cheers dude. i'm in year 12 and don't need such detail although i'm grateful because other people do and i am glad that you didn't rush through the cells. Also great art for the video, if you made them yourself then you are a mad lad, since i am an artist and know how hard it is. Keep up the good work man!!!
omggggg thank u i'm in a Human Pathology class and had no idea what was going on. it's completely online and the professor just assigns reading assignments, no videos, nothing. as i was watching this video a lot of things started connecting. i remembered most things from the textbook but seeing it in a video made it so much easier and i feel more confident on my understanding on inflammation.
That video was fantastic! wow, I’ve tried to find a good, short, and concise video on inflammation for a while now… this was definitely the best… thank you!
Hi there, you state that the increase in vascular diameter results in a slower blood flow. The resources I have state that vasodilation actually increases blood flow but reduces blood pressure. I'm interested to hear your thoughts!
One correction, with vasodilation you get increased blood flow not decreased blood flow due to the fact that you have increased radius and thus decreased resistance
I thought that the increase in diameter of the blood vessels is what makes the blood flow slower since more volume = less pressure. The increased blood flow was a result of the concentration gradient from the chemokines. In your case, I think you're equating blood velocity and blood flow. At least that's what I thought. God I hope I'm right cause I got a test tomorrow. Everyone dog pile and make fun of me if I'm wrong though
@@qt3.147 no, you look up possieule equation. With less resistance you get more blood flow essentially. I can't comment on the pressure gradient which produces velocity o the fluid because I don't know that stuff that well blood flow is different from velocity of blood tho
@@qt3.147 increase in diameter together with exudation of fluid in the microvasculature is what cause slow blood flow, concentration of red blood cell and increased viscosity of the blood, a condition called stasis.
In change of local blood vessels In first point you said there is a slower blood flow but there is local increase in blood flow, which manifests as redness and warmness.
HI THERE!! I NEED HELP! I had a biology test some days ago and there was a question whether macrophages produced histamine or cytokines to induce chemotaxis. I chose cytokines bc clearly the cells who mainly produce histamine are basophils and mast cells, but my teacher marked it as incorrect. So can someone explain to me???
I think some mechanisms were active in fatty infiltration after a bad, basically untreated neck injury - no information given from various medical professionals. Mystery infiltration mass-like area on my neck since...& it's all basically killing me... I was active too... had lots of goals. Wish more cared about their actual work!
Very thorough. Had to reverse a number of times because of the speed of which the information was taught. Just rolling down the interstate in my big rig learning things free of charge.
which of the following process is in charge of directing inflammatory cells exactly into the site of injury? -chemotaxis -diapedesis -vasodilation -adhesion can you please answer this
Hi, my wife had an anterior/posterior lumbar fusion in L4/L5 on Jan 24th. About 11 weeks ago. She has no pain, is able to walk miles and work hours, however her right foot still turns pink and gets hot for her. Sometimes there may be just a little swelling at night. Is this heat common? Thank you.
To the creator of this video, I ask for permission whether I can use this video and translate it into Indonesian for learning and research purposes? Thank you and please reply
I’m an engineering student, but watching medical videos during my free time somehow relaxes me. I don’t plan on pursuing medicine as a career, but the workings of the human body is so complex and intriguing. It’s engineering at it’s best! Even more astounding that it’s on a biological level. Edit: Does anyone know why massaging or touching the site of injury soothes the pain? Is there a biological reasoning for that or no?
Yes, it can happen due to pathogens via PAMPS or NECROSIS (non- programmed death of cells) via DAMPS. Both activate the same pathway via TLR and DLR and the inflammosome. That activates the cytokine expression and IL-1B, respectively.
So, your body uses pain as a way to alert you to a problem, and stop you from moving the affected body part. My question is...who are you? Who is this consciousness that your body has to relate news to and use pain to communicate with? Who are you? It's just interesting that your body understands that their is a pilot.
