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00:07 | Alright, y'all? Hm. Today gonna talk about skeleton. Bones of |
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00:15 | body. 216. Some odd You will all know them all by |
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00:21 | end of the class. Well, don't know if you'll know but you'll |
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00:24 | them. All right. So when hear that number 216 sounds pretty |
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00:27 | doesn't it? Like I've got to that many. Well remember you are |
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00:32 | mirror image. So you'll have many are gonna be repeated twice. And |
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00:37 | when you think about your hands and , you're gonna have bones that are |
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00:41 | not just twice but like a lot they have the same names. So |
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00:46 | really not as bad as it This is where our starting point is |
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00:50 | kind of distinguishing between both the axle the appendix color skeleton. The actual |
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00:56 | follows just the same body plan that discussed before. It's your head and |
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01:00 | trunk. So your head in your are the ones where all the things |
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01:03 | need in order to live are Right? Are we awake this |
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01:08 | I'm having a hard time being awake . Alright. So it's that's where |
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01:12 | going to have the most important things your body. And so the bones |
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01:16 | that part of the body are gonna there to protect those important parts. |
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01:21 | you talk about your appendices. These the things that you moved there. |
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01:25 | there involved in locomotion. Typically we're about a whole bunch of long bones |
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01:30 | the appendix skeleton and a bunch of and irregular shaped bones in the actual |
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01:36 | . Now. One of things I'll out is you'll say wait a |
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01:39 | I've got these bones here. I've my shoulders and my hips. Are |
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01:43 | part of the actual or the a and those are considered part of the |
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01:48 | particular skeleton? So when you think movement, those two things to which |
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01:53 | those at particular bones are connected to going to be included in that. |
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01:58 | , so that's just kinda how we're divide things up. We're gonna start |
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02:01 | the skull, we're gonna work our through the vertebrae, we're gonna look |
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02:03 | the ribs from there, we're gonna into the upper limbs. So we're |
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02:07 | start with the shoulder blades and work way down the arms and then we're |
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02:11 | go to the hips. We're gonna down our way through the legs and |
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02:15 | really, really straight forward and Now would add one of the |
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02:20 | A lot of your homework is going be looking at pictures of these and |
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02:23 | can play with models and digital ones that on the exam. We're gonna |
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02:28 | it simple. I will show you here. Those are the type of |
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02:32 | you will see on the exam. not gonna give you some strange |
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02:35 | That is really hard to tell what's on, right? It's gonna be |
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02:38 | that you see here, we're gonna the hard stuff to the lab. |
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02:42 | you're taking the lab, You get actually manipulate and hold onto the |
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02:46 | All right, so this is our point. You can see we've we've |
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02:49 | loops the skull here. So you see the different bones. We have |
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02:53 | bones in the skull. And these the weird ones are the ones with |
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02:57 | most interesting complex structures. And so might be in terms of difficulty, |
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03:04 | hardest stuff to understand. So getting out of the way first kind of |
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03:07 | it nice and easy. Alright So the cranial bones there are eight bones |
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03:12 | the face. For the facial there's gonna be 14 bones that we're |
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03:15 | be learning. They're all gonna be together by a unique type of joint |
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03:20 | suture. We're gonna learn those four today um to help us understand how |
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03:26 | connected to and with the exception of mandible, none of these bones really |
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03:31 | , they all are very, very and they are there to protect the |
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03:36 | valuable thing in your body, your . Okay, so let's kind of |
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03:43 | through these. All right now, not only a a structure that protects |
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03:50 | brain which would be found in this right here, but there's also gonna |
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03:52 | some muscles that are gonna be attached it. So all the facial expressions |
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03:56 | you make all the abilities to move head and so on. So |
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03:59 | are due to actual uh prominence is other protuberances that are gonna be found |
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04:06 | the surface of these bones. We're gonna worry about those. We'll let |
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04:09 | lab deal with them. All So what I wanna do is I |
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04:12 | to just kind of walk through. remember what I said There are single |
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04:15 | and they're gonna be paired bones. gonna start with the single bones |
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04:18 | This is something that's not hard to if you sit in front of a |
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04:22 | , if you have a friend you do this in front of with a |
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04:24 | as well. All right. The ones that you can't see we can't |
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04:28 | touch with your hands are gonna be ethanol in this finale. But we'll |
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04:32 | to those in a second. So first bone is gonna be the one |
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04:34 | the front, cleverly called the frontal . Okay, the one in the |
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04:40 | over here, that's called the occipital . All right. And when we |
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04:43 | to the brain and we'll get to brain, we're gonna find that the |
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04:47 | underlying them were named after these two . And actually named after the bones |
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04:52 | are gonna be making up the rest the cranial cavity. So we got |
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04:54 | the front frontal bone on the back the occipital bone. And then when |
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04:58 | look inside the cranial cavity, you're to see these two bones here. |
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05:02 | little tiny sucker right here looks But you can see it actually extends |
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05:06 | works and and serves as part of facial structure actually divides up the nasal |
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05:11 | . That's the void bone. And the thing that looks like a bird |
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05:15 | bat, what do you think? or bat bats? You've got |
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05:20 | bats All right, we're going bats year. All right, so the |
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05:23 | that looks like a bat that's just bone. Alright, so these are |
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05:28 | four single bones, so frontal so frontal occipital eth Boyd, still |
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05:35 | and then the rest of the bones make up the cranium are gonna be |
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05:39 | . The two on the side of head right here. These are the |
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05:42 | bones. And then as you move right up here where you wear your |
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05:48 | or your Yamaka or anything else? would be the parietal bones. Alright |
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05:55 | as I said, when we get the brain you're gonna see we're gonna |
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05:58 | frontal um uh parietal temporal is what going to kind of say how do |
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06:03 | remember temporal? Alright, these are your temples actually temples are named after |
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06:09 | bone underneath it. Which is They're called temporal is because when you |
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06:13 | the first place where you start seeing is right here. So this is |
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06:19 | time teller. That's where it gets name from. Alright, just tells |
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06:25 | you're old or in my case my head is old. All right now |
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06:32 | can see here we have a top and we have a bottom portion, |
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06:36 | top portion is referred to the The bottom portion referred to as the |
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06:40 | . You can see right here smack in the middle of the occipital |
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06:43 | You got this big giant old and what it's called. The big giant |
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06:47 | . Except we have to call it its proper latin. So, for |
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06:52 | magnus. All right, the frame magnus is the portion or the place |
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06:58 | they're the spinal cord exits out through down through the root abril column. |
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07:06 | , so those are the eight bones the skull. We want them to |
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07:10 | face. I think actually I might a Oh no, we gotta deal |
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07:15 | the fossa. Alright, so um thursday I said look where there's parts |
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07:21 | the bone that you're gonna see names and over again. So Foster is |
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07:25 | of them is a fossil depression. . Your your brain sits in this |
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07:30 | cavity and it's actually uplifted by fluid other things in there and kind of |
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07:36 | . But one of the things that hold, maintains its shape. Let |
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07:40 | back up because I know you're not really see brain, you might get |
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07:46 | play with with like a fixed A cat. Brain, I think |
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07:50 | the lab maybe a little bit But brain tissue is gross. It's |
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07:58 | . It's like warm butter. You played with warm butter if you break |
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08:02 | one baker's anyone baked? Yeah. do you do? You take the |
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08:05 | out of the refrigerator and let it on the counter for a while. |
