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00:06 | they're now I'm turned on and you can hear me. What I was |
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00:10 | is I've never tried the live so I don't know if that would |
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00:14 | worth trying sometimes. Just for Just toe to screw everything up. |
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00:20 | , So next Tuesday is the last before Thanksgiving break. And officially, |
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00:27 | the last day we meet in Um, I have to be someplace |
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00:32 | Tuesday. And so I think what gonna try to do I'm not telling |
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00:36 | that we're not gonna meet on Tuesday , you know, in person |
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00:41 | but I will send out an I may just do us all online |
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00:46 | next Tuesday. Um, my sons the Boy Scouts, I'm a range |
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00:50 | officer for the Boy Scouts. Which I get to go to the rifle |
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00:53 | and sit there until the kids not shoot each other. Um, |
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00:58 | not that they would, but that's the Boy Scouts think. Um, |
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01:02 | , so, um, that's I be if they have good Internet, |
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01:07 | gonna I'm gonna lecture from there. way I don't have to travel the |
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01:11 | and have to get back up If not, then I'll probably just |
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01:16 | up here. But, you but I'll let you guys know before |
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01:19 | happens. And not like Tuesday I will let you know before |
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01:25 | Uh, but we are still having . Uh, if you're online, |
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01:29 | can do it anywhere, right? for on airplane. Well, I |
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01:32 | you could do it there, but gonna cost you like an arm and |
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01:34 | leg. All right, um, have a paper due coming up next |
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01:39 | , Right? Second draft. Is next week or does it this |
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01:41 | Okay. I can't remember what? set it up. I think I |
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01:45 | it up because previously I pushed up Thanksgiving. Them people would use Thanksgiving |
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01:49 | an excuse to turn in things and it's just, like, just |
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01:52 | get it done. So So it's Friday. Is that right? |
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01:56 | excellent. And then we get it , and then it's out of your |
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01:59 | . You don't have to worry about , right? I mean, that's |
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02:04 | you gotta look at these things. like, Yeah, it's done |
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02:08 | Then after that, we have After , we'll have two more lectures, |
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02:13 | ? This, uh, the Tuesday week is the male lecture on repugnant |
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02:17 | reproduction. And then the to the following Thanksgiving would be three female |
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02:23 | And then the Thursday would be How reproduction actually work on? But it's |
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02:29 | a sex talk, but it's a talk, right? I mean, |
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02:32 | not gonna talk about how we're going talk about what occurs, uh, |
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02:37 | , uh, to get fusion. today we give still finish up our |
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02:42 | about food, remember? What? type of meal did we have on |
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02:46 | Thursday? Not just a burger. right. It was a big, |
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02:52 | cheeseburger. And for those of you put bacon on it. We slept |
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02:55 | the bacon. We had a big side of fries and a big old |
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02:58 | . We're talking good. 4000 calories American meal. Yes, Right. |
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03:06 | remember, where did digestion start? the mouth. And what do we |
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03:09 | digesting? No. What? What we digesting? Carbohydrates and a little |
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03:15 | of fat. Then the food went to the stomach. We stop digesting |
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03:19 | , and then we started digesting proteins a little bit of fat And so |
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03:24 | that material is being pushed into the intestine. And we're going to see |
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03:29 | gonna happen, because there's one thing haven't really been digesting at this |
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03:33 | Really. We have been digesting the , and we're changing the nature. |
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03:37 | so when we get to the small so you can see here, this |
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03:40 | a picture showing you the Lord G tracts so you can see that has |
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03:44 | small test in the large intestine. really the rest of the track. |
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03:47 | then we have these accessory glands, liver and gall bladder, which kind |
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03:51 | go hand in hand, and then pancreas. All right. And so |
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03:55 | small intestine is where digestion, the bit of chemical digestion occurs and absorption |
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04:03 | . All right, so when we're food, we need to think small |
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04:07 | and then the large intestine. It rolling absorption, but it doesn't really |
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04:11 | a role in food absorption. It absorption in something else. We're gonna |
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04:16 | how that works. Now, how go about processing or digesting is gonna |
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04:20 | the function of the liver and the . So the reason they exist They |
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04:24 | just massive glands for producing enzymes for . All right, so that's kind |
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04:30 | our big picture today. The small . Sorry. Come on, |
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04:36 | Alright. Is the body's major digestive ? It's about 6 m long. |
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04:41 | gonna play some number of game so that's about 20 ft. You |
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04:44 | , it's not exactly 20 ft, you can see and it extends from |
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04:48 | pile orris of the stomach. So that that that a sphincter, they're |
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04:53 | the way to the Phileo. cycle sphincter, That's that's the extent |
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04:58 | it. So it's about 20 ft and has three segments duodenum to June |
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05:02 | , an ilium. If you break down, you can think about like |
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05:05 | the little itsy bitsy front end the odd numbers about 10 inches long. |
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05:08 | receives the secretions from the accessory digestive . So from the liver and gall |
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05:18 | and the pancreas and then in the , um, that's where the majority |
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05:22 | the chemical digestion is taking place. you can think of the Wadden is |
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05:25 | of the receiving region and then you to the jejune, um, where |
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05:29 | gonna be doing some digestion. You're to start the process of absorption and |
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05:33 | ultimately you get down to the which is the longest, and this |
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05:36 | where the remainder of the absorption is place. Okay, so it's really |
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05:40 | just his long, 20 ft long where digestion absorption is taking place |
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05:49 | We talked about the mucosa of all parts of the digestive system. Have |
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05:55 | sort of arrangements in terms of their . Right? We said that there's |
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06:00 | and ridges and folds and stuff, here's where we can really start seeing |
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06:04 | folds. Alright, we have these folds in the way you can think |
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06:08 | this like a serious of speed right? So instead of the tube |
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06:15 | like so right, that would be tube. Instead, your tube is |
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06:23 | like this. Okay, It's a tube. It's terrible drawing deal with |
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06:34 | , right? But you see, kind of bumps, and what you |
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06:37 | see here is that this slows down the material has to go up and |
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06:42 | the ridge is kind of like you to go over speed bumps and it |
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06:45 | the movement of the material down and this does, it increases the surface |
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06:49 | . The effect of surface area of digestive track by threefold. Now, |
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06:53 | it's 20 ft long, that makes effective length of the digestive tract. |
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06:57 | long? 64. Good. We're some simple math. Keep doing the |
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07:01 | for me. All right, so is primarily seen in the duodenum in |
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07:05 | jejune. Um and so the you don't see it quite as |
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07:09 | but it's still there. Alright, not as much. But what we've |
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07:13 | now is we basically are saying we to slow things down because we need |
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07:17 | finish the process of digestion and we need to take in the things that |
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07:22 | want. All right. And then you look on the folds, |
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07:26 | So you can imagine. Here's my like this, right? If I |
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07:30 | on my folds What? I'm gonna if I'm going to see a little |
