Still need help with striations and intercalated discs? th-cam.com/video/58QjlkcuMOw/w-d-xo.html Need help identifying epithelium? th-cam.com/video/reoEVXvoUmI/w-d-xo.html For more basic Histology (AP I): th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2RFon6AxyVIeoAMtp0Ci13u.html Advanced Histology (AP II): th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2Ro6cMPxNpRxHf3m0lh-1oa.html Skeletal system: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2QJa_kN6fP_le3qUJ1E4iHM.html Anatomical Regions/Vocab: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2SuHjuuhFFM7CgR1N-pU_Rh.html Muscle Anatomy: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2TMpyo7eNNzO0ug-mjpm5vM.html Heart: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2SRAB_sNg8xKheQNhgf5tgJ.html Blood: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2TLudKbM8FsWm9mB2PtOIls.html
Thank you so much for the easy markers and clarifications, sometimes there's so much going on under a slide that I don't know what features to focus on. I will definitely be using this for my practical exam for A&P!!
They aren't always clearly visible on every part of the slide...carefully scan the whole slide looking for striations. Sometimes in cardiac they are not visible but the intercalated discs will be...if you give a timestamp and a slide that you can't see striations on I will tell you where to look
@@AnatomyHero thank you ma, the only slide where I see striations is in the skeletal muscle slide that was shown from the beginning till 1:16, I didn't notice any striations in any of the cardiac muscle slide or any other skeletal muscle slide that was projected. Ps: I do not know if what I'm referring to as striations is what it actually is. I think it's those tiny faint lines (pink and white) across the skeletal muscle.
photos.app.goo.gl/epabow2dBG6Yyvrb8 I circled the most visible striations (light and dark stripes) but if you zoom in and pan around you can see them everywhere. In the cardiac examples the striations are not visible, So in that case you would just look for the intercalated discs
Look in the lower left quadrant near where there is empty space, the striations are pretty visible there. If you scan back and forth across the fibers you will notice other ones but they're not as distinct.
Good evening Ma'am thank you for this vid but I also wanted to ask about these 2 questions I have to do in basic histology which is how to distinguish the three muscle types when stained with H&E? The second one is compare and explain the reasons for the staining properties of the three vertebrate muscle types? Could you please help me with this? Thank you so much!
Striations are light and dark bands that occur throughout the length of the muscle cell, and are seen in both cardiac and skeletal muscle. Intercalated discs are specialized cell junctions that only exist in cardiac muscle If you want to hear me explain it in a little more detail, go to this video th-cam.com/video/58QjlkcuMOw/w-d-xo.htmlsi=ISSH28z-8TCFLd2w and check out between 0 - 1: 20 for striations and between 2 and 3: 25 for intercalated discs. Video also has more practice/examples of cardiac and skeletal.
I just came to this video after seeing your connective tissue identification. I’m a bit confused about the dense regular and the smooth muscle. They look the same to me .
That's such a common issue I've made a video about it! Let me know if you still have questions after you've watched this... th-cam.com/video/5kmZ2Yo-gEg/w-d-xo.html
Here is my full histology playlist! th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2RFon6AxyVIeoAMtp0Ci13u.html On there I have 1) a video about all the connective tissue (including cartilage) 2) a review and practice specifically for cartilage and 3) a video about bone histology! I also have a video with practice questions for ALL the tissue types, but I haven't put it on the playlist yet. I will do that later Best of luck in your studies!
Hello Could you help me differentiate types of tissu when not even knowing whether it would be a conjuctive , a cartilage or a muscle... before moving to like subclasses . Thanks in advance.
The best thing to do is to learn all the families individually first, and then you'll be able to visually recognize what family it's in just through experience (meaning...once you've seen enough epithelium, you'll know it's epithelium and not muscle) You can also try the process of elimination...tell yourself all the things you know it's not and usually you'll only be left with one good answer. On my basic histology playlist (linked below) I have a video called identifying tissues that you can practice this with. If you aren't fully familiar with the other family types yet, you can also check out the following videos: 1) identifying epithelium 2) identifying connective tissue proper 3) identifying cartilage 4) practice identifying connective tissue (goes through ALL ct) There's also videos for things people commonly mix up (simple squamous vs adipose, smooth muscle vs dense regular). Hope that helps, good luck in your studies! Basic Histology (AP I): th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2RFon6AxyVIeoAMtp0Ci13u.html
@@AnatomyHero I found your video on identifying tissues earlier and watched it , it taught me how to immediately know which family it is , I still hesitate between smooth muscle and dense regular and don't often see striation in cardiac muscle but since you expected that saying in your response that you had videos for things people mix up gonna watch them ASAP inshallah Thanks again your videos help a lot.
