-
Goosebumps
Goose Bumps is a video project that was designed towards an 8th grade audience. The video describes the presence and causation of goose bumps on the human body through the use of skits, diagrams, and illustrations. During the video, we explain how environmental and emotional triggers (such as: the cold or fear) can cause the occurrence of goose bumps due to the release of hormones, such as Adrenal
-
The Basic Structure of the Hair Follicle and Skin
This short presentation looks at the basic parts of the hair follicle that are essential knowledge for people learning to be a hairstylist or barber. These include the dermal papilla, the hair root, the blood supply, the sebaceous gland, the nerve endings and the arrector pili muscle.
-
Why Do We Get Goose Bumps?
Learn more for free: https://www.khanacademy.org/a/372h
"Why Do We Get Goose Bumps?" is part of our mission to provide free education to the modern world. You can help spread the knowledge by liking, commenting, and subscribing to the Science Saturdays channel.
Science Saturdays is on Google+, Reddit, and Blogger!
Google+: http://tinyurl.com/nyj72dj
Reddit: http://tinyurl.com/kb6438w
Science Sat
-
10 Useless Human Body Parts
►Donate With PAYPAL: https://goo.gl/96TtMe
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Facebook Page ► http://www.facebook.com/sxmscelik
We all have body parts that are absolutely necessary such as the heart, brain, lungs, kidneys, stomach, etc., but we also have body parts that are pretty much useless. Let’s take a look at some human body parts that serve very little or no purpose:
1. Plica semilunar
-
Arrector Pili
Domestic Animal Biology Assignment - Cornell University
By: Mia Olmedillo
-
ANATOMY; VISCERAL SMOOTH MUSCLE & CARDIAC MUSCLE HISTOLOGY by Professor Fink
In this Video-Lecture Professor Fink describes the Histology (Microanatomy) of Visceral Smooth Muscle and Cardiac Muscle, while comparing and contrasting them with the Histology of Skeletal Muscle Tissue. Reference is also made to intercalated discs (gap junctions), peristaltic contractions, autonomic motorneurons, vasoconstriction, bronchoconstriction, Iris of the Eye, and arrector pili muscles.
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Hair Specialist Trichologist The Scalp Dermis
Hair Specialist Trichologist - The Scalp Dermis
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
info@absolique.com.au
Not only is hair a completely different structure to the scalp, the scalp has a surface which is called the ‘epidermis’ and also many layers underneath that form the ‘dermis’. The epidermis is what we look at for
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Skin Song
Learn about skin: types of tissue, layers, accessory structures and functions. "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" (Beverly Hillbillies Theme) was written by Paul Henning. No copyright intended. Lyrics are below.
SKIN SONG
The skin has three layers
Epidermis you do see
Outside stratum corneum
is dead as it can be
The stratum basale
is the layer that divides
The cells move away from blood
bec
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Pilosebaceous unit Meaning
Video shows what pilosebaceous unit means. The structure consisting of hair, hair follicle, arrector pili muscle and sebaceous gland.. Pilosebaceous unit Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say pilosebaceous unit. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
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Leg Waxing & Goosebumps : Waxing Tips & Tricks
Subscribe Now:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehowbeauty
Watch More:
http://www.youtube.com/ehowbeauty
Goosebumps are caused by tiny muscles called erector pili in each hair follicle contracting making the hair stand up. Find out about leg waxing and goosebumps with help from an experienced fashion professional in this free video clip.
Expert: Summer Vasilas
Bio: Summer Vas
-
Work it Out
Remix of Acapella by Karmin for our Physiology project on Arrector Pili Muscle. Enjoy~
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Scalp Treatments for Hair Loss, Brush Therapy
Scalp Treatments for Hair Loss, Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
Why Scalp Brush Therapy? Before you wash your hair next time consider this, scalp is skin, and you’re trying to wash away scalp scale, scalp oil and dandruff with a Hair Shampoo! Preparing the Scalp prior to washing your scalp skin with
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10 Useless Body Parts
Check out which of your 10 body ports are virtually useless.
Our bodies are intricate in nature. Every single part is supposed to have its own function, however that's not entirely true. Here are 10 useless human body parts.
Number 10 -- Following childbirth, nipples on women are very useful, but on men.... well there's no purpose whatsoever.
Number 9 -- Ahh yes, the ever attractive body hair.
