Added: 4 years ago
From: WashingtonDeceit
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  • Hi Dr. M,

    I was referred by my classmate to come to your videos and I'm so thankful I did. I love how i can study for A&P without being in a class. Thank you so much for your help and time. You're terrific!

  • fibrocartilage NEVER has e "perchondrium"(only elastic cartilage & hyaline cartilage do!)

    and the slide in video has a perichondrium and elastic fibers,so it is an elastic cartilage.

  • Great videos.

    Thank you so much !

  • I suggest a remake, many people can get fooled when you say fibrocartilage..

  • Yall knew what he meant, give him a break .lol.!

  • amazing. Thanks again.

  • I'm pretty sure this is elastic cartilage......

  • Very good!!!! You teach very good!! I wish i`ve dicovered you early!

  • excuse me Dr.Minarcik, but isn't this "Elastic Cartilage"?

    because you refer to it as "Fibrocartilage" 2 times at: 0:06 and 0:58 .

    thanks,

  • @mohazsash

    fibrocartilage contains collagen AND elastic fibers...so i guess you can use it interchangeable

  • @foeasy16 No, fibrocartilage has type I collagen in addition to the type II in all cartilage. Elastic cartilage has elastin and type II cartilage. The 2 types of cartilage are different and not subsets of each other.

  • song name please?

  • YAY i'm last minute studying for

    my lab test tomorrow!

    fuck this video helped...alot =D

  • bad view at :47.

  • I'm guessing that he calls it fibrocartilage due to the elastic stain (orcein stain in this case?) showing a high concentration of elastic fibers in this tissue. Elastic fibers are constructed with Type III collagen, which is a type of fibrillar collagen. Thus, fibrocartilage is an appropriate name in this case. I'm not sure if that is why it's named that way though.

  • Aren't hyaline and elastic cartilages made of type II collegen?

  • Yes my mistake.. I think I confused elastic fibers with reticular fibers (which is highly composed of type III collagen - which also stains dark but with silver staining). So, hyaline and elastic cartilages are predominantly composed of type II collagen. Elastic fibers are the only histological difference in the case of elastic cartilage, and they're composed of glycoproteins, fibrullin, elastin, and a couple other proteins I can't rememeber off hand.

  • Sir, why do you refer to this as fibrocartilage??

  • thanx so much bro.really helpful.

  • thank you so much! this excellent!!

  • Thanks for the information.

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