Since smooth muscle doesn't have striations, is it easily confused with other types of tissue? If so, how do we know for sure that is it smooth muscle? Thanks again!
In my experience, people mix up smooth with dense regular... so I made a video just about that! th-cam.com/video/5kmZ2Yo-gEg/w-d-xo.html If you go to my playlists you'll see I have one for basic histology. I have a video for every family (the ones that start with identifying have questions at the end) and then a video that has questions for all the tissue types as a wrap up!
Still need help with striations and intercalated discs? th-cam.com/video/58QjlkcuMOw/w-d-xo.html
Need help identifying epithelium? th-cam.com/video/reoEVXvoUmI/w-d-xo.html
For more basic Histology (AP I): th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2RFon6AxyVIeoAMtp0Ci13u.html
Advanced Histology (AP II): th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2Ro6cMPxNpRxHf3m0lh-1oa.html
Skeletal system: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2QJa_kN6fP_le3qUJ1E4iHM.html
Anatomical Regions/Vocab: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2SuHjuuhFFM7CgR1N-pU_Rh.html
Muscle Anatomy: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2TMpyo7eNNzO0ug-mjpm5vM.html
Heart: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2SRAB_sNg8xKheQNhgf5tgJ.html
Blood: th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2TLudKbM8FsWm9mB2PtOIls.html
You are a hero! I've got an exam in 3 hours and because of you I can be confident.
Thank you so much for the easy markers and clarifications, sometimes there's so much going on under a slide that I don't know what features to focus on. I will definitely be using this for my practical exam for A&P!!
Such a simple and clear video of how to identify muscles, good one i will always come back for more of these helpful videos Thank you and god bless
Thanks, it was very helpful! just watching this a day before my practical exam lol!
Thank u so much,having so much difficulties lately for identifying slides,it was helpful
You are the best!! Thank you so much for all of your videos 💙
You're so welcome! I'm happy to do what I can to help the next generation of healthcare professionals!
@@AnatomyHero Hello, I just got a perfect grade from my exam, thank you once again.
@@oykuunal Awesome!
I love your channel so much, helped me right before anatomy practical
Ma'am, thank you for this video. You're doing a great job. The issue is, I still find it difficult to see the striations.
They aren't always clearly visible on every part of the slide...carefully scan the whole slide looking for striations. Sometimes in cardiac they are not visible but the intercalated discs will be...if you give a timestamp and a slide that you can't see striations on I will tell you where to look
@@AnatomyHero thank you ma, the only slide where I see striations is in the skeletal muscle slide that was shown from the beginning till 1:16, I didn't notice any striations in any of the cardiac muscle slide or any other skeletal muscle slide that was projected.
Ps: I do not know if what I'm referring to as striations is what it actually is. I think it's those tiny faint lines (pink and white) across the skeletal muscle.
photos.app.goo.gl/epabow2dBG6Yyvrb8
I circled the most visible striations (light and dark stripes) but if you zoom in and pan around you can see them everywhere.
In the cardiac examples the striations are not visible, So in that case you would just look for the intercalated discs
@@AnatomyHero thank you, I think I can point out striations now when I see, thank you this was really helpful ☺️
@@amakaosita1982 happy to help! Good luck in your studies!
Wait, I dont see striations in the first skeletal muscle practice example.
Look in the lower left quadrant near where there is empty space, the striations are pretty visible there. If you scan back and forth across the fibers you will notice other ones but they're not as distinct.
Good evening Ma'am thank you for this vid but I also wanted to ask about these 2 questions I have to do in basic histology which is how to distinguish the three muscle types when stained with H&E? The second one is compare and explain the reasons for the staining properties of the three vertebrate muscle types? Could you please help me with this? Thank you so much!
