I have never enjoyed Anatomy and Physiology as much as I do when I watch Crash Course. Hank cracks me up and puts things in such a way that I completely understand it. I actually stopped reading my chapters first, and instead I watch his videos several times first before going through the book. When I read something I don't understand, I watch Crash Course and then completely get it. Crash Course is going to help me graduate in time... and as a single mom and full time student, that's huge. And while I am working my way to graduation.. I am smiling and laughing.. because Hank is literally hilarious. He makes me smile. Thanks Crash Course!
Exactly! XD I wasted so much time in class because Crash Course had explained everything so much better. I just ended up watching the videos on my phone and taking notes on them instead.
Welcome to TH-cam. When you're competing against the entire world, you have to be "THE" best. Whereas your professor just needs to be the best in your area, willing to work for X dollars based on Y hours dealing with Z children.
Hank is underrated people say he is reading a script and while thats quite true the way he presents the data is because he understands it and the analogys he gives is something a bit too good to say he is just acting in reality he is just better than most professors and his glasses and the way he is shows and how he talks is proof enough he was the social nerd that everyone asked for help in school
It would be so awesome if you could mention Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (a form of Dysautonomia) or Dysautonomia in general in one of your videos. It needs more awareness and is often found in younger people. Thanks! :)
He's speedy, but I have a pause, rewind, and play button LOL. Seriously my FAVORITE channel. I have already taken API and APII but need refreshing and more detail for my pharmacology course...Hank has helped more than my prior instructors have.
I can't tell you how helpful all your videos have been. I always watch the video first before class and it is so much easier to understand what the professor is saying, plus it really helps studying for tests and finals. Thank you crash course! wouldn't be this far in college without you!
Like some other commenters I have POTS (a type of dysautonomia) and I can tell you just how important the autonomic nervous system is, because when it doesn't work it feels like your whole body is falling apart!
Thank you Hank for all the help you've given me in understanding the various subjects you've been covering. This series is a great tool for anyone looking to increase their learning.
Bruhhhh! I just want to give Hank a hug. I felt like I wasn't going to make it through A&P... but thanks to Hank, I'm doing pretty well. This has helped me SO much!
I'm doing a biology unit in my psychology degree right now and hank is my saviour here. My grade would be so much lower if the a+p and biology videos didn't exist. Thanks hank!
This video literally simplified and made this topic so much more understandable than my textbook! Gonna do a lot better on this test because of this! Thank you!!!
I'm actually early! Just want to tell you guys that I absolutely love these videos, and when we watch them in class, I can actually understand you. (my classmates think you talk to fast) I think that it is just great for everyone to watch. So informational! Will donate as soon as I can!
I'm currently taking a course to obtain a certificate as a specialist in fitness nutrition and these videos are soooo helpful. love them. have recommended them to all of my peers taking the course as well
Anatomy and Physiology are topics that just became interesting to me in my mid 20's. This is such a great way to bring information in a creative entertaining manner. Thanks so much for the information, its presented in a manner where I'm laughing and learning. Keep up the great work guys!
Wanted to take a second to Thank everyone from crash course for the wonderful videos that help me understand what is going on in Anatomy and physiology Thank you all
to take down notes it took me 6 pages of my notebook in 4 minutes!!! Keep up the good work and be the best teacher of EVERYONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :)
My A&P teacher linked us to this video (and I reminded my peers prior to the exam on this topic), and I have been using this channel's videos since. Informative and memorable, perfect for reviewing information or introducing information.
It seems many of us here have some type of Dysautonomia. I do as well and also have Autonomic Neuropathy. Life is a daily struggle to say the least. Most doctors don't understand and the treatment is nearly void. I was also dx with AAG. Autoimmune Autonomic Ganglionopathy Have had no treatment for this. No drs in my area know anything about it. These video's are great. Thanks for the tid bit on the Ganglia. It is really aweful when you have to fight your own body daily. ugh... Good luck to all of you here. Well wishes.
