THE LIVER, GALLBLADDER & PANCREAS by Professor Fink

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  • Опубліковано 27 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 66

  • @kubes8388
    @kubes8388 4 роки тому +10

    I'm not even in the medical field but with just highschool bio I'm still able to learn something actually, shows just how important a teacher that communicates well really is to learning anything.

  • @sherritaylor3114
    @sherritaylor3114 11 років тому +9

    I can not get enough of your lectures. You are amazing!! You have the gift of giving clarity. God designed you for teaching.

  • @blacksmacker89
    @blacksmacker89 11 років тому +3

    You are an amazing professor. The complexities that normally accompany the lessons are elusive in your presentation of the material. Thank you.

  • @Drashiq95
    @Drashiq95 10 років тому +10

    the super teacher seen in my life....you made my studies interesting..

  • @katd1932
    @katd1932 7 років тому +5

    Thank you once again, I love your teaching style and it is helping me tremendously in Nursing school.

  • @annakins15
    @annakins15 10 років тому +8

    actually that student asking the question about giving Glucagon injection (IM or SubQ) @ around 15:30 is true for a pt. who is moderate to severe HYPOglycemic if can not drink/eat 20-30g of carbohydrates. (If you can do IV stuff, then may have to give glucose or glucagon IV if severe). -- nursing student. I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS professorfink !!!!!!!! You make my day and get me really excited to learn this stuff and reminds me why I'm want to be in this profession! THANK YOU!

  • @MrChrisers
    @MrChrisers 6 років тому +1

    Thank you so much, I have benefited immensely from your lectures and will remember you for a long time to come.

  • @MessiahChild88
    @MessiahChild88 11 років тому +1

    wow, this professor helped me a lot. 100 stars for you sir. God Bless you.

  • @OJASVIVYAS
    @OJASVIVYAS 12 років тому +1

    never seen such a wonderful teacher...exellently explained...hats off to such a grt professor...may god bless you ....PLZZZZZ UPLOAD MORE VIDEOS SIR........

  • @raedawarrar
    @raedawarrar 6 років тому +1

    Amazing, the greatest prof I've seen ever

  • @pashya1988
    @pashya1988 12 років тому +1

    very clear and genious way of teaching. ..i m just fan of yours

  • @PattyRichardson1
    @PattyRichardson1 10 років тому +1

    Thank you! You make this material seem so clear! You are a gifted teacher!

  • @agamy4
    @agamy4 11 років тому +2

    What an amazing professor! Thank you

  • @bonvivant55
    @bonvivant55 10 років тому +2

    Excessive bili levels are considered a critical value for any patient and can cause brain damage and hearing loss. In extreme cases of kernicterus, blood transfusion is advised. Placing infants under UV lamps helps, because UV rays break down bili.

  • @marycox9916
    @marycox9916 10 років тому +1

    You're a GREAT TEACHER!! Thank you

  • @josemauricio9702
    @josemauricio9702 11 років тому +1

    thank you very much, you are an amazing professor.

  • @hupper12345
    @hupper12345 12 років тому

    Thank you so much..Uploaded this in the right time for my exams coming up! Ur great teacher!

  • @Why6isnt9
    @Why6isnt9 11 років тому

    teacher of the century!!!

  • @louiseanderson777
    @louiseanderson777 11 років тому +1

    WONDERFUL

  • @eleannakritikaki4811
    @eleannakritikaki4811 8 років тому +8

    In greek, 'chole' means 'bile', which is probably why it is called 'cholecystitis' I suppose (greek person here)

  • @melaniesmith5909
    @melaniesmith5909 7 років тому

    Enjoyed your lecture. I have many teachers (Professors). I learned a lot

  • @alaas276
    @alaas276 7 років тому

    احب محاضراتك لانها واضحة ومفهومة .....شكرا جزيلا"""""""""""

  • @bonvivant55
    @bonvivant55 10 років тому +1

    itis means infection AND/OR inflammation. For example, arthritis has nothing do do with infection. However, white cells converge on the area and cause inflammation in the hopes that it can remove the uric acid and repair the damage it created from friction.

  • @nujuumnurra
    @nujuumnurra 11 років тому

    i loooove you professor fink for making it so easy for me love you and thank you very much

  • @EarlLedden
    @EarlLedden 10 років тому

    Prof Fink, your lectures are a great gift and you are the most skillful teacher I have encountered.
    I do quibble with one assertion. I'm making wine and am concerned with the metabolism of alcohol. You say it's transformed in to fat, but I've read that it becomes acetic acid, carbon dioxide and water, even though some energy is released in the process. Can you or anyone comment on this?

    • @EarlLedden
      @EarlLedden 9 років тому

      ***** A solid answer to and refute of my "quibble", Student Body. Many thanks.

  • @user-zr7xu5jo3q
    @user-zr7xu5jo3q 9 років тому +1

    thank you very much

  • @nisikant7836
    @nisikant7836 11 років тому

    thank you very much for uploading

  • @sadickhassan6215
    @sadickhassan6215 3 роки тому

    Thanks

  • @shirink1967
    @shirink1967 10 років тому

    How does "skipping breakfast often" cause gallbladder stone? The first thing the doctor asked me when she diagnosed the stone in my gallbladder was that question. And I rarely skip breakfast. I see it more as genetic, because my mother had gallbladder stone and removed.

  • @xshadinx
    @xshadinx 12 років тому

    very nice teacher , and lecture :)

  • @salim1685
    @salim1685 12 років тому +1

    Great!!

  • @mattpartridge9197
    @mattpartridge9197 4 роки тому +2

    Thanks for the amazing lecture :) one question though, why is the thing holding the two lobes of the liver together called the falciform “ligament”, I thought ligaments held bones together?