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08:08 | pick up the butter. Any sort pressure on the butter makes it |
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08:11 | It's kind of gross, right? not margarine, margarine actually turns into |
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08:16 | goo, which makes you really see . It's really, really not something |
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08:19 | want. But anyway, so butter really, really soft. That's what |
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08:22 | tissue is like. Alright. It's a bunch of fat and when you |
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08:27 | and touch it is being held in and its shape is being maintained by |
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08:32 | structures. And one of the structures helps maintain its shape are these fossa |
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08:37 | it sits on top of these All right. And so you can |
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08:41 | there's three of them. There's an one. There's supposed to be one |
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08:43 | there's one in the middle which we to as the middle fossa. |
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08:49 | And what they do is they uphold brain. They sit there and they |
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08:53 | kind of as the table on which structures lists it. And each of |
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08:56 | faces support different parts of the brain . So we can see what there |
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09:02 | from. So, I kind of this down here, the color coding |
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09:05 | fruit loop things so that you can the three fossa. You can see |
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09:08 | spin oid, you can see the and the frontal bones right here make |
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09:13 | the anterior fossa. The middle fossa is gonna be made up by a |
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09:17 | of the spin oid and it's gonna primarily the temporal bones. The occipital |
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09:22 | makes up primarily the posterior fossa. terms of the region's again we haven't |
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09:28 | the parts of the brain yet but frontal lobes are going to be sitting |
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09:31 | there over here on the side, the temporal lobe, there's a little |
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09:35 | for the pituitary gland and then back this is where the cerebellum and the |
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09:39 | are going to be located. And which is you're just taking your brain |
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09:44 | you're setting it down into the space it's upholding it. The portions of |
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09:54 | these bones we said are not They're held together by a special type |
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09:59 | joint called suture. Um These aren't only sutures in the bodies. And |
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10:03 | aren't the only place you're gonna see sutures are also gonna be part of |
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10:07 | facial bones. But we're not gonna those names. Were going to use |
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10:10 | four because they're pretty simple and easy identify and it helps us to better |
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10:14 | the cranial vault. Alright. So that you're interested are the coronal |
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10:22 | Remember when we talked about the coronal which way was the corona view across |
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10:27 | top, Right? So that's the suture. And you can see here |
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10:31 | the coronal suture. The sagittal view your left and your right. And |
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10:37 | the sagittal suture here sits mid, mid sagittal between the two parietal |
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10:43 | All right back here, you can this structure that's kind of triangular, |
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10:49 | looks kind of like the greek that's why it's called the lambda |
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10:55 | All right, so the lambda suture then that's gonna be between the occipital |
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11:02 | the two Paride als And you can over here there's a little bit of |
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11:05 | temporal and that's part of that as . And then over here, finally |
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11:09 | separates the parietal and temporal bones, is called the squamous suture, I |
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11:14 | know why specifically they call that squamous look like a scale to me, |
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11:18 | whatever. Alright, but those four kind of oh and remember we did |
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11:24 | about sesamoid bones to see these little things that they're kind of highlighting Those |
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11:29 | examples of sesamoid bones, so they have names and we're not gonna worry |
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11:32 | it. Alright anyway, those four , pretty straightforward criminal, right? |
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11:40 | lamb oid squamous. Now looking at picture like this and look we do |
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11:48 | this two slides just so that you have different views. Alright, so |
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11:54 | be afraid to just kind of jump stuff, they're 14 facial bones. |
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11:58 | right, and so you can see the frontal bone comes forward, but |
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12:03 | not gonna count, that's part of cranium. So we're gonna just focus |
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12:07 | on the front end one of these moves. Alright that's gonna be the |
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12:12 | . Alright, that's one of the bones. And then we have another |
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12:15 | that doesn't move that's hidden on the . And I'm pointing at it right |
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12:21 | and you can see from the from side view, you can see it |
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12:26 | , it's attached to the bone, called the bomer. So to single |
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12:32 | , the mandible, that's the bottom , right one that divides part of |
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12:37 | nasal cavity continues that. The F is the bomber. All the rest |
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12:41 | them are paired. All right in of the pairs right up here, |
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12:46 | hard part of your nose. They take off my glasses right up |
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12:50 | nasal bone down here. That's cartilage here when you break your nose. |
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12:55 | what you're breaking. All right over on the inside of your eyes. |
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13:01 | the lack animal bone. Alright. tear bone. How's that? See |
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13:07 | else we have? Oh yeah over on the sides. What's that called |
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13:12 | cheek? Right? That thing that bony part there that makes the |
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13:16 | That's the zygomatic bone um Palestine Um Ever felt really really sick. |
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13:24 | you had to go and touch your palate to help yourself vomit. You |
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13:29 | where that special button is in your . Right? Okay. The hard |
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13:35 | is made up of two bones. first of those bones up front is |
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13:40 | the maxillary. It's this and then right there. But if you move |
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13:46 | back where there's still hard palate and quite soft palate yet. That's where |
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13:50 | paired palantine bones are. So the illa are two bones that came |
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13:57 | infused up here in the front, palantine or two bones that are back |
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14:00 | the back paired, way back. can see better pictures here. Better |
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14:09 | is um here to put on Alright finally this. There's no good |
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14:19 | to do this. Alright um see two little green things right there and |
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14:26 | over here. Those are called the nasal conch show. And the purpose |
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14:31 | these bones is to create a a that when you breathe in cause the |
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14:37 | to kind of roll on itself. called a termination. Alright so when |
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14:42 | hair, when you're air does this the nasal cavity that's termination. So |
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14:47 | are terminates. Alright. And they there so when you breathe in it |
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14:51 | the air to move around a lot . Those are separate bones if you |
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14:57 | inferior nasal contra do you think you superior ones? Yeah but they're part |
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15:04 | another bone so they sit on another ? Alright so why do we have |
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15:10 | these things and why do we Well as I mentioned we terminate the |
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15:14 | uh we have bones that are there secure teeth into place. They create |
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15:18 | oral cavity, the oral cavity, nasal cavity, they anchor all your |
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15:22 | muscles so that you can look at like you are right now with complete |
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15:26 | like this. You know it It takes effort to make that |
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15:31 | Alright. You've heard that? What the phrase? Takes more muscles to |
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15:35 | a frown than it takes to make smile. Yeah. So your professor |
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15:41 | looking at it, You smile at . No, I'm not gonna work |
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15:46 | . Okay. All right. Um creates those openings for the air and |
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15:52 | your food. Alright, so these of the head region include the cranial |
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16:00 | . That's what surrounds the brain. have the orbital cavity. Alright. |
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16:05 | gonna be what surrounds the eyes, for the passage of blood vessels up |
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16:09 | the eyes, passage of nerves, to the eyes. And it's made |
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16:13 | of a whole bunch of bones. don't need to go through the cranial |
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16:16 | . But you can see here here's frontal bone, there's my zygomatic |
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16:20 | There's my max illa right back that little green one that's lack rommel |
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16:25 | , That blue one in the back was that annoyed. And you can't |
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16:28 | it because it's sitting back over That would be the bone. Oh |
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16:32 | the Palestine sits on the bottom Alright, so all these makeup that |
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16:37 | cavity again with a static picture. easy to see. But when you |
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16:40 | something that you can manipulate. So can imagine the laboratory, they'll probably |
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16:44 | you go through and be able to all those the nasal cavity. This |
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16:52 | a passage for air. Alright. also has a special region in the |
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16:57 | reaches where you're gonna have the receptors for the sense of smell. We'll |
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17:04 | to that when we talk about the system. Alright so it's divided into |