I have an exam today and I understood nothing from my notes so I watched your videos and you could explain in 10 minuets what my professor couldn’t explain in over an hour. Thank you so much
Last minute attempt to learn 8 months of a uni course in one night before my exam tomorrow. Luckily, after watching these videos, I'm a lot more confident!
That was really awesome! The best I've found to date. Textbooks and professors both wear you down on this one every time. It was just a brief superficial overview but the content is wonderfully presented. Thank you so much. great work!!
I really hope you will make a video on POTS and Dysautonomia. I would really like to educate my teachers, family, and friends about this illness that I have. A lot of them either don't understand it or refuse to try to understand it. They don't think it's a real thing, but that's mostly my teachers though. Please help me spread awareness about this terrible illness. It's been hard trying to explain something that most people don't think exists and you could really help open people's eyes. Thank you.
win jones The Dysautonomia International website has a place on it where you can get packets for your teachers to explain what dysautonomia and P.O.T.S. is. The website is also a invaluable resource for information.
I watch lectures in anatomy, come here and slow down the video speed I understand then I go back to watch lectures and understand some more, this channel helps me SOO MUCH
im pretty sure im undiagonsed ADHD and im struggling to read through lecture slides, so these videos are helping me out a bunch. Thank you guys so much for these videos!
I think professors in general are extremes, some explains everything so slowly like we are dumb and others just presume we know everything, this is so perfect and direct that we understand the hole idea and it gets a lot easier to pick up on the specifics later. thankss btw
I just started an Anatomy course at a trade school that only meets 4 hours a week. So I was thinking I have a 40 hour work week why don't I just listen to Anatomy stuff all work week?! Well day 1 is almost over and this has been sooo helpful! Thanks CrashCourse team!
I'm a yoga instructor. I've been using your videos to fine tune and tweak my anatomy knowledge. Thank you for laying the information out in such a clear and concise manner!! Very helpful!!
Thank you so much, this video helped me understand what I've been struggling to learn in 1,5 years of medical school and thousands of pages of textbooks.
"Batman calling Alfred up to see how he is after his meningitis"...LOL!!!!!! Oh my gosh! SO flipping funny! I think Hank had a hard time keeping it together at this point. GREAT analogy!
I have pots (a type of disautonomia) like a few of there other commenters here. A video explaining it would be really cool, because its kind of hard for me to understand!
Me too! How do you guys explain it when other people ask you what it is? I usually explain it as a dysfunction of your fight or flight response, but this backfires when people don't know what the fight or flight response is :/
Mary Elizabeth I usually start by briefly explaining the autonomic nervous system. I say it controls bodily functions that we don't have to think about, like blood pressure, digestion, etc. Then I tell people that my ANS does not function properly, so it tends to mismanage those bodily functions mentioned before. People seem to get it when I break it down like that, but there isn't always time to explain it this thoroughly. I hope it helps though!
I have dysautonomia also I agree it would be nice to have a video about it specifically. However this video was helpful for me because it shows how are ANS is supposed to work when it functions properly. I can just share this video and say this is what is not working in my body. That is Dysautonomia.
Mary Elizabeth I say "we all have a ANS which are like wires that give directions to the body from the brain to do everything. All the stuff your body does without thinking: breathing , your heart beating, digesting ect. And my ANS has a short in it sometimes everything works right the wires pass on the message but more often mine has a disconnect were the message is lost or the wires by themselves pass on a message the brain did not send. And like a short in a electronic device you can never predict when it will short out though one can be aware of conditions that make it more likely to." This is the explanation I have been giving for 12 years it seems to work. Keep in mind though that you never have to tell or explain dysautonomia to people unless you want to don't feel pressured. Also some people might never be able to understand and that's OK.
Hank i just wanna thank you so so much for all of this i just love how you teach and how you present, you can't imagine the number of times you helped me understand things academically but more importantly you helped me learn A LOT of things and they stick so easily just cause you put them the way you do. Thanks man
I am a Kinesiology major at a local college for transfer. I do appreciate the education I am receiving crash course. I do have degree in Physical Education. So Transfer degree work is what is next in Kinesiology for me.
