rudimentary undeveloped and not undeveloped in size. It's undeveloped as in |
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75:05 | structure that we're interested in. Which is this stuff in here? |
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75:12 | there are about 15 to 25 They radioed to the nipple. There |
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75:16 | duct works that go to the And so what we have is the |
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75:20 | . It's the alveoli that are responsible producing milk in response to the hormone |
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75:27 | . They produce the materials that we milk and then it's the oxytocin and |
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75:35 | prostaglandins that are being produced that cause around the L. V. |
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75:40 | Line along the ducks that allow for ejection. Alright so what we have |
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75:46 | is we have these two hormones. so during gestation you're basically the placental |
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75:53 | . The placental progesterone is helping you those rudimentary mammary glands. Prolactin after |
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76:00 | is starting to be produced and it producing the enzymes that help for milk |
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76:06 | . Alright So That's The 1st Now if you do not breastfeed then |
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76:11 | there's no stimulation then the body just okay I don't need to produce milk |
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76:16 | so you stop producing milk but as as you breastfeed in other words as |
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76:20 | as you're suckling you will produce Now there's a movie caldwell. There's |
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76:27 | that you're probably familiar with the grown right? So it's like I can't |
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76:32 | who the woman was but she basically her four year old son over and |
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76:36 | he's mommy, I'm hungry and she her breasts out and starts breastfeeding is |
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76:40 | four year old kid and everyone's hey you're still breastfeeding. Yeah, |
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76:44 | long as they're still breastfeeding they can it. But the movie I always |
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76:47 | about the Empire of the Sun. an Academy Award winner. None of |
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76:52 | guys know it was long before your . And the emperor, the last |
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76:56 | of china had a milk uh a nurse, milk nurse. I can't |
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77:02 | nurse whatever it is say Good West nurse, thank you blind on brains |
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77:09 | into pudding last day of class talking boobs. You know, I keep |
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77:17 | awake, don't I? Some of right? Had a wet nurse through |
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77:23 | until like the age of 11 or . And that was his comfort |
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77:26 | Right? So whenever he got scared or whatever he called the wet |
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77:31 | and basically would suckle. This is 10 year old child, imagine a |
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77:35 | year old child with westerners. And know. Yeah. So as long |
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77:42 | they're suckling, that's that's what So oxytocin um is there to cause |
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77:48 | prolactin is making milk is the way think about what is oxytocin also |
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77:53 | It also promotes evolution. And what's is that these two hormones together and |
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77:58 | other hormones were not quite clear what are, What they do is they |
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78:02 | ovulation. All right. So typically happens is you give birth you're suckling |
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78:10 | you basically have natural birth control and about you know, Up to about |
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78:15 | months, usually about 12 months That's when you can actually start ovulating |
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78:21 | and again. The reason why this of makes sense. Alright. You |
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78:24 | imagine here I am suckling a I don't want to be pregnant because |
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78:29 | nine months I would have to be two babies and you know, |
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78:33 | we live in a simple, easier . Not simpler, but an easier |
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78:36 | than it was when I say you're chased by tigers across the plains of |
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78:41 | , right? Or surviving all sorts horrible things in the jungles of far |
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78:46 | Asia or wherever you want to right. You're nomadic species. You |
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78:52 | to be able to have one maybe a toddler, maybe an older |
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78:59 | . So on and so forth. wanna be able to create your tribe |
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79:01 | help you take care of stuff. this is that natural birth control. |
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79:12 | all Alright, so where are 2 20. I finished right on |
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79:19 | . Hot dog. Hot dog. diggity dog. All right, so |
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79:22 | have an exam on thursday? You peer reviews do today? I'm gonna |
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79:27 | the button to stop this. This the last lecture. Who's graduating this |
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79:33 | ? Congratulations. You know, get there and scream and yell. I |
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79:38 | recommend doing a handstand. I've have that done on the stage before, |
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79:42 | you better be good at it. . Anyway, that's all I have |
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79:47 | you. Good luck on your Make sure you get your sleep. |
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79:51 | stay up every night all night. welcome often dollars |
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