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17:08 | there's actually two parts to it. have what is called the septum. |
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17:12 | already seen the two parts of the . It's the Bomber and the |
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17:14 | Boyd. So it means you have left and a right right to that |
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17:19 | cavity and then the bones that make that nasal cavity include the spin. |
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17:23 | the void that we just mentioned. bomber that's not being shown palantine. |
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17:29 | The nasal bones um max Della and inferior nasal conch to. Alright so |
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17:36 | side has those. When it comes the oral cavity. This is primarily |
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17:42 | passage for food but air is also through it. This is where you're |
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17:47 | find your glands, your teeth, tongue, so and so forth. |
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17:52 | mandible. The maxillary as well as palantine make up these structures. Now |
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18:02 | generally speaking are kind of heavy and you can imagine your head weighs a |
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18:08 | . So one of the things that has provided for us is a way |
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18:12 | make our heads less heavy. And we have in our heads a bunch |
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18:16 | holes bunch of spaces we call these sinuses there, what are referred to |
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18:21 | the nasal and para nasal sinuses. , so when you have a sinus |
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18:27 | , what do you think you're affecting holes? All right now, what |
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18:34 | are is a hollowed out area of bone and I'm not saying hollowed out |
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18:37 | something drilled in there, it just form. So it creates the space |
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18:41 | open up to these cavities, the cavity in particular. And so it's |
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18:47 | with epithelium. And so what happens is that when you breathe in |
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18:53 | air goes into these spaces and is as a place to warm up the |
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18:58 | and to moisturize the air before it down into your lungs, it also |
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19:04 | resonance to your voice. Have you that none of our voices sound exactly |
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19:07 | same? That feature. Can you my voice from another person's voice? |
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19:16 | , mine's mostly grumpy. At That's what the kids think. All |
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19:24 | , so this creates that unique residents that unique sound that each of our |
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19:29 | have. It's part of what creates unique residents. Alright, so these |
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19:34 | gonna be mucus lines and air filled so you can imagine with big hollow |
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19:41 | with lots of warm air and moisture in little tiny holes, bacteria can |
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19:48 | into those spaces. And when bacteria in those spaces, that would be |
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19:51 | you end up with an infection. , a sinus infection is simply that |
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19:57 | having some sort of pathogenic bacterium. ? Um So the names their names |
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20:05 | from which bone they actually sent it sit in. And so we can |
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20:08 | we have four of them. The that's in the frontal bones called the |
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20:12 | sinus. One in the void, sinus. It's fine idol in the |
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20:16 | and the maxillary in the maxillary. , so that would be here and |
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20:23 | one up here in the front row then annoyed. I can't point to |
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20:28 | it's deeper in as well as the . All right. But it kind |
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20:32 | shows you the general shape and it up. It makes your head lighter |
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20:36 | you're not carrying as much thickness and bone in those areas. So, |
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20:46 | many bones have we looked at so ? 22 eight for the Cranium, |
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20:54 | for the face. All right. lots of her doubles. So, |
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20:58 | makes a little bit easier. We one bone in our neck. |
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21:02 | really in our throat region. there's gonna be bones that are vertebrae |
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21:06 | we have one it's called the Right? And you can see it |
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21:10 | right up here on top of the . Its job is to serve as |
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21:15 | point of attachment for muscles of the . So it's the only one that |
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21:23 | see there. It has two projections are kind of important? Or at |
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21:26 | identifiable. We have this projection out in the back greater horn. And |
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21:30 | little tiny projections up the top there the lesser horns. And so these |
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21:35 | are gonna attach that. That's going help provide a way for you to |
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21:38 | in a way for you to produce . Alright. And then the rest |
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21:42 | the structure in there is gonna be . So many buttons that now. |
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21:51 | . Glad you're paying attention. ready for now? We're just gonna |
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21:56 | triple the number the vertebrae There are plus four. Which is how |
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22:11 | 33. Yeah. Yeah. actually, I'm sorry. I heard |
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22:17 | right number back there. 33. , 19 plus 10. 29 plus |
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22:23 | . 33. 33 plus 23 is . I'm just trying to see if |
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22:30 | if you can do math in the , you're awake. All right. |
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22:35 | right. Look at these numbers. have seven cervical, 12 thoracic five |
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22:38 | five sacral for cox Egil. How we remember? How many are in |
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22:43 | of these different things? All I'm gonna give you a trick at |
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22:46 | . This is my trick. I know if it's gonna work for |
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22:48 | When do most humans eat breakfast? students? seven a.m. There we |
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22:56 | Seven. You said 787 A. . All right. When do most |
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22:59 | eat lunch? 11 11. no. 12. When do most |
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23:05 | eat dinner? 55 o'clock. I it's weird. And then they have |
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23:11 | again. Right? And then we up late and then we party and |
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23:16 | fun. And then we're hungry. so we go to the 24 hour |
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23:20 | , you know, usually like, waffle house or something and we eat |
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23:23 | at four a.m. And wow, look that. 7 12 55 and |
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23:32 | I just got to remember what time humans eat. Right? If I |
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23:37 | , if I do students, they'd like, well, you know, |
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23:40 | we have breakfast, you know lunch like 11 o'clock because I can skip |
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23:46 | . I'm not gonna eat at Maybe I snack at five, but |
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23:49 | have dinner like what? Seven or . Right? And then you get |
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23:53 | midnight snack on. So see those get all screwed up. So just |
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23:57 | normal humans, 7:00, breakfast, lunch dinner at five. They have |
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24:07 | . That's why we're fat. And then midnight snack, which is |
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24:11 | a midnight snack. Maybe that's when get up to pee. I don't |
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24:14 | . All right. Now, if look at this, you'll see that |
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24:18 | vertebrae are not straight. There's actually to it. Actually when you're born |
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24:22 | born C shaped, right? And over time you rearrange the structure of |
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24:29 | bones so that you end up with uh curvature like So alright, so |
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24:33 | can see a concave convex, concave then there's this slight convex and then |
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24:38 | just kind of ignore the sigil bones . And the reason we kind of |
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24:42 | it because there's a fusion that takes there. All right now, the |
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24:47 | we have this, this kind of convex and con cavity is that that |
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24:54 | or distributes the weight of the bones from gravity. All right now, |
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25:02 | gotta think about it like this if take a bone and I stack it |
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25:06 | way instead of straight on. I'm putting all the weight on in fact |
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25:09 | I'm doing is I'm creating a force moving in this direction. So I |
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25:14 | moving the force all the way so the forces being distributed instead of |
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25:19 | on down through your body. All , so that's the primary way it |
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25:23 | as a better way of support. second thing that it does is that |
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25:26 | actually creates some springing minus two to spinal column. Alright now, in |
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25:33 | , it's hard to see the spring because we stand upright when we run |
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25:36 | kind of run upright, even though may be tilting our body slightly forward |
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25:40 | we run, but you really want see the spring penis. Watch one |
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25:44 | those nature channels, watch like a run and they're like Accordions. |
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25:48 | they shrink and then they expand outward shrink and expand out. And that's |
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25:52 | a function of the structure of the cord in that organism. Alright, |
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25:59 | it functions kind of like a spring help you create that forward momentum. |
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26:04 | also provides a certain degree of flexibility increases resilience with regard to that structure |
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26:11 | how it protects the spinal column. , So one of the things I |
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26:16 | make sure you do is do not the vertebrae for the spinal cord. |
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26:20 | right. Those are two different structures vertebrae or the bones that protect the |
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26:24 | cord. So structurally this is the view of what a vertebrae looks |
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26:34 | All right, You can see it this hole that sits in the middle |
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26:39 | it. Well, I'll start down with the big This is the |
