Man, I simply cannot express my gratitude to you enough. Your content was the one thing that actually made me interested in my studies again. I'm finally studying everyday now by watching one video of yours a day and sometimes more from other channels.
"BEAUTIFUL gap junctions!!" I love your enthusiasm:) The human body IS really cool, so it boggles my mind when professors drone on monotonously in lectures. I want to shake them and say GET EXCITED. Thanks for the awesome content. Can't wait to get my first "real" job after graduation and give your channel a well-deserved donation!
I’m not a medical student, I’m a fitness trainer and when I watch your video I feel I’m watching a movie which is holding me till the end and I overjoy after learning it well by the end. I must say your teaching skills are by far the best I have ever encountered. Keep it up, I hope this family grows bigger and bigger.
So this is my first comment but I'm a loyal subscriber and viewer. I just wanted to share that you have a way of calming down whatever anxiety or doubt I may have whenever new material is introduced. Your passion is super admirable and soothing, not to mention helpful and understandable!! As a current student in A &P II, I often get anxious bc it's been quite a while since I've been in school. Just knowing that I can count on ninja nerd to explain it in a thorough manner, makes me feel at ease and overall, more about the material. I tell everyone about this channel when asked how am I understanding the material!! (Even when they don't ask)😁 To say I love your channel is an understatement...I LIVE BY YOUR CHANNEL!! Untouchable!
I can not express my gratitude to you enough. I'm a medical student in Italy, I've attended a ridiculous number of lessons, I've read books and notes, but your 48min of video taught me more than everything else. It's actually quite amazing that you are sooo good at explaining that I was able to understand everything, even if it is not my main language.
Brief Table of Contents: 4:20 - SA Node 6:20 - Bachmann's Bundle 7:10 - Internodal Pathway 8:10 - AV Node 9:50 - Bundle of His 12:40 - Bundle Branches 13:10 - Purkinje fibers 15:40 - Nodal Cell 23:10 - Connexons 26:00 - Contractile Cell 35:20 - Sarcoplasmic Reticulum 37:20 - Troponin 39:50 - Functional Syncytium Nice videos, thanks. How do the potassium ions make their way back into the cells? Or is that in another video. You may want to add this (or your own improved) table of contents to the description. Maybe someone else can post a detailed table of contents as this is just a brief one.
I love everything about Zach but my most favorite part is how he appreciates the body processes/anatomy and then describes them as "amazing", "cool" and "BEAUTIFUL" AND you know he means it!! THANK YOU FOR EVERYTHING NN!!
Your passion for the topics and the simplistic approach that you use to explain everything (in detail) is incredible! Every time I start a new topic, i search for your videos on it first! You are doing a great service to all the struggling medical students out there sir! :)
I cannot express how much you have changed my life... I don't even have the right words for expressing my gratitude, you are amazing , I wish I have had teachers like you, how much I would enjoyed the lectures if that was the case
As soon as I get my first paycheck, i am gonna donate it entirely to your channel. You deserve to be the better paid teacher in the universe and I hope one day I can be as good as you in teaching
I was unable to understand even a single word in textbooks and hours of med school lectures. But just 48 min of this masterpiece made everything clear as crystal! Keep up the good work! 🔥
I'm in my first semester of vet school right now and your videos are a lifesaver!! You make me feel so much more confident about the material I have to know for class! Thank you so much!!
9:28 this keypoint was asked more than 4 times in the same exam...the examiner was just changing the way of asking but that was the key idea, thank you so much ❤❤
As i finished watching this video it felt like for the first time I learned something. There is surely no other way to teach better. I have been through so many lectures but something was there which was not adding up like how nodal cell connects with the contractile cells but now when I know it feels exactly like when you finally acquire the knowledge you have been trying to get from years back. Please don't stop making videos. I am doing Bachelor and counting on you.👍👍👍
Even after attending tons of lectures and studying tons of notes...... these 48 mins made me really understand the concept very well. and you keep us concentrated very well brother. Love from India.
I want to express my gratitude... Thank you SO much for your videos. I was a nurse in France and I am now studying paramedicine in New Zealand. Your videos are amazing, you are talented, thank you for sharing your knowledge and help us to become good clinicians.
