at 15:55, should the barrier be termed "blood-brain barrier" instead of "blood gas barrier"? the latter is often used for the alveolar-capillary barrier.
is the Pco2 of blood maintained at 4 mmHg, as he's saying at the beginning of this clip, or 40 mmHg, as it appears in majority of texts? had me a little confused there.
+stephen mwenje The PCO2 hovers around 40 mmHg the body has a lot of compensatory mechanisms to not let the value dip below ~36 and not rise aboue ~45.
graet people always think of ideas great sir sir i think gamma receptors ,,temperatures changes nd joint sensors are sufficient for exercise induced hyperventilation to meet body demands
Usually I am getting bored from long lectures. But this professor is amazing. Enjoying. I tnink he is the one who described West zones of the lung.
Thank you Dr. West for your lectures.
Turns out that the control of ventilation is more complex than I thought! Thanks
ur videos are the best thing that ever happend to me haha
@nmwoody Yes he means to refer to the blood brain barrier, he uses that term when he explains it in his book.
at 15:55, should the barrier be termed "blood-brain barrier" instead of "blood gas barrier"? the latter is often used for the alveolar-capillary barrier.
It was a wonderful lecture. Thank you so much!
is the Pco2 of blood maintained at 4 mmHg, as he's saying at the beginning of this clip, or 40 mmHg, as it appears in majority of texts? had me a little confused there.
+stephen mwenje
The PCO2 hovers around 40 mmHg the body has a lot of compensatory mechanisms to not let the value dip below ~36 and not rise aboue ~45.
graet people always think of ideas great sir
sir i think gamma receptors ,,temperatures changes nd joint sensors are sufficient for exercise induced hyperventilation to meet body demands
Love Serenade at the beginning :)
can't agree more , i just wish i've seen these videos be4 now :( , i have an exam in Rs module 2 days from now :(
what a legend
12:53 peripheral chemoreceptors.
27:36 pulmonary stretch.
Great, Thankyou so much sir
lol walkies... i love this man.
This part sounded incorrect to me though, as the dog is probably just excited (result of conditioning) rather than pre-hyperventilating
can any one plz tell me which video is talking about the pressure distribution in the lung ( apex , bottom) in regard to the pulmonary artery level???
that's pulmonary blood flow video i think: ruclips.net/video/F6bgX3-bEts/видео.html
*the