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26:42 | that's the primary structure you can see here, that's where the body |
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26:46 | When you look at these pictures, big round structure right there, this |
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26:51 | portion right there, That is the . And then just posterior to |
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26:59 | you have this small hole and you see the hole is basically stacked. |
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27:03 | a hole and a hole and a and all. And so what you |
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27:06 | is you're creating a canal through which spinal cord is actually going to be |
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27:12 | . That's completely protected and again going here. You can see where that |
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27:17 | . It's right there. Alright. on the anterior side of the body |
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27:22 | the spinal cord and then surrounding the cord. Through that framing is a |
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27:29 | that protects on all sides. All . So this arch portion that makes |
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27:35 | the other half of that for ehman a couple parts to it. |
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27:40 | We have medicals. So the pentacle basically the two sides and then the |
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27:44 | top arch portion that's gonna be on posterior side, that's referred to as |
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27:50 | stamina. All right. So we the vertebral framing and the body. |
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27:58 | you can see we have a whole of stuff sticking off the edges. |
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28:00 | are called processes. You can go a friend and go and touch the |
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28:05 | there back, give them a back . They'll appreciate it. But you'll |
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28:08 | right there on the spine. You'll that hard bone in the middle of |
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28:11 | back. That is the spine ist . All right, right. They're |
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28:18 | process. And then what we have we have that set out to the |
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28:22 | and see them here going out this . That would be the transverse |
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28:28 | And then we have two that are up and to processes that are pointing |
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28:33 | . And what they do is the that are pointing up are attached to |
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28:37 | in contact with the ones that are down on the vertebrae that's above |
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28:42 | And whenever two bones come together we that an articulation. So these are |
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28:47 | processes. So we have superior processes up. We have inferior process is |
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28:52 | down the superior on the bottom one in contact with the inferior of the |
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28:59 | the superior got to make sure I'm my words correctly. So you don't |
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29:03 | confused. The one that's on the has a spirit pointing up. The |
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29:06 | that's on the top has the inferiors down. That's where the contact |
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29:09 | If I was using proper anatomy, staying superior inferior to many times. |
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29:14 | right, So, you can see that when I'm pointing at right |
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29:21 | that would be an inferior process. thing right underneath it. That's a |
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29:26 | process right there. Okay, so vertebrae has these seven processes to trans |
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29:38 | two, superior to inferiors, one spinal wow ! Now these bones don't |
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29:51 | sit directly on top of each other between them. There's a bunch of |
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29:55 | cartilage that sits in between to provide between those heavy bones. All |
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30:02 | these are what formed the inter vertebral . We can what you can think |
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30:10 | these inter vertebral discs. This is first textbook I've ever seen where they |
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30:14 | draw a full inter vertebral disc that ruptured. So this is actually kind |
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30:20 | cool. All other textbooks just have ruptured disc. So down here on |
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30:24 | bottom is showing you a normal Up here would be a ruptured |
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30:29 | All right, you can see where rupture is taking place. So the |
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30:33 | you can think about this if you've seen dr Scholl shoes, you ever |
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30:37 | the pads you put inside the Right? Dr Scholl's Alright, basically |
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30:42 | it is is a bunch of fibrous tissue that sits on the outside and |
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30:47 | fibers connective tissue serves as a barrier the squishy center. Alright, the |
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30:52 | like center sits on the inside. the part on the outside, that's |
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30:57 | Angeles fibrosis kind of easy to Fiber fibrosis right? And then on |
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31:03 | inside the jelly squishy part, that's nucleus propulsive. So weight is being |
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31:10 | to this inter vertebral disc. It's on that gel portion. The the |
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31:15 | or not the annual is the nucleus . And what it's doing is it's |
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31:20 | pressure downward. Which causes that Angela's pulses to push outward. But what's |
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31:26 | it in place is that fiber. so basically what you do is you |
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31:30 | the slight bulging as it basically disperses and weight outward. All right, |
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31:38 | you tear the Angeles fibrosis, that's you have a herniated disc and so |
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31:44 | that gelatinous gooey portion can actually press . That was weird. You know |
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31:57 | I did differently there? Um so that that portion can now push |
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32:03 | and it can press up against things it presses up against a spinal |
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32:07 | you're gonna notice it and so a disc is very very painful. Alright |
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32:14 | the vertebral discs are cartilage, not . They sit between the vertebrae between |
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32:20 | bodies of each of the vertebrae to for those forces to go outward. |
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32:27 | probably in the lab but not you're gonna start seeing the different shapes |
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32:34 | the different types of of vertebrae. for example the cervical vertebrae have a |
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32:41 | shape relative to the thoracic vertebrae which unique from the lumbar vertebrae. |
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32:47 | So remember we start at the top have seven cervical, then we have |
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32:51 | thoracic, then we have five lumbar we're just kind of working our way |
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32:57 | and two the cock sigil in the , so be sacral five. And |
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33:03 | cock sigil four. But you can here they have all those features that |
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33:08 | just described. So they both have they all have transverse. They all |
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33:14 | the superior inferior articular processes. They have the spinal process but they're all |
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33:20 | very different looking from one another. the reason for that is that they |
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33:24 | different sorts of movement. Right? for example look at when I bend |
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33:32 | this would be my lumbar region. this is about as mobile as I |
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33:36 | . But notice I can't do the sort of movement up top right where |
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33:41 | thoracic is. But look at my right have a lot more degrees of |
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33:47 | , more movement that I'm capable of right, I can do this not |
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33:57 | the same kind of movement that I get right around here right? Not |
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34:02 | flexible. Also older. So but that kind of makes sense? |
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34:07 | the shape of the bones allow for movement with regard to the cervical |
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34:12 | One and C. Two have special . Alright. See one's name is |
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34:18 | the atlas. All right. I'm sure that none of you have taken |
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34:24 | mythology. Anyone taking greek mythology? know who atlas was? Who's |
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34:34 | Here's what? Right? He's a who carries the world on the |
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34:39 | He's been cursed to carry the world the end of time. So, |
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34:44 | was that's who atlases. So, you understand why C. One is |
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34:49 | atlas? Put your head, that's world. Right? So, atlas |
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34:55 | holding up the world underneath the C. Two is called the |
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35:03 | All right. Why do you suppose called the access? I have no |
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35:08 | . Alright, Because it allows me turn my head back and forth. |
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35:12 | right. So, those two have special names. Alright, But they |
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35:17 | specific movement because of their particular One of the unique features of the |
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35:24 | vertebrae is their transverse processes have a . Alright, So here you can |
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35:31 | here is the transverse process and it with the rib. And so at |
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35:36 | end of each of the transverse processes the thoracic vertebrae you have. The |
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35:41 | facet, costal refers to the The rib articulation. That's all it |
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35:48 | . All right. So you can here that little fast. Right? |
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36:01 | we mentioned the sacrum and there being bones, we mentioned the cox and |
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36:05 | cox Egil vertebrae. We said there's bones and these particular vertebrae fused together |
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36:13 | early on. Actually the cock Siegel kind of fuse about y'all's age, |
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36:17 | a little bit older around age, to 25. They fuse. But |
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36:21 | are individual bones that are coming together they're forming a larger structure. And |
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36:25 | you can see here with the you can see that fusion. So |
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36:29 | we use we refer to the sacrum single structure as opposed to the five |
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36:34 | that make up that single structure. can see within these uh the |
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36:43 | They have these holes these for me write for Raymond singular for media is |