You are so amazing! I am so glad I found you early in my med degree. Your knowledge is just incredible and your ability to teach it to others is unparalleled! Thank you for doing what you do
Love this guy. I used his videos to study for a Vascular Registry. I am now using them to study for RCIS cardiac Registry test. He's amazing and explains everything so well.
third year medical student and i have my cardiology/pneumology exam 2 months later, your videos are the best Zach. Thank you so much, we really owe you a lot.
OMG bro you are a genius for teaching us this great! This is my first time watching your videos and I can tell I have never got it this clear from a lecture, you connect all the dots in one and i like that, I am from Bolivia my native language is Spanish and I totally understood your whole video dude, Keep doing this great work! once I got money i will support you as much as possible. Thank you!
You are the BEST professor ever! Thank you so much for your efforts! And just so to let you know you raised lots of today's doctors and the future doctors too.
I cannot thank you enough for these videos. This is brilliance and I will support you. You are hand’s down the best teacher I’ve ever encountered. The breadth and variety of expertise in your videos, your enthusiasm and energy. I’m on here all the time. I used to get so worried if I had a mediocre teacher. Now, I’m like “no worries, I’ll go on Ninja Nerd”. :) Thank you so much. You are a brilliant person. Legit brilliant. No exaggeration. Just the truth. 🤓👍🙌
Thank you for explaining everything that i didn't get nd just learn them up to pass my exam. With ur video everytime I realize why I choose this field 🥺🥺🥺
OMG you're awesome! I'm in school to be an MA. I want to continue to nursing and end up as a CRNA. You bring such enthusiasm and interest to these subjects! This is well above my current educational needs, but you've made it interesting and fun, so I just keep watching!
I have practiced nursing and enjoyed. Now I’m experiencing EDUCATION from my CARDIAC challenges and your beautiful thorough explanation THANKS for great explanation.
My dental school Biophysiology professor lecture’s consist of slides with screen shots of ninja nerd videos and a link to ninja nerd videos for us to watch instead of him lecture us lol.
I am obsessed with your videos!!! You are a really wonderful teacher... You literally save me time after time passing my exams. Really helping me going through Med school. Please keep doing what you do! Thank you so so much... Your fan from Israel :)
I wish I would have found Ninja Nerd in AP1, WOW I am in AP2 and just now found these videos. This is SO thorough and makes total sense after watching. Zach you do a fabulous job making sure every detailed is explained and makes sense, THANK YOU you Rock
Before this video, I had no excitement whatsoever in studying the heart. But now, wow! The heart is really amazing and easy to understand. Many thanks to you guys. You rock!
Videos are just perfect, my hat's off to you for existential knowledge (coming from an MD). This should be included in high school and even med schools. If you are reading my comment, just a suggestion and a wish, once you are done with the drawing, could you do a freeze frame of a board so we can take a screenshot, or upload a photo of a board and add a link below the video? That would be great for us to keep in the gallery for repetition. Thanks and keep the good work!
Thank you sir !! I cannot repay the debt of gratitude i hold for u in my heart !!! May you be blessed with all what u wanna acheive ..my prayers and wishes are with u sir
Referred 3 books for this concept, read more than i could, and your 48 mins video was like damnnn such satisfying , each concept just got engraved in my brain! THANKKSSS A TONN BROTHER! THERES NO SUCH AWSOME VIDEOS LIKE YOU MAKE ! just keep going we need such people to become great doctors! I JUST DONT HAVE WORDS TO THANKYOU ENOUGHH
@@david9840 totally! Been awesome to see this grow. Saved me in my kin degree. Better instruction than most of my professors. At least for my style of learning
This video is honestly a lifesaver, I was so confused about the intercalated discs and the sodium/calcium/potassium channels but now it makes perfect sense!! Thank you so much :)
Great video, however at 5:20 it is mentioned the SA node sets the pace at 60-80bpm. This is incorrect. The SA node spontaneously fires between 100-110 bpm. The vagus nerve and other physiologic factors are responsible for bringing it down to what we consider normal with is around that 60-80bpm.
Freakin Awesome video!!!! I hate not knowing every detail, even though for my profession (med-surg nurse) I don't have to, but I still WANT too lol. Thank you.
37:13 references telling us to go watch the video your team made on how muscles contract. I haven't seen it yet and this is my mental note (and a reference for anyone else who wants to remember what it was they were wanting to watch after the end of this video 🤣). Thanks! This is fantastic!
