Love this video? Check out our course "Cardiovascular Physiology" made entirely with videos like this: Students, click here: www.alilaacademy.com/courses/cardiovascular-physiology-for-students Teachers, click here: www.alilaacademy.com/courses/cardiovascular-physiology-for-teachers
This is an excellent video, clear and concise as well as accurate. This was the best video describing this I could find and I’m a physician who is now a veterinary student.
Thank you for the great video. Pretty straightforward, just the most important information, and the explanation and animation are amazing. Thanks again.
This is class 11 th topic and we'll expained in short time I need these type of dense and short vedio plz ... Make these type of vedio more I loved each second
Thank you so much for this informative video! I was looking for "which part of the hemoglobin does the Co2 binds to? It took me a lot of time searching to find this little info. Thank you again!
Thank you so much for this wonderful illustration and explanation: would it be correct if we say that fixing these gazes is due to : Affinity for gazes O2 and Co2. Affinity for protons (that depend on PH)
What I do not understand is that I thought the carbon dioxide that enters the red blood cell all dissociates into bicarbonate ions and H+ ions so when the RBC goes to the lungs, how is CO2 going straight to the lungs, rather than the process you explained of bicarbonate ions becoming CO2 in the RBC AND THEN go into the lungs?
Your diet. Your exercise routine. Eating fiber kills. It is full of CO2 which is toxic. You need liquid minerals. Green juicing. And 2-4 hours exercise to sweat every day. That will shift things in time. It takes months to repair. No processed food, no alcohol, no coffee.
Our bodies is made up of about 70% water, there's absolutely no way that the blood can dry out or harden unless you are talking about chunks of blood clots that solidifies in your bodies due to chronic issues such as CVD'S.
Are you sure CO2 binding to hemoglobin is competetive? I'm more inclined to say it is non-competetive as the CO2 binds at the N-terminus of the globin polypeptide and not the hemi group.
Our blood is being constantly circulated in our body via blood vessels (HEART plays an important role ) and our body temperature (37°C) supports it. For a liquid to become solid its temperature needs to be lowered(I.e Less energy of the molecules ) . Our body never loses its entire water to become dehydrated.
Love this video? Check out our course "Cardiovascular Physiology" made entirely with videos like this:
Students, click here: www.alilaacademy.com/courses/cardiovascular-physiology-for-students
Teachers, click here: www.alilaacademy.com/courses/cardiovascular-physiology-for-teachers
This is an excellent video, clear and concise as well as accurate. This was the best video describing this I could find and I’m a physician who is now a veterinary student.
This is the best explanation I’ve seen so far!! Thanks so much!
Concise and so easy to understand. Thank you so much for your great video!
You're very welcome!
Thank you for the great video. Pretty straightforward, just the most important information, and the explanation and animation are amazing. Thanks again.
simple, beautiful, fast, well explained, great job!
GOD BLESS YOU FOR MAKING ME LOVE BIOLOGY MORE
Agree to
Thank you, I can't go forward in biology without animation and your vedios are exhilarating.
Thanks 😊 you covered entire chapter in a short video
Hey guys, your videos have been helping me a lot!! Would love if there was one about the Renine-angiotensine system!!
Thank you so much for deliverd such a wonderful animation........watching from beauty of Pakistan Gilgit baltistan...
I am impressed with these videos
It satisfies me
It's an amazing explanation
Thank you so much for nice explanation with awesome animations...these videos are very helpful for shortly understanding with excellency 🔥
I spent days on this topic ...thanku for creating such an amazing vid
This is class 11 th topic and we'll expained in short time
I need these type of dense and short vedio plz ... Make these type of vedio more I loved each second
Thank you so much for this informative video! I was looking for "which part of the hemoglobin does the Co2 binds to? It took me a lot of time searching to find this little info. Thank you again!
Thank youuuu soo much❤
This helped me a lot..i was stuck in this topic..but now its just crystal clear..
This video is fantastic. Thank you a lot
straight to the point, excellent video.
lovely straight to the point
concept cleared 😊jazakallah
Its really very helpful good job
Beautiful explanation....
Thank you very much 😍😍
You got a new subscriber now😉
Very nice video for clear all related oxygen and carbondioxyde transport 👌👌👌👌👌👌👌
Thanks so much for this video . I was so confused before 😅
Hahaha, same I'm glad I finally found a video that was straight forward and explained all I needed to know. :)
GREAT video, thank you very much 🩸🩸🩸
Thank you so much for this wonderful illustration and explanation: would it be correct if we say that fixing these gazes is due to :
Affinity for gazes O2 and Co2.
Affinity for protons (that depend on PH)
This is very help in my class
Ma'am thank you so much💖
It's really simplified..
Thanks
Thanks a lot!