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07:32 | . I go up and down, so. All right. These air |
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07:35 | the villa at the base of each . I is a crypt. And |
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07:39 | you can see Here is a There's the crypt way down low. |
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07:44 | right, Now, this is just projection up and down. So it's |
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07:48 | type of fold on top of the . So the fold on top of |
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07:51 | folding, it increases the surface area the effect of surface area tenfold. |
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07:56 | what is the effective length of digestive now? 600 ft long. |
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08:02 | think about that. You are this tiny thing and now you have an |
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08:06 | length of the digestive tract of 600 . All right, now what we're |
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08:10 | here by doing this is we're increasing absorptive area, the surface area, |
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08:17 | . And we're also increasing the secretive area of the digestive tract, so |
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08:21 | allows us to engage the time that's sitting in the digestive tract. |
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08:27 | each of these individual ville I has arterial has a capital G network has |
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08:31 | visual, even has a lymphatic which we call a lack deal, |
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08:35 | we're going to see the importance of just a moment. Maybe I have |
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08:37 | up there. Oh, it says absorbing lipids and lipid soluble vitamins. |
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08:42 | right, so you can think of finger having its own arterial, its |
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08:46 | venue. Its own lacked Hill and capital Orry network in there. So |
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08:50 | a lot of interaction that's going on . We have two major types of |
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08:55 | found out on the surface of the . It's called the villas absorptive |
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08:59 | What do you think it does? absorbs. Yeah, it says right |
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09:04 | . And then we have the goblet and goblet cells we have all throughout |
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09:06 | digestive tract. They're basically single cellular , uh, cells. And they |
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09:12 | a bunch of Meuse in, and helps lubricate the intestinal lining. |
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09:17 | so it basically helps grease the wheels that things can kind of move along |
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09:21 | fine, but it also protects. to see the thing we gotta remember |
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09:25 | protecting from is the indigestible material that are absorbing. All right? |
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09:31 | lot of the food that we consume pokey and and damaging to ourselves, |
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09:39 | at the microscopic level, right? basically is very, very sharp, |
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09:43 | it can damage cells. So putting that protective layer on the surface |
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09:47 | helps protect against all that stuff. right, now there is smooth muscle |
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09:53 | that allows these ville I toe actually up on the pull down So you |
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09:56 | imagine what I'm doing is I'm kind massaging the time as it comes |
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10:01 | And so it helps also to increase area as well. And it also |
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10:06 | to milk. The lack feels alright the secretion portion. So if the |
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10:12 | is the primarily the sort of the secretive portion is we're down here in |
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10:17 | the, uh, Crips of Libre . Just calm the Crips. It's |
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10:23 | . All right Now, on the of each of these cells So here |
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10:28 | can see here is our villas absorptive . Theirs are Goblet cell. I'm |
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10:31 | gonna flop the next life you can here. Here's an endocrine cell. |
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10:36 | the pan with cell. Here's, , a undifferentiated crypt cell, which |
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10:40 | be a type of stem cell They all have these little tiny, |
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10:45 | , surface extensions. Alright, These called micro ville I. So the |
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10:50 | is simply fingers that are made up many, many, many different |
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10:54 | and this picture shows it a little better. You can see here is |
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10:58 | villas, right. So there's your and then if you look, you |
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11:03 | see there's itsy bitsy, teeny tiny that make up the villas. So |
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11:07 | kind of the surface area. And each of these cells have these micro |
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11:13 | I, which increases the surface Another 20 fold. So let's do |
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11:17 | math again. One more time. we went from 20 ft TEU 60 |
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11:24 | to 600 ft to 12,000 ft. let's do some little math in her |
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11:33 | . How far is a mile? you guys know how long the |
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11:39 | Yeah, You know what? The , huh? It's 1600 m. |
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11:47 | true. In terms of feet, is right. 5280 ft. I |
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11:55 | it up before class, just so know because I'm a cheater, |
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11:59 | All right. So if you're roughly ft and it's roughly 5280 ft for |
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12:08 | mile, your small intestines have an length of two and a quarter miles |
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12:15 | . Now, if they were completely , imagine how big of an organism |
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12:19 | have to be to have a digestive that large right, much bigger than |
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12:25 | are now. So the idea here we are basically increasing surface area at |
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12:31 | levels so that we can increase the tive, uh, environment and the |
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12:38 | environment. All right. And each this stuff these these micro ville I |
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12:45 | together is referred to as the brush , and you can see down here |
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12:49 | not very clearly, of course. in this little picture right there, |
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12:53 | showing you what those cells kind of like. And you can see there's |
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12:56 | surface area. Now, if you envision this one thing that you could |
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13:02 | Well, I'm gonna use one of . Well, since I can't show |
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13:07 | , think of a piece of right? If you think of a |
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13:10 | of paper and look at its you lay down the paper. That's |
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13:13 | , right, that's the length. let's say that piece of paper could |
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13:17 | be this long, right? So you cut off a piece that's that |
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13:21 | because that's the surface that you can . But if you want to have |
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13:25 | surface area, you could take that of paper and go up and down |
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13:28 | times, and it have the same length, but you've increase the surface |
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13:32 | . That's in essence, what you've here. Now, this brush border |
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13:35 | a whole bunch of enzymes, thes gonna play a role in chemical |
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13:40 | and we're not gonna memorize all the . That's the good news. |
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13:44 | because there's lots and lots of All right? And there's also transport |
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13:48 | . Why do we need transport Because we're absorbing things. All |
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13:55 | so what are we secreted? All , so in the Crips, what |
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14:01 | have are what are called the intestinal . You see how easy this is |
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14:09 | you're creating fluid in the intestines contest you. All right. Quick |
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14:13 | If you're secretive stuff from the it's called pancreatic juice kind of |
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14:21 | but it makes it easy. All . So four types of cells that |
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14:26 | should be familiar with the enteric endocrine . Alright. Simply put, this |
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14:32 | the cell that is talking to other right outside of the small intestine. |
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14:39 | job is to preach secrete something called in in which is very similar to |
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14:45 | . They bind to the same Alright, so CCK is cool, |
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14:49 | kind of. We'll see it on slide a moment, all right. |
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14:52 | also secretes glucose insulin, a tropic , which is a really long, |
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14:57 | word for saying the hormone that basically on the pancreas to tell it when |
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15:02 | release insulin. In other words, saying to the pancreas, You know |
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15:07 | ? Um, the body's gonna wanna a whole bunch of glucose as it |
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15:11 | into the bloodstream. We haven't released glucose yet, but it's gonna be |
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15:14 | coming. That's really all that Okay, so that's That's its job |
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15:20 | basically to signal to other cells that has arrived. The pan it sells |
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15:28 | produced antibacterials. Alright, we talked the five second rule that's usually thinking |
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15:34 | the stomach. But remember, we bacteria that live in our digestive track |