Hi, your videos are simply amazing and I have learned a lot from them! I wanted to ask if you have ever considered posting a link for your "empty drawings" , where we can print them out and write on them as you go along the material? Thank you for your time!
You are the best teacher I've seen💖 Thank you sir so much for all this work that you have been doing. You are really the best medical teacher I've seen in youtube. 🙏👍
I work in Telemetry and this content is awesome, I know a little more by listening to your content then I did reading some study material. I hope this page continues. Thank you.
Notes from the video because I got confused by the order of things: General Flow: SA Node → AV node (via internodal pathways) → AV bundle → L & R Bundle branches (branches of the AV bundle) → Purkinje fibres. Notes about the SA & AV nodes: SA Node: creates the sinus arrhythmia (60-80 bpm), pacemaker of the heart Connects to and can stimulate the left Atrium via the Bachman’s bundle. Stimulates the right atrium via the internodal pathways. Stimulates the AV node via the internodal pathways. AV Node: An AV node can interact (can be stimulated by )with the bachman’s bundle. The AV node branches into the R & L Bundle Branches within the interventricular septum which then stimulate the heart via the purkinje fibres. How nodal cells communicate with contractile cells Nodal Cells: RMP of about -60mv Na+ leaks through leaky “Funny Sodium Channels” which then lowers the MP to -55mv Voltage-gated calcium channels open at -55mv, causing an increased inflow of calcium, and for cations to gather within the cell, raising MP to -40mv. -40mv is the threshold of the nodal cell. Once threshold is reached, there is a dramatic increase in Calcium (threshold activated the L-type Ca+ Channels causing an aggressive increase). MP is now +40 mv, depolarizing the cell. Gap Junctions: In order for the nodal cell to share current with the contractile cell, the ions must travel through gap junctions. Gap junctions exist between the intercellular space, connecting the cells together. Desmosomes hold the gap junctions and cells in place so that they don’t stretch apart. Gap Junctions + Desmosomes = intercalated discs. Contractile Cells: RMP of about -85mv. Inflow of positive cations results in an increase in MP, activating threshold. When threshold is reached, NA+ voltage gated sodium channels open up and release Na+ drastically increasing MP. Cell depolarizes, positive charges move across the cell in a wave. MP gets to around 10+mv (meanwhile very few additional CA+ channels open and allow CA+ to flow in), so the Na+ channels close. K+ channels open at the same time as the Ca+ channels, but the amount of K+ leaving the cell greatly exceeds the amount of CA+ entering the cell, causing a little drop in MP (around 0mv). CA+ becomes more active at 0mv while K+ are still leaving the cell, causing a plateau at 0mv. The Inflow of Calcium causes Calcium-induced Calcium release. Some Calcium ions to receptors on the Sarcolemma, and additional calcium to be released into the cell At a certain point CA+ close, and CA returns to the sarcoplasmic reticulum (either by moving up the concentration gradient and using ATP or swapping places with sodium). Ca+ is pumped out of the cell Na+ is pumped out of the cell Potassium channels continue to release K+ and the cell is at rest. The nodal cell allows for Na+ to leak in… and the whole cycle starts over again.
I had so much difficulty understanding the cardiac action potential & the pacemaker potential during my 1st year. This was the best explanation I've ever seen on this topic!
Ninja Nerd Science, Wow! As senior clinician i have been really encouraged by your lectures. I feel know i have to contirbute my fair share to the world of Medical Science. Thus, I have uploaded my first PPT based video.
Attended more than 15 cardiovascular physiology lectures in medical school, but your 48 mins video taught me a lot more. You are amazing man.
Felt the same...was so well done.
Ahmet X Ninja Nerd is very thorough and has the great ability to actually teach. He articulates very well.
@@faithcharfauros4892 yes you are true
I missed my physiology lecture but now I have no regret..
@@kismatrajpurohit4522 that was in your kismat btw😀
Remember
TIC -> TAC
1. Troponin T binds tropomyosin
2. Troponin I binds Actin
3. Troponin C binds Calcium
Thank You kind soul!
Thanks
❤️
Brilliant!!!
TicTac
Man, I simply cannot express my gratitude to you enough. Your content was the one thing that actually made me interested in my studies again. I'm finally studying everyday now by watching one video of yours a day and sometimes more from other channels.
Same here!
"DON'T YOU DARE LAUGH AT ME, IM SHORT" lol !!! i love your videos !!
Oh that was cute!
