I had a stroke in my thalamus in 2022. I have what I call "locked-in" syndrome. It's when I begin to sweat, forehead only, I have to lay down because I'm locked-in to severe pain and am not able to move, as my body feels like I'm burning alive. This only happens in the evening. I call 6 PM the "bewitching" hour that I have to be laying down becauseI know it's coming. I start to sweat and have to lay down, my feet point out and my body is on fire, feels like I have been set on fire with pain and I can't move. I also suffer from nerve damage from the stroke that affects feeling from my breast bone to my bottom, I feel nothing on inside. I can drink cold water and feel it going down my esophagus and then stops. I don't feel my stomach or insides. So I adapted to when I take my medication I use the restroom. Oh and the CPS pain in left hand is debilitating, if air touches my left hand the pain is like I'm being tortured, burning, being electrocuted, burning alive, hit by lightening, horrid. Now the pain that travels to my spine when I am in "locked-in" there are no words. People say I look great and I can talk, yes I can talk, but the complications from this stroke have changed my life, turned my world around. I read somewhere that recovery is different for everyone and the goal is to have you have quality of life, give yourself time. This damage from a thalamic stroke, at least the damage I suffer, does not equal quality of life. This video explains how temperature works. I have tried putting into words what has been happening to me. Any words of advice or any helpful tips because I feel lost and scared.
Great job! I can't believe the how much efferent you put into these videos, they are absolutely great. They are very knowledgeable, the part about humans originating from tropical climate zones, just blew my mind. Thank a lot!
@bobtheowl2 Sorry bout that, havent really looked into pyrogens and the cytokines playing the roles in temperature regulation, in much detail just yet. But I will be sure to look into it in later videos:) And yea RSAnimate is a great channel!!
WOW , thank u u saved my life i have Pathophysiological exam next week and i couldn't understand how regulation the T but this is good and short ... BIG LIKE
Amazing video! Best video yet on this subject, thank you! I seem to have a problem regulating my heat, and this helped me know more about what might be going on in my body when I get overheated! 🥵
Lovely video content! Excuse me for the intrusion, I would appreciate your thoughts. Have you tried - Tarbbatigan Social Plugin Tip (do a search on google)? It is a great one of a kind guide for enlarging your testicles and increasing your testosterone level without the hard work. Ive heard some awesome things about it and my buddy at very last got excellent success with it.
During Fevers chemicals called pyrogens released by white blood cells raise the set point of the thermoregulatory centre causing the whole body temperature to increase by 2-3 °C. This helps to kill bacteria and explains why you shiver even though you are hot.
Thank you so much! Now I need a video about hypothermia and heat stroke 😆 Never ending! I am suffering about some dysregulation as I have had episodes where my body themperature has dropped down to 34.6 Celsius during night or during an episode of weakness. When coming back to conciousness my body temperature has been rising very rapidly back to normal levels. (This could be extreme energy saving reaction to exhaustion). I also can not tolerate heat and suffer immensely on hot days. This is related to the time when I fell ill so if I can get diagnosis, perhaps my dysautonomia gets fixed too. This was absolutely excellent video! Subscribed just to say thanks!
I was hoping you'd go into the pyrogens/cytokines, but still learned something new about brown fat. These videos are great though, reminds me of RSAnimate.
in 9:12 SNS response to increase temp in your video its cholinergic ? blood vessel sympathetic post ganglionic neuron is adrenergic . neurotransmitter is NE and receptor is alpha 1 receptor. or I'm wrong ?
Can anyone answer this pls….. The temperature in a room drops to 65 F causing the heater to turn on. The temperature change is an example of a. Response b. Stimulus c. Effector d. Receptor e. Control system
your temperatures are wrong, the normal zone is from 37*C +/- 0.5. at 27*C it could cause death and at 30*C you would need medical emergancy as your tempreture has far exceeded beyond hypothermia. so both your temperature are too cold.
What can I do to help my body regulate this better. I tend to have a harder time from hot to cold temperatures where by body over compensates and I sweat like crazy. I know that they hypothalamus controls the body reaction. I know that there’s a msg that the body receives to start doing the right role... but what should I take? magnesium?
