Practice Identifying Connective Tissue (Complete)
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- Опубліковано 14 чер 2024
- Practice questions start at 16:13. Includes: areolar, adipose, regular dense fibrous connective tissue, irregular dense fibrous connective tissue, reticular connective tissue, elastic connective tissue, hyaline cartilage, elastic cartilage, fibrocartilage, osseous tissue (bone, spongy and compact). Background info includes: the classifications of connective tissue, the components of connective tissue, answers the question "Why is blood a connective tissue?"
00:00 Intro
00:35 Background (what do all CT have in common?)
3:00 Basics of IDing connective tissue proper
4:45: Differentiating connective tissue proper
8:30 Differentiating cartilage
12:25 Bone (spongy and compact)
13:15 Blood
14:30 Remembering your word bank (list of all tissues)
16:13 Question 1
16:42 Question 2
17:28 Question 3
18:29 Question 4
19:09 Question 5 (bonus ID of explanation)
20:17 Question 6
20:54 Question 7
21:49 Question 8
22:28 Question 9
23:08 Question 10
23:29 Question 11
24:34 Question 12
25:59 Question 13
26:29 Question 14 (common error at end)
27:44 Question 15
28:24 Question 16
28:50 Question 17
29:16 Question 18 (different crop of same tissue at end)
30:15 Question 19
31:04 Question 20
31:55 Question 21
32:32 Question 22
32:58 Question 23
33:24 Question 24 (four connective tissues in one!)
35:10 Advice (how to learn tissues that you can't seem to remember/stop confusing tissues for other tissues)
For a full list of my available playlists and videos, please check out this google doc: docs.google.com/document/d/1r...
For a full list of my available playlists and videos, please check out this google doc: docs.google.com/document/d/1rjKakxLy3gzviqzA4ip_ks5zqlBe7g4a/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=106852390999448369721&rtpof=true&sd=true
I'm passing my histology exams tomorrow 😂. This came at the right time
i also have mine tomorrow good luck !
@@jo-annemonard5290 when
Thank you for the great content and quizzes! I was struggling to understand with my AP teacher but you broke it down so well!
Hi, today I received my histology grade and I passed! You were very helpful with your guides to identify each type of tissue and your practice on how to differentiate them. I remember the stress of the early stages of the course of not understanding anything of what I was studying until someone suggested your channel and the practices became MUCH easier! Thank you so much. You really are a hero ❤️
It is very hard to get started in histology without a good explanation of what you're looking at! Glad I could help, good luck in your studies ☺️
Best I have ever seen!
I'm so grateful to have come across your page! You definitely have a new subbie! Thanks so much for breaking it all the way down :)
Hello Dr. Robin! You are God sent! Thank you very much for your easy approach on breaking down this video. I have watched several of your videos and I am more confident in passing my A&P 1 class! Thank you again 🙂🙂
Thank you very much! I have my exam today and just binge your videos yesterday night. I think if the exam would be like this, then I'm pretty confident
Excellent presentation. Thank you very much
thanks your video's made me understand hysto and start to like it
You deserve more than a million subscribers ❤
Thank you, that's very kind!
This is very helpful ☺️👍
We should multiply you and have you in every science class teaching
Your wonderful
I have a test on Tuesday and today is Friday I just hope I do well
Good luck on your exam! Hope you get the grade you want
Thank you for the video! For question 20, there were a bunch of lines that looked like intercalated discs to me? I was wondering what they actually were?
Hmm, I took a look and I don't see anything that looks like intercalated discs to me, unless you're talking about the reticular fibers themselves. That particular example is at a very low magnification... You might better understand what you are looking at if you find the example that was at a higher magnification and then compare and contrast them.
I also have this video about intercalated discs that might help you better recognize them: ua-cam.com/video/oh-qutBwq2Y/v-deo.html
@@AnatomyHero thank you! :)
Hi. Can you explain why in Q17, the answer is elastic cartilage and not fibrocartilage, please?
In fibrocartilage you have long, noodle like collagen fibers with scattered lacunae...in elastic you have tightly packed lacunae with short threads in between them.
You can look at question 18, at 29:17 to see what fibrocartilage should look like. Also 16:55 for a closer look
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Hi,can you please differentiate between reticular and spongy bone,i confused the two on question 19.
I can see why you confused them, because they do have a similar sort of pattern... But reticular Is a network of thin black fibers and spongy bone doesn't have fibers, it has trabeculae which are much thicker. It's hard to describe with just words, but if you get a picture of spongy bone and a picture of reticular and compare them side by side I think you will see the difference immediately.
Compact bone = tree stump
💜💜💜🙏
Which magnification we see the most in here?
It's a variety of magnifications...if you want to get a general sense my advice is to screenshot the different tissue types and organize them (i.e., put all the hyaline together, all the areolar together) and then compare them side by side to see what they look like on low magnification vs high (once they're all together, it should be obvious which ones are low vs which ones are high)
Hope that helps, best of luck in your studies!
Whoa my brain hurts 🧠
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