Perfect
🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
"BEAUTIFUL gap junctions!!" I love your enthusiasm:) The human body IS really cool, so it boggles my mind when professors drone on monotonously in lectures. I want to shake them and say GET EXCITED. Thanks for the awesome content. Can't wait to get my first "real" job after graduation and give your channel a well-deserved donation!
Emily
Thus really exciting
Hello
I’m a medical student from Saudi Arabia and I just wanted to say THANK YOU so so so much. Keep up the good work man, you’re a life saver
بتوفيق
I’m not a medical student, I’m a fitness trainer and when I watch your video I feel I’m watching a movie which is holding me till the end and I overjoy after learning it well by the end. I must say your teaching skills are by far the best I have ever encountered. Keep it up, I hope this family grows bigger and bigger.
So I've been trying to understand this for 4 years and this has been the most useful 48 minutes of study ever. You guys are incredible.
Me too 😂
So this is my first comment but I'm a loyal subscriber and viewer. I just wanted to share that you have a way of calming down whatever anxiety or doubt I may have whenever new material is introduced. Your passion is super admirable and soothing, not to mention helpful and understandable!! As a current student in A &P II, I often get anxious bc it's been quite a while since I've been in school. Just knowing that I can count on ninja nerd to explain it in a thorough manner, makes me feel at ease and overall, more about the material. I tell everyone about this channel when asked how am I understanding the material!! (Even when they don't ask)😁 To say I love your channel is an understatement...I LIVE BY YOUR CHANNEL!! Untouchable!
Same here :)
hahaha ,that is nice, watch mine as well😍😅😍
Same😊
7
I can not express my gratitude to you enough. I'm a medical student in Italy, I've attended a ridiculous number of lessons, I've read books and notes, but your 48min of video taught me more than everything else. It's actually quite amazing that you are sooo good at explaining that I was able to understand everything, even if it is not my main language.
Dude you may not be tall but you sure as hell ain't short. You tower over any professor I have ever had.
Brief Table of Contents:
4:20 - SA Node
6:20 - Bachmann's Bundle
7:10 - Internodal Pathway
8:10 - AV Node
9:50 - Bundle of His
12:40 - Bundle Branches
13:10 - Purkinje fibers
15:40 - Nodal Cell
23:10 - Connexons
26:00 - Contractile Cell
35:20 - Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
37:20 - Troponin
39:50 - Functional Syncytium
Nice videos, thanks. How do the potassium ions make their way back into the cells? Or is that in another video. You may want to add this (or your own improved) table of contents to the description. Maybe someone else can post a detailed table of contents as this is just a brief one.
Bless you 🙏
Hats off bro
Good job
Na-k antiport maybe
You teach so painstakingly bro and then all your content is here for free. That’s a huge act of kindness
I love everything about Zach but my most favorite part is how he appreciates the body processes/anatomy and then describes them as "amazing", "cool" and "BEAUTIFUL" AND you know he means it!! THANK YOU FOR EVERYTHING NN!!
Your passion for the topics and the simplistic approach that you use to explain everything (in detail) is incredible! Every time I start a new topic, i search for your videos on it first! You are doing a great service to all the struggling medical students out there sir! :)
I cannot express how much you have changed my life... I don't even have the right words for expressing my gratitude, you are amazing , I wish I have had teachers like you, how much I would enjoyed the lectures if that was the case
As soon as I get my first paycheck, i am gonna donate it entirely to your channel. You deserve to be the better paid teacher in the universe and I hope one day I can be as good as you in teaching
I so so so hope YT pays you a lot. You deserve every penny. From the bottom of my heart, I’m grateful for your work!
I was unable to understand even a single word in textbooks and hours of med school lectures. But just 48 min of this masterpiece made everything clear as crystal! Keep up the good work! 🔥
I'm in my first semester of vet school right now and your videos are a lifesaver!! You make me feel so much more confident about the material I have to know for class! Thank you so much!!
sameee
9:28 this keypoint was asked more than 4 times in the same exam...the examiner was just changing the way of asking but that was the key idea, thank you so much ❤❤
I like your style. You have an enthusiasm for teaching that I am not seeing in other teachers. Thank you. You have a rare gift.
