Thromboemboli and thromboembolisms | Miscellaneous | Heatlh & Medicine | Khan Academy
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- Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
- Clarifying difference between a thrombus and an embolus (and between thrombosis and embolism). Created by Sal Khan.
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I am so thankful for this channel.....wish I would have saw it in my a&P 2 course I would have got an A instead of a B+......certain concepts I could not just put my finger on it. Especially some of the Immune System now with patho I feel an A is coming! Thanks for your time and wisdom.
Love your biology movies! Watched all of them so far!
To summarize (please correct me if I am wrong):
Thrombus: the local blood clot
Thrombosis: the condition caused by thrombus
Embolus: any object in blood that can stop blood flowing, including air, thrombus, etc
Embolism: the condition that an embolus blocks a blood vessel
Thromboembolus: an thrombus in the bloodstream which travels away from where it was originally formed
Thromboembolism: the condition caused by thromboembolus.
(additional notes: there does not seem to be word 'thrombolism', but thrombosis instead)
Thank you
Can you tell me which one was the PREVIOUS video? Post a link o
r something please.
Wow, thanks so much for posting this. Its exactly what I need for my exam tomorrow: quick and dirty with not too much detail.
Excellent!
thanks that did clarify it more!
thanks!
niz explanation
Does someone know the pathophysiology of thromboembolism?
@vickiormindyb Although what you said has certain truth in it, what Khanacademy said is not wrong at all. It is true that a thrombus is formed under static conditions and that it doesn't move under some circumstances,but it can bedislodged, and become free flowing, as the nature of this clot changes from a thrombus to a embolus or thrombo-embolus. It is a thrombus due to the nature of its formation, it is an embolus becase of its physiological consequence, the blockage of a blood vessel.
@vickiormindyb Perhaps from the four degrees he has obtained and very kindly shared. I don't see the need for the bigotry and authoritarian stance, personally I feel he explains the difference rather well?
No it would not be called a thrombo-embolus. The term thrombo-embolism indicates that both thrombosis and embolism is occurring but to describe the free flowing clot it would simply be called Embolus.
yay First view
@vickiormindyb driver!*
This is the most basic pathology, you really don't need to be a MD to understand or teach it.
Firstly, do not put words in my mouth. I merely asked if she was a physician, nothing more. Secondly, there is definitely knowledge available for everyone. I just feel when it comes to a topic like medicine it shouldn't be taught by a non-professional. I also feel most professionals would agree with my sentiments on that because they have a deeper understanding of medicine and medical practice then a lay person armed with google.
Medical specialist? What kind of specialist? Your terminology is extremely vague.
Is she a Physician?
LOL. He is kind of right though. Thrombo-embolus is not really the correct terminology. While I think its fine to teach at this level for the general public, for a more authoritative and complete look at this... it should probably be taught by an MD. I would not trust any other even healthcare professional on the topic.
What a fancy word for a video title lol