Shotgun Histology Thin Skin

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  • @Hands4Surgery
    @Hands4Surgery 9 років тому +68

    This is a much better way yo learn histology than commuting to the med school and sitting for hours on a slide waiting for the instructor to drop by. This is the way it should be done. Thanks a lot doc!

  • @ninahabic1627
    @ninahabic1627 4 роки тому +25

    "Stratum spongiosum ...That is just Alzheimer kicking in" You have a great sense of humor :) Thank you for doing these videos:)

  • @4Cranleigh
    @4Cranleigh 8 років тому +13

    These lectures in histology and pathology are a medical milestone that have enlightened students and teachers alike. Thank you, Dr. Minarcik.
    From Wiki, the layers of the skin are (from the outside in):
    1. Cornified layer (stratum corneum)
    2. Clear/translucent layer (stratum lucidum, only in palms and soles)
    3. Granular layer (stratum granulosum)
    4. Spinous layer (stratum spinosum)
    5. Basal/germinal layer (stratum basale/germinativum).
    The term Malpighian layer (stratum malpighi) is usually defined as both the stratum basale and stratum spinosum.

  • @clairek4523
    @clairek4523 3 роки тому +3

    13 years later and I'm using this for my Intro to A&P class. Thank you for this series! Incredibly helpful!

  • @ilhana1879
    @ilhana1879 10 років тому +31

    Thank you VERY much for your videos. 6 years later and you are still benefiting MANY histology students!!!

  • @DragonHeart55
    @DragonHeart55 4 роки тому +5

    I know this series is over a decade old, but it's also saving my tail in my current histo class, so - thank you!! These are very well done and they're a fantastic way to study and review for my upcoming midterm!

  • @SKAVSTADEATHCREW
    @SKAVSTADEATHCREW 12 років тому +1

    I really feel this format is the ultimate way to prepare for practical histological examinations, Big props!

  • @RejathBenny
    @RejathBenny 9 років тому +14

    This is awesome............. thanks a lot sir.....
    This made my day........ you "shotgun" method is brilliant and this is exactly the way we want to study...not just memorize some stuff to vomit in the exam papers ..... God bless !

  • @TheDrKKool
    @TheDrKKool 9 років тому +8

    Great review. However, two additional pieces of information that would help are: 1. Areas of the body where we can find such thin skin and 2. The actual thicknesses for various layers in microns or mm. Thank you for posting.

  • @Pro0osh
    @Pro0osh 3 роки тому +1

    I am at the end of my preclinical years... I've been taking histology lectures for a while now but I really feel I still didn't master histology slides...
    Looka like I found what I need...
    Thank you

  • @denianejohn8056
    @denianejohn8056 11 років тому

    Thank You very much. Your pathophysiology videos have been very helpful. I really appreciate your making this information free and accessible. Thanks.

  • @martinyzeany1
    @martinyzeany1 11 років тому

    Thanks for all the pathology and histology videos they have been so helpful!

  • @shifa2253
    @shifa2253 4 роки тому +2

    wow! thank u so much sir...2007 - 2020!!

  • @LovesRock
    @LovesRock 12 років тому

    The whole shotgun histology series is amazing. A biiiiig thank you for doing this. I have an histology exam on monday, and if I get an A i'll totally dedicate it to you haha!

  • @sanjaydhungana8242
    @sanjaydhungana8242 4 роки тому +1

    watching in 2020 still old is gold

  • @Bengolstar300
    @Bengolstar300 8 років тому

    I'm having fun watching these you're such a natural it makes it so easy to learn thank you sir !

  • @jannistoss
    @jannistoss 12 років тому

    This is so much helpful!! THANK YOU! Love your shotgun-philosophy....!

  • @WashingtonDeceit
    @WashingtonDeceit  10 років тому +5

    Simple quick visual pattern recognition

  • @majornabeel598
    @majornabeel598 8 років тому

    Its almost like you are teaching me on a pentahead microscope....thanks a lot and kudos for all your effort.

  • @antonnsydneynelson4321
    @antonnsydneynelson4321 4 роки тому

    This was very helpful. Thank you so much!!

  • @emmanueljbanda4444
    @emmanueljbanda4444 2 місяці тому +1

    The entire second year (med 2) medical students at the University of Zambia entirely depends on you.
    Thank you 🙏🏾

    • @WashingtonDeceit
      @WashingtonDeceit  2 місяці тому +1

      You have no idea how happy that makes me feel.

  • @v5red
    @v5red 5 років тому

    Great stuff. This is so much better than a static textbook. I feel like I actually retain and am not worried that I am misidentifying stuff like I am when I see an image in a book with text but nobody explicitly identifying stuff.