As i finished watching this video it felt like for the first time I learned something. There is surely no other way to teach better. I have been through so many lectures but something was there which was not adding up like how nodal cell connects with the contractile cells but now when I know it feels exactly like when you finally acquire the knowledge you have been trying to get from years back. Please don't stop making videos. I am doing Bachelor and counting on you.👍👍👍
YOUR 48 min videos saved my many hours. Thank you so much
Even after attending tons of lectures and studying tons of notes...... these 48 mins made me really understand the concept very well. and you keep us concentrated very well brother.
Love from India.
I want to express my gratitude... Thank you SO much for your videos. I was a nurse in France and I am now studying paramedicine in New Zealand. Your videos are amazing, you are talented, thank you for sharing your knowledge and help us to become good clinicians.
You are an AMAZING teacher. Thank you for your time, and content. Greatful I've found your channel!!
"Dont u dare laught at me, I m short"
Adorable !!! 😊
I love ur videos, keep up d good job.
Thank u Ninja nerds!!!
You are so amazing! I am so glad I found you early in my med degree. Your knowledge is just incredible and your ability to teach it to others is unparalleled! Thank you for doing what you do
Love this guy. I used his videos to study for a Vascular Registry. I am now using them to study for RCIS cardiac Registry test. He's amazing and explains everything so well.
Really appreciate your devotion! lots of love and respect, thank you!
third year medical student and i have my cardiology/pneumology exam 2 months later, your videos are the best Zach. Thank you so much, we really owe you a lot.
OMG bro you are a genius for teaching us this great! This is my first time watching your videos and I can tell I have never got it this clear from a lecture, you connect all the dots in one and i like that, I am from Bolivia my native language is Spanish and I totally understood your whole video dude, Keep doing this great work! once I got money i will support you as much as possible. Thank you!
The way he uses colours very effectively is his magic.Ninja need is the best.Thanks professor Murphy...........!!
I got drained from reading, and so this helped me so much, thank you!
Wow. Dang, you’re so smart!! Wish I had your brains so I can teach all those stuff without looking at any notes. Amazing explanation, thank you!
Thank you so much for doing these lectures, the quality of your teaching is incredible. I've learnt so much!
Incredible is all that i have to say i almost lost my confidence and was questioning myself . But now i can understand so much better .
you truly an incredible person , such an awesome explanation to this subject , keep it that way bro ❤️
+Extra Channel Thanks for the super nice comment, glad you enjoyed!
You are the BEST professor ever! Thank you so much for your efforts! And just so to let you know you raised lots of today's doctors and the future doctors too.
I love your videos! You are very knowledgeable and a great teacher!
I cannot thank you enough for these videos. This is brilliance and I will support you. You are hand’s down the best teacher I’ve ever encountered. The breadth and variety of expertise in your videos, your enthusiasm and energy. I’m on here all the time. I used to get so worried if I had a mediocre teacher. Now, I’m like “no worries, I’ll go on Ninja Nerd”. :) Thank you so much. You are a brilliant person. Legit brilliant. No exaggeration. Just the truth. 🤓👍🙌
Thank you for explaining everything that i didn't get nd just learn them up to pass my exam. With ur video everytime I realize why I choose this field 🥺🥺🥺
never had imagined this topic to be so easy because of the way u taught ....thank you so much......
you remind me that everything is going to be okay! thank you!
OMG you're awesome! I'm in school to be an MA. I want to continue to nursing and end up as a CRNA. You bring such enthusiasm and interest to these subjects! This is well above my current educational needs, but you've made it interesting and fun, so I just keep watching!
im gonna comment on all the videos im watching bc you're saving my life THANK YOU
I have practiced nursing and enjoyed. Now I’m experiencing EDUCATION from my CARDIAC challenges and your beautiful thorough explanation THANKS for great explanation.
My dental school Biophysiology professor lecture’s consist of slides with screen shots of ninja nerd videos and a link to ninja nerd videos for us to watch instead of him lecture us lol.
I am obsessed with your videos!!! You are a really wonderful teacher...
You literally save me time after time passing my exams. Really helping me going through Med school.
Please keep doing what you do! Thank you so so much...
Your fan from Israel :)
I quote "don't you dare laugh at me , I'm short" 😂
You sounded so cute!
This is by far the best lecturer on RUclips!!! Thank you so much!!!
you deserve more exposure
I wish I would have found Ninja Nerd in AP1, WOW I am in AP2 and just now found these videos. This is SO thorough and makes total sense after watching. Zach you do a fabulous job making sure every detailed is explained and makes sense, THANK YOU you Rock
No words can explain how thankful we are for your lectures!!!