YOUVE MADE THIS ALL SO CLEAR FOR ME THANK YOU
What is the difference between intercalated discs and striations
Striations are light and dark bands that occur throughout the length of the muscle cell, and are seen in both cardiac and skeletal muscle. Intercalated discs are specialized cell junctions that only exist in cardiac muscle
If you want to hear me explain it in a little more detail, go to this video
th-cam.com/video/58QjlkcuMOw/w-d-xo.htmlsi=ISSH28z-8TCFLd2w
and check out between 0 - 1: 20 for striations and between 2 and 3: 25 for intercalated discs. Video also has more practice/examples of cardiac and skeletal.
I just came to this video after seeing your connective tissue identification. I’m a bit confused about the dense regular and the smooth muscle. They look the same to me .
That's such a common issue I've made a video about it! Let me know if you still have questions after you've watched this... th-cam.com/video/5kmZ2Yo-gEg/w-d-xo.html
teacher can you share detailed cartilage and bone tissue lecture too ? i will take histology exam next week at friday. 🙏🙏🙏
Here is my full histology playlist! th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2RFon6AxyVIeoAMtp0Ci13u.html
On there I have 1) a video about all the connective tissue (including cartilage) 2) a review and practice specifically for cartilage and 3) a video about bone histology!
I also have a video with practice questions for ALL the tissue types, but I haven't put it on the playlist yet. I will do that later
Best of luck in your studies!
Hello
Could you help me differentiate types of tissu when not even knowing whether it would be a conjuctive , a cartilage or a muscle... before moving to like subclasses .
Thanks in advance.
The best thing to do is to learn all the families individually first, and then you'll be able to visually recognize what family it's in just through experience (meaning...once you've seen enough epithelium, you'll know it's epithelium and not muscle) You can also try the process of elimination...tell yourself all the things you know it's not and usually you'll only be left with one good answer.
On my basic histology playlist (linked below) I have a video called identifying tissues that you can practice this with. If you aren't fully familiar with the other family types yet, you can also check out the following videos: 1) identifying epithelium 2) identifying connective tissue proper 3) identifying cartilage 4) practice identifying connective tissue (goes through ALL ct)
There's also videos for things people commonly mix up (simple squamous vs adipose, smooth muscle vs dense regular).
Hope that helps, good luck in your studies!
Basic Histology (AP I): th-cam.com/play/PLBM7jL93Kc2RFon6AxyVIeoAMtp0Ci13u.html
@@AnatomyHero I found your video on identifying tissues earlier and watched it , it taught me how to immediately know which family it is , I still hesitate between smooth muscle and dense regular and don't often see striation in cardiac muscle but since you expected that saying in your response that you had videos for things people mix up gonna watch them ASAP inshallah
Thanks again your videos help a lot.
Miss I didn't understand which part are the striations
On the skeletal muscle, it looks like there are lines going top to bottom. Those are the striations.
Since smooth muscle doesn't have striations, is it easily confused with other types of tissue? If so, how do we know for sure that is it smooth muscle? Thanks again!
In my experience, people mix up smooth with dense regular... so I made a video just about that!
th-cam.com/video/5kmZ2Yo-gEg/w-d-xo.html
If you go to my playlists you'll see I have one for basic histology. I have a video for every family (the ones that start with identifying have questions at the end) and then a video that has questions for all the tissue types as a wrap up!
Wow, what a set of resources!
Amazing video
I have a microscope test today❤️
Good luck! Hope you get the grade you want 🙂
it is very helpful
Thank you so much ❤☺️
Awesome ✨
Thank you so much 😭
THAAAAAAAANK U VERY MUCH IT REALLY HELPS ME 🥀.
Indeed a Hero
YOU ARE THE BEST I LOVE YOU
Ty
Lovely
You're the best!
Thank you soooo much
very helpful
Luv u ❤ thank you very much😊
Omg this was so helpful wow
Glad you're finding my videos helpful! Good luck on your exam! (And if you didn't know already...I have a histology playlist!)
@@AnatomyHero just took my lab exam. I aced it
@@BPrincess awesome!!
thank you so muchhhhhhhhhhhh
k