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Anatomy of Skin
Sorry the beginning got cut off! The beginning said, the epidermis is made up of tons of stratified squamous epithelium. Others as shown: dermis, hair shaft, hair root, artery, vein, arrector pili muscle, sweat gland, sweat duct, sebaceous gland, receptors (pain, temperature, touch), pacinian corpuscle
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Natural Hair Loss Treatment Start with Scalp Brush Therapy
Natural Hair Loss Treatment – Start with Scalp Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
info@absolique.com.au
Scalp is skin, the scalp skin is home, incubator and protector of your hair follicle and all of its essential appendages. So why is it that we never consider the intrinsic scalp skin when washing our
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"In the Epidermis" Anatomy Project - Music Video
Parody of "I Want It That Way" by the Backstreet Boys. The song is a lower pitched recording of our voices because it just sounded weird higher pitched :P Not the best video, but it worked for the time we had :D
"In the Epidermis" Lyrics
Skin
Integumentary
Is what, protects me
insulates me and
keeps organs in my body
And first, is hair shafts
they grow, from follicles
Arrector
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Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy
Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
Before you wash your hair next time consider this, scalp is skin, and your trying to wash away scalp scale, scalp oil and scalp dandruff with a Hair Shampoo! Preparing the Scalp prior to washing your scalp skin with Scalp Brush Therap
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7 Most Interesting Useless Body Parts of Animals
If you enjoy my content, please follow me on:
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Source:
7 Most Interesting Useless Body Parts of Animals
Description:
Male Breast Tissue and Nipples
The subject of male nipples is a sensitive topic to many. Those who wish to invalidate evolutionary theory might pose the question, "Was
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10 Useless Body Parts That We Don't Need Anymore
Top 10 parts of your body that we don't need anymore, according to Nickipedia!
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/9CwQhg
Subscribe to Nickipedia: http://bit.ly/1G97GmA
Other Videos You Might Like
Why Yawning Is Contagious: https://youtu.be/LKed9j5Vvlc
People Born With Extra Body Parts: https://youtu.be/orvnkDzv4ow
Description:
Our friend Nick Uhas from Nickipedia gave us his list of the to
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How To Prevent Hair Loss - The Hair Loss Vitamins
http://stoplosinghairnow.info/
How To Prevent Hair Loss - The Hair Loss Vitamins
What is Hair Growth?
While many of us may wish for long, luscious, healthy hair, we are not always that
lucky. Growing your hair requires time, effort and patience! Often people who have
dry, damaged or very thin, limp hair struggle to grow their hair. This may
partly be due to a poor diet, underlying diseas
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Care of the Hair and Nails 1951 Encyclopaedia Britannica Films
more at http://quickfound.net/
"A fairy tale character uses magic to help youngsters learn good health habits."
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the re
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SUMMER TOUR 2011 - THE OUTTAKES
SUMMER TOUR 2011 - THE OUTTAKES
Sezione contenuti speciali, solo per assidui collezionisti e fan instancabili.
directed by Giuseppe Fiori
Hair is a filamentous biomaterial, that grows from follicles found in the dermis. Found exclusively in mammals, hair is one of the defining characteristics of the mammalian class.[1] The human body, apart from its glabrous skin, is covered in follicles
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Video 67.wmv
Itch (Latin: pruritus) is an unpleasant sensation that evokes the desire or reflex to scratchAlso attached to the follicle is a tiny bundle of muscle fiber called the arrector pili that is responsible for causing the follicle lissis to become more perpendicular to the surface of the skin, and causing the follicle to protrude slightly above the surrounding skin (piloerection)and a pore incased with
Goosebumps
Goose Bumps is a video project that was designed towards an 8th grade audience. The video describes the presence and causation of goose bumps on the human body ...
