Looks like many people from Riga are watching this :D These are quite helpful and you have covered every topic that I need in my university thanks or sharing these vids
@twandy4 The secretory end pieces can be acinar, alveolar or tubular in a given salivary gland or a combination of any or all of these. The secretory elements of a given tubule / duct are of one type only. But in a given GLAND, there can be any amalgamation / mix of the end pieces, I think.
CAREFUL! there are no MUCOUS ACINI, only MUCOUS TUBULI !! that s the term for it! Sturcture is a little different! pay attention also to semilunar demilunes (mixed TUBULOACINUS) are mucous tubuli, but joint by serous secreting cells (gianuzzi / von ebner halfmoon) they produce lysozyme for the control of bacterial flora in the oral cavity). adding up: -mucous producing cells form : Mucous tubuli -serous secreting cells : Serous acini -mixed type : semilunar demilunes (tubuloacinar) thanks
submandibular glands rarely have intercalated ducts...they are abundant in parotid glands and absent in sublingual glands. at least this is what i have learned from med school. you should look for intercalated ducts in the parotids!
Tell your school, if they let me teach path and histo entirely by myself, I'd go there, as long as they let me do it my way!
Thank you so much for these videos! All the students at my medical school love them.
Charlie M Thank you for making my day!
you are my hero. i almost gave up on believing i could pass. but you saved my ass. thanks a bunch. now i ve got a real chance
Not if they are dedicated to SHARING medical knowledge, as Hippocrates commanded all physicians to do.
I am medicine student and histology is the main subject at the moment. Thank you very much for this video, very very helpful.
Looks like many people from Riga are watching this :D These are quite helpful and you have covered every topic that I need in my university thanks or sharing these vids
hello fellow rsu student
@@marcelofa89 oh hello fellow fellow riga students
@twandy4
The secretory end pieces can be acinar, alveolar or tubular in a given salivary gland or a combination of any or all of these. The secretory elements of a given tubule / duct are of one type only. But in a given GLAND, there can be any amalgamation / mix of the end pieces, I think.
you drive me crazy when you talk this way baby!
I wish you were my professor,you are a PERFECT one!
your videos are great! thank you sir
Great video!! Helped out SO MUCH!! thanks!!
your videos are veryyyyyyyyyy helpful thank u soooooo much
you make it look easier :) really like your videos thank you
thanks for these videos! :)
great work
thank you so much ! your videos are very helpful :D
super su ti filmići!
hello from Croatia!!
Thank you so much this was great
sir, very good videos.thank you
i like that attitude
creeper voice! thx for videos homes.
thank u prof
submandibular and submaxillary glands are the same
CAREFUL! there are no MUCOUS ACINI, only MUCOUS TUBULI !!
that s the term for it! Sturcture is a little different! pay attention also to semilunar demilunes (mixed TUBULOACINUS) are mucous tubuli, but joint by serous secreting cells (gianuzzi / von ebner halfmoon) they produce lysozyme for the control of bacterial flora in the oral cavity).
adding up:
-mucous producing cells form : Mucous tubuli
-serous secreting cells : Serous acini
-mixed type : semilunar demilunes (tubuloacinar)
thanks
sadly i guess riga is a bit too far away (?)
submandibular glands rarely have intercalated ducts...they are abundant in parotid glands and absent in sublingual glands. at least this is what i have learned from med school. you should look for intercalated ducts in the parotids!
still interested? your needed here...
sure, if your school is more interested in global education than fat profits, im interested!
minarcik@gmail.com
sus
not good slide sample