I am an engineering student and i want to get some information about heat loss by sweating and calculate it can you help me it would be very useful for me
Thank you for making this video! One question though, as far as I know, the nervous and endocrine systems acting together to maintain homeostasis. But is it true that homeostasis always involves the interaction between these two systems? It seems to me that regulating blood CO2 level and maintaining a normal body temperature do not require hormones... Thank you!
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Watching this video in 2022, that's straight 9 years of service to medical students, Thank you so much.
I had a stroke in my thalamus in 2022. I have what I call "locked-in" syndrome. It's when I begin to sweat, forehead only, I have to lay down because I'm locked-in to severe pain and am not able to move, as my body feels like I'm burning alive. This only happens in the evening. I call 6 PM the "bewitching" hour that I have to be laying down becauseI know it's coming. I start to sweat and have to lay down, my feet point out and my body is on fire, feels like I have been set on fire with pain and I can't move. I also suffer from nerve damage from the stroke that affects feeling from my breast bone to my bottom, I feel nothing on inside. I can drink cold water and feel it going down my esophagus and then stops. I don't feel my stomach or insides. So I adapted to when I take my medication I use the restroom. Oh and the CPS pain in left hand is debilitating, if air touches my left hand the pain is like I'm being tortured, burning, being electrocuted, burning alive, hit by lightening, horrid. Now the pain that travels to my spine when I am in "locked-in" there are no words. People say I look great and I can talk, yes I can talk, but the complications from this stroke have changed my life, turned my world around. I read somewhere that recovery is different for everyone and the goal is to have you have quality of life, give yourself time. This damage from a thalamic stroke, at least the damage I suffer, does not equal quality of life. This video explains how temperature works. I have tried putting into words what has been happening to me. Any words of advice or any helpful tips because I feel lost and scared.
Great job! I can't believe the how much efferent you put into these videos, they are absolutely great.
They are very knowledgeable, the part about humans originating from tropical climate zones, just blew my mind.
Thank a lot!
Just a little correction, our bodies and objects don’t emit heat through radiation, but rather irradiation, which is a completely different process
@bobtheowl2 Sorry bout that, havent really looked into pyrogens and the cytokines playing the roles in temperature regulation, in much detail just yet. But I will be sure to look into it in later videos:) And yea RSAnimate is a great channel!!
Good that you mention them in here in the comments so I know that there is more to the story!
i salute you for ur stamina... mashaALLAH.. awesome explanation
Watching the video in 2021, your drawings have improved so much... Thank you so much'
Thanks you're a bliss to every med student
This is quite simply the best video I've found on this subject. Excellent work.
WOW , thank u u saved my life i have Pathophysiological exam next week and i couldn't understand how regulation the T but this is good and short ... BIG LIKE
your the best and great teacher Sir..word thanks is too less and short for your contribution
Amazing video! Best video yet on this subject, thank you!
I seem to have a problem regulating my heat, and this helped me know more about what might be going on in my body when I get overheated! 🥵
Your illustrations are wonderful :)
Lovely video content! Excuse me for the intrusion, I would appreciate your thoughts. Have you tried - Tarbbatigan Social Plugin Tip (do a search on google)? It is a great one of a kind guide for enlarging your testicles and increasing your testosterone level without the hard work. Ive heard some awesome things about it and my buddy at very last got excellent success with it.
During Fevers chemicals called pyrogens released by white blood cells raise the set point of the thermoregulatory centre causing the whole body temperature to increase by 2-3 °C. This helps to kill bacteria and explains why you shiver even though you are hot.
Very well explained. Such a gem of a video. So much hard work nested in explaining the concept so well. Well done.
Thank you so much! Now I need a video about hypothermia and heat stroke 😆 Never ending!
I am suffering about some dysregulation as I have had episodes where my body themperature has dropped down to 34.6 Celsius during night or during an episode of weakness. When coming back to conciousness my body temperature has been rising very rapidly back to normal levels. (This could be extreme energy saving reaction to exhaustion). I also can not tolerate heat and suffer immensely on hot days. This is related to the time when I fell ill so if I can get diagnosis, perhaps my dysautonomia gets fixed too.
This was absolutely excellent video! Subscribed just to say thanks!