Goose Bumps is a video project that was designed towards an 8th grade audience. The video describes the presence and causation of goose bumps on the human body through the use of skits, diagrams, and illustrations. During the video, we explain how environmental and emotional triggers (such as: the cold or fear) can cause the occurrence of goose bumps due to the release of hormones, such as Adrenaline. When visual or physical stimuli cause adrenaline and other hormones to be released, the hormones initiate the contraction of the Arrector pili muscle. Because the muscle is attached to the epidermis and the hair follicle, when the muscle contracts, the hair shaft is pulled upright and the skin around the hair follicle becomes depressed. This creates a dimple at the skin surface which forms an air pocket between the hair and the skin. Though goose bumps do not seem to serve much purpose for the present day human, recall that pre-historic mankind had a lot more hair. The video explains how the formation of goose bumps can improve chances of survival for a prehistoric human by acting as an insulator from the cold environment and to increase the visual size of the prehistoric human to deter potential predators. These descriptions support the theory as to why we develop goose bumps today.
wn.com/Goosebumps
Goose Bumps is a video project that was designed towards an 8th grade audience. The video describes the presence and causation of goose bumps on the human body through the use of skits, diagrams, and illustrations. During the video, we explain how environmental and emotional triggers (such as: the cold or fear) can cause the occurrence of goose bumps due to the release of hormones, such as Adrenaline. When visual or physical stimuli cause adrenaline and other hormones to be released, the hormones initiate the contraction of the Arrector pili muscle. Because the muscle is attached to the epidermis and the hair follicle, when the muscle contracts, the hair shaft is pulled upright and the skin around the hair follicle becomes depressed. This creates a dimple at the skin surface which forms an air pocket between the hair and the skin. Though goose bumps do not seem to serve much purpose for the present day human, recall that pre-historic mankind had a lot more hair. The video explains how the formation of goose bumps can improve chances of survival for a prehistoric human by acting as an insulator from the cold environment and to increase the visual size of the prehistoric human to deter potential predators. These descriptions support the theory as to why we develop goose bumps today.
- published: 13 Dec 2013
- views: 12714
The Basic Structure of the Hair Follicle and Skin
This short presentation looks at the basic parts of the hair follicle that are essential knowledge for people learning to be a hairstylist or barber. These incl...
This short presentation looks at the basic parts of the hair follicle that are essential knowledge for people learning to be a hairstylist or barber. These include the dermal papilla, the hair root, the blood supply, the sebaceous gland, the nerve endings and the arrector pili muscle.
wn.com/The Basic Structure Of The Hair Follicle And Skin
This short presentation looks at the basic parts of the hair follicle that are essential knowledge for people learning to be a hairstylist or barber. These include the dermal papilla, the hair root, the blood supply, the sebaceous gland, the nerve endings and the arrector pili muscle.
- published: 28 May 2013
- views: 9278
Why Do We Get Goose Bumps?
Learn more for free: https://www.khanacademy.org/a/372h
"Why Do We Get Goose Bumps?" is part of our mission to provide free education to the modern world. You ...
Learn more for free: https://www.khanacademy.org/a/372h
"Why Do We Get Goose Bumps?" is part of our mission to provide free education to the modern world. You can help spread the knowledge by liking, commenting, and subscribing to the Science Saturdays channel.
Science Saturdays is on Google+, Reddit, and Blogger!
Google+: http://tinyurl.com/nyj72dj
Reddit: http://tinyurl.com/kb6438w
Science Saturdays Blog: http://tinyurl.com/mzzxutv
Sources: http://tinyurl.com/lje3jsc
If you would like to read along while you listen to the video, you can either turn on captions or read the script below.
Cutis anserina, commonly known as goose bumps, have no purpose. Or at least that's how it seems. So why do we get goose bumps? Goose bumps are a vestigial reflex, meaning that they have lost their ancestral function in our species. However, back when we were primates, goose bumps purposely occurred for two reasons, being cold, and having extreme emotions, some of which include fear, nostalgia, pleasure, sexual arousal, awe, admiration, and euphoria. So why do we get goose bumps in what seems like two totally separate cases? Well just as goose bumps have two causes, they also have two purposes. When the body is cold, the arrector pili muscles located at the base of each hair follicle contract, making the hair erect. In response to this involuntary reflex, the skin bunches up, creating what we know as a goose bump. In return, an extra layer of insulation is created, maintaining the body's temperature. Since humans don't have a lot of hair nowadays, this once essential reflex now serves us no purpose. On the other hand, when we experience a strong, stressful emotion like fear, our sympathetic nervous system pumps adrenaline through our body, once again starting the goose bump reaction, formally known as the piloerection reflex. Although the same reflex is occurring, it now occurs for a different reason. When the hair stands erect, the human now appears bigger, a trait that was very helpful in intimidating predators back in time. Today goose bumps are more of a nuisance than they are a help, but ultimately we still have them because humans just simply haven't gotten rid of them through evolution.
wn.com/Why Do We Get Goose Bumps
Learn more for free: https://www.khanacademy.org/a/372h
"Why Do We Get Goose Bumps?" is part of our mission to provide free education to the modern world. You can help spread the knowledge by liking, commenting, and subscribing to the Science Saturdays channel.