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15:39 | produced chemicals and stuff that could be to us. And in fact, |
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15:43 | are pathogenic bacteria as well. So the pan it sells do is they |
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15:48 | part of the immune system to ensure those cells, I mean those |
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15:53 | those harmful bacteria are basically kaput. kill things that shouldn't be here. |
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16:00 | undifferentiated crypt cells and the stem cells basically stem cells for the, |
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16:05 | different areas. So we have the differentiated cells that ultimately are pushed upward |
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16:10 | the villas absorptive cells you can imagine things grind over the ville. I |
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16:15 | killing cells, so you're gonna have be replacing them regulators. So that's |
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16:18 | they do. And then the stem gives rise to everything. That's really |
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16:22 | there Now. There are also some mucosal glands that secrete alkali mucus. |
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16:28 | do we need alcohol? Mucus? , remember, the kym that's arriving |
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16:32 | the stomach is heavily, heavily and we need to help protect the |
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16:38 | against that acidity. We're gonna neutralize acidic time through the pancreas. But |
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16:44 | doesn't help us the moment that it , because that's gonna come up |
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16:50 | It's the the the neutralizing agents, is basically bicarbonate. Don't get secreted |
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16:57 | it's told to be secreted. All , so anyway, those are the |
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17:03 | of the secretions there. Remember how said when we look at these |
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17:08 | we need to bake breaking down? the motility? What's absorption? What's |
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17:12 | and what It's accreting, right? said that wherever you are, just |
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17:16 | at those four things. Sometimes there be no motility or there may be |
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17:19 | absorption or whatever. The small One of those areas where it has |
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17:23 | four. So with regard motility, have three primary functions for this |
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17:29 | The first is mixing time with the . All right, so the pancreas |
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17:33 | gonna be producing juices. Liver is be producing secretions. And so we |
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17:37 | to add those juices to that Now, you can imagine if I |
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17:43 | a solution. I'm dripping stuff on . It doesn't mix really well, |
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17:48 | ? It just kind of drips and on the top. So you guys |
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17:52 | tea. Ever drink tea? Do you like your tea? Bland |
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17:56 | nastier. Do you like Thio? it with something sweet. No, |
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18:00 | sweet. You like it? No. Sweet. Not sweet. |
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18:04 | you guys like it? Sweet? , so if you just take your |
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18:07 | , is it sugar or do you that sweetener? Okay. You used |
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18:12 | fancy. You're going to go get cactus and get the sugar from the |
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18:16 | . That's that's fine. Sugar, . Except when it's not right. |
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18:22 | you put your gave a in or put your white sugar your brown sugar |
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18:25 | know, the raw sugar or yours little, which is what I use |
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18:29 | stevia, right? Or if you're bold, you're gonna go for those |
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18:34 | and you're gonna put it in your and you're just gonna dump it in |
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18:36 | you're gonna let it sit right Take that spoon and you mix because |
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18:43 | you don't mix, then you get tea, bitter tea, better tea |
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18:46 | you get down to the bottom. all of a sudden it's like, |
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18:49 | , too much sugar. So that's first job is to mix, and |
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18:53 | can see the mixing here is basically squeezing in two different places and is |
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18:58 | forcing or creating forces that cause the inside the digestive tract to mix with |
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19:05 | another, right? Basically, it's squeezing the toothpaste from the middle. |
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19:09 | guys use Aquafresh overused. Aquafresh has three pretty colors, has red, |
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19:14 | or red green. And then whatever nasty. Semi green is Yeah, |
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19:20 | don't know. I'm talking about never mind that if you don't know |
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19:24 | talking about you don't know What? is the toothpaste. Aquafresh. You |
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19:27 | what? You know what it Okay, It was you squeeze the |
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19:29 | of the two long enough. You're gonna have the pretty lines of Aquafresh |
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19:33 | out on your toothpaste. Eventually. just kind of a blended mix of |
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19:39 | . You don't believe me? Give a try sometime. Just start squeezing |
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19:42 | . Like so. All right, the first one. All right. |
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19:45 | second is that in mixing it we're not just mixing the juices, |
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19:50 | we're also mixing the materials against the . I and so you could imagine |
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19:57 | is taking place, and I'm breaking down. And if everything just stayed |
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20:03 | the surface or didn't mix and it kind of slid along three only thing |
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20:06 | could be absorbed would be the stuff the surfaces. And so, by |
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20:10 | it, what you're doing is you're stuff from the middle that may be |
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20:14 | out to the surface so that it be absorbed up, and similarly, |
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20:18 | you're doing is you're moving things that been digesting. You're moving it around |
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20:22 | that you could give this constant turnover the surfaces. And so that's the |
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20:27 | . Here is we're mixing things so we can increase the rate of |
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20:31 | So that's the two types of And then finally, the simple one |
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20:35 | just I'm just trying to push it . That's the Paris Tulsa's. And |
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20:38 | it's like I'm not gonna keep things in the duodenum. I'm gonna move |
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20:42 | from the duodenum to the jejune to ilium, and I'm gonna do so |
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20:45 | . But I'm constantly are propelling things the large intestine. All right, |
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20:52 | that's that's ultimately that kind of motility we're looking at here. So breaking |
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20:59 | down, we refer to that mixing segmentation. We refer to the to |
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21:03 | forward movement as our propulsion as parastatal . Those are the two processes and |
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21:10 | last type of motility. I want kind of mention here is the gaster |
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21:13 | reflects. Basically, this basically Oh, there's stuff. I've eaten |
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21:19 | , right? So what I'm gonna is my stomach is full. I |
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21:22 | make room for the stuff in the to go into the duodenum. The |
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21:26 | in duodenum has to move to the and the stuff in the genome has |
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21:29 | move to the ilium stuff. The has to go someplace. So I'm |
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21:32 | move it to the Sikh, um basically transferred from the spawn, testing |
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21:36 | large intestine. That's the thing. , illegal reflects. Stomach gets |
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21:42 | Let's make space all right. And in essence, what that does. |
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21:47 | , if I move something from the and where do you think it |
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21:50 | You don't know the large intestine. goes from seeking to the column. |
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21:53 | this stuff from the colon to the . And then what do you need |
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21:56 | feel or what do you feel I got to go to the |
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22:00 | Notice that after a meal there's often a need to use the restroom. |
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22:08 | here is our first gland since since salivary glands. So when you think |
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22:16 | the pancreas, it actually is a of two different functions and extra |
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22:19 | And in an endocrine gland, we're the endocrine today. On Thursday, |
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22:25 | going to deal with the endocrine. right, so the endocrine that we |
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22:28 | the the islets of Langerhans their jobs insulin glucose company will come back to |
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22:33 | . All right, the X A is secreted out of the body, |
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22:36 | into the body. So when were out in the digestive tract, which |
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22:40 | outside the body. So here we're have two basic groups of cells we |
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22:45 | asked ourselves in the duck cells. we see this before? We looked |
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22:48 | the salivary glands where they're asked our . Everyone nod your heads online. |
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22:56 | your heads of Of course, Dr , that absolutely I absolutely remember learning |
