hi there! i have a question is it possible to differentiate hyaline cartilage from elastic cartilage by looking not only at the stain and part of the body where it's found but i noticed that when it's hyaline cartilage there are isogenous cells present while in elastic cartilage there is the regular 1 lacuna w/ 1 chondrocyte? by the way i loved the idea of how parts that starts with letter E are elastic cartilage :) Thanks ! :)
@WashingtonDeceit Sorry to bother you, to my understanding, the fibroblast-like cells in the perichondrium are undifferentiated mesemchymal cells not fibroblast?? Any clarification will be much appreciated. Thank you for these videos - I'm very grateful for your time and efforts.
I believe the pericondrium is where the chondroblasts reside. The difference between hyaline articular and non-articular is that the non-articular does not have a perichondrium.
@TheDrnic dont you have it the other way around? articular does not have perichondrium. there are cells deep inside the perichondrium that form chondroblasts
my understanding is that the lacunae in the case of cartilage are not actually real, and are rather artifacts of fixation. As the tissue is fixed the chondrocytes shrink away from the matrix resulting in the surrounding space. So they're more like pseudo lacunae as opposed to lacunae you find in bones.
@scottyhoop yes. interstitial growth occurs during development->late puberty and appositional is the chief process in adult cartilage.
interstitial growth is like bread rising - chondrocytes in a lacunae divides and each starts creating cartilage matrix which spaces them out into new lacunae.
omfg god histoligi isnt going very well for me in my medical studies ;p wish me good luck for tomorrows test! at least this helped a bit! thanx!
Eztini 1 month ago
@Eztini get in there and kick ass!
WashingtonDeceit 1 month ago
Any trypophobics get freaked out by looking at this?
kittymimi200 2 months ago
indeed... it can grow both appostitional and interstitial :)
Wandelaarke 5 months ago
hi there! i have a question is it possible to differentiate hyaline cartilage from elastic cartilage by looking not only at the stain and part of the body where it's found but i noticed that when it's hyaline cartilage there are isogenous cells present while in elastic cartilage there is the regular 1 lacuna w/ 1 chondrocyte? by the way i loved the idea of how parts that starts with letter E are elastic cartilage :) Thanks ! :)
therunawayslover995 6 months ago
I believe you are correct Sdej!
WashingtonDeceit 7 months ago 3
@WashingtonDeceit Sorry to bother you, to my understanding, the fibroblast-like cells in the perichondrium are undifferentiated mesemchymal cells not fibroblast?? Any clarification will be much appreciated. Thank you for these videos - I'm very grateful for your time and efforts.
sdejanip 7 months ago
I believe the pericondrium is where the chondroblasts reside. The difference between hyaline articular and non-articular is that the non-articular does not have a perichondrium.
TheDrnic 10 months ago
@TheDrnic dont you have it the other way around? articular does not have perichondrium. there are cells deep inside the perichondrium that form chondroblasts
attta999 8 months ago
@attta999 that is true. Must have got mixed up when I posted this.
TheDrnic 8 months ago
No dif
WashingtonDeceit 1 year ago 2
im struggling to tell the difference between hyaline cartilage from the trachea and hyaline cartilage in the form of articular cartilage.
hazyb91 1 year ago
So nice! I can identify different types of cartilage after listening to you 10 seconds...
My applause. Thanks.
m4rk89 1 year ago
thank you good sir
oygk 1 year ago
There is really nothing in the entire body that looks like cartilage, except for cartilage.
Rachael251314 1 year ago
I like!
Bobbet9 1 year ago
Comment removed
razzin1234 1 year ago
@razzin1234 why would it be a joke?
gobais53 1 year ago
my understanding is that the lacunae in the case of cartilage are not actually real, and are rather artifacts of fixation. As the tissue is fixed the chondrocytes shrink away from the matrix resulting in the surrounding space. So they're more like pseudo lacunae as opposed to lacunae you find in bones.
jazter89 2 years ago
awesome,very helpful thanks!
Lsmg07 2 years ago
really helpful ,thanks
MsMatison 2 years ago
Thank you very much! To the nice person whom
shared this very informative video! Thank you!
panoz360 2 years ago
not too much detail! but very adequate day before exams! epinephrin adrenaline.... same sam but different!
SatchelBKatt 2 years ago
All examples of elastic cartilage start with an E, awesome!
Dameon5555 3 years ago 15
yeah, what the heLl is a TMJ?
Chillaxa101 3 years ago
temperomandibular joint (jaw!)
mieldelsol 3 years ago
u did mention about TMJ??
what is it actually??
ayuwhizzgirlz 3 years ago
Corniculate and cuneiform cartilage are also Elastic, though they do not start with "E."
mecervera 3 years ago
oh i like the video and i watch it several times its helpful
solomickf 3 years ago
Where are the perichondrium?
mitchsansom 4 years ago
scotty u r right
verbal typo (boo-boo)
there are a lot more in thee 650 movies
ty
wdc
WashingtonDeceit 4 years ago 4
i believe cartilage undergoes interstitial growth as well, not just appositional growth.
scottyhoop 4 years ago 17
@scottyhoop yes. interstitial growth occurs during development->late puberty and appositional is the chief process in adult cartilage.
interstitial growth is like bread rising - chondrocytes in a lacunae divides and each starts creating cartilage matrix which spaces them out into new lacunae.
twmd 1 year ago
@scottyhoop You are correct.
wuabel 1 year ago
@scottyhoop True
Pede89Denmark 1 year ago
Apart from the American pronunciations, pretty good all 'round!
darraghman 4 years ago
put1...c'est quoi tout ces videos educatifs de medcine ou je sais pas quoi...:D:D:D
RoZe88 4 years ago