JUST IN TIME for my mini quiz !!! thank you crash course, your anatomy videos is the only reason i understand anything !!! you have no idea how many exams i have done well on because this exists.
I found this video really interesting, though that might have something to do with the fact that my autonomic nervous system is extra touchy. Will the next few videos dive at all into what happens when one of the systems is misfiring, or over action? Or things like Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (I have a feeling I miss spelt it)?
Rosemary Bell We've got more ANS episodes coming -- next week we're talking specifically about the sympathetic division and the following episode will concentrate on the parasympathetic. There's a lot of anatomical terminology to cover in there, but we will touch a little on the ways things can go wrong. -Nicole
+Gwendolyn johnson-vidales fight with it,dont let it break u Theres a ted talks i suggest u to see it:my phylosophy of a happy life Sorry for the wrong dictations
I always end up watching your videos before reading any chapter from the text books and those black and white words become very easy to understand as i'm able to relate. thankyou @CrashCourse. greetings from Delhi, India.
Thanks for the videos!!! Taking online classes it's hard to just read the material these are great for actually knowing what is going on!!! Also keeps my interest....
I've added this as a required video for my nursing students to watch for our unit on the pharmacology of autonomic drugs. You make the phsyio all so simple!
We've memorized the cranial nerves as OOPTAFAGVSH (oop tafa gush) 1,2,8 sensory 5,7,9,10 mixed and the remaining (i.e, 6,3,4,11 and 12) are motor. Remembering two of the sets is enough and the rest are the rest. :)
I have many health troubles and disorders -- but after seeing all that the ANS is in charge of -- I'm sure you can imagine that having a disorder _of_ that very system (aptly named dysautonomia) is by far the worst thing I can have. At any given point in my life I've either been unable to control my muscle movements and end up flailing involuntarily, unable to keep my skin temperature from anything but on fire despite being cold internally, unable to regulate my heart rate or my blood pressure in response to what my heart right is doing so just constantly passing out, unable digest anything consistently pretty much ever, or even keep consistent vision from one day to the next based on my body's failure to keep homeostasis of pressure behind my eyes. This is, no doubt, one disorder I would never wish on anyone -- esp since there are so many variations of it. But the fact that none of the symptoms are consistent between one person over the course of two or three years - let alone person to person - no doctors can ever figure out what's wrong with you. ....thennnn when they finally do, you discover that ALL the automatic/involuntary functions of your body are just unable to regulate themselves...and you are then expected to somehow NOT panic after hearing that. ...but then quickly remember your sympathetic nervous system ain't gonna like dat adrenaline spike and then you aren't gonna be able to fix your shizz. So you best just magically just, be chill af. But in all seriousness.... it's mind blowing what all one system can be in charge of and just how MUCH havoc it can wreck on one body over a lifetime.
+OurPeanutGallerie Really useful to hear about that! Thanks for your comment :) And good luck with your condition, I hope with advances in medical science that they may discover a cure in the future for you!
When I get through med school, I'm definitely donating to this channel. It has helped me significantly.
Justin Fugate ikr its like I'm actually taking the course, but for free!
200 like....... I did that
Did you donate?
Did you donate?
Justin Fugate hows med school?
I have never enjoyed Anatomy and Physiology as much as I do when I watch Crash Course. Hank cracks me up and puts things in such a way that I completely understand it. I actually stopped reading my chapters first, and instead I watch his videos several times first before going through the book. When I read something I don't understand, I watch Crash Course and then completely get it. Crash Course is going to help me graduate in time... and as a single mom and full time student, that's huge. And while I am working my way to graduation.. I am smiling and laughing.. because Hank is literally hilarious. He makes me smile. Thanks Crash Course!
Can we all just appreciate that he said "I recognize that this is confusing". When was the last time you heard that from a teacher
Why did it take him 8 minutes to explain what took 2 hours for my professor to explain 😂
Exactly! XD I wasted so much time in class because Crash Course had explained everything so much better. I just ended up watching the videos on my phone and taking notes on them instead.