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36:48 | . And so these holes serve as passageway for blood vessels as well as |
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36:53 | to move down your legs alright? to serve the lower pelvis with the |
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37:01 | . That's the bone that you never to break in here. Ever broken |
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37:04 | coccyx. I know ever bruised your . Was it fun? No, |
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37:13 | is not fun. It is like worst thing like four years ago I |
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37:16 | my coccyx. I had to call h. Police to walk me to |
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37:20 | to drive me to class because it that much to walk. It was |
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37:25 | And you see me walking across campus like the oldest person ever. You |
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37:30 | ? All right. And the reason so painful, there's a bunch of |
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37:34 | tiny ligaments that are attached to And so when you break that now |
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37:38 | have all this freedom of movement or like that that you're tugging and pulling |
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37:43 | , things that shouldn't be tugged and on. Alright, so the sacrum |
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37:47 | , the the coccyx or the coccyx are are four and they fused |
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38:03 | How many bones? I don't £56.56. Were a little over a quarter |
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38:12 | the way done. The thoracic cage made up of a couple of different |
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38:19 | . We have ribs and we have sternum. That's what you're referring to |
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38:23 | thing. Right? Here. That's breastplate, right? There's three bones |
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38:27 | make up the sternum and if you at a tie, the sternum kind |
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38:31 | looks like a tie. All Just bear with me. Kind of |
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38:35 | right. So, the verse bone called the manubrium. Alright? It's |
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38:39 | of like the thai portion of the . Its job is to articulate with |
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38:43 | ribs. It also articulates with the , which is gonna be part of |
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38:47 | appendix color skeleton. This portion right is referred to as the body. |
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38:52 | might see it someplace is referred to the Gladiolas? Or really the |
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38:57 | Excuse me Gladiolas. Alright. You what the Gladiolas is all right. |
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39:03 | of you may have heard of Gladiolas to a type of flower but that's |
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39:07 | named after another structure. The gladiolas the sword of a gladiator. They |
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39:14 | kind of like sort of a Kind of, That's where it comes |
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39:21 | . And then this last little bit here, that's called the void |
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39:25 | So that would be like this portion down there. It's primarily made up |
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39:29 | cartilage until about the age of 40 which point becomes ossified. It's basically |
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39:34 | a whole bunch of muscles and ligaments attached to um uh for the abdomen |
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39:40 | um Yeah, it's it's that last bit the tip of the sternum. |
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39:46 | manubrium body or gladiolas as well as process since she keeps answering how |
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39:54 | How many bones? 56 Plus three 59. Yeah. All of these |
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40:06 | I mean the question is will it if you break it? Yes. |
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40:11 | . Living tissue. Remember we have osteo sites. Osteoblasts. Osteoclasts are |
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40:16 | be sitting there trying to make it with the stress. Yeah. |
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40:22 | If you don't want to break that the thing you're most concerned with the |
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40:26 | , you don't ever ever gotten the knocked out of where they punch you |
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40:29 | , you know. Yeah, that's like that special button, that zip |
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40:33 | process right there. It's like a button that just says here, let |
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40:37 | just remove all the air from your . But yeah, when they're saying |
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40:40 | you're doing cpr you want to avoid that because the structure that allows that |
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40:46 | move are the are the ribs. what you're doing is you're using those |
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40:51 | of as a spring as a bellows move air in and out. But |
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40:55 | pressing down on a structure that doesn't to be pressed on basically. Is |
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41:00 | to protect the heart? Right? many thoracic vertebrae over there? 12 |
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41:18 | vertebrae all have costal facets? so how many paired ribs do we |
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41:26 | ? 12, 12 pairs or a of 24? Right ribs are associated |
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41:33 | the thoracic vertebrae? Alright. So you know how many thoracic vertebrae |
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41:38 | you know how many ribs there Alright, and it's paired. So |
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41:42 | 12 on this side, 12 on side, that's 20 for 24 plus |
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41:46 | is really 60 plus 24 84 minus , 83. See how quickly they |
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41:51 | by. It's like no no big . Alright. Seven of these, |
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41:56 | first seven are called the true You can see all these ribs are |
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42:00 | to these thoracic vertebrae? Uh You see them up top, you can |
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42:04 | them down below as they come around ones that are directly attached to the |
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42:09 | so they're all going to be attached the costal cartilage. But the ones |
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42:13 | are directly attached. So here's the and you can see cartilage to sternum |
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42:18 | to sternum all the way down. first seven are attached directly, even |
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42:24 | one attached directly. And then look happens. This cartilage is attached to |
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42:29 | cartilage. This cartilage is attached to cartilage. This cartilage is attached to |
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42:33 | cartilage all right. And then down , this one doesn't even have |
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42:37 | This one even further, doesn't have . So those last five are referred |
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42:43 | as the false ribs. First seven you attach directly by cartilage. That |
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42:48 | true. If you're attached indirectly, false Or if you have no |
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42:53 | your false These last two without cartilage the floating ribs. So that's number |
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42:59 | and number 12. All right. two makes sense. 11 and |
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43:05 | So, ribs 12 ribs seven true falls. The last two of the |
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43:11 | are the floating ribs structurally pretty Now ribs are flat bones. They're |
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43:20 | long bones. You'd like to think them as being long bones, but |
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43:23 | not. So your homework tonight is go test this out. Find good |
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43:26 | joint. Go get yourself some ribs the ribs look at this bone and |
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43:30 | is it a flat bone? Or it a long bone? A long |
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43:34 | would be shaped like this. A bone would be shaped like this, |
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43:38 | ? Yeah. And go and take look and see the best homework you'll |
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43:43 | did. I'm not gonna grate for though. Alright. The long |
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43:50 | Alright so the way we're looking at is we're looking from the back to |
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43:54 | front. So over here portion right is one catch to this would be |
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44:01 | the costal cartilage is and it's attached the sternum. So this long portion |
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44:05 | we're looking at here is the portion comes up and around through the |
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|
44:10 | Alright. That is called the Alright. The next long portion is |
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44:16 | right here? It's called the Alright. It sits between the two |
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44:22 | of attachment to the vertebrae. So have a shaft and you have a |
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44:26 | . And the way that that rib before it becomes the neck. So |
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44:30 | chef turns sharply. That's called the . So we have a shaft. |
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44:34 | have an angle and then we have neck and the two portions that make |
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44:38 | the boundaries of the neck. We the portion that's attached to the body |
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44:42 | the thoracic vertebrae. That's called the . And we have the portion that's |
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44:46 | to the facet on the transverse process called the tuber coal. So this |
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|
44:52 | all out of order up here. you would think of it like |
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|
44:54 | It's shaft angle neck head. All . So the hardest part is to |
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45:02 | what's the to brickell. It's the with the transverse process. What's ahead |
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45:05 | the arctic articulation with the body. next sits between those two points. |
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45:11 | angle comes around. That's the easy . And the shaft is the longest |
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|
45:17 | . And how many ribs do we ? 12 pair one on each |
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|
45:23 | So 24 in total. But 12 . And that is your actual |
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45:35 | 83 bones. That's not hard. for the easy for more easy. |
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45:41 | you have questions about these. if you're not in the lab, |
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45:45 | of your homework is going to be here going through those atlases and kind |
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|
45:49 | learning the pieces parts. Yes, . Yes. So all all 2012 |
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45:58 | should say 1212 has a pair or 24 are equally paired. So you |
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46:05 | 12 on one side. 12 on other side. No no no, |
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46:11 | sorry. So for the vertebrae the , you only have one of each |
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46:16 | ? Because it sits in the And so that is um That is |
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46:21 | makes up your middle portion. So have those 7 12 554. That's |
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46:29 | you have of those. But then ribs as they're coming up, there's |
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46:32 | pair on each side. Alright? then when it comes to those facial |
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46:36 | cranial bones, we had a couple were not paired and then we had |