I was hoping you'd go into the pyrogens/cytokines, but still learned something new about brown fat. These videos are great though, reminds me of RSAnimate.
Amazing....helped a lot....thank you
thank you very much, sir! such a big help. keep doing great things :)
-from a veterinary medical student from the Philippines :D
You r awesome dude ..keep helping us by making more videos ..god bless u
What are the measures you would take to ensure the temperature returns to homeostatic level.
thank you soooo much ! this was soo helpfull ! being one day apart from exams !! ;D wish me luck ppl
Really good explanation !
BIG THANKS BRO, YOU'RE BESTT
Great explanations but it's quite fast. Thank you :)
0.75 speed is the key...try it..!
Try slowing it down.... -_-
He mentioned the 'EXTERNAL' temperature range as 27-30*C !! Watch it again !
excellent concept presentation thanks
in 9:12 SNS response to increase temp in your video its cholinergic ? blood vessel sympathetic post ganglionic neuron is adrenergic . neurotransmitter is NE and receptor is alpha 1 receptor. or I'm wrong ?
It would be better if you provide these notes for students so they can download them. Nice video btw 👍
How much easier does he need to make it for you?
A bit blurry and hard to read but very good video
This is basically a 30 mins video cause I keep on repeating it. Lol
Watch it in 0.75 speed
Very well explained.
I want this guy's notes.
Brilliant video!
Very much understanding! Thanks
THANK YOU SOO MUCH !
this is great! I understand temperature regulation now! woo
Really , this viedo is very useful 😊😊 thank you
and I hope to continue by more viedos like it
thank you so much 😅🥰
great video bro
Can anyone answer this pls…..
The temperature in a room drops to 65 F causing the heater to turn on. The temperature change is an example of
a. Response
b. Stimulus
c. Effector
d. Receptor
e. Control system
your temperatures are wrong, the normal zone is from 37*C +/- 0.5. at 27*C it could cause death and at 30*C you would need medical emergancy as your tempreture has far exceeded beyond hypothermia. so both your temperature are too cold.
another good video!
thank you bro
Very helpful....thank you soo much
this was really helpful. thank you!
Thank you
What can I do to help my body regulate this better. I tend to have a harder time from hot to cold temperatures where by body over compensates and I sweat like crazy. I know that they hypothalamus controls the body reaction. I know that there’s a msg that the body receives to start doing the right role... but what should I take? magnesium?
i want to know the same thing.
Waaw.. V. Informative and helpful
Thank you sooooo much
why the rush ? it's hard to keep up :s
sorry my apologies, great video btw! it really helped =)
I had many pens just like that.
Level ...Hats off👍
It is a very great video. But the definition is too low for see when the words are too packed.
Very helpful and enlightening, thanks!
Definitely going to help with my Bio homework XD
You. Are. Amazing!!!!
thank you.. help me very much
What’s the reason for COld. Sweats ?
That is magnificent. Thanks alot!!
where is he going
hey man this video doesn't seem to be working any more.
thank you so much
it was really great thank you
nice thanks for explanation
thank u
A hand touching hot water (or any liquid) is experiencing convection, not simply conduction.
thanks
thank you so much!
great work ,, ^__^ u make 50 pages sooooo easy now .. thank u v much :)
wonderfull, i'll keep supporting you at Patreon .. ;-)
ع الحرام انك رسام
استانست ع الصور أكثر
Does anybody have any information on thermorgulatory behaviour and what signals are sent to cause this (putting clothes on or taking off etc).
wow its one of the oldest armando's video that I ever seen haha
I am an engineering student and i want to get some information about heat loss by sweating and calculate it can you help me it would be very useful for me
amazing but its actually really difficult to read what you are writing sir
thank uuuu
Ok
Thank you for making this video! One question though, as far as I know, the nervous and endocrine systems acting together to maintain homeostasis. But is it true that homeostasis always involves the interaction between these two systems? It seems to me that regulating blood CO2 level and maintaining a normal body temperature do not require hormones... Thank you!
thanks :) great vid! very understandable :)
Im assuming noone got here from Avengers age of ultron
Thanks a lot! (y)
Great job, thank you :-)
dull
Human evolution didn’t happen
Speak slowly
Thank you
Thank u
nice thanks for explanation
thank u
Thank u