Thank you for making these videos. You do a better job than most of my professors. Please keep making videos like this!
"oh shoot, they hit threshold potential" had me in tears
I wish you could get a reward for how well you teach oh my god everything is so easy to understand because of your videos!
“These beautiful gap junctions” oh so beautiful 😄📚❤️
Before this video, I had no excitement whatsoever in studying the heart. But now, wow! The heart is really amazing and easy to understand. Many thanks to you guys. You rock!
Videos are just perfect, my hat's off to you for existential knowledge (coming from an MD). This should be included in high school and even med schools. If you are reading my comment, just a suggestion and a wish, once you are done with the drawing, could you do a freeze frame of a board so we can take a screenshot, or upload a photo of a board and add a link below the video? That would be great for us to keep in the gallery for repetition. Thanks and keep the good work!
We are currently in the process of drawing each and every lecture we created to be added to our upcoming website. Thanks for the great suggestion!
Glad to hear that, looking forward to it! Keep the good work guys.
Greeting from Croatia :)
Thank you sir !! I cannot repay the debt of gratitude i hold for u in my heart !!! May you be blessed with all what u wanna acheive ..my prayers and wishes are with u sir
I can't thank you enough, God bless you 😭😭😭😭😭
Referred 3 books for this concept, read more than i could, and your 48 mins video was like damnnn such satisfying , each concept just got engraved in my brain! THANKKSSS A TONN BROTHER! THERES NO SUCH AWSOME VIDEOS LIKE YOU MAKE ! just keep going we need such people to become great doctors! I JUST DONT HAVE WORDS TO THANKYOU ENOUGHH
not sure if you're a PhD but i really hope you're already a professor or on your way!
He's a PA (physician assistant). The fact that people thought he's a doctor or PhD speaks to how well-trained PAs are.
@@david9840 totally! Been awesome to see this grow. Saved me in my kin degree. Better instruction than most of my professors. At least for my style of learning
@@Misscellaneous_ Agreed!
This video is honestly a lifesaver, I was so confused about the intercalated discs and the sodium/calcium/potassium channels but now it makes perfect sense!! Thank you so much :)
I hit the subscribe button after listening to you. That means you made me understand,now am searching for your part 2,
I've watched all your videos and I watch all the commercials so you make more money, that's how much I love you guys.
Yo bro u made my day, Iam started liking cardio now ❤️✌️👌💐🎉🎉👋👍thanks broi!!
Ur 48 min lecture saved my hours.
Respect...
Love ur lectures. Stay blessed.
Incredibly helpful! I'm a first year med student and I was struggling to understand my prof's powerpoints on this topic.
this is literally one of the best lectures on youtube
Thank you so much for what you do. You are amazing.
+Samilia Asare awesome I'm so happy we were able to help!
You are always able to break things down into such a way that makes learning so much easier!!
Great video, however at 5:20 it is mentioned the SA node sets the pace at 60-80bpm. This is incorrect. The SA node spontaneously fires between 100-110 bpm. The vagus nerve and other physiologic factors are responsible for bringing it down to what we consider normal with is around that 60-80bpm.
It's 60-100 😴 please verify from other sources too
You are AMAZING! The best teacher! I don’t know what I would do without your lectures.
Oh dear, you are a masterpiece of the Almighty
Simply the best. Not enough money to donate so I'm liking every video I watch instead to help. Keep up the good work!
Freakin Awesome video!!!! I hate not knowing every detail, even though for my profession (med-surg nurse) I don't have to, but I still WANT too lol. Thank you.
Salute to this man how simply he explains such complex topics ❤❤❤ love from India 🇮🇳
I wasn't aware so much stuff goes on for a heartbeat
37:13 references telling us to go watch the video your team made on how muscles contract. I haven't seen it yet and this is my mental note (and a reference for anyone else who wants to remember what it was they were wanting to watch after the end of this video 🤣).
Thanks! This is fantastic!
Thank you master
Best medical practice content online i can't say how much I'm grateful for
Hi, your videos are simply amazing and I have learned a lot from them! I wanted to ask if you have ever considered posting a link for your "empty drawings" , where we can print them out and write on them as you go along the material? Thank you for your time!
God bless you man. I hope you have an amazing life. Spent 3 weeks learning all of this but you summarized it so well.