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23:01 | . All right. And then the , which is the clump of asking |
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23:06 | , are connected to each other via . And so you have ducked cells |
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23:11 | make up the walls of the and they're not just there as |
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23:15 | Now, this is duck two. U C t not duck. |
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23:17 | quack. All right, I've got make sure I because sometimes it gets |
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23:21 | online, All right? The jobs both of these cells is to produce |
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23:28 | enzymes, hint ass in our cells bicarbonate and duct cells. All |
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23:35 | so that we can chemically digest in small intestine. Alright, So asking |
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23:42 | produce enzymes, duck sell produced by it and together that creates the environment |
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23:49 | produces the enzymes is necessary to finish process of digestion. So this is |
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23:58 | it looks like Awful lot like the that we saw in in the mouth |
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24:03 | salivary glands. Alright, um, you look at the pancreas, it |
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24:09 | a series of La Buell's. It's a very strong or sturdy structure to |
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24:14 | with, right, But it's basically bunch of of a sina that have |
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24:17 | clump together. And then there's little tissue around each of the clumps. |
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24:20 | would be what a low beall All right. And so the asinine |
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24:23 | you can see here in the right? This is what Messina looks |
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24:29 | . So I'm just gonna circle one there. All right, so the |
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24:33 | this clump would be like a You'll all right? And so you |
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24:38 | see there's a bunch of a senior or asking her cells and it's those |
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24:43 | that are gonna be producing the enzymes they're connected to, uh, a |
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24:49 | worked, which is made up those cells, and they converge on a |
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24:52 | duct which converged on the larger duck converges on the main duct, |
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24:57 | and moves the materials that the asking and the duck cells are producing the |
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25:03 | cells. Like I said, they bicarbonate be asking ourselves, make a |
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25:07 | bunch of enzymes. We got this word, right? Here's Imogen. |
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25:12 | , Aziz. Imogen is just a enzyme that hasn't been activated yet. |
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25:19 | , so that's all that ISS. it's basically ah, bunch of digestive |
|
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25:23 | , some that are active, Some or not. We secrete that out |
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25:27 | with the bicarbonate, and we're gonna that into the digestive tract or whatever |
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25:30 | there is gonna be finished off. gonna finish, uh, digesting them |
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25:36 | . And so this is what your juice looks like. And I point |
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25:41 | of volume here, but not for sake of memorizing. It's gonna become |
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25:44 | little bit important a little bit But again, not value wise. |
|
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25:47 | kind of get a bigger picture you . So we're talking about secretion now |
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25:53 | produce about 1.5 liters per day of out of the pancreas. That's pretty |
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25:59 | , right? I mean, that's bottle right? There is 500 |
|
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26:04 | right? So that's three of those is how much fluid you're pumping out |
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26:10 | your pancreas, All right, And you can see in terms of protein |
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26:17 | , it's one of the busiest parts the body, anywhere between 15 and |
|
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26:21 | g per day of protein. Again , very impressive. Now, this |
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26:28 | a list of all the different Zima and enzymes that are being produced. |
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|
26:32 | do not need to memorize them, I want you to notice the the |
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26:36 | different sorts of cells or different sorts enzymes. All of these enzymes right |
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26:41 | , these imagines are peptide aces. what is a pep today's job? |
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26:47 | down. What proteins? Very All right, so at this |
|
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26:52 | we've taken the large protein that we've them down into tinier peptides. And |
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26:56 | this is this the purpose of these Z Mogens are to finish the job |
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27:02 | protein digestion. Now, remember, said we have to release the's in |
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27:08 | inactive form because our body is made of proteins. Inside of cells are |
|
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27:13 | . So if you have active, , pep, today's is inside your |
|
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27:18 | . You're basically chewing up the insides yourselves. That's a very bad |
|
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27:21 | That's why there were secreted in their form. And then they're activated once |
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27:26 | in the digestive tract. But then what else we have. All |
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27:30 | we have pancreatic amylase. All We have a lip base, We |
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27:34 | lips, we have our nieces and says, and then we have the |
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27:37 | pace. And so again, I'm not asking to memorize these |
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27:41 | but you could see what a My Emily's digests. Remember who's salivary |
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|
27:47 | So thank you. Carbohydrates. Mounting it to Alright, so |
|
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27:56 | Alright, so I'm breaking down the . Remember? I started breaking down |
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27:59 | in the mouth. I'm finishing the of breaking down sugars here. |
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28:04 | I started the process of breaking down in the mouth. I continue breaking |
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28:08 | Fats Fats in the stomach. And what am I doing? I'm finishing |
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28:12 | job of breaking down fats in the intestine And Oh, by the |
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28:17 | we don't ever really think about But everything you eat happens to come |
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28:21 | a living organism. Even Cheetos, ? Cheetos is an unnatural color in |
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|
28:28 | , but it comes from what? ? That's right. It's corn, |
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28:34 | right. And so there are DNA or DNAs and RNAs in all our |
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28:40 | , right? And so we can those little tiny molecules those nucleotides for |
|
|
28:47 | own purposes. And if we don't them for our own purposes wood chopping |
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28:50 | and we still have a whole bunch carbon we can play with. And |
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28:53 | the DNAs and RNAs says, help break down those DNAs and RNAs that |
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28:58 | in the things that we consume. right, so we've got this |
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29:03 | really cool system. In other we are pumping out every sort of |
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29:08 | on the planet to chew up anything our body could possibly ever put into |
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29:13 | . And this is why I kind laughed. I'm gonna pause here for |
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29:16 | second. I'm gonna make a statement I know a lot of you guys |
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29:20 | grown up being freaked out about, bovine growth hormone and all these other |
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29:25 | hormones. You know, that they into our food, right? |
|
|
29:29 | um, my favorite ones are the that deal with GMO, right? |
|
|
29:34 | , my goodness. We've We've We've jeans and we put him into vegetables |
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29:38 | make them bigger. We've been doing since the dawn of time. The |
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29:42 | that we started farming is we're selecting traits. The differences is now we |
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29:46 | molecular biology techniques to do that. the truth is, is that for |
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29:51 | food that you put into your we have an enzyme for breaking down |
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29:55 | materials. Bovine growth hormone is a . It cannot be absorbed through the |
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30:02 | track. It has to be broken into amino acids. It cannot affect |
|
|
30:06 | now. What can affect you are . Why? Why steroids? Do |
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30:12 | guys remember? Because they're fats? so they could move back and forth |
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30:16 | plasma membranes like that. So you that into your mouth and your mouth |
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30:21 | absorb a steroid. All right. mean, if you've ever watched like |
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30:25 | little kids in Africa where they're like them the vitamin A right, what |
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30:28 | they do? Do they give them piles of carrots to eat? |
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30:32 | They make the little kids walk they open their mouth and they drip |
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30:36 | oil into their mouth. And that A which is fat Absorbable goes right |
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30:41 | their system because they're fats. All . My point is is that our |
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30:50 | are designed to break down foreign That's just what they do. Everything |
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30:59 | eat from apples to It's something with Z. You have a Z. |