Science Saturdays is on Google+, Reddit, and Blogger!
Google+: http://tinyurl.com/nyj72dj
Reddit: http://tinyurl.com/kb6438w
Science Saturdays Blog: http://tinyurl.com/mzzxutv
Sources: http://tinyurl.com/lje3jsc
If you would like to read along while you listen to the video, you can either turn on captions or read the script below.
Cutis anserina, commonly known as goose bumps, have no purpose. Or at least that's how it seems. So why do we get goose bumps? Goose bumps are a vestigial reflex, meaning that they have lost their ancestral function in our species. However, back when we were primates, goose bumps purposely occurred for two reasons, being cold, and having extreme emotions, some of which include fear, nostalgia, pleasure, sexual arousal, awe, admiration, and euphoria. So why do we get goose bumps in what seems like two totally separate cases? Well just as goose bumps have two causes, they also have two purposes. When the body is cold, the arrector pili muscles located at the base of each hair follicle contract, making the hair erect. In response to this involuntary reflex, the skin bunches up, creating what we know as a goose bump. In return, an extra layer of insulation is created, maintaining the body's temperature. Since humans don't have a lot of hair nowadays, this once essential reflex now serves us no purpose. On the other hand, when we experience a strong, stressful emotion like fear, our sympathetic nervous system pumps adrenaline through our body, once again starting the goose bump reaction, formally known as the piloerection reflex. Although the same reflex is occurring, it now occurs for a different reason. When the hair stands erect, the human now appears bigger, a trait that was very helpful in intimidating predators back in time. Today goose bumps are more of a nuisance than they are a help, but ultimately we still have them because humans just simply haven't gotten rid of them through evolution.
- published: 04 Jan 2014
- views: 3188
10 Useless Human Body Parts
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Facebook Page ► http://www.facebook.com/sxmscelik
We all have body parts that ...
►Donate With PAYPAL: https://goo.gl/96TtMe
►SUBSCRIBE NOW: https://goo.gl/NktkX7
Facebook Page ► http://www.facebook.com/sxmscelik
We all have body parts that are absolutely necessary such as the heart, brain, lungs, kidneys, stomach, etc., but we also have body parts that are pretty much useless. Let’s take a look at some human body parts that serve very little or no purpose:
1. Plica semilunaris (Third Eyelid)
Fragments of a third eyelid known as the plica semilunaris can be found next to the tear duct.
Although it is not needed for survival or vision, it does serve a purpose. During eye movement, the plica semilunaris ensures tear drainage and sweeps debris away from the eye.
2. Darwin’s Point (Top Skin Fold On Ear)
Darwin’s point, also known as Darwin’s tubercle, is a small fold of skin that forms on 10 percent of people’s upper ear.
Its origins are unclear, however, research shows it may have been a joint that allowed the ear to swivel or flop down.
3. Body Hair
Hair on our head can insulate heat, eyebrows keep sweat out of our eyes, and male facial hair could play a role in sexual attraction, but what do we need body hair for?
4. Vomeronasal Organ
Vomeronasal organ, or Jacobson’s organ, is found on the olfactory system of amphibians, reptiles, and mammals.
Described as chemoreceptors, this non-functioning specialized sensory system in the nose is used to detect chemicals,
in the case of humans, pheromones.
5. Wisdom Teeth
Other than being extremely painful to remove, wisdom teeth serve no purpose with the exception of misaligning
our jaw and impeding on dental hygiene.
Today, around 35 percent of the population no longer develops their third and final set of molars.
6. Auricular Muscles
Anterior, posterior, and superior auricular muscles surround the outer ear and are used to swivel some animal’s ears
towards the direction of sound, but serve no purpose with humans.
Unless you find it funny when people can wiggle their ears.
7. Coccyx
Found at the very end of vertebral column, the coccyx is comprised of three to five vertebrae below the sacrum
that are either separate or fused together.
The coccyx, or tailbone, is a vertebrae leftover from when our distant ancestors were walking around with tails.