A very very helpful video
Easy to understand
Not complex
Thanx alot for describing this system in an easy manner God bless u
Fantastic explanation
Nice explanation , lack some minor details but much helpful though
Thank you a lot.... Really nice Video with proper explanations..... 😚😚😚😚
Wow! Great explanation!
Thank you soo much 💞
I've never understood this so well until now
It really helpful 😃 good work.
Helped me a lot
Very well explained......
Who's here after watching Cell's at work and wanting to know red blood cells can actually deliver the oxygen?
only you bi***
Mai to ncert me se doubt utha kar laya lol
MEEE
Bro im here for science exam and i dont fking understans shit im so dumb
@@thescreamguitarist bruh🤣🤣
Mam how does the conc of hydrogen ions in the blood causes the oxygen to associate or dessociate from the Haemoglobin?
Thanks 🎉
so simple and genius
WBC's can also squeeze and is called as diapedesis
What I do not understand is that I thought the carbon dioxide that enters the red blood cell all dissociates into bicarbonate ions and H+ ions so when the RBC goes to the lungs, how is CO2 going straight to the lungs, rather than the process you explained of bicarbonate ions becoming CO2 in the RBC AND THEN go into the lungs?
Nice voice,nice explanation mem.
Very helpful
Thank you
Nice video keep it up 🙂
Thanks so much
amazingggg ❤️❤️❤️
This was really helpful- thank you.
Thnku mam 💕💕💕💕💕
Madam what is use of biopisy ..is it for cancer tell me
THANK YOU! :)
Thank.you.so.much.sir.
thanks
Whats the errors in shapes that happen do to Lukemia
Very much satisfied 🙌
Great info
wow i got a nice information
Is m 4 oxygen molecules jo haemoglobin se attach ho rhe hain wo kahan se aa rhe hain???
I don’t understand: if the CO2 is converted into HCO3-, and HCO3- diffuse in the plasma, why is there still CO2 going into the lungs?
B/c the lungs have alveoli, then alveoli is the site of gasses exchange, And CO2 is going to excrete.
To get get breath out and start the process afain
very helpfull
Very helpful !!! 👍
Which element attracts oxygen in hemoglobin?
Study oxygen dissociation graph. It’s the difference in the partial pressure of the gases. The whole concept revolves around diffusion.
@@mozart4636 thanks
I feel like I'm at home here...what's going on? I wanted to ask the same question and Mozart answered it…💯 🩸🩸🩸
Merci
Woow... This is fantastic. It makes me think Anemia can be cured by breathing exercizes ? Possible?
Depends of the type of anemia. Pathological(pertaining to diseases of the blood) cases needs intervention.
Amazing love u
Nice
Wow how god can thinking to make something complicated like this
Please cover how to read cardiac strips for student nurses
I'm trying to understand why my oxy hemoglobin levels are so low
Your diet. Your exercise routine.
Eating fiber kills. It is full of CO2 which is toxic.
You need liquid minerals. Green juicing.
And 2-4 hours exercise to sweat every day.
That will shift things in time. It takes months to repair.
No processed food, no alcohol, no coffee.
How does blood stay liquid? How or why does the body keep liquid. Does blood Harden in the bloodstream if the dehydrated?
Our bodies is made up of about 70% water, there's absolutely no way that the blood can dry out or harden unless you are talking about chunks of blood clots that solidifies in your bodies due to chronic issues such as CVD'S.
@@christinams.0625 but what's this CVDs?
@@zoya3049 Cardiovascular diseases
Thank youuuuuu
Are you sure CO2 binding to hemoglobin is competetive? I'm more inclined to say it is non-competetive as the CO2 binds at the N-terminus of the globin polypeptide and not the hemi group.
It's explained right there in the video, if you pay attention.
رائع
Holy smokes
Bruh that last part is so damn confusing. How tf are we supposed to remember that!
Wow
Go to medical school for the love of life , not money . Great video watch out for Rouleaux . 😉
True... 👌Are u a doctor...?
Kashyap dekh lia video 📷
❤😍
Why 😭🥲
Damn
Ahhh the Urethracites!
Mn taraf Estaz marwan 😂
Red blood cells, also called *'EUrythrocytes.'*
With a title like Medical Media? Yeah, no.
Poli
Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Plz dot stop
Urdu mai bolo yaar
Confusing
Thank you
Mam how does the conc of hydrogen ions in the blood causes the oxygen to associate or dessociate from the Haemoglobin?
thanks
How does blood stay liquid? How or why does the body keep liquid. Does blood Harden in the bloodstream if the dehydrated?
Our blood is being constantly circulated in our body via blood vessels (HEART plays an important role ) and our body temperature (37°C) supports it. For a liquid to become solid its temperature needs to be lowered(I.e Less energy of the molecules ) . Our body never loses its entire water to become dehydrated.
liquid is the best way to get nutrients from blood everywhere
yes it can harden if you dont drink enough water and can make clots or have heart attack