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31:09 | . I need a Z if I a Z something. Two zebras. |
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31:13 | don't know anyone. Area zebras. just gonna pretend all right, |
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|
31:18 | Zucchini. Thank you. Yeah, apples to zucchinis. Although it would |
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31:22 | been good to have an animal flesh there someplace. But anyway, from |
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31:25 | to zucchinis, right is foreign. we have the enzymes to break them |
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31:31 | into the peptides and the simple sugars lipids that we need to absorb to |
|
|
31:38 | . All right. And it all because of the pancreas. All |
|
|
31:44 | now, the environment that allows us happen has to be alkaline. |
|
|
31:50 | remember, the time coming from the is incredibly acidic. A ph of |
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31:56 | two. And we need an environment 8.1. And this changes because of |
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32:01 | duck sells the duck cells, pump tons and tons of sodium bicarbonate. |
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|
32:07 | right, and that's what allows us neutralize the acid. So how do |
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|
32:16 | do this? How do we regulate all this stuff happens? I'm pumping |
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32:20 | all these enzymes and pumping out by it. How do I do |
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|
32:24 | Well, simply put, the first , is that your cells are always |
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32:28 | this stuff. It's constituent Lee but it's not producing so much because |
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32:33 | body doesn't wanna waste energy. But does just kind of like leak |
|
|
32:37 | right? I mean, that's the . I'm constantly producing and producing this |
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32:40 | , very small. They can't see I'm doing. Very small amount. |
|
|
32:44 | , there's a physical shrugging, a small amount of everything. But when |
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32:52 | need this stuff, I'm gonna naturally regulated. And so what are the |
|
|
32:57 | ? Well, first, remember when eating food, one of things that |
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33:01 | is is my parasympathetic system becomes I start releasing a seed of |
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33:06 | So Sita Coleene is one of the important regulators. Alright, it's acting |
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33:12 | the cells on the acid ourselves to the process of secretion. Now |
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|
33:18 | you can look at this and you say Okay, well, what's going |
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|
33:20 | E. These little circles represent the containing those imagines. Notice it doesn't |
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33:26 | you, which is? Imogen is regulated by what? And I don't |
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33:29 | about the pathways, although please note for mental sake that they're all signaling |
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33:34 | . Remember I told you how important are? Yeah, because they're |
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|
33:39 | Alright, So seedy. Colin is one Parasympathetic Kohli, Cystic Aydin. |
|
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33:46 | right, We mentioned that a minute . Kohli. Sister Keenan is produced |
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33:50 | the duodenal isosceles. So it's a cell that's found in the duodenum. |
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33:56 | . And what it does is in to lipids in the Lumen. All |
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34:04 | response toe lipids in the inside the track. I'm gonna up regulate polycystic |
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|
34:11 | . Now, I want you to about this for a moment, |
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34:13 | I've been eating food. I'm putting in my body. I begin the |
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34:17 | of digestion. I'm starting a little sugar and starting a little bit with |
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34:20 | proteins, but I really haven't done lot of work on the fats. |
|
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34:24 | mean, I've started a little right, because I have some salivary |
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34:28 | . I have some, uh, lips. Just noticed that the lips |
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34:32 | just changes from where it came but I haven't really done any major |
|
|
34:36 | . So at this point, it's fat in the digestive track that are |
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34:42 | the small test. It hasn't been yet. It's just sitting there and |
|
|
34:47 | the Here's the thing. If you've eaten anything that's really, really |
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34:50 | you notice how long you feel like of right. That's just because it |
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|
34:55 | longer to process it all right. not because it's bad for you. |
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35:00 | just your body is going. I broken it down yet. I need |
|
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35:03 | break it down. And so that's signal. It's cool, assisted |
|
|
35:07 | and that's doing so all right. last thing is grip. G R |
|
|
35:14 | is gas related peptide. These are is another signaling molecule that's released via |
|
|
35:19 | vagal nerve, all right, and just basically saying when food is |
|
|
35:23 | these air, the signals that increase the rate at which I'm going |
|
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35:28 | produce thes imagines and these enzymes you're produced but really secrete thumb right now |
|
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35:38 | regulate the opposite direction. Anything I on, I need to have a |
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35:41 | to turn on. There's two other that turn them off right. We |
|
|
35:44 | peptide. Why? Why? they're producing the ilium and the |
|
|
35:49 | And again, what's the signaling It's lipids. If there's lots of |
|
|
35:54 | , slow down because I still need process. All right. So in |
|
|
36:01 | words, I haven't absorbed everything so . Your stop sending me stuff, |
|
|
36:06 | slow things down. And then, , some out of Staten. This |
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36:10 | produced in two different places, first the intestine in D cells and then |
|
|
36:15 | the pancreas. There's these Delta cells should be a delta, all |
|
|
36:20 | And in essence, a smart of is just that negative regulator. That's |
|
|
36:24 | you gotta do. So there's ways turn it on in ways to turn |
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36:27 | off. And so you're playing this role in response to, uh, |
|
|
36:32 | lipids that are still present in the in the digestive tract. Now, |
|
|
36:39 | far as the duck cells are how do I tell them when to |
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|
36:42 | on? Well, remember, we producing the whole bunch of different |
|
|
36:47 | What we're looking for is we're looking what's showing up in the duodenum. |
|
|
36:52 | right. Now, the kind that's the day Wadham is acidic. The |
|
|
36:57 | of the bicarbonate is to neutralize the . So that's gonna be our primary |
|
|
37:03 | , right? We're trying to basically , Hey, let's deal with |
|
|
37:07 | So again we had a CEO, . Same sort of thing. We |
|
|
37:10 | grip, same thing. But we this new molecule called secret in nicely |
|
|
37:17 | by the SL's in the duodenum. right, so they're talking, they're |
|
|
37:22 | the duodenum, they're talking to the , and what they're doing is they |
|
|
37:26 | responding to acidity. All right, as acid goes up, Secretary goes |
|
|
37:34 | causes the production of bicarbonate, which released to neutralize the acidity, which |
|
|
37:39 | then result in its down regulation P, which also plays a role |
|
|
37:45 | pain, plays a role in inhibiting secretion. So there's your negative |
|
|
37:52 | all right, so there's some signaling going on. But ultimately, what |
|
|
37:56 | the signals telling us something is there it needs to be dealt with. |
|
|
38:00 | you just need to know what my ? I'm measuring acidity and measuring |
|
|
38:04 | and it's basically telling me when to those enzymes Now. We've already talked |
|
|
38:10 | thes three phases, but I just to kind of re introduce them to |
|
|
38:14 | , right and just kind of show what's going on from the perspective of |
|
|
38:17 | intestine. All right, so in stomach, we talked about that |
|
|
38:21 | That's that's stomach growl. Start producing , getting ready for food. All |
|
|
38:26 | , so remember, that's kind of we're doing here is it's initiated by |
|
|
38:31 | smell. It's a phallic, basically small uptick in secretion. But nothing's |
|
|
38:36 | on because there's no real food All right, the gastric phase. |
|
|
38:40 | food is actually showing up. So we're gonna do, Maybe gastric is |
|
|
38:45 | a role in serving as a We don't know for certain. But |
|
|
38:49 | , closest to kinda and gastric are closely related proteins, and so they |
|
|
38:55 | to the same receptor so gasoline is to the blood stream. May be |
|
|
38:58 | signal from the from the digestive tract the from the stomach is making a |
|
|
39:05 | to the pancreas to say, food is showing up and they're using |
|
|
39:10 | , but ultimately it's once food shows . All right, we've talked about |
|
|
39:14 | asset. That's the SL's. What we doing is we're telling it to |
|
|
39:20 | . And then it's the pep tones awesome band from the fifties singing doo |
|
|
39:27 | . That was the joke that no liked. Thank you. And lipids |
|
|
39:31 | the duodenum are what are calling the of coal assistant Kinen Kohli. Sister |
|
|
39:37 | , what are we doing? We're saying released everything all right. Now |
|
|
39:43 | the interesting thing. You had a of triglycerides. If you have a |
|
|
39:46 | bunch of try grilled Lyssarides, I have much of an effect on |
|
|
39:50 | But if you've broken some of them , which is occurring because of the |
|
|
39:58 | and stomach, if you're gonna have Lyssarides and that's going to stimulate the |
|
|
40:06 | , All right, so the mawr Lyssarides you have the greater the |
|
|
40:11 | In terms of peptides, large peptides a slightly intermediate effects, you |
|
|
40:18 | in other words, it causes an . If you give a whole bunch |
|
|
40:22 | non essential amino acids no effect. ? Why do you think not essential |
|
|
40:27 | acids wouldn't have any effect? Uh is an essential why are they not |
|
|
40:33 | ? Do you remember This is One question our body can make it |
|
|
40:40 | we don't need to rely on the of these amino acids. So them |
|
|
40:46 | present is like, Well, whatever can use you or I can turn |
|
|
40:50 | into fuel. All right? But the essential amino acids that have a |
|
|
40:56 | effect on that. And again, know the answer. Basically, what |
|
|
41:00 | just said is, if I can't these things when they are available, |
|
|
41:05 | going to really start breaking things Because if I confined these essential ones |
|
|
41:10 | , there's gotta b'more. And that's your body does. So the last |
|
|
41:18 | of the small intestine, we've looked motility. We look at digestion. |
|
|
41:23 | what are we digesting? Everything. looking at absorption. What are we |
|
|
41:28 | ? Well, that's this. All . Well, we've mentioned secretion. |
|
|
41:31 | . So we've done motility digestion, . Here's absorption. Now think of |
|
|
41:36 | daily diet. Alright, If you it into a liquid right, you're |
|
|
41:42 | in anywhere between 1.5 and two leaders food per day. Okay, I'm |
|
|
41:47 | asking to memorize these numbers. I'm using him as an example Alright now |
