I watched a video of yours on how bones begin a year ago, but I am not a doctor. Can I benefit from your experience in whether bones and flesh grow at the same time from mesoderm or one before another?
Bones and muscles grow simultaneously from the mesoderm, with their development closely coordinated to ensure proper formation and function of the musculoskeletal system. I hope this answers your question 😊
@@JoaosLab ا Yes, thank you very much. Do you mean that it should never happen that the bone grows first at any stage of growth and is then covered with flesh
@@Shorouq-r1y In vertebrates, bone development is closely coordinated with the formation of surrounding tissues. Bones form either through the transformation of cartilage (in endochondral ossification) or directly from mesenchymal tissue (in intramembranous ossification), and this process is always accompanied by the development of muscles, skin, and other tissues. So bone doesn't develop first, then the rest. These processes are happening simultaneously.
Great video! Can you make videos like, “How your Body Protects you From Cancer” or virus, just immune system stuff, haven’t seen much about that! Thanks!
Not studying this, but had to watch that new Joao drop😂
This makes me so happy. Thank you so much! 🙌
Fab video. Very informative.
Thank you so much! 😊
I watched a video of yours on how bones begin a year ago, but I am not a doctor. Can I benefit from your experience in whether bones and flesh grow at the same time from mesoderm or one before another?
Bones and muscles grow simultaneously from the mesoderm, with their development closely coordinated to ensure proper formation and function of the musculoskeletal system. I hope this answers your question 😊
@@JoaosLab ا
Yes, thank you very much. Do you mean that it should never happen that the bone grows first at any stage of growth and is then covered with flesh
@@Shorouq-r1y In vertebrates, bone development is closely coordinated with the formation of surrounding tissues. Bones form either through the transformation of cartilage (in endochondral ossification) or directly from mesenchymal tissue (in intramembranous ossification), and this process is always accompanied by the development of muscles, skin, and other tissues. So bone doesn't develop first, then the rest. These processes are happening simultaneously.
@@JoaosLab thank you for your help 🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
Great video! Can you make videos like, “How your Body Protects you From Cancer” or virus, just immune system stuff, haven’t seen much about that! Thanks!
That's a very interesting topic. Thanks for the suggestion! We will be publishing more videos in the next weeks, so stay tuned.
Loved it!
Thank you! ❤️
Informative!
Thank you! 😊