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46:40 | bunch that were paired. Okay. right, any other questions? You |
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|
46:48 | want to go home. I can it. All right. We're now |
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46:55 | into the girdles. Okay, So gonna start with the upper limbs. |
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47:01 | gonna work our way down and then gonna go down to the lower limbs |
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47:04 | work our way down through those. shoulder girdle is made up of two |
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|
47:11 | . The first one is the the second is gonna be the |
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|
47:15 | This is your clavicle. Alright, bone right here. Its purpose is |
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|
47:22 | hold your arm out to the Alright. And the reason it sits |
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47:28 | is because your scapula is floating in muscles of the back. Alright. |
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|
47:34 | what we have is we have the connected to the clavicle which is connected |
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|
47:38 | the scapula and that is what holds arm out. You break your |
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47:46 | your arm falls forward and inward. broken the clavicle. Yeah, that's |
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|
47:53 | a fun one either. Right? did have a friend whose grandmother when |
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47:57 | got mad when she got mad at , would grab him by the |
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48:00 | make him pay attention. Apparently you what that feels like. So the |
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48:06 | is like what? Yeah, I you like a chicken. Alright. |
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48:12 | looking at the clavicle we said that attached to the sternum and it's attached |
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|
48:18 | the scapula, the portions that's attached the scat or to the sternum is |
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|
48:23 | the sternal end. How clever. then the part that's attached to the |
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|
48:29 | is attached to a process on the called the acro me in. So |
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|
48:34 | called the chromium lend. So that of sets the arrangement. So sternal |
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|
48:39 | a chromium lend is over here. when you see a picture like this |
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48:47 | you see all these names and stuff that, don't freak out about |
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|
48:51 | I mean the first thing that's gonna is gonna overload your brain. So |
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48:54 | you gotta do is you have to that step back and say I just |
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48:57 | to know the things that I'm being to learn. Don't try to memorize |
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49:01 | here. All right. And so you need to do in this particular |
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49:05 | is kind of locate what's the front what's the back? All right. |
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|
49:10 | the scapula, as I said, embedded in a bunch of muscle in |
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49:13 | body. All right in your It sits on the back side, |
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|
49:19 | ? The portion that's smooth, The side that's smooth, That's the |
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|
49:25 | that is facing towards your body. portion that has this large thing sticking |
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|
49:31 | . The spine sticking out is the that's faced away from your body. |
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|
49:37 | this would be the anterior side. is the posterior side. So the |
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|
49:42 | side of dorsal side has what it and that spine sticks up and it |
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|
49:48 | as an attachment point for a bunch muscles. And the lateral end. |
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|
49:53 | that a chromium process that we just . So the scapula would extend across |
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|
49:59 | way. You can see here there's clavicle, right? We're looking at |
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|
50:07 | anterior side here and there's your chrome and that would be the chromium end |
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|
50:13 | the chromium end of the of the . So chromium process part of the |
|
|
50:23 | spine serves as an attachment point for bunch of muscles here. This structure |
|
|
50:28 | the lateral edge is the Glynn oid . That's the place that articulates with |
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|
50:35 | humor versus long bone of the upper . So that's where the head |
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50:41 | So that's what you think of as shoulder socket. Alright. That would |
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50:47 | called the Illinois cavity. And then have three fossil of which I think |
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50:52 | of of importance that you should And again these structures are where muscle |
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50:57 | going to be found on the anterior . We have this large smooth |
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51:03 | Alright. It's called the sub scapular . So it's below the scapula is |
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51:10 | you look at it. Alright so would be the sub scapular fossil, |
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51:14 | big giant flat surface on the posterior . We use the spine as a |
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51:20 | point. The portion above the spine the super a spineless fossa. The |
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51:26 | below where muscles attaches the infra So the below spine process. Or |
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51:33 | . Excuse me. So super spin and for spin this sub scapular, |
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51:40 | your scapula? The humerus is the . It isn't. Have you ever |
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51:53 | begged your findings. Have you ever ? You're funny man. No. |
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51:58 | done that. Okay. Yeah. like when I look at people and |
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52:04 | like it. He's not talking to . I'm not gonna look at |
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52:09 | Is it funny when you bring your ? But no. So it |
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52:15 | All right. So the humerus is humorous. It's not funny when you |
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52:21 | your funny bone. So you can see kind of. What am I |
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52:26 | to do is I'm trying to connect things together. Right. Alright so |
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52:31 | humerus is the long bone of the are alright. It articulates with the |
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52:37 | at the glen oid cavity. The that articulates at the glen oid cavity |
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52:41 | called the head. So the proximal of the humerus is the head. |
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52:47 | have a bunch of portions that stand but see that stand out that muscles |
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52:54 | gonna attach to. We have the and lesser to brickell for example we |
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52:58 | the deltoid tuba ross et This is telling you which muscles attached to |
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53:03 | The deltoid ferocity. That that's where deltoid muscle attaches. Alright so these |
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53:10 | stick out so that your arm can specific sorts of movements because those are |
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53:15 | sites for ligaments and for muscles you along the long length. So this |
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53:21 | be the shaft. Right? Then get down to the bottom and this |
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53:25 | where we're gonna articulate with two The two bones of the lower |
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53:30 | All right. The two bones are be the old and the radius. |
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53:35 | the anatomical position. Right? Palm like. So so the bone on |
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53:41 | outside is the radius. The bone the inside is the owner. The |
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53:48 | of the humerus with the radius is the capitulation. It's going to be |
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53:53 | on the lateral side. That's the you can remember it. If you |
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53:55 | where the radius is capitulate. Um the attached or is the point of |
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54:01 | where these two articulate? All so capital. Um And then on |
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54:06 | medial side, that's where the trow is. Now this one's a little |
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54:09 | easy to remember because it's going to with the ulna in a structure called |
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54:14 | trow clear notch. So the two together kind of go hand in |
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54:17 | All right now if you take your and look down at it you have |
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54:22 | bony structures that sit on the outside ? You can see it right there |
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54:26 | if you feel on your other side can feel it over here. |
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54:30 | Those are called the epic con Alright, so there's a lateral one |
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54:35 | side would be the lateral this side that side for this arm. That |
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54:44 | I'm looking at this time, which is lateral that way medial is this |
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54:48 | ? Okay, so you can find two. And those show you that |
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54:53 | be that little bump that comes So you know how you draw |
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54:57 | We've all drawn bones right? Most the guys we drew bones a lot |
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55:01 | we drew skulls and crossbones a right? So you make that little |
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55:05 | of bumpy bump at the end. are representing your epic con dials right |
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55:12 | . The reason I'm pointing this out the epic candle service attachment points for |
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55:17 | , but this is where that owner travels right and it travels right there |
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55:24 | that epic con dial is. And comes right down and around and keeps |
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55:28 | downward the arm. So when you right here, we call that our |
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55:34 | bob right? And you can actually your finger and you can roll it |
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55:39 | that older nerve and you can get little tingle going all right. You |
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55:43 | feel it. No one's gonna press real hard because no one wants to |
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55:47 | that really awful feeling. All But you can kind of So there |
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55:52 | go. The humerus, the bone isn't that's your funny bone. So |
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55:59 | down our arms, forearms, lower , here's our alma. And our |
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56:03 | , radius we said is the lateral knows the medial bone. We're gonna |
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56:07 | that they actually can cross over each when we super Nate. So the |
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56:12 | of the medial bone we've mentioned or already mentioned the cochlear notch. So |
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56:18 | trope of the humerus goes into this that's called the trow clear notch. |
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56:24 | can see it up here. So they've done is they've taken the structure |
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56:29 | looking at it now from a medial lateral view. And you can see |
