At 4:14 you put that the adrenal glands produce testosterone, and then said that testosterone plays a role in the "fight or flight response." I believe you were actually referring to adrenaline (epinephrine/norepinephrine) which is made in the adrenal medulla of the adrenal glands. Although the adrenal glands do produce some testosterone, it is mainly the Leydig cells in the testes of males that produce testosterone; whereas in females, it's the ovaries (25%), adrenal glands (25%), and peripheral tissues (50%) that produce testosterone.
Dr Bao Tram No I'm sorry. my phone battery went dead that day amd never I finished that last bit. Apologies! thank you for taking the time to comment; I hope you found the rest of the video useful even though it was cut off at the end!
Hello, I thought testosterone has something to do with the sperm? And the Epinephrine is the one that is responsible for FIGHT (SYMPHATETIC) and the Norepinephrine FLIGHT (PARASYMPATHETIC)?
Not quite, both Norepinephrine and epinephrine both act very similarly so they are mainly part of the sympathetic response. And testosterone has nothing to do with sperm per se. Testosterone is a hormone that gives male characteristics, while sperm is a gamete that is made by the testes.
At 4:14 you put that the adrenal glands produce testosterone, and then said that testosterone plays a role in the "fight or flight response." I believe you were actually referring to adrenaline (epinephrine/norepinephrine) which is made in the adrenal medulla of the adrenal glands. Although the adrenal glands do produce some testosterone, it is mainly the Leydig cells in the testes of males that produce testosterone; whereas in females, it's the ovaries (25%), adrenal glands (25%), and peripheral tissues (50%) that produce testosterone.
Thank you! I was thinking the same thing and was looking in the comments to see if someone else suspected this too.
yes this video is missing epinephrine and also the differences between adrenal cortex and adrenal medulla
I am currently doing an online anatomy course and I just wanted to say a huge THANK YOU. Your videos are so incredibly helpful.
I am so glad you are finding the videos useful! Thanks for taking the time to comment!
I really really agree
Can we get a part 3, please? Love your videos!! Very helpful information!
I just want to let you know that I appreciate all your videos! I learned so much ! Thank you ! May God bless you more
Susanna= Master 👏👏🙏🙏 thank you very much for all your knowledge.
Question, is there a reason why you left out the Parathyroid gland?
Such an amazing creative lecture to grasp the idea of Endocrine systems. God bless you more and more it's very helpful.
thank u so much ,now no need to revise my notes for exam, this is just enough...tqqqqq so much
Thank you very much we need part3 please
Thank you i am so grateful for your videos and appreciating your hard work ❤️❤️🙏🙏🙏 love from india and blessings ❤️❤️
Susanna is awesome
Part 3 please..?????
Thymosin. Adrenal glands also produce estrogens, not only testosterone.
Do you have the blank sheets available so I can print off and follow along?
deep respect.unique
ohhhh noooo, no part 3?
What markers are you using? These are awesome videos. Thanks so much for taking your time to create them.
Did u unfinish this part? Because i cant find any video continue this part.
Dr Bao Tram No I'm sorry. my phone battery went dead that day amd never I finished that last bit. Apologies! thank you for taking the time to comment; I hope you found the rest of the video useful even though it was cut off at the end!
@@susannaheinze will you be doing part3? I can’t find it anywhere else. Your videos have been very helpful. Thank you!
Where’s part 3
I have a question in how testosterone that is produced by the adrenal gland can prepare for fight or flight?
That's wrong. The adrenal gland produces adrenaline that is the hormone that produces fight or flight reactions. I think she made a mistake.
@@pepitobenegas testosterone is produced in the ball sack and is involved with energy, growth of muscle, and denser bones.
I didn't understand testosterone uses , i think fight and flight is for epinephrine and Norepinephrine
Hello, I thought testosterone has something to do with the sperm? And the Epinephrine is the one that is responsible for FIGHT (SYMPHATETIC) and the Norepinephrine FLIGHT (PARASYMPATHETIC)?
Not quite, both Norepinephrine and epinephrine both act very similarly so they are mainly part of the sympathetic response. And testosterone has nothing to do with sperm per se. Testosterone is a hormone that gives male characteristics, while sperm is a gamete that is made by the testes.
how can you be out of time and get cut off on a video you are making yourself? lol