  • @victoriamariechristine8714
    @victoriamariechristine8714 9 років тому

    This is amazing, thank you so very much ! :)

  • @WashingtonDeceit
    @WashingtonDeceit  12 років тому +2

    @rockernoobsthurein The virtual microscope online at the Univ. of Iowa displays the slides, Camtasia records them, my 3-dollar radio-shack microphone describes them, UA-cam receives the finished product.

  • @weeklyplans
    @weeklyplans 13 років тому

    This is amazing, thank you so much!

  • @JaiMedicine
    @JaiMedicine 5 років тому +1

    4:43 I believe that's a keratinocyte rather than a melanocyte. Keratinocytes tend to have high melanosome/melanin concentrations due to rapid phagocytosis of the melanosomes from the melanocyte. Melanocytes tend to have nuclei surrounded by a white clearing of cytoplasm. I believe you can see one a little to the right of the keratinocyte you were pointing at.

  • @mymiette
    @mymiette 9 років тому

    Really nice video.
    Well done and funny sometimes. It really helps. Thank you for these :-)

  • @halabihazem
    @halabihazem 12 років тому

    THANK YOU SO MUCH! You are awesome!

  • @g2la
    @g2la 12 років тому

    Thank you so much.. i would also love to see the hair follicles and the sebaceous glands???

  • @DJuggz06
    @DJuggz06 15 років тому

    Also forgot to mention, in the papillary dermis, those processes that weave up and down, are called the 'Rete Ridges'
    love your videos!

  • @Dexterprog
    @Dexterprog 15 років тому

    He did a great job indeed, but it still does matter.
    Thanks for all your videos, man.
    Cheers from Argentina

  • @sallybergz
    @sallybergz 11 років тому

    Nice slide, thank you. Would you mention, please what kind of cells the body of the sweat gland consist of.

  • @ebrahimalahdel9538
    @ebrahimalahdel9538 4 роки тому

    Thank you .Dr

  • @ryanman555
    @ryanman555 16 років тому

    Thanks for the information.

  • @tasmedic
    @tasmedic 6 років тому

    Great video which will never age.
    I wonder what happened with the slide processing, though. Everything is pink... did the lab tech run out of haematoxylin?

  • @JihadAlAnsari
    @JihadAlAnsari 5 років тому

    I have a question! What is that white space in between the collagen? It always bothers me

  • @zaidmousa9867
    @zaidmousa9867 11 років тому

    Hello Professor.
    Does thin skin not always have hair follicles? I was told that, but I recently failed a Practical Microscopy test because I could not identify "Thin Skin". I suspected it, but since there was no hair follicles, I got desperate and wrote Urinary Bladder (Cause Urothelium can sometime look similar to Stratified Squamous).

  • @wenzlightung5649
    @wenzlightung5649 5 років тому

    Very good, helped me to pass my exam. True.

  • @numbernin6
    @numbernin6 15 років тому

    very helpful, thank you :-)

  • @henryfulbright7106
    @henryfulbright7106 8 років тому

    does the stratum spinosum contain keratin,maybe in form of filaments?

  • @L_B2892
    @L_B2892 5 років тому +1

    Doc, you are insane. How can you possibly tell nerves and blood vessels apart. Also, you are doing it like i drink a whole jug of water in one breath:)

    • @WashingtonDeceit
      @WashingtonDeceit  5 років тому +1

      Because you sound completely idiotic, I wont take that as an insult.

    • @L_B2892
      @L_B2892 5 років тому

      @@WashingtonDeceit Whatever floats your boat, Doc. But a really good video and excellent content, thx for that. You made it quite easier for Med students.

  • @victoriapiasecka7766
    @victoriapiasecka7766 2 роки тому

    Still incredibly useful!

  • @muhammadnaquibali198
    @muhammadnaquibali198 10 років тому

    How can you differentiate between the sweat glands, blood vessel, and the nerve? Please professor :)

  • @adobonghito
    @adobonghito 17 років тому

    Hey thanks for the video! Amazing discussion. I would just like to point out only thick skin has stratum lucidum

  • @marzieshojaat2494
    @marzieshojaat2494 Рік тому

    Thank u

  • @Hands4Surgery
    @Hands4Surgery 9 років тому

    Thanks a lot!, MS2

  • @rockernoobsthurein
    @rockernoobsthurein 12 років тому

    What is the programme you are using to show the slides?

  • @mjbarien
    @mjbarien 5 років тому +9

    I thought stratum lucidum is only present in thick skin?

    • @wakylaugh
      @wakylaugh 5 років тому +1

      Moises John Barien it is.

  • @gottalottasteil8
    @gottalottasteil8 14 років тому +1

    there is no stratum lucidum in thin skin...was that just a mistake?

  • @senyp28
    @senyp28 12 років тому

    very helpful!

