The layers of the abdominal wall
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The layers of the abdominal wall
An animated guide to the human body : The muscle edition http://tabletopwhale.com/2014/08/12/a-users-guide-to-muscles.html
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A couple GIFs from Crash Course Anatomy & Physiology, because we heart you! ❤️ https://youtu.be/X9ZZ6tcxArI
Some GIFs for you! From one of our favourite episodes of Crash Course Anatomy & Physiology so far: Joints! https://youtu.be/DLxYDoN634c
by In a Nutshell-Kurzgesagt
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQGOcOUBi6s
Location of lobes of Lungs
#lobes #lungs #anatomy #physiology #usmle #doctor #doctordconline #nhs #usmlestep1 #usmlestep2 #nurse #nursing #xray #medstudent #medschool #medicine #medlife #amc #plab #mrcp #mcat #hospital #patient #pathology
Making a human
Source: Eleanor Lutz
There’s a bunch more of this kind of stuff on Proko.com
Please look at the rest of the blog I’ve reblogged this from. It’s great!
Another cat dissection video- - Chest and arm muscles
Ventral cat thigh. Excellent video
Cat muscle dissection
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fysJk6voSn4
Powerpoint presentation of dissection photographs of cat and selected organs of cow, sheep, and pig versus cadaver comparing similarities and contrasting differences in the anatomy.
Another excellent comparative anatomy resource in structural identification.
11 terms · abdominals (all) → thinner in cats because they w…, Pectoralis Major and Minor → major is smaller than minor in…, latissimus Dorsi → smaller and rectangular in cats, trapezius → 3 in cat (spinotrapezius, acro…
Knowing why the muscles are the way they are is very helpful when learning them.
Adductors can be confusing. Here are some good pictures to get a feel of how they’re arranged.
Muscles! I'm sorry I forgot to include the sarcoplasmic reticulum and the T-tubules! You can kinda see them scratched in there. Here's a link to a full downloadable picture that you can also zoom in on: https://docs.google.com/file/d/0BxXQpU-1z_WVNzFyX1VWcUxMUzA/edit
Notice how nerves are set up in a similar fashion. Replace the -mysiums with -neurium and you have a diagram that is applicable to nerves. Action potentials are pretty much the same thing in both muscles and nerves.
Do you know what the thymus does?
The thymus is a primary lymphoid tissue; along with bone marrow, it is the site where T lymphocytes, components of adaptive immunity, develop. While T cells complete maturation in the thymus, B cells complete development in the bone marrow.
Secondary lymphoid tissues, on the other hand, are sites where fully developed B and T lymphocytes circulate awaiting activation by pathogens. These include the spleen, appendix, tonsil, adenoid, Peyer’s patch, etc.
Image from David B. Fankhauser, Ph.D, University of Cincinnati Clermont College