|
|
41:52 | small intestine absorbs about 6.5 liters of per day. That means of the |
|
|
42:00 | leaders that are in your body. ? So 6.5 plus two. That |
|
|
42:04 | your digestive tract has to produce. 6.5. All right. And that's |
|
|
42:13 | this little chart shows you here is , Look, my saliva, I'm |
|
|
42:16 | 1.5 liters per day. We talked that, right? I mean, |
|
|
42:19 | told you, don't memorize numbers, it's like I'm dripping saliva all the |
|
|
42:23 | . Except I'm swallowing it now because an adult. I'm not a child |
|
|
42:26 | on my shirt, my stomach about liters per day. So we're up |
|
|
42:31 | now 3.5 liters of fluid. And , my pancreas is about 1.5 liters |
|
|
42:36 | day, and we haven't gotten there , but basically, the liver is |
|
|
42:39 | be producing about half leader today. in essence, everything plus my food |
|
|
42:45 | up to about 8.5 liters. I said there was a huge |
|
|
42:51 | right? If I wanna make I have to invest money so there |
|
|
42:54 | a huge investment in terms of and my body reabsorbed the majority of |
|
|
43:00 | investment right off in the small intestine . So that's what the difference is |
|
|
43:08 | C endogenous. Those are my endogenous right there. All right, now |
|
|
43:13 | we get back to what we have learned. Alright? So absorbency is |
|
|
43:17 | gonna favor water. It's always gonna sodium. It's always gonna favor chlorine |
|
|
43:21 | going a favor. Potassium. In words, we're going to see this |
|
|
43:27 | absorption of the salutes that our body , right? And then we're going |
|
|
43:33 | see this net secretion of by carbon . Now. Why bicarbonate? Because |
|
|
43:39 | have tons of bicarbonate our bodies, ? How do we make bicarbonate? |
|
|
43:43 | you guys remember co two plus water ? And our blood has fallen this |
|
|
43:53 | all right, It's an easy thing make, and we have multiple |
|
|
43:56 | including the digestive system that makes this so secretive. It is an easy |
|
|
44:01 | to do. So that's just talking these elements in terms of what we're |
|
|
44:08 | . And what's in our food is and water and so on. And |
|
|
44:11 | we're gonna bring all that stuff back . And it follows a rule that |
|
|
44:14 | that we've already talked about. Wherever goes, water follows. Wherever water |
|
|
44:18 | , the other salutes follow right. it could do so in either passive |
|
|
44:23 | , terms of sodium or active All right. And so that's all |
|
|
44:28 | is showing you? How do I absorbed? Well, I can use |
|
|
44:33 | electrochemical Grady. It basically drives it this direction. You see, if |
|
|
44:37 | can get it's not showing it, can leak in between right? So |
|
|
44:43 | can use leak channels. So there's ways that I could passively absorbed. |
|
|
44:48 | none of the pictures. They're showing necessarily. All right, how do |
|
|
44:51 | actively absorbed what I could use I can use pumps. So these |
|
|
44:55 | active mechanisms. But once I start the sodium, what does the water |
|
|
44:59 | ? It follows, and once the moves, chlorine feels left out. |
|
|
45:02 | it kind of goes along. And about potassium? Well, there's more |
|
|
45:06 | over here, so I'm gonna follow water. That's in essence, how |
|
|
45:10 | deal with that. And then with to the other agents that were actually |
|
|
45:14 | to absorb glucose and amino acids. example, they're going to use the |
|
|
45:20 | to help bring them into the Because we don't want to expend |
|
|
45:25 | we want to save energy. And using passive or secondary active transport mechanisms |
|
|
45:31 | us to do that. So what digestion? All right, so we |
|
|
45:38 | that's what absorption we're gonna be bringing this stuff in. Let's take a |
|
|
45:41 | at Digest Gestion A little bit more , but not so much that is |
|
|
45:45 | make our heads hurt. That sound ? Are we all pro? No |
|
|
45:49 | hurting. Okay, so hydraulics, , That's simply what digestion is. |
|
|
45:56 | is breaking those bonds. That's we're back to that first lecture. I |
|
|
46:00 | breaking bonds. So we're adding We're splitting water and half adding the |
|
|
46:04 | . H 21 half of that bond the H to the other bond. |
|
|
46:08 | why we're allowed to create those stable . Alright, carbohydrates are gonna be |
|
|
46:13 | in the forms of Polly. Sacha primarily, but also die Sacha |
|
|
46:17 | And when we talk about our policy , we're usually talking about starches and |
|
|
46:21 | . Alright, we might get some sack rides in our bodies, but |
|
|
46:26 | it's dissect rights, all right, mono sack rides are already readily |
|
|
46:30 | So what we're trying to do is trying to convert those complex carbohydrates into |
|
|
46:34 | simple carbohydrates, the mono sacha All right, proteins were going to |
|
|
46:40 | hydraulics is to break proteins down in acids or in a small peptides, |
|
|
46:44 | simple. And in terms of this is the most difficult one of |
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46:48 | of the processes. We're gonna take , which is our dietary fat. |
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46:53 | gonna convert them into monocle, Lyssarides free fatty acids, and that's what |
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46:57 | going to absorb. So here is breakdown in a nutshell. All |
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47:02 | There are a lot of enzymes but we don't need to know |
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47:06 | Hey, does that sound nice? just shows you look, I started |
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47:11 | with the AB Ellis, right? that's the one that we do need |
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47:13 | know because it's found in the slide the pancreas, right? And what |
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47:17 | the amylase do? It takes these starch chains and chops them up in |
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47:20 | little tiny, smaller, uh, . Alright, and then what we |
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47:26 | is we take these small carbohydrates and other enzymes allow us to break these |
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47:32 | down. We have brush border enzymes lack tastes or souk race right that |
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47:40 | us to break the dye sack, down into mono sack rides and allow |
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47:45 | to absorb the mono sack ride. have some other enzymes that is to |
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47:50 | down, try carbohydrates instead of di . All right, that kind of |
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48:00 | sense. And you can see here the carriers, right? Was it |
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48:05 | advantage of taking advantage of sodium moving its concentration ingredients? So it's a |
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48:13 | active transport secondary active transport. Glute is just a natural transporter, |
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48:20 | Secondary active transport. So that's how how we move model Sacha rights. |
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48:25 | basically have to convert them down from carbohydrates. Thio ah di Sacha rides |
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48:32 | ultimately into, um, mono sack . Now you should know. Of |
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48:40 | . You crace Maltese black tastes at by name. I'm not gonna ask |
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48:45 | where they found Can't brush border Well, remember, we started the |
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48:53 | in the stomach. We're gonna finish job here in the small intestine were |
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48:56 | long peptides what we call all ago All that means many. And we |
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49:01 | them down into, uh uh, short poly peptides. So we're talking |
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49:08 | Polly peptides that have, like, length of five or so and then |
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49:12 | have enzymes that allow us to break down. Amino acid at the |
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49:17 | These air brush border enzymes so you see up there at the top. |
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49:20 | have a four, so it's just , uh, quad peptide, I |
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49:26 | . Probably. Getting the might be tetra peptide is probably the correct |
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49:31 | right? Yeah. Tetra peptide. you can see I'm breaking down to |
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49:34 | try peptide. But here's something that don't really learn about Try. Peptides |
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49:39 | absorbable die peptides are absorbable. You necessarily will absorb them, but you |
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49:45 | . And so there are some peptides we absorb. We don't have to |
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49:48 | everything down straight down to the amino level. All right, but then |
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49:53 | he gets inside the cell, we'll it down even further. And then |
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49:56 | amino acids are absorbed and brought sent the body and used for fuel or |
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50:00 | building camp. So this is kind showing you on the right hand |
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50:06 | The Allah go peptide absorption. So , so good Notice. Not a |
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50:10 | of enzyme name there. Just just . Do you see what's going |
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50:14 | Take something complex like a cheeseburger. it up in a little tiny |
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50:18 | A little tiny bits get absorbed. far, so good. Yeah. |
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50:24 | we get to the fats and fats a little bit more difficult. |
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50:28 | So fats, remember hate water. so what they do is they like |
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50:32 | hang out with each other. And we're looking at here is you're seeing |
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50:36 | very large bubble with a whole bunch little tiny bubbles associated with it. |
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50:40 | you let that sit long enough, bubble in the small bubbles will come |
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50:43 | as they are excluded even further from water. Remember the waters Exclusionary? |
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50:48 | fat is not water says I don't you and it kicks the fat |
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50:52 | And the fat feeling dejected kind of out with itself and creates the |
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50:58 | All right, so we use fats get fats from a whole bunch of |
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51:03 | things on what we do is we through a process called the multiplication. |
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51:09 | a multiplication simply is breaking down those . All right, So what I |
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51:15 | to use is an example that were more familiar with at least the ladies |
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51:18 | familiar with it. Men? Not much. So I want you to |
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51:22 | a salad for men. Salad is leafy green stuff that the women |
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51:29 | Okay. And then some women on salad, like thio, eat or |
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51:36 | to put a dressing that's called vinegar oil. All right. Now, |