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56:33 | is the true clear notch and that's sets the truck into that notch and |
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56:40 | you to create this sort of movement your arm. The bony portion back |
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56:46 | , that's called the L. Crown on, right? So when |
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56:49 | think of the bony portion of your , that's your lecrone on. |
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56:54 | when you come around the edge, would be the ala cronyn process. |
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56:58 | they label the process. But it's portion right here that sticks out. |
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57:02 | the al acronym. And then down , that little bony portion that sits |
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57:07 | to the side. Okay, on side, I'm sorry, it would |
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57:11 | on this side because that's your So right over there. That's the |
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57:15 | oid process. And it's what's creating articulation with the carpal bones that make |
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57:20 | the wrist. So the radius has stylist process as well. And the |
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57:27 | thing I wanted, I don't think even talk about any of the other |
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57:30 | that are of concern. So humorous up here with the scapula and it |
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57:39 | down here with both the owner and radius. The radius and the ulna |
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57:43 | gonna articulate with the carpal bones. I stopped counting, we can go |
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57:55 | and count, but I'm not All right. So one of the |
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58:01 | that people remember stuff in uh anatomy they use harmonics. Ever learned harmonics |
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58:09 | come up the phrase and it helps remember like the sequence of a bunch |
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58:12 | words. All right. And with carpal bones and the partial bones. |
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58:17 | is one of the places where you a lot of pneumonic, pneumonic that |
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58:20 | easiest to remember are dirty, no because our brains remember dirty things a |
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58:26 | better than clean things. All now this is a respectable class. |
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58:33 | I try to make them less dirty you. But I mean, you |
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58:37 | I swear if you look up any , it's going to be some sort |
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58:40 | dirty phrase. All right. And this is how we remember the carpal |
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58:45 | . I've tried to clean up. found a picture. This artist is |
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58:48 | really interesting artist. He takes contortionists and he twists them and puts |
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58:53 | in pictures and then takes pictures. guys watched cartoons right? When you |
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58:56 | kids, like tom and jerry when jerry and spike would get in a |
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59:00 | . How do they represent the fight the cartoon? It was a cloud |
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59:05 | usually like an arm coming out and a leg coming out. So he |
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59:08 | a picture where he has like five all in a ball and that's like |
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59:14 | limbs are coming out and it's like supposed to be a fight at the |
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59:17 | or something like that. But this the same sort of picture to help |
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59:20 | us to remember the pneumonic and some try positions that they can't handle. |
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59:26 | right. So what are our carpal there? The wrist bones? So |
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59:30 | to make sure that we understand our is here. It's what allows us |
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59:34 | make this movement, right? Do see that? It's not up |
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59:39 | It's very very small bones that are together. There's eight of them. |
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59:44 | right. And they're held in close one another by a bunch of |
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59:48 | And so there's two rows of four . And so we basically go |
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59:52 | illuminate trickle atrium pissy form and notice is your thumb. So we're going |
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59:58 | this direction, Right? So scaphoid eight pistol for intricate tree. Um |
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60:06 | back around to the other side. we got to that sound a lot |
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60:09 | each other, the trapezius and the . And then we go to cap |
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60:12 | eight and into hamate. And so just learn those orders. Now |
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60:20 | this is not a lab. It's in a lab when you can sit |
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60:23 | and point at a bone and what is this? Right? It's |
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60:27 | to do that when you're looking at picture like this, You just memorize |
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60:31 | picture. But what if I turn picture upside down and backwards? Then |
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60:35 | kind of screwed, aren't you? ? So, we're gonna let the |
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60:39 | really kind of do all the hard . So I may ask you a |
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60:43 | like which row is the the you the handmade in as an example? |
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60:48 | it'll be a little bit easier on . Alright? But if you need |
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60:52 | remember the pneumonic, that's the that if you don't like that |
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60:56 | go find your own. This is one I found that I was |
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60:59 | okay, I think that's works all . And then we get down to |
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61:04 | hands and remember what I said is you look at a skeleton, When |
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61:07 | see your palm, your palm is with long bones. And so you |
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61:11 | see them right here, those are to as the metacarpals. There are |
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61:15 | of them. All right. And we do is we count from the |
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61:18 | and we work um inwardly. So . So this would be number or |
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61:23 | , this would be number one, two, number three. Number |
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61:26 | Number five. So it's metacarpal number . And then the fingers are referred |
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61:34 | as the phalanges. Alright, collectively the phalanges, they're all long |
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61:40 | The thumb is the pollocks. so the thumb 12 bones. Remember |
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61:55 | I said on Tuesday? I said body is your cheat sheet. So |
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61:59 | you forget stick up your thumb and it. How many bones do you |
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62:07 | to take your finger bend it? many bones? You see three? |
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62:12 | can do it with any of So your fingers have three bones, |
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62:17 | have three failings failings is singular phalanges the plural together. So you have |
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62:24 | phalanges each failing. So the one closest proximity to the one that's furthest |
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62:30 | distal. The one that sits in middle is middle. Alright, so |
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62:35 | can see there those are the individual . So the thumb itself is called |
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62:40 | pollocks and that is the upper So it wasn't hard. 1238. |
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62:51 | a whole bunch. five Plus How much? 14. How many |
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63:02 | in total? 14 plus five and plus 8. 27 plus two. |
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63:08 | plus 1 30 plus the scapula and uh The Clavicle. Another 232 times |
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63:21 | 64 bones. Man. We just through all that stuff. How many |
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63:28 | we have before him? 83. bones. Now we just gotta do |
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63:35 | legs. The pelvic girdle is made of three bones that have been fused |
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63:42 | to form basically one big giant actually bones on each side. So there's |
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63:47 | total of six bones that make up pelvic girdle. Or your hip |
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63:51 | All right. What we call these collectively is the mosque Aqsa. |
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63:57 | so there's three pairs they fuse around age of 13 to 15 and they |
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64:03 | that bony pelvic girdle that protects all structures of the pelvis. The three |
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64:11 | . The easy one to remember is you can feel on the side, |
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64:14 | here? That crest, that top of your hip, that's called the |
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64:20 | . That that portion that sticks up the iliac crest. So the bone |
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64:24 | the ilium, the bone that you on is called the skim. And |
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64:30 | bone that sits in the front is the pubis. Alright. So the |
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64:35 | together and there's there's three on this , three on that side fused together |
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64:40 | together, those three pairs formed the cock. So you can see there's |
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64:45 | big giant gaping hole between the fusion these bones. It's called the |
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64:50 | Foramen the foramen is what nerves and vessels used to get down into your |
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64:54 | and go down to innovate and provide . This is looking from the |
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65:02 | You can kind of see here there's indentation. This is similar to the |
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65:08 | oid cavity to which the humerus is to for the upper arm. That |
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65:13 | that little indentation is called the asi . Um All right now to see |
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65:18 | buell. Um Asi tabula. Um means vinegar bowl. And so vinegar |
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65:24 | can refer to the thing that you your fingers into between courses to clean |
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65:28 | hands or can refer to um uh the cup that they gave to christ |
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65:35 | he was on the cross to feed vinegar. Alright. So again either |
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65:40 | in uh in reference to. All . But that is that a c |
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65:46 | um is a cavity to which the bone is going to be associated. |
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65:51 | right. And that's a point of for all three bones. One of |
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65:58 | things that we can look at when look at this is this is one |
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66:01 | the areas where we can see sexual or fizz um in humans very very |
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66:05 | . The male and the female pelvis very very different. Male, male |
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66:10 | female pelvis. The primary reason for difference in shape is for the purpose |