8. Erector Pili
Erector pili, or arrector pili muscles, are tiny muscles that are attached to our hair follicles via smooth muscle
fibers. When these muscles contract they cause hair to stand on end, something we commonly refer to as goose bumps.
9. Appendix
While the appendix is found between the small intestine and large intestine it plays no role in digestion.
Experts suggest it may have served a purpose when the human diet was mostly made up of plants.
Now it only becomes inflamed and infected before finally rupturing when someone develops appendicitis.
10. Male Nipples
Why do men have nipples anyway? All human fetuses develop nipples even before our gender is determined.
While it is rare, men are capable of lactating.
►SUBSCRIBE ► [MC Gamer] ►Channel: https://goo.gl/h6FNXh
Don't forget to click LIKE, SUBSCRIBE and COMMENT Below!
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Music:
"Ultralounge" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
"Pyro Flow" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
All Music Are:
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
wn.com/10 Useless Human Body Parts
►Donate With PAYPAL: https://goo.gl/96TtMe
►SUBSCRIBE NOW: https://goo.gl/NktkX7
Facebook Page ► http://www.facebook.com/sxmscelik
We all have body parts that are absolutely necessary such as the heart, brain, lungs, kidneys, stomach, etc., but we also have body parts that are pretty much useless. Let’s take a look at some human body parts that serve very little or no purpose:
1. Plica semilunaris (Third Eyelid)
Fragments of a third eyelid known as the plica semilunaris can be found next to the tear duct.
Although it is not needed for survival or vision, it does serve a purpose. During eye movement, the plica semilunaris ensures tear drainage and sweeps debris away from the eye.
2. Darwin’s Point (Top Skin Fold On Ear)
Darwin’s point, also known as Darwin’s tubercle, is a small fold of skin that forms on 10 percent of people’s upper ear.
Its origins are unclear, however, research shows it may have been a joint that allowed the ear to swivel or flop down.
3. Body Hair
Hair on our head can insulate heat, eyebrows keep sweat out of our eyes, and male facial hair could play a role in sexual attraction, but what do we need body hair for?
4. Vomeronasal Organ
Vomeronasal organ, or Jacobson’s organ, is found on the olfactory system of amphibians, reptiles, and mammals.
Described as chemoreceptors, this non-functioning specialized sensory system in the nose is used to detect chemicals,
in the case of humans, pheromones.
5. Wisdom Teeth
Other than being extremely painful to remove, wisdom teeth serve no purpose with the exception of misaligning
our jaw and impeding on dental hygiene.
Today, around 35 percent of the population no longer develops their third and final set of molars.
6. Auricular Muscles
Anterior, posterior, and superior auricular muscles surround the outer ear and are used to swivel some animal’s ears
towards the direction of sound, but serve no purpose with humans.
Unless you find it funny when people can wiggle their ears.
7. Coccyx
Found at the very end of vertebral column, the coccyx is comprised of three to five vertebrae below the sacrum
that are either separate or fused together.
The coccyx, or tailbone, is a vertebrae leftover from when our distant ancestors were walking around with tails.
8. Erector Pili
Erector pili, or arrector pili muscles, are tiny muscles that are attached to our hair follicles via smooth muscle
fibers. When these muscles contract they cause hair to stand on end, something we commonly refer to as goose bumps.
9. Appendix
While the appendix is found between the small intestine and large intestine it plays no role in digestion.
Experts suggest it may have served a purpose when the human diet was mostly made up of plants.
Now it only becomes inflamed and infected before finally rupturing when someone develops appendicitis.
10. Male Nipples
Why do men have nipples anyway? All human fetuses develop nipples even before our gender is determined.
While it is rare, men are capable of lactating.
►SUBSCRIBE ► [MC Gamer] ►Channel: https://goo.gl/h6FNXh
Don't forget to click LIKE, SUBSCRIBE and COMMENT Below!
►Donate My Channel With PAYPAL: https://goo.gl/96TtMe
Contact ► sxcelik@gmail.com
▼Follow Me On▼
Website ► http://sxmscelik.com/
Facebook ► http://www.facebook.com/sxmscelik
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Google+ ► http://plus.google.com/+sxmscelik
Pinterest ► http://www.pinterest.com/sxmscelik
Music:
"Ultralounge" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
"Pyro Flow" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
All Music Are:
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
- published: 05 Jan 2016
- views: 1853
Arrector Pili
Domestic Animal Biology Assignment - Cornell University
By: Mia Olmedillo...