    • @professorfink
      @professorfink  4 роки тому +3

      Great Question. The best answer I can offer is that some connective tissue structures that do not connect between bones are also called "ligaments". These include structures in the Liver (Falciform ligament) and Uterus (Broad ligament), etc. There are many anatomic and medical terms that are "misnomers" (misnamed), such as the Basal Ganglia in the Brain (which is not a ganglia).

    • @mattpartridge9197
      @mattpartridge9197 4 роки тому +1

      professorfink OK, thanks. I’m starting a medicine degree this October and I’ve just been going through your lectures as preparation, they’re really helpful :)

    • @rachell7682
      @rachell7682 Рік тому

      Prof Fink you should know that glucagon injection can be given in case of hypo - its an im injection in case of emergencies if you don't have access for iv glucose and patient unable to take anything orally. We keep it on all our "hypo" boxes

  • @sumanrajbahak3540
    @sumanrajbahak3540 5 років тому

    Can't we dissolve the gallstone , if we take bile as bile stored in the gallbladder start dissolving cholesterol stones once they come in contact with bile?

  • @weslynkelly9285
    @weslynkelly9285 3 роки тому +1

    One word perfect

  • @wongawonga1000
    @wongawonga1000 4 роки тому

    I wonder if anyone has ever thought of using engineering modeling in the teaching of anatomy?
    When an engineer does a design of a large complex system, they sometimes start by viewing a future product in terms of the functions it performs and how these functions interact with one another. The interactions are performed via the exchange of data between functions. Functions may be broken down into multiple lower level functions which also exchange data among themselves. Doing this form of analysis is known as doing a functional breakdown.
    Looking at these lectures, it strikes me that you could perform a functional breakdown of the human body using data flow diagrams and then map the functions to the anatomical structure and the data flows to the exchange of hormones etc...

    • @rawdonwaller
      @rawdonwaller 4 роки тому

      That sounds feasible, but would it make it easier to understand, or would it make it less comprehensible?

    • @wongawonga1000
      @wongawonga1000 4 роки тому

      @@rawdonwaller If done properly, it becomes very easy to understand.

    • @rawdonwaller
      @rawdonwaller 4 роки тому

      @@wongawonga1000 could you give us a sample?

  • @zuhairsniper8041
    @zuhairsniper8041 8 років тому

    hello prof. i think you will thought me ideant I have question why high level of glucose is dangerous please tell me the mechanism of hurting

  • @mspinchey
    @mspinchey 11 років тому

    Good video, although I have removed gallstones several times doing a liver/gallbladder flush with apple juice, lemon, olive oil and epsom salts. I am doing another cleanse this week. Dr. Andreas Moritz has great videos on you tube regarding this.

  • @ashnaali4029
    @ashnaali4029 6 років тому

    if both hepatic artery and hepatic portal vein supply the liver than which vessel bring deoxygenated blood from it. you are an amazing tutor

    • @professorfink
      @professorfink  6 років тому +2

      ALL blood exits the Liver through the Hepatic Vein (which flows into the Inferior Vena Cava). See this Video at elapsed time of 36:52.

    • @ashnaali4029
      @ashnaali4029 6 років тому

      professorfink thank you

  • @m.safarsayedy3906
    @m.safarsayedy3906 8 років тому

    Your lectures are amazing thanks for sharing.one question professor .you said (the digested nutrient and substance absorbs from GI tract and caries to the liver by hepato portal vein ).as we know liver is a storage organ most of substance store in liver .so when the blood comes out from liver by hepatic vein into inferior venacava to the right Atari to the right ventricle so on ....is the blood contains the products which absorbed before?and body how can get the absorbed nutrient which Ned it ?

    • @professorfink
      @professorfink  8 років тому +4

      +m.safar Sayedy Nutrients absorbed from the digestive tract are carried to the Liver by the Hepatic Portal Vein. The blood leaving the Liver (in the Hepatic Vein) still contains plenty of nutrients that are delivered to the cells of the body. The amounts of every nutrient in the bloodstream is maintained almost constant by "homeostatic reflexes" involving the Nervous System and Endocrine System.

  • @Ambrishamkar
    @Ambrishamkar 11 років тому

    thank you

  • @proudkikuyu
    @proudkikuyu 10 років тому

    This is great are the teaching notes available in script?

    • @professorfink
      @professorfink  10 років тому +4


      Down-loadable e-books of the Lecture Outlines by Professor Fink (as well as “hard copy” versions) can be purchased from the WLAC College Bookstore at: onlinestore.wlac.edu/fink.asp

    • @professorfink
      @professorfink  10 років тому +1


      Down-loadable e-books of the Lecture Outlines by Professor Fink (as well as “hard copy” versions) can be purchased from the WLAC College Bookstore at: onlinestore.wlac.edu/fink.asp

  • @PrinceSingh-vt3zd
    @PrinceSingh-vt3zd 6 років тому

    How do I get the notes as followed by the Professor

    • @professorfink
      @professorfink  6 років тому

      Check-out professor fink's web-site for additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com
      Down-loadable e-Books of the Lecture Outlines by Professor Fink can be purchased at: wlac.redshelf.com/
      “Hard Copy” Lecture Outlines can be purchased from the WLAC Bookstore at: onlinestore.wlac.edu/fink.asp

  • @wassimabdou7649
    @wassimabdou7649 4 роки тому +1

    THANK YOU HABIBI

  • @melaniesmith5909
    @melaniesmith5909 7 років тому

    I'm not part of any of your classes

  • @bless1012
    @bless1012 12 років тому

    Prof. Fink, you are such a beautiful man.

  • @tiancole8763
    @tiancole8763 3 роки тому

    This man loves to clap