Because they have to talk about 50 different things along with the main topic
And Hank doesn’t take any time to breath
Welcome to TH-cam. When you're competing against the entire world, you have to be "THE" best. Whereas your professor just needs to be the best in your area, willing to work for X dollars based on Y hours dealing with Z children.
He doesn't have to explain every single thing 5 different ways for the slower people in the group. They can just watch the video a couple more times.
this guy shud have like 20 million views, he is on spot.
Ikr?!😊👍
+Milo curry And its not just him,its the entire Crash Course team! There amazing!!👌😍
Victoria J
Right in time for exams
Hank is underrated people say he is reading a script and while thats quite true the way he presents the data is because he understands it and the analogys he gives is something a bit too good to say he is just acting in reality he is just better than most professors and his glasses and the way he is shows and how he talks is proof enough he was the social nerd that everyone asked for help in school
I just realized you're John Green's brother...wow...these crash courses are really helping!!
Chandreyi Sen yeah they r really an educated family !!!!!!
I'm in med school right now - and I love you
Elena how is it? :)
I love you more
YESSSIRR!!!!
It would be so awesome if you could mention Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (a form of Dysautonomia) or Dysautonomia in general in one of your videos. It needs more awareness and is often found in younger people. Thanks! :)
He's speedy, but I have a pause, rewind, and play button LOL. Seriously my FAVORITE channel. I have already taken API and APII but need refreshing and more detail for my pharmacology course...Hank has helped more than my prior instructors have.
I have an autonomic nervouse system disorder, so I love having this wonderful video to help people understand what it means.
You should start up a medical school. You teach way better than my teachers there.
CAN U PLEASE???? I'm premed tho but it would still be so helpful. biochem is murder!
Yes please!!!
He is biochemist
heavythinker16 ikr the teachers are like: "today we're gonna learn *insert topic here* and you'll have to take a BUNCH OF NOTES 😵!
I swear!!!
I can't tell you how helpful all your videos have been. I always watch the video first before class and it is so much easier to understand what the professor is saying, plus it really helps studying for tests and finals. Thank you crash course! wouldn't be this far in college without you!
Like some other commenters I have POTS (a type of dysautonomia) and I can tell you just how important the autonomic nervous system is, because when it doesn't work it feels like your whole body is falling apart!
I got an 86% on my anatomy test!! Thank you! :D Wish I saw these videos for my first anatomy test (Where I got an 53%) :(
Thank you Hank for all the help you've given me in understanding the various subjects you've been covering. This series is a great tool for anyone looking to increase their learning.
Bruhhhh! I just want to give Hank a hug. I felt like I wasn't going to make it through A&P... but thanks to Hank, I'm doing pretty well. This has helped me SO much!
Anyone else here struggling through Anatomy and Physiology? 😂
MahoGats TFM YESSSS
@@brittneyhansen2623 you've got this!
Nah thx to this channel I’m acing my exams 😂😂😂😭
I'm doing a biology unit in my psychology degree right now and hank is my saviour here. My grade would be so much lower if the a+p and biology videos didn't exist. Thanks hank!
JUST IN TIME FOR MY NEXT QUIZ! Thanks crash course!
Karen M WOO! YOU'RE WELCOME! HAPPY STUDYING!
-Nicole
Had a feeling id see some fellow POTSies on here! Keep fighting guys!❤️
This video literally simplified and made this topic so much more understandable than my textbook! Gonna do a lot better on this test because of this! Thank you!!!
Will you explain how disautonomia (?) works? I have POTS (a form of disautonomia) and I don't quite get how it works. Great video as usual!
Same here!
I'm actually early! Just want to tell you guys that I absolutely love these videos, and when we watch them in class, I can actually understand you. (my classmates think you talk to fast) I think that it is just great for everyone to watch. So informational! Will donate as soon as I can!
Best video so far ; i was so so so frustated with pre and post ganglionic system
I'm currently taking a course to obtain a certificate as a specialist in fitness nutrition and these videos are soooo helpful. love them. have recommended them to all of my peers taking the course as well
Everytime I watch this videos I have a huge smile on my face because these videos are so funny.
this one was art. really well done. it would have been easy to just state pre and post ganglionic fibers. but he explains WHY it makes sense
Anatomy and Physiology are topics that just became interesting to me in my mid 20's. This is such a great way to bring information in a creative entertaining manner. Thanks so much for the information, its presented in a manner where I'm laughing and learning. Keep up the great work guys!