Domestic Animal Biology Assignment - Cornell University
By: Mia Olmedillo
wn.com/Arrector Pili
Domestic Animal Biology Assignment - Cornell University
By: Mia Olmedillo
- published: 10 Sep 2015
- views: 60
ANATOMY; VISCERAL SMOOTH MUSCLE & CARDIAC MUSCLE HISTOLOGY by Professor Fink
In this Video-Lecture Professor Fink describes the Histology (Microanatomy) of Visceral Smooth Muscle and Cardiac Muscle, while comparing and contrasting them w...
In this Video-Lecture Professor Fink describes the Histology (Microanatomy) of Visceral Smooth Muscle and Cardiac Muscle, while comparing and contrasting them with the Histology of Skeletal Muscle Tissue. Reference is also made to intercalated discs (gap junctions), peristaltic contractions, autonomic motorneurons, vasoconstriction, bronchoconstriction, Iris of the Eye, and arrector pili muscles.
Check-out professor fink's web-site or additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com
See Playlists: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-PGxg0OB4e-0E0a3JrPPbw/videos?view=1
Down-loadable e-books of the Lecture Outlines by Professor Fink (as well as "hard copy" versions) can be purchased from the WLAC Bookstore at: http://onlinestore.wlac.edu/fink.asp
wn.com/Anatomy Visceral Smooth Muscle Cardiac Muscle Histology By Professor Fink
In this Video-Lecture Professor Fink describes the Histology (Microanatomy) of Visceral Smooth Muscle and Cardiac Muscle, while comparing and contrasting them with the Histology of Skeletal Muscle Tissue. Reference is also made to intercalated discs (gap junctions), peristaltic contractions, autonomic motorneurons, vasoconstriction, bronchoconstriction, Iris of the Eye, and arrector pili muscles.
Check-out professor fink's web-site or additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com
See Playlists: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-PGxg0OB4e-0E0a3JrPPbw/videos?view=1
Down-loadable e-books of the Lecture Outlines by Professor Fink (as well as "hard copy" versions) can be purchased from the WLAC Bookstore at: http://onlinestore.wlac.edu/fink.asp
- published: 11 Jan 2014
- views: 8065
Hair Specialist Trichologist The Scalp Dermis
Hair Specialist Trichologist - The Scalp Dermis
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.a...
Hair Specialist Trichologist - The Scalp Dermis
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
info@absolique.com.au
Not only is hair a completely different structure to the scalp, the scalp has a surface which is called the ‘epidermis’ and also many layers underneath that form the ‘dermis’. The epidermis is what we look at for signs of the hair health and hair growth changes relating to hair thinning, hair loss and disturbed hair cycles.
The dermis show many more signs like the health of the oil gland (sebaceous gland) attached to each and every hair follicle, the arrector pili muscle, which is why it hurts when you pull your hair, the rate of cellular division which when going too fast can appear as dandruff on the scalp and most importantly, the blood supply to the hair delivering the oxygen and nutrients to the hair bulb so the hair gets what it needs to grow.
Hair Specialist Trichologist - The Scalp Dermis Microscopic diagnosis of the scalp shows:
• Under and overactive oil glands, blocked oil glands, dehydrated under functioning oil glands
• The tensile strength of the arrector pili muscle
• Presence of too many dead skin cells
• Health of scalp circulation
• Presence of translucent hairs that cannot be seen on the epidermis or without a microscope
The dermis gives so many more clues to what can be seen on the epidermis. One of the main things of interest are the amount of these translucent hairs found, these hairs are alive, but have had so much cellular damage they have no structure. So when I am calculating the results expected from Absolique Natural Hair Loss Treatments, we always consider these tiny unseen to the eye translucent hairs.
The correct scalp preparation taught and practised at Absolique Hair Health Clinic address all of the issues found on the epidermis and dermis to deliver the best result in combination therapy. We share this with you in hope you will understand and appreciate why you need to follow our instructions of changing the way you wash your hair to focus on the scalp, to deliver the best results from addressing all symptoms and causes.