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66:14 | giving birth Children. We have females this very wide. You can see |
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66:20 | wide pubic arch, you can see inlet is much much wider and the |
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66:26 | themselves are much more shallow and males basically have more of an upright |
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|
66:31 | So this is just an example. are all the different characteristics. But |
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66:35 | just a point of example that you look at the skeleton and go oh |
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66:39 | looking at the structure of the Oscar . I can determine the sex of |
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66:46 | particular um skeleton to what it belongs . So moving down from the |
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66:56 | Yeah cox to we go to the . Alright. The femur is the |
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67:02 | or largest bone in the body. about one quarter of your side. |
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67:05 | there's another one of those fun ones if you dig up a skeleton and |
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67:08 | find the femur. You can actually the femur and you can calculate the |
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67:12 | of the person because it is always quarter the length or the size of |
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67:17 | person that you're looking at. structurally the place of articulation is the |
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67:24 | . So the head is where you at the assay tabula. Um of |
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67:27 | Oscar aqsa. We have a bunch processes that set up. We have |
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67:32 | canter's alright, this is where some the gluteal and thigh muscles are going |
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67:38 | attach. We have the gluteal tubarao which is not shown here. But |
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67:43 | this structure kind of comes off like that is where the gluteal tuba rossi |
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67:49 | be. You don't need to identify you hear that word gluteal tuba rossi |
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67:53 | kind of like the Deltoid tubarao That's the big muscle. You know |
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67:56 | your glutes are right Alright. The of your butt. There's three of |
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68:03 | greater, lesser and medial. All . And so those muscles are attaching |
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68:09 | holding and and giving strength of that joint. Um The shaft is this |
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68:15 | portion you can see at the very we have the articulation with the next |
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68:21 | and here we have something that's kind unique. This particular articulation is called |
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68:27 | con dial and there's two of So normally Akande I'll you might see |
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68:32 | . It's just a shape of a . And so the epic condo would |
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68:36 | the area above the condo, I'll here we have to con dials that |
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68:41 | side by side that are associated with next bone in the uh in the |
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68:48 | which is the tibia. So the articulates with the tibia um in the |
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68:53 | side and on the superior side on proximal side it's articulating with the ox |
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68:58 | . Oh now I just want to here. This is also where you're |
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69:02 | see the patella. So you can they put the patella in place. |
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69:05 | protects the knee joint. When we about articulations we'll see this a little |
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69:10 | better. But you can see it's . They're trying to show here that |
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69:15 | a tendon and ligament. The ligament on the bottom side. The tendon |
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69:17 | on the top side. And so you move you're actually pulling the patella |
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69:22 | and away from that joint as you . All right. So like when |
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69:26 | leg is extended it sits in front it's kind of loose. But when |
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69:31 | tighten it up, the patella is sitting there and protecting that open |
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69:39 | Lower leg. two bones just like the lower arm. We had the |
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69:50 | and the way I remember this is . T. F. We go |
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69:53 | femur completely articulates with the tibia. that's the larger of the two bones |
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69:59 | the lower leg. And then articulating the femur, sorry with the tibia |
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70:05 | the fibula. So femur tibia So weight is born through the |
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70:12 | Down through the tibia. Down to tar cell bones of the ankle and |
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70:17 | into the feet. All right. you can see here there's that bigger |
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70:23 | . You can see the articulation. , So here is the tibia structure |
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70:31 | I want to understand is down here the distal end. What you call |
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70:36 | ankle is actually part of the What you think of on the that's |
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70:40 | to be on the um the inner or the medial side and then on |
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70:44 | outer side. The thing that you to and say that's my ankle. |
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70:48 | actually part of the fibula. So are called the mallee Ally collectively. |
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70:53 | there's a medial Mallia list which is of the tibia. And we have |
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70:57 | lateral malleable. That's part of the . All right. And you can |
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71:01 | of like that like this. The cell bone, specifically the talus sits |
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71:07 | this as part of your ankle. then these two bones come and they |
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71:11 | on either side. And so now we've done is we've created a joint |
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71:16 | rocks back and forth between those two . Okay, so three bones in |
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71:27 | hip that the femur tibia fibula working to the tallis. So these are |
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71:34 | tarsus bones. They're not as There's seven of them instead of there |
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71:40 | eight. Like we had in our . Again, there's a pneumonic. |
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71:43 | found the clean one. So the is tall California. Navy Medical interns |
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71:49 | cuties. It's terrible, there's horrible english. But you can remember |
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71:54 | right. So the two Mallia to I'd come down like so right. |
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72:02 | first tar cell bone is called the . Alright the talus sits on top |
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72:09 | your heel bone which is the cal . The bone that comes forward is |
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72:15 | navicular and then we go immediately and next row there's four bones. Those |
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72:22 | are the medial the intermediate and then lateral uh uniform. And then finally |
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72:31 | one that sits over here on the is the cue Boyd. So talia's |
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72:36 | Calcavecchia's then navicular, then medial intermediate que uniforms. Que Boyd. And |
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72:44 | you can see T. C. . M. I. L. |
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72:48 | those are the uniforms. And that's here is Q. Boyd. Now |
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72:52 | you want you can come up with else to help you understand those the |
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72:54 | big ones though are the kind of easy ones to remember the talus and |
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72:58 | falcon ius we're down to the The long bones of the hands were |
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73:10 | the metacarpals, the long bones of feet. Those are called the metatarsals |
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73:16 | they take up the length portion of feet until you get down to your |
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73:21 | . When you get down to your . Those again are called the phalanges |
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73:25 | like your fingers are called phalanges. big toe is called the Alex. |
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73:30 | thumb was called the pollocks. So have the pollocks we have the Alex |
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73:36 | then each of these phalanges again there's be two in the big. So |
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73:41 | Alex has to approximate distal phalanges and all the other toes have three. |
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|
73:49 | , if you wear sandals then that's cheat sheet. Alright? You can |
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73:53 | your toes presuming you know how to your toes. Alright, so approximate |
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|
73:58 | and distal just like the fingers. your feet have to them a bunch |
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74:08 | arches. All right now if you're me, you have flat feet, |
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74:11 | have flat feet. So my arches not well pronounced but some of you |
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74:15 | really really well pronounced arches. And arch kind of looks like. So |
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74:20 | notice I'm not doing this, it's this, you have a lateral |
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74:23 | You have a medial arch and then have a transverse arch. And what |
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74:27 | does is that it allows for weight be distributed to the edges of the |
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|
74:33 | and serve as a spring for when take your steps right? So when |
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74:38 | take a step, what happens is that arch comes down and it basically |
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74:43 | out, forces go to the edges through the heel, down through the |
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74:47 | and out through the lateral side. then as you start lifting up the |
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74:51 | it's gonna all that energy potential energy in that stretching allows you to More |
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|
74:58 | lift your foot up. It helps you forward. So, it's a |
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75:03 | to help propel you during locomotion. , if you can't visualize this or |
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|
75:08 | it, go find some sand that's . I encourage you to head on |
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75:12 | to the beach, it's only 60 away. Take off your shoes, |
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75:16 | walk on the beach for a little and take a look and see the |
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75:19 | of your foot. You'll be able see that arch pretty well. All |
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75:24 | , that's today. I'm gonna just you because I'm just feeling generous |
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|
75:28 | What do we have in two An exam? So you should be |
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75:33 | up for your exam. I think . It probably opened up last night |
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75:36 | midnight. So find your times. , I will see you on Tuesday |
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75:44 | we'll do articulations. It will be lot |
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