  • @WashingtonDeceit
    @WashingtonDeceit  13 років тому

    @mv2slash2
    spinosum is the correct term

  • @desecrator2u
    @desecrator2u 15 років тому

    Probably a sample from a soft-skinned hairless beauty, why worry about hair when there are more nicer things to learn here for nonhistologists. U post a video if u have one with a hair. Thank u Shotgun!

  • @caraannecurtis
    @caraannecurtis 13 років тому

    @nuke20ar All thin skin does have hair, in histology structures are viewed under a micrscope, therefore they may not be visible with the naked eye.

  • @WashingtonDeceit
    @WashingtonDeceit  14 років тому

    @MrMomomade IMHO they are all the same

  • @njain1091
    @njain1091 6 років тому

    Stratum germinativum is aka stratum basale. Is the stratum spongiosum also known as the stratum spinosum?

  • @tamilarasirenganathan8243
    @tamilarasirenganathan8243 7 років тому

    Thank you so much sir. I was dreading this posting. You actually made it so much easier and fun. All your videos are really very helpful. Great work.Stay blessed.From Malaysia.

  • @AshiyaJ
    @AshiyaJ 11 років тому

    THANKS

  • @larissiamartin6190
    @larissiamartin6190 Рік тому

    My question is , does the corneum will growth after we over exfoliate a skin on the face , and does the vellus hair will growth more ?

    • @WashingtonDeceit
      @WashingtonDeceit  Рік тому +1

      Regeneration after exfoliation often results in less hair, especially depending upon the degree of exfoliation.

  • @CloudSheep
    @CloudSheep 13 років тому

    @gottalottasteil8 yup there isn't stratum lucidum in thin skin

  • @adagbapsamuel7743
    @adagbapsamuel7743 9 років тому

    I downloaded for personal use. Thanks

  • @MrMomomade
    @MrMomomade 14 років тому

    About germinativum, do you mean Malphigian?

  • @wisdomedwin6742
    @wisdomedwin6742 3 роки тому

    I think Lucidum is only found on thick skin and not thin skin

  • @mercedesmalone973
    @mercedesmalone973 8 років тому +2

    How can you tell which is a nerve and which is a blood vessel? They look fairly similar to me.

    • @WashingtonDeceit
      @WashingtonDeceit  8 років тому +12

      vessels have lumens and blood cells

    • @LOLsaudi
      @LOLsaudi 6 років тому

      RBCs in the vessele :D sometimes capillaries have them too :D

  • @WashingtonDeceit
    @WashingtonDeceit  12 років тому

    @LovesRock SHOTGUN HISTOLOGY: Helping thousands of students to KICK ASS for four years!

    • @haminami6226
      @haminami6226 6 років тому

      stratum germiativum= malpiphian layer...is this what you couldn't recall in the video?

  • @mohsenalamir3750
    @mohsenalamir3750 5 років тому

    thankyouuuuuiu soooo muchhhh

  • @juliaraefriedrich
    @juliaraefriedrich 10 років тому

    no, he said it was not in this kind of skin.

  • @ilikefunnyvideos
    @ilikefunnyvideos 10 років тому +1

    You said stratum lucidum. But I thought that is only in thick skin. This is describing thin skin.

    • @wisdomedwin6742
      @wisdomedwin6742 3 роки тому

      After seven years...I agree with you though 😂😂

  • @leung8888
    @leung8888 11 років тому

    Stratum Basale I think.

  • @strugsi
    @strugsi Рік тому

    stratum lucidum only in thick skin

  • @arlenerosenberg8710
    @arlenerosenberg8710 2 роки тому

    why not use eyelid as thin skin?

  • @justinmckinlay
    @justinmckinlay 12 років тому

    selfless

  • @fdsfsadfsd560
    @fdsfsadfsd560 8 років тому +1

    класс

  • @lubdub47
    @lubdub47 9 років тому

    which program does he use?

    • @soteem8155
      @soteem8155 8 років тому

      +LubDub www.histologyguide.org

  • @abrahammmy2773
    @abrahammmy2773 10 років тому +3

    This is awesome and very helpful. Good luck with that Alzheimer's lol.

  • @renpeca1893
    @renpeca1893 7 років тому +1

    germativum or basalis

    • @hawraamohammad1239
      @hawraamohammad1239 6 років тому

      Renpeca
      Germativum is the basali+ first lyars of spinosim

  • @DNAdzadza
    @DNAdzadza 13 років тому

    nope, that´s true... lucidum can be seen only in thick skin

  • @DNAdzadza
    @DNAdzadza 13 років тому

    the same

  • @Bahamut2218
    @Bahamut2218 13 років тому

    @imnotaqtp stratum basale.

  • @homeros33
    @homeros33 14 років тому

    @bioenzyme89 stratum basale

  • @Wassergrab
    @Wassergrab 12 років тому

    @mv2slash2 :-D spungeosum

  • @MrBartson
    @MrBartson 2 роки тому

    It isn't a thin skin :)