Wanted to take a second to Thank everyone from crash course for the wonderful videos that help me understand what is going on in Anatomy and physiology
Thank you all
to take down notes it took me 6 pages of my notebook in 4 minutes!!! Keep up the good work and be the best teacher of EVERYONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :)
My A&P teacher linked us to this video (and I reminded my peers prior to the exam on this topic), and I have been using this channel's videos since. Informative and memorable, perfect for reviewing information or introducing information.
It seems many of us here have some type of Dysautonomia. I do as well and also have Autonomic Neuropathy. Life is a daily struggle to say the least. Most doctors don't understand and the treatment is nearly void. I was also dx with AAG. Autoimmune Autonomic Ganglionopathy Have had no treatment for this. No drs in my area know anything about it. These video's are great. Thanks for the tid bit on the Ganglia.
It is really aweful when you have to fight your own body daily. ugh... Good luck to all of you here. Well wishes.
I have an exam today and I understood nothing from my notes so I watched your videos and you could explain in 10 minuets what my professor couldn’t explain in over an hour. Thank you so much
Last minute attempt to learn 8 months of a uni course in one night before my exam tomorrow. Luckily, after watching these videos, I'm a lot more confident!
Crash course is why science is the only subject I do not get bored studying for :D
That was really awesome! The best I've found to date. Textbooks and professors both wear you down on this one every time. It was just a brief superficial overview but the content is wonderfully presented. Thank you so much. great work!!
I really hope you will make a video on POTS and Dysautonomia.
I would really like to educate my teachers, family, and friends about this illness that I have. A lot of them either don't understand it or refuse to try to understand it. They don't think it's a real thing, but that's mostly my teachers though.
Please help me spread awareness about this terrible illness. It's been hard trying to explain something that most people don't think exists and you could really help open people's eyes.
Thank you.
win jones The Dysautonomia International website has a place on it where you can get packets for your teachers to explain what dysautonomia and P.O.T.S. is. The website is also a invaluable resource for information.
These videos help me survive vet school midterms, Thank you crash course!
I watch lectures in anatomy, come here and slow down the video speed I understand then I go back to watch lectures and understand some more, this channel helps me SOO MUCH
im pretty sure im undiagonsed ADHD and im struggling to read through lecture slides, so these videos are helping me out a bunch. Thank you guys so much for these videos!
I think professors in general are extremes, some explains everything so slowly like we are dumb and others just presume we know everything, this is so perfect and direct that we understand the hole idea and it gets a lot easier to pick up on the specifics later. thankss btw
I just started an Anatomy course at a trade school that only meets 4 hours a week. So I was thinking I have a 40 hour work week why don't I just listen to Anatomy stuff all work week?! Well day 1 is almost over and this has been sooo helpful! Thanks CrashCourse team!
I'm a yoga instructor. I've been using your videos to fine tune and tweak my anatomy knowledge. Thank you for laying the information out in such a clear and concise manner!! Very helpful!!
Looking through comments and seeing my POTS family!! Hang in there guys! Dysautonomia doesn't own us!
Crash Course always has the best analogies.
Thank you so much, this video helped me understand what I've been struggling to learn in 1,5 years of medical school and thousands of pages of textbooks.
My therapist just recommended this to me and it actually did make me smile to see Hank Green's face on it.
"Batman calling Alfred up to see how he is after his meningitis"...LOL!!!!!! Oh my gosh! SO flipping funny! I think Hank had a hard time keeping it together at this point. GREAT analogy!
I have pots (a type of disautonomia) like a few of there other commenters here. A video explaining it would be really cool, because its kind of hard for me to understand!