Ohmg, he is so handsome. And his knowledge just enhances it.
You are the best teacher I've seen💖
Thank you sir so much for all this work that you have been doing. You are really the best medical teacher I've seen in youtube. 🙏👍
Great job man!
+אריאל יודקוביץ
thank you so much we really appreciate your kind positive feedback
It's worth to bunk my med school classes for watching your videos
Thank God I'm in this generation
Thank you soooo much Zach!!!
Thank you so much I wish my professor was like u, she is only reading from the presentation without explaining anything 😒
Spiker_87 same here, I have to teach myself
I can’t thank you enough for what you’re giving the students. Your lectures are a life saver 🙂 hats off to you
Anybody have an exam tomorrow 😄
Yupp
On Monday 😂
On Sunday
In an hour😂
Tomorrow 😅
I work in Telemetry and this content is awesome, I know a little more by listening to your content then I did reading some study material. I hope this page continues. Thank you.
"what are these little invaginations? trust me its a word, I know" LOL
I just am surprised by how much he is in love with the physiological mechanisms and keeps appreciating them. I so admire his passion so damn much❤
Notes from the video because I got confused by the order of things:
General Flow: SA Node → AV node (via internodal pathways) → AV bundle → L & R Bundle branches (branches of the AV bundle) → Purkinje fibres.
Notes about the SA & AV nodes:
SA Node: creates the sinus arrhythmia (60-80 bpm), pacemaker of the heart
Connects to and can stimulate the left Atrium via the Bachman’s bundle.
Stimulates the right atrium via the internodal pathways.
Stimulates the AV node via the internodal pathways.
AV Node:
An AV node can interact (can be stimulated by )with the bachman’s bundle.
The AV node branches into the R & L Bundle Branches within the interventricular septum which then stimulate the heart via the purkinje fibres.
How nodal cells communicate with contractile cells
Nodal Cells:
RMP of about -60mv
Na+ leaks through leaky “Funny Sodium Channels” which then lowers the MP to -55mv
Voltage-gated calcium channels open at -55mv, causing an increased inflow of calcium, and for cations to gather within the cell, raising MP to -40mv.
-40mv is the threshold of the nodal cell.
Once threshold is reached, there is a dramatic increase in Calcium (threshold activated the L-type Ca+ Channels causing an aggressive increase).
MP is now +40 mv, depolarizing the cell.
Gap Junctions:
In order for the nodal cell to share current with the contractile cell, the ions must travel through gap junctions.
Gap junctions exist between the intercellular space, connecting the cells together. Desmosomes hold the gap junctions and cells in place so that they don’t stretch apart.
Gap Junctions + Desmosomes = intercalated discs.
Contractile Cells:
RMP of about -85mv.
Inflow of positive cations results in an increase in MP, activating threshold.
When threshold is reached, NA+ voltage gated sodium channels open up and release Na+ drastically increasing MP.
Cell depolarizes, positive charges move across the cell in a wave.
MP gets to around 10+mv (meanwhile very few additional CA+ channels open and allow CA+ to flow in), so the Na+ channels close.
K+ channels open at the same time as the Ca+ channels, but the amount of K+ leaving the cell greatly exceeds the amount of CA+ entering the cell, causing a little drop in MP (around 0mv).
CA+ becomes more active at 0mv while K+ are still leaving the cell, causing a plateau at 0mv.
The Inflow of Calcium causes Calcium-induced Calcium release.
Some Calcium ions to receptors on the Sarcolemma, and additional calcium to be released into the cell
At a certain point CA+ close, and CA returns to the sarcoplasmic reticulum (either by moving up the concentration gradient and using ATP or swapping places with sodium).
Ca+ is pumped out of the cell
Na+ is pumped out of the cell
Potassium channels continue to release K+ and the cell is at rest.
The nodal cell allows for Na+ to leak in… and the whole cycle starts over again.
Thanku so much i needed this:))
I had so much difficulty understanding the cardiac action potential & the pacemaker potential during my 1st year. This was the best explanation I've ever seen on this topic!
If I want to learn something which I did not understand in lecture just type topic + ninja nerd
Ninja Nerd Science, Wow! As senior clinician i have been really encouraged by your lectures.
I feel know i have to contirbute my fair share to the world of Medical Science. Thus, I have uploaded my first PPT based video.