Thank you very much for creating this video! It is very well presented, paced and organized. The illustrations are very helpful to visualize the material discussed. The summary at the end is also very useful. Thanks a million!!
I have antithrombin3 . Recently had ca oxalate kidney stone . Is it safe to take vitamin K2 ? I know vit K1 promotes clotting but can’t find info on vit K2 and antithrombin 3 .Any thoughts? Thank you for this helpful video!!!
Honestly, as a medical person I never needed to go into that intricate chemistry.!!! Whatever I have shown in the video was enough to understand all the related concepts so I never explored these detail. This makes me curious... in which field you are?
Pathology is not in plan in near future. But I do touch upon relevant pathological aspects here and there. And yes I want to cover all the subjects eventually. Thank you.
What is being said at 1:10 - 1:13 ? Your accent is a bit thick. The name koagulation stems from danish Im pretty sure. After all it was the danish chemist Henrik Dam that indentified vitamin k
Hi there, thanks for the comment. From 1:08 to 01:18 its “It is stored mainly in liver. However, the storage does not occur to a larger extend and its level declines rapidly if it’s not taken in diet regularly.” You can turn on CC also. Regarding origin of name, few books and other sources (including that I referred) mention it as German. Seems its same (Koagulation) in Danish and German. But yes, Danish makes more sense as Henrik Dam was Danish. Thank you.!
this allows it to bind with calcium which in tern allows it to fix on platelets during coagulation cascade. Watch the video on coagulation cascade. You will get the idea.
Was having a hard time understanding the the functions of Vitamin K, but you made it very easy. More power to you.🙌💯
Awesome! Thank you!
Thank you very much for creating this video! It is very well presented, paced and organized. The illustrations are very helpful to visualize the material discussed. The summary at the end is also very useful. Thanks a million!!
Crisp and clear explanation ! Thank u !
Most helpful sir...❤❤❤❤.. thank you sir..😊
U deserve to subscribe ❤️🔥❤️🔥
Kudos to your explanation👏🙌🔥
Amazing MashaALLAH
Nice video! Good Job!
Magnificent.
הרבה תודות על המידע המעניין ועל צורת העברה האיכותית.
Fantastic video sir
Thanks. Please share the videos to support us.
It is a very good video👍
I have antithrombin3 . Recently had ca oxalate kidney stone . Is it safe to take vitamin K2 ? I know vit K1 promotes clotting but can’t find info on vit K2 and antithrombin 3 .Any thoughts? Thank you for this helpful video!!!
Thank you 💜 it was helpful
Welcome 😊
Sir what is hydroquinone?
Omggg you are a life saver thanks alott💕💕💕💕
Good job Sir 👍
Informative video and awesome presentation thank u
Welcome 😊
Really helpful video ❤️🇵🇰
Thank you 😊
thank you sir
Very good video 🙏
Thank you
Sir plz make video on all vitamins
Very helpfull
Thank you...!
Thank you
Welcome ☺️
you are smart
🤓
Awesome!
Thank you 😊
Very helpful
Thank you😊
Thanks a lot
Thank u sir😍
Welcome 😊
Sir does carboxilation take place after hydroquinone give electrons to the glutamic acid residues??
Honestly, as a medical person I never needed to go into that intricate chemistry.!!! Whatever I have shown in the video was enough to understand all the related concepts so I never explored these detail. This makes me curious... in which field you are?
@@NonstopNeuron Sir I'm in class seven . I'm doing O
Levels
And I want to be a cardiac surgeon in future .
@@NonstopNeuron And Sir your videos are so good and are really helpful to me .I mostly watch your videos.
Glad to be helpful to future surgeon 😊
@@NonstopNeuron Thank you Sir 🙂
Excuse me sir ! when oxygen and carbon dioxide binds with clotting factorys then it's mean that Glutamic acid residues are carboxilated?
carboxylation is addition of carboxyl group. for clotting factors, this occurs at glutamic acid residues.
SO COOOL
Thanks. Keep watching.!😊
Thank you!! :)
You're welcome!
Warfarin is anticoagulant but vit k is help clotting of blood then how vit k uses as warfarin?
vitamin K is used as antidote to reverse the effect of warfarin.
What is the last factor to be depressed in Vitamin K deficiency?
Sir can you please, make the videos of pathology
Pathology is not in plan in near future. But I do touch upon relevant pathological aspects here and there. And yes I want to cover all the subjects eventually. Thank you.
What is being said at 1:10 - 1:13 ? Your accent is a bit thick. The name koagulation stems from danish Im pretty sure. After all it was the danish chemist Henrik Dam that indentified vitamin k
Hi there, thanks for the comment. From 1:08 to 01:18 its “It is stored mainly in liver. However, the storage does not occur to a larger extend and its level declines rapidly if it’s not taken in diet regularly.” You can turn on CC also.
Regarding origin of name, few books and other sources (including that I referred) mention it as German. Seems its same (Koagulation) in Danish and German. But yes, Danish makes more sense as Henrik Dam was Danish. Thank you.!
Why carboxilation need oxygen????
this allows it to bind with calcium which in tern allows it to fix on platelets during coagulation cascade. Watch the video on coagulation cascade. You will get the idea.
carboxy = carb + oxy = carbon + oxygen
lol at 4:11 u wrote 7 as IIV instead of VII
Yaa I know 🫣🙈