I agree! I have it too, unfortunately
Me too! How do you guys explain it when other people ask you what it is? I usually explain it as a dysfunction of your fight or flight response, but this backfires when people don't know what the fight or flight response is :/
Mary Elizabeth I usually start by briefly explaining the autonomic nervous system. I say it controls bodily functions that we don't have to think about, like blood pressure, digestion, etc. Then I tell people that my ANS does not function properly, so it tends to mismanage those bodily functions mentioned before. People seem to get it when I break it down like that, but there isn't always time to explain it this thoroughly. I hope it helps though!
I have dysautonomia also I agree it would be nice to have a video about it specifically. However this video was helpful for me because it shows how are ANS is supposed to work when it functions properly. I can just share this video and say this is what is not working in my body. That is Dysautonomia.
Mary Elizabeth I say "we all have a ANS which are like wires that give directions to the body from the brain to do everything. All the stuff your body does without thinking: breathing , your heart beating, digesting ect. And my ANS has a short in it sometimes everything works right the wires pass on the message but more often mine has a disconnect were the message is lost or the wires by themselves pass on a message the brain did not send. And like a short in a electronic device you can never predict when it will short out though one can be aware of conditions that make it more likely to." This is the explanation I have been giving for 12 years it seems to work. Keep in mind though that you never have to tell or explain dysautonomia to people unless you want to don't feel pressured. Also some people might never be able to understand and that's OK.
I have no words to thank Hank green
Hank's videos are almost the only ones I don't have to put on double speed when I'm revising😂 med school lack of time problems
I'm prepping for my CRRN testing and these videos are game changers.
I love Crash Course videos. I'd die for a copy of the Anatomy scripts or a summary. I take notes ridiculously while watching!
My professor made it sound so impossible to understand. You don't know how much you've helped me right now. Thank you!
AWWWEEE SHEEEEETTT!!! The Character Foils Analogy goes even DEEPER?!?! 3:10
Thank you very much! Very well explained, you are a big role model for me :) Keep up the great work! Greetings from Berlin, Germany.
I'm cramming for my derm/sensory exams in pharmacy school and this is just what I needed! Thank you so much
I'm taking physiological psychology and this helps so much understanding things that we've been talking about in class!
Hank i just wanna thank you so so much for all of this i just love how you teach and how you present, you can't imagine the number of times you helped me understand things academically but more importantly you helped me learn A LOT of things and they stick so easily just cause you put them the way you do. Thanks man
I am a Kinesiology major at a local college for transfer. I do appreciate the education I am receiving crash course. I do have degree in Physical Education. So Transfer degree work is what is next in Kinesiology for me.
These topics are in perfect timing for my A2 biology exam in 2 months, revising has never been easier, thank yoooouuuuuu :)
Love the way it was presented. Easy to grasp a complex topic. Great modulation of voice by the presenter kept you focus. Excellent presentation 👌😁
You have made it easy for me after being confused. Many thanks from the faculty of Dentistry mansoura university in Egypt
you explained sympathetic and parasympathetic so well omg thank youuu👏🏼🙌🏼 Love you’re channel so much!
JUST IN TIME for my mini quiz !!!
thank you crash course, your anatomy videos is the only reason i understand anything !!! you have no idea how many exams i have done well on because this exists.
You're the best Hank! Stuff explained by you always sounds easier :3
I found this video really interesting, though that might have something to do with the fact that my autonomic nervous system is extra touchy. Will the next few videos dive at all into what happens when one of the systems is misfiring, or over action? Or things like Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (I have a feeling I miss spelt it)?
Rosemary Bell We've got more ANS episodes coming -- next week we're talking specifically about the sympathetic division and the following episode will concentrate on the parasympathetic. There's a lot of anatomical terminology to cover in there, but we will touch a little on the ways things can go wrong.
-Nicole
Thank you, Nicole from Crash Course. The information is helpful.
+CrashCourse Great!! I have autonomic dysfunction (ehlers danlos is main illness) and it has taken away my life.
+Gwendolyn johnson-vidales fight with it,dont let it break u
Theres a ted talks i suggest u to see it:my phylosophy of a happy life
Sorry for the wrong dictations
You guys make my Mondays exciting
Why does he explain it with so much more clarity and concision compared to my literal university classes and textbook...
