Thromboemboli and thromboembolisms | Miscellaneous | Heatlh & Medicine | Khan Academy
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- Опубликовано: 5 апр 2011
- Clarifying difference between a thrombus and an embolus (and between thrombosis and embolism). Created by Sal Khan.
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Love your biology movies! Watched all of them so far!
Wow, thanks so much for posting this. Its exactly what I need for my exam tomorrow: quick and dirty with not too much detail.
Thank you
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.
Excellent!
Can you tell me which one was the PREVIOUS video? Post a link o
r something please.
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?
yay First view
@vickiormindyb driver!*
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.
This is the most basic pathology, you really don't need to be a MD to understand or teach it.
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.
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.
What a fancy word for a video title lol