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51:41 | and oil is an aqueous solution, a fatty solution. That's the oil |
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51:46 | vinegar is water or water and say hate each other so they separate from |
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51:51 | other. And if you would take and oil and just turn the container |
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51:55 | , you'd get ah, whole bunch fat because the fact is on the |
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52:00 | and the oil of the vinegar would on the bottom. So, |
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52:03 | you'd end up with, like, nasty soup of oil and leaf. |
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52:08 | it's not bad enough that the leaf nasty. Alright, guys, |
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52:13 | the guys in here are nodding their into pretending I'm gonna eat that |
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52:17 | Alright. So, ladies, what you do if you want vinegar and |
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52:21 | on your dressing? No, no. We're scientists. We don't |
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52:24 | anything. We emulsify, All That's all you're doing is you're taking |
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52:30 | big old fat bubble and you're breaking apart with the acquis solution of |
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52:36 | And so you basically mix the two together, But still, they're not |
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52:41 | mix. It's basically big bubbles broken in a little bubbles. And so |
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52:45 | this mortification does, it allows us break down the fats in our bodies |
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52:52 | lot quicker Again, we could go to the example of the jawbreaker if |
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52:56 | put a jawbreaker in my mouth. remember, it's sugar compressed to the |
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53:01 | of the sun and in order to it, it's basically a layer of |
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53:05 | at a time, and this would you forever to consume it. And |
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53:09 | , by breaking down ah, fat and from a big bubble where you'd |
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53:14 | a basically a layer or a couple molecules at a time. By breaking |
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53:18 | smaller bubbles, you actually increased surface so you could actually break it down |
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53:22 | lot quicker. That's the purpose of multiplication. Now, obviously, you |
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53:28 | just most if I buy just shaking body. That's not how this |
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53:32 | You have to have agents that come and create this process of multiplication, |
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53:37 | right? And so there are different that you can, uh, break |
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53:41 | down. But ultimately, it's gonna a result of the secretions from the |
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53:46 | that they're going to do this. right. Now, the digestion of |
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53:51 | is gonna be done through the lip . All right, so we have |
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53:53 | Lippi's gastric lips and ultimately, pancreatic pace, which is gonna play that |
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53:59 | role. So it's the bile of liver that promote this process. This |
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54:07 | where most of the Mosul fires were . All right, so the alkaline |
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54:12 | produced by that found the Bible. is bicarbonate, right? So there's |
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54:16 | neutralizing agent bile salts. All which is gonna be the important |
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54:22 | And then there's other junk in so notice the first two, and |
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54:26 | the rest is like whatever. All , You make a lot of |
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54:29 | and what happens is you make it then your body says, Oh, |
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54:32 | , I've made it. So I'm stored up in the pancreas. I'm |
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54:34 | remove some of the water out of . And so that's what it is |
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54:38 | up. And that's why you can with that. A gall bladder. |
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54:40 | it's nice to have one, because allows you to speed up the process |
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54:44 | digestion. You don't have to wait the liver to catch up with digestion |
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54:48 | you already have it stored up in gall bladder. All right, so |
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54:51 | can see down here bile salts and a thin. But we focus primarily |
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54:54 | the bottle. Salt is what plays role in the mechanical digestion. That's |
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54:58 | fancy word for the multiplication, Most vacation is simply taking that bubble |
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55:05 | fats and spray it apart. And the bile salts do. All |
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55:09 | so how does this work it? right, here's a word you don't |
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55:12 | a lot of all right. We've of Absorb, right? If something |
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55:18 | something, I mean, one thing into something else. We don't see |
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55:22 | word all that much. Add Alright. Adss orb is something is |
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55:28 | inserted in And so what you can is I've got this bubble of |
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55:36 | right? And this bile salt has , um, a hydrophobic region. |
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55:43 | has a hydro filic region, and it basically adds sorts itself. The |
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55:50 | region add sorts itself into the into fatty portion, and the Hydra Filic |
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55:55 | , which is charged, sits out the water area and you get a |
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55:58 | bunch of these things and they line and they're all negatively charged. And |
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56:03 | two things are on the same what do they do? They repel |
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56:09 | ? And so by repelling each if you get a whole bunch of |
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56:12 | they're trying to separate from each other when they repel, they tear apart |
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56:17 | fat bubbles and so you make smaller and they keep tearing apart until all |
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56:23 | these bile salts are equally distributed away one another, so that you don't |
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56:27 | any further. Alright, So in , what you're doing is you're increasing |
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56:32 | area by tearing these bubbles apart. the little tail portion which I mentioned |
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56:38 | over here and this is what this trying to show you. That's where |
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56:41 | pancreatic lift pace hangs out. It basically it's something that the lips |
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56:46 | come along and say I'm gonna sit and I'm gonna start digesting the fat |
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56:50 | there. And then the cola pays along, and the two things together |
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56:55 | for you to break down the fats lot quicker. And then what you |
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56:58 | up with is this really weird Now, this isn't a good picture |
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57:02 | it. This is it actually tearing . This is a better picture. |
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57:06 | is what a fat bubble looks Notice it has multiple layers to |
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57:11 | Alright. This one in this particular is try laminar. Meaning it |
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57:16 | uh, multiple layers that are are layers. So laminar refers to the |
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57:24 | the paired layers. And so this three layers of that. And what |
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57:29 | is the more bile salts you the smaller, smaller you get this |
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57:33 | it starts breaking down. And with fats, the lips, the calypso |
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57:37 | what it does. It starts breaking the triglycerides that air there. And |
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57:42 | this is what this is trying to you is it's tearing off a portion |
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57:46 | you can imagine this will be a one, and this would be a |
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57:49 | one. And then, as the is air working, you're gonna start |
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57:54 | down those laminar layers something like where you start off with three layers |
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57:59 | then you start digesting and it goes to one layer. And then |
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58:02 | what you're gonna form is something called my seal. Now, ladies, |
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58:08 | you ever bought the skin cleaner that about the my seals in it? |
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58:14 | watch, you know, watch these . You know, when they talk |
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58:17 | the cleansers, You know, it's this new formula with these hydro |
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58:22 | my seals, and you're like, , I could spend extra money to |
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58:26 | my face with what could simply be with open water. Right? What |
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58:32 | doing is using fancy words is Look, I'm rubbing my face with |
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58:35 | , which is in essence, what doing with soaps anyway, right? |
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58:40 | what you're doing is you're breaking down surface molecules, the surface triglycerides and |
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58:47 | things on the inside are moving And so you're just constantly moving things |
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58:53 | . And ultimately, what's going up you're gonna end up with a core |
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58:57 | maybe a couple of fatty acids, everything else on the surface is gonna |
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59:01 | broken down. And so once that in the my seal So you're going |
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59:07 | this multi laminar structure down to My seal. Then what happens is |