Damn- I love you and your incredibly well-produced videos. You are professionals and scholars. Thank you.
+greent26tube sexy :p
Crash Course has always been awesome!!!!! It makes my lessons easy for me!!
Could you explain dysautonomia in one of your videos? What it is and what it does to your body?
These crash course episodes are the reason i got 3.8 gpa, thank you 🥰❤️
Thank you Hank, this episode has been the missing piece of a very big puzzle for me.
Really interesting article I read basically disproves some of this video on where the parasympathetic nerves originate from
Thanks for such an amazing channel.. You've seriously got another big supporter...
I went from getting 60% on my tests in A&P to getting 90% ,all thanks to you
I love your sense of humor! thanks for making these videos!
Thank you! It was easy to understand and easy to remember! 👍
I always end up watching your videos before reading any chapter from the text books and those black and white words become very easy to understand as i'm able to relate.
thankyou @CrashCourse. greetings from Delhi, India.
Thank you! Fast, but very helpful. Love the illustrations!
THIS WAS SOO GOOD!!LOVED THE WAY THE WHOLE THING WAS PRESENTED!
Love your lectures, never boring.
This is a very entertaining breakdown!
THIS WAS REALLY HELPFUL THANK YOU SO MUCH. I NEVER COMMENT ON TH-cam BUT FELT THE NEED THE TO THIS TIME
My textbook explained ganglia "grouped cell bodies" . SO SPECIFIC EH??. This video taught me what ganglia really are . Thanks man
I have an exam in 50 minutes... this helped me greatly!
YOU. ARE. AMAZING. so thankful for all these video's!!
Definitely recommending to my students. You always help me with my lessons. Two thumbs up!
Loved the Ron and Hermione reference! And thaaaank you for saving my friend and I for our exam next week!!!
Thanks for the videos!!! Taking online classes it's hard to just read the material these are great for actually knowing what is going on!!! Also keeps my interest....
I've added this as a required video for my nursing students to watch for our unit on the pharmacology of autonomic drugs. You make the phsyio all so simple!
This gives precise conception. Excellent
We've memorized the cranial nerves as
OOPTAFAGVSH
(oop tafa gush)
1,2,8 sensory
5,7,9,10 mixed and the remaining (i.e, 6,3,4,11 and 12) are motor.
Remembering two of the sets is enough and the rest are the rest. :)
This is great! I nice way to recap all the stuff I forgot because I was slacking at school!
I have many health troubles and disorders -- but after seeing all that the ANS is in charge of -- I'm sure you can imagine that having a disorder _of_ that very system (aptly named dysautonomia) is by far the worst thing I can have. At any given point in my life I've either been unable to control my muscle movements and end up flailing involuntarily, unable to keep my skin temperature from anything but on fire despite being cold internally, unable to regulate my heart rate or my blood pressure in response to what my heart right is doing so just constantly passing out, unable digest anything consistently pretty much ever, or even keep consistent vision from one day to the next based on my body's failure to keep homeostasis of pressure behind my eyes.
This is, no doubt, one disorder I would never wish on anyone -- esp since there are so many variations of it. But the fact that none of the symptoms are consistent between one person over the course of two or three years - let alone person to person - no doctors can ever figure out what's wrong with you. ....thennnn when they finally do, you discover that ALL the automatic/involuntary functions of your body are just unable to regulate themselves...and you are then expected to somehow NOT panic after hearing that. ...but then quickly remember your sympathetic nervous system ain't gonna like dat adrenaline spike and then you aren't gonna be able to fix your shizz. So you best just magically just, be chill af.
But in all seriousness.... it's mind blowing what all one system can be in charge of and just how MUCH havoc it can wreck on one body over a lifetime.
+OurPeanutGallerie Really useful to hear about that! Thanks for your comment :) And good luck with your condition, I hope with advances in medical science that they may discover a cure in the future for you!
+Rebecca Robinson i put my dysautonomia in remission simply by doing hypnotherapy
Germaine Edouard Toddler get your smartphone?
Crash Course is so helpful. Thank you!