Best but concise video available!! Taking Patho for my NP program and this helped me tremendously while studying for midterms 🙏🏾
I am in an Immunology class at the moment and this video cleared some things up as in the E- selectin. thanks a lot
Very good explanation it covered summary of veterinary or medical inflammation topics
Very good
cheers dude. i'm in year 12 and don't need such detail although i'm grateful because other people do and i am glad that you didn't rush through the cells. Also great art for the video, if you made them yourself then you are a mad lad, since i am an artist and know how hard it is. Keep up the good work man!!!
omggggg thank u i'm in a Human Pathology class and had no idea what was going on. it's completely online and the professor just assigns reading assignments, no videos, nothing. as i was watching this video a lot of things started connecting. i remembered most things from the textbook but seeing it in a video made it so much easier and i feel more confident on my understanding on inflammation.
That video was fantastic! wow, I’ve tried to find a good, short, and concise video on inflammation for a while now… this was definitely the best… thank you!
I got a deep cut today in. My palm waiting for this inflammatory stage😔😬thank you for this wonderful video to understand the process
There was a fantastic amount of information packed into these 6 minutes! Thank you for creating!
I’m going through the Inflammatory Response now, so thank’s for the explaining
Can you see it? Like a vapor?
@@SusieSynth well no I can’t see it because the damage is from my stomach unlike in the video
A very simple explanation enriched with images that complement the speech. I congratulate you, my students will be very grateful to you.
This is brilliant thank you!!!! The visuals were so easy to follow and helped understand the process.
The personification of blood clotting through the use of Gandalf really sold it for me 👌👌👌
Man, I saw lots of medical videos about this topic , but your video is the best without dubs
Thank you so much ^_^
True
Hi there, you state that the increase in vascular diameter results in a slower blood flow. The resources I have state that vasodilation actually increases blood flow but reduces blood pressure. I'm interested to hear your thoughts!
The blood flow increases in volume, however, it decreases in velocity. So we have large volumes of blood moving at a slow rate. Hope that's helpful.
I may be wrong but its more blood moving at a slower rate
nah yeah this is an amazing video - everytime i listen to it i pick up a new fact - it's jam packed full of really useful detail - thankyou !
Wow, beautifully illustrated and clearly explained. Thank you
One correction, with vasodilation you get increased blood flow not decreased blood flow due to the fact that you have increased radius and thus decreased resistance
I thought that the increase in diameter of the blood vessels is what makes the blood flow slower since more volume = less pressure. The increased blood flow was a result of the concentration gradient from the chemokines. In your case, I think you're equating blood velocity and blood flow. At least that's what I thought. God I hope I'm right cause I got a test tomorrow. Everyone dog pile and make fun of me if I'm wrong though
@@qt3.147 no, you look up possieule equation. With less resistance you get more blood flow essentially. I can't comment on the pressure gradient which produces velocity o the fluid because I don't know that stuff that well
blood flow is different from velocity of blood tho
@@qt3.147 increase in diameter together with exudation of fluid in the microvasculature is what cause slow blood flow, concentration of red blood cell and increased viscosity of the blood, a condition called stasis.
This is by far the best video about inflammation i've ever seen. Thank you!
This is a really good explanation of inflammation.
Very nice 👌 keep it up 👌👌👌
True💯
This guy!! You are amazing!
00:24 The increased in vascular diameter results in FASTER* blood flow
I caught that mistake too.
No! The blood flow slows...its a phenomenon called "stasis"... He knows what he saying...lool it up
Amazingly explained
Great Content.
thank you for this ....it was soooooo helpful
In change of local blood vessels
In first point you said there is a slower blood flow but there is local increase in blood flow, which manifests as redness and warmness.
This happened in the extravasation video too. I am so confused lol. smaller radius = slow flow? based on Pousille equation?
HI THERE!! I NEED HELP! I had a biology test some days ago and there was a question whether macrophages produced histamine or cytokines to induce chemotaxis. I chose cytokines bc clearly the cells who mainly produce histamine are basophils and mast cells, but my teacher marked it as incorrect. So can someone explain to me???
@msp banane It turns out there was no correct answer for that question so the teacher just gave us all the points. But thanks anyway! x
@@casiniaciobanu4929 you are very welcome
excellent video 🖤
Are you able to cover what happens to the liver's bile production when the gallbladder is surgically removed?
the bile gets directly delivered to the duodenum
Elaborative 💯🙌
I think some mechanisms were active in fatty infiltration after a bad, basically untreated neck injury - no information given from various medical professionals. Mystery infiltration mass-like area on my neck since...& it's all basically killing me...