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59:11 | you have something that can act as way to transfer these fats. And |
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59:19 | where we are. When we get the Juna, these my seals come |
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59:24 | into the nearest environment, and then can take up Fats in one of |
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59:30 | ways. Diffusion fusion is easy, ? What do I dio? I |
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59:38 | pass through the membrane, right when the word diffusion, Does that make |
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59:43 | ? Okay, so I'm passing through membrane, so that's through the membrane |
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59:52 | . Well, I'm a fat. are the plaza? Memory is made |
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59:55 | of facts so I can join on the plasma membrane. So I get |
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60:02 | . And the last one on I think is the coolest is we |
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60:06 | transporters. So you have fat So they literally grabbed fat. So |
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60:14 | can imagine these my seals coming along surface of the cells and basically is |
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60:19 | along the surface cells, it's shedding acids that are either diffusing through joining |
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60:23 | with the membrane or being picked up carriers to move to the inside of |
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60:28 | cell. And then once that I'm gonna process. So that's how |
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60:34 | digest fats. Fats require the liver produce the bile salts. The bile |
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60:41 | create our service emulsifiers for the fat . The fat bubbles get smaller. |
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60:47 | then, with the enzymes from the , I break down the triglycerides. |
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60:52 | I take complex fat bubbles and turn into itsy bitsy non complex, my |
|
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60:58 | and then the my seals Allow me transfer the fats to the absorbable cells |
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61:03 | one of three ways. That is steps. Okay, Yeah. So |
|
|
61:11 | question is it transported inside the cell or outside the self? So what's |
|
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61:17 | happen is we're going to transfer the into the absorbable cell with the exception |
|
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61:22 | the collision, which means emerging with plasma membrane. And once I get |
|
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61:27 | the cell, I'm going to So the free fatty acids don't just |
|
|
61:34 | inside your body and just kind of la la No, we have to |
|
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61:38 | them up, and we have to them to where we want them. |
|
|
61:41 | what we're gonna do is we're gonna thes free fatty acids, the monocle |
|
|
61:45 | , and we're going to convert them into thes complex fats like a |
|
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61:51 | We're gonna package them up with some and work creating the structure of proteins |
|
|
61:56 | fats called Kyle Omicron. Now all is being done in the end of |
|
|
62:00 | particular and ultimately to the Golgi The V L D. L is |
|
|
62:05 | similar. The difference being is that not using dietary fats. I'm using |
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62:09 | that air inside the cell there or creating all right. But it's the |
|
|
62:13 | process. And so, ultimately, packaging all this stuff inside of vesicles |
|
|
62:18 | this is a very large structure of and fats, and it can't just |
|
|
62:23 | pushed through a channel. I have secreted via vesicles. And so now |
|
|
62:28 | got this column, Micron, that's here in the interstitial space, and |
|
|
62:31 | too big to get anywhere because it pass into the Capitol area. And |
|
|
62:36 | is where the lacked heels become The lacked heels, remember, are |
|
|
62:42 | lymphatic structures that have that that shingle structure to it? Remember, we |
|
|
62:50 | about this when we looked at the , and so the pressure of the |
|
|
62:53 | surrounding the lacked hill opens up the in between the cells and then allow |
|
|
62:59 | to pick up the Kyle of my . And so the lack teal is |
|
|
63:03 | we move fats as Kyle Omicron into , and then they'll circulate throughout the |
|
|
63:09 | and go where they need to go allows you to deliver fats to the |
|
|
63:14 | in the area where they need to delivered. That's what all those steps |
|
|
63:19 | talk about right there, all so you can see all sorts of |
|
|
63:26 | in the mix in the mixed my transferred to the absorptive sell processed may |
|
|
63:31 | made in Oak Island Micron. Kyla is secreted out into the interstitial |
|
|
63:36 | picked up by the lymphatic in what called a lack teal because it's milky |
|
|
63:42 | , cause all the fats and then lacked he'll allows you to move the |
|
|
63:46 | into the circulatory system to then deliver where you need to go. So |
|
|
63:52 | so good. That's probably the most thing about digestion. Shoulder shrug. |
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64:05 | turn it on. That's the hot where people kind of it's like a |
|
|
64:10 | right regulating it. How do we all this stuff? Well, guess |
|
|
64:16 | . We got two hormones. We've mentioned them. Kohli. Sister kind |
|
|
64:19 | in secret police is takin in, , Acts on the gall bladder. |
|
|
64:26 | , Hey, remember all those juices put away for the next meal? |
|
|
64:30 | is the time to release. Um , pancreas spell it correctly. Don't |
|
|
64:34 | it like I did write up their increase pay increase instead of pancreas. |
|
|
64:39 | . What is gonna do? Release pancreatic juices? Oh, yeah. |
|
|
64:41 | the way, uh, there's a tiny valve called the hepatic am |
|
|
64:47 | There is actually a petal pink pancreatic pula. You can see it right |
|
|
64:56 | is what? It's in the wall the duodenum. It basically says that |
|
|
65:00 | little valve, which is smooth Oh, yeah. Go ahead and |
|
|
65:03 | . So that stuff come flowing through basically says, Oh, yeah, |
|
|
65:07 | . Slow down. We still gotta stuff you just sent us. That's |
|
|
65:11 | police. It's kind of the the , remember, is in response to |
|
|
65:14 | ph low pH release the bicarbonate so I can neutralize the bicarbonate. I |
|
|
65:27 | it's a little early. So so good. Now that I |
|
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65:33 | we're gonna finish a little earlier yeah, keep moving. All |
|
|
65:39 | last little bit here. One more of the large intestine. There's a |
|
|
65:44 | we could talk about with large but we're talking about in terms of |
|
|
65:47 | . All right, so it's only 5 ft long. There's three major |
|
|
65:51 | . We have the C come right receives the time from the small |
|
|
65:55 | So this is the C come down . The colon goes all the way |
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66:00 | , and then the last little bit the rectum, All right. Says |
|
|
66:03 | are the basic three regions. and the role, the primary |
|
|
66:09 | So not just, um um you , like, we're not gonna break |
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66:14 | down, But just in the big of thing, its job is to |
|
|
66:18 | , Remember, we absorbed a whole of stuff we started off with about |
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|
66:21 | leader and a half to two leaders food. We added a whole bunch |
|
|
66:25 | liquid to it. We basically reabsorbed but about a leader's worth of the |
|
|
66:31 | , all right. And so the of the large intestine is to re |
|
|
66:34 | water and salt back into the What happens if you don't absorb water |
|
|
66:40 | into the body? That one What is What is your poop |
|
|
66:44 | Diarrhea? That's all it is. the failure of your large intestine to |
|
|
66:48 | that water. Okay, so that's primary job. We've absorbed the sodium |
|
|
66:55 | the sodium goes water follows, plus the other fun stuff. And so |
|
|
67:00 | gonna leave about 100 mils of water our feces, so we're losing a |
|
|
67:06 | bit of water. But for the part, everything that we invested |
|
|
67:12 | we've gotten back. Plus the stuff was actually in our food, |
|
|
67:17 | Because if your food contains water and only letting a little bit go, |
|
|
67:22 | not bad. 10% loss. Not at all in terms of the |
|
|
67:27 | All right, now again, there's all sorts of stuff in your large |
|
|
67:32 | . We're talking micro micro organisms. dealing with all the indigestible material. |
|
|
67:37 | you're talking about fiber, which you if you think about when you buy |
|
|
67:41 | , if you've ever had to buy fiber like Metamucil and stuff, it's |
|
|
67:43 | , Oh, look, it's a . It's not not rough or anything |
|
|
67:46 | that, but to your cells It's , very pokey and stuff. And |
|
|
67:50 | what's your large intestine? Also secretes this alkaline mucus to protect the lining |
|
|
67:56 | the large intestine that basically serves of barrier between all the hard, |
|
|
68:01 | indigestible stuff plus all those microorganisms, so that's there. It also helps |
|
|
68:06 | move the stuff through the large and it's I'm not gonna really go |
|
|
68:12 | it really, really deeply here. if you go back and look that |
|
|
68:15 | can see kind of a little blobs little those called hasta and so basically |
|
|
68:20 | does is you could imagine. Each these things have smooth muscle around |
|
|
68:24 | and what you're doing is you're moving from one of those little, |
|
|
68:28 | hasta so the next one. So like and it's and there's just constantly |
|
|
68:34 | things forward, like So um so , there's still a little bit more |
|
|
68:41 | on than what I've described here, ultimately the role, if beyond |
|
|
68:45 | uh, this absorption is to store until it's time for defecation. All |
|
|
68:53 | , that's that, Z it's final or its job. I said duty |
|
|
68:58 | talk about digestion. Last line is summary slide. All right, It |
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|
69:12 | kind of gives you that big picture , and it's not a complete slide |
|
|
69:17 | any means. But do you see you've done here? I mean, |
|
|
69:19 | could literally create a graph, It's like, here are my four |
|
|
69:23 | motility, digestion, absorption, Here are my structures right. What |
|
|
69:30 | they do in each of these And it becomes very simple. Instead |
|
|
69:34 | having what 60 slides worth of material kind of go through, you could |
|
|
69:39 | create a page of information to understand organize. And that's just really kind |
|
|
69:48 | how this starts off right here. is what it kind of shows |
|
|
69:52 | So that's digestive system in a So that cheeseburger and that fry in |
|
|
69:58 | large shake that we got the 4000 of joy and happiness with the |
|
|
70:03 | If you eat bacon right, what comes out of all that. It's |
|
|
70:09 | indigestible materials. They're gone. They our bodies. But everything else fuels |
|
|
70:18 | , keeps us alive, Helps us grow. Be stronger, crow. |
|
|
70:23 | way or the other, it doesn't . So anyway, that's the digestive |
|
|
70:29 | in a nutshell. So I'm gonna up for any questions. You guys |
|
|
70:31 | online. Feel free to ask If not, we'll just close up |
|
|
70:36 | and we'll go home and come back Thursday to talk about the endocrine system |
|
|
70:42 | how it regulates growth. The metabolism pretty quiet. All right, |
|
|
70:52 | enjoy the rest of your day. know, for those who live live |
|
|
70:59 | to 88 they've opened up the toll yesterday. And for the next 15 |
|
|
71:06 | , it's free. And I zipped here in 85 miles an hour on |
|
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71:10 | tollway. It was awesome, and were passing me at, like, |
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|
71:15 | So still pretty cool. Any |
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