I was active too... had lots of goals.
Wish more cared about their actual work!
Well done
Very thorough. Had to reverse a number of times because of the speed of which the information was taught. Just rolling down the interstate in my big rig learning things free of charge.
Fantastic video, thank you!
the fantastic visual aspect of it all helped me so much and made everything so much easier! thank you !!
Perfect 🤩
So an inflammation is in particular helpful and a cleaning mechanism as long as it functions normally right?
Yes
Can you talk about the oedema as a whole topic for me please
You have done a good job!
This was incredibly helpful, thank you!
Sir made the video on hypersensitivity
This video made me to finally understand Inflammation, Great Job!!
Thank you very much
I love this! Worth subbing for.
This is cool! Thank you for this well-explained video! Now I understand!! Thank you!!!
Hi, thanks for this. I have a concern: is extravasation the same as diapedesis?
Can tumor site become red and hot from necrosis?
Such a great video!
which of the following process is in charge of directing inflammatory cells exactly into the site of injury?
-chemotaxis
-diapedesis
-vasodilation
-adhesion
can you please answer this
Could you please list your resources for this information!? Thank you.
Is antibody secreted during inflammation
Great vid
Can we get the photos you used?
God bless you
thank you so much for this
way better than inflammatory response video of khan academy @khanacademy
Hi, my wife had an anterior/posterior lumbar fusion in L4/L5 on Jan 24th. About 11 weeks ago. She has no pain, is able to walk miles and work hours, however her right foot still turns pink and gets hot for her. Sometimes there may be just a little swelling at night. Is this heat common? Thank you.
thank you so much for the well-explained video, it had helped me to understand it. :)
Same
Thank you
SVP le logiciel avec le quelle vous travailler
To the creator of this video,
I ask for permission whether I can use this video and translate it into Indonesian for learning and research purposes?
Thank you and please reply
Hi! You are welcome to add subtitles to this video (would be much appreciated!), but please do not reupload it to a different channel/website. Thanks!
Describe the pathogenesis of atheroma (process of atherosclerotic plaque) formation.
I’m an engineering student, but watching medical videos during my free time somehow relaxes me. I don’t plan on pursuing medicine as a career, but the workings of the human body is so complex and intriguing. It’s engineering at it’s best! Even more astounding that it’s on a biological level.
Edit: Does anyone know why massaging or touching the site of injury soothes the pain? Is there a biological reasoning for that or no?
How mnay people understood all this... teaching isnt easy as it appers, its not for everyone
hello may I ask if the reaction is the same when you have a bruise (wound that didnt open your skin)
Yes, it can happen due to pathogens via PAMPS or NECROSIS (non- programmed death of cells) via DAMPS. Both activate the same pathway via TLR and DLR and the inflammosome. That activates the cytokine expression and IL-1B, respectively.
Vasodilation increases blood flow, why would it slow it?
Arteriole will dilate which will result to slower blood flow
@@jeno6466 vasodilation’s purpose is to increase blood flow. It might decrease blood pressure, but it does not slow down blood flow.
@@143Al ohh okay sorry. I think I was thinking of vasoconstriction
@@jeno6466 No problem, thanks for trying to help :)
Actually, vasodilation result in increasing the blood flow.
Susan's Platform yeah, but the blood moves slower
Nice
How to eliminate shredded virus and dead particles from body
U would have to power walk and drink ph 9 or 10
This doesn't sound like Andrew from SketchyMedical?
bone remodeling and calcium bone intake
U rock dude ! Appreciate it!
In what step can the inflammation stop
So, your body uses pain as a way to alert you to a problem, and stop you from moving the affected body part. My question is...who are you? Who is this consciousness that your body has to relate news to and use pain to communicate with? Who are you? It's just interesting that your body understands that their is a pilot.
That’s God who designed us is this way. This isn’t a random accident like many people believe
Wow
Magic. Got it.
Vasodilation increases blood flow actually
I’m here from that tik tok. This absolutely sounds like Ben Shapiro at 1.5 speed lol
comploment cascade
Added to the list of future topics!
comploment system
kinin cascade
PEA palmitoylethanolamide
intro to cytokines
pamps and pprs
med uff
granulocyte family
chemotaxis
Okay Ben Shapiro
phagocytosis