Contact Absolique Hair Health Clinic Hair Specialist Trichologist for more information about The Scalp Dermis, hair loss, hair thinning and hair loss treatments that work. Email info@absolique.com.au or call our friendly reception team on 07 3229 3242
wn.com/Hair Specialist Trichologist The Scalp Dermis
Hair Specialist Trichologist - The Scalp Dermis
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
info@absolique.com.au
Not only is hair a completely different structure to the scalp, the scalp has a surface which is called the ‘epidermis’ and also many layers underneath that form the ‘dermis’. The epidermis is what we look at for signs of the hair health and hair growth changes relating to hair thinning, hair loss and disturbed hair cycles.
The dermis show many more signs like the health of the oil gland (sebaceous gland) attached to each and every hair follicle, the arrector pili muscle, which is why it hurts when you pull your hair, the rate of cellular division which when going too fast can appear as dandruff on the scalp and most importantly, the blood supply to the hair delivering the oxygen and nutrients to the hair bulb so the hair gets what it needs to grow.
Hair Specialist Trichologist - The Scalp Dermis Microscopic diagnosis of the scalp shows:
• Under and overactive oil glands, blocked oil glands, dehydrated under functioning oil glands
• The tensile strength of the arrector pili muscle
• Presence of too many dead skin cells
• Health of scalp circulation
• Presence of translucent hairs that cannot be seen on the epidermis or without a microscope
The dermis gives so many more clues to what can be seen on the epidermis. One of the main things of interest are the amount of these translucent hairs found, these hairs are alive, but have had so much cellular damage they have no structure. So when I am calculating the results expected from Absolique Natural Hair Loss Treatments, we always consider these tiny unseen to the eye translucent hairs.
The correct scalp preparation taught and practised at Absolique Hair Health Clinic address all of the issues found on the epidermis and dermis to deliver the best result in combination therapy. We share this with you in hope you will understand and appreciate why you need to follow our instructions of changing the way you wash your hair to focus on the scalp, to deliver the best results from addressing all symptoms and causes.
Contact Absolique Hair Health Clinic Hair Specialist Trichologist for more information about The Scalp Dermis, hair loss, hair thinning and hair loss treatments that work. Email info@absolique.com.au or call our friendly reception team on 07 3229 3242
- published: 29 Jun 2015
- views: 414
Skin Song
Learn about skin: types of tissue, layers, accessory structures and functions. "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" (Beverly Hillbillies Theme) was written by Paul Hen...
Learn about skin: types of tissue, layers, accessory structures and functions. "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" (Beverly Hillbillies Theme) was written by Paul Henning. No copyright intended. Lyrics are below.
SKIN SONG
The skin has three layers
Epidermis you do see
Outside stratum corneum
is dead as it can be
The stratum basale
is the layer that divides
The cells move away from blood
become keratinized
tough...waterproof...then they flake off
Deep in epidermis
pigment is called melanin
It is the reason
why there's color in your skin
It helps absorb the light rays
and protects from sunlight
Stratified squamous
make the epidermis right
five layers...real thick
The dermis is below
with lots of blood vessels you'll see
It helps to control
temperature of the body
Sudoriferous glands,
coiled eccrine produce sweat
After puberty,
apocrine smell you bet
In the groin...armpits
Epidermal cells divide
make hair in follicle
Hair stands up, it's goose bumps
arrector pili muscle
Hair grows from the root
and the shaft is what you see
Sebaceous glands keep hair/skin soft
Sebum is oily
Makes it pliable...waterproof too
Nails are a part of skin
protect the digits well
Stratified squamous
keratinized epithelial cells
Also in the dermis,
neurons motor and sensory
For touch, temperature, pressure, pain,
work effectively
General senses...two t's two p's
Fibrous connective dermis
below subcutaneous
Where there are major blood
vessels-hypodermis
Mostly made of adipose
cushions and insulates
The integumentary system,
now ain't it great
You all learn about the skin now ya hear
wn.com/Skin Song
Learn about skin: types of tissue, layers, accessory structures and functions. "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" (Beverly Hillbillies Theme) was written by Paul Henning. No copyright intended. Lyrics are below.
SKIN SONG
The skin has three layers
Epidermis you do see
Outside stratum corneum
is dead as it can be
The stratum basale
is the layer that divides
The cells move away from blood
become keratinized
tough...waterproof...then they flake off
Deep in epidermis
pigment is called melanin
It is the reason
why there's color in your skin
It helps absorb the light rays
and protects from sunlight
Stratified squamous
make the epidermis right
five layers...real thick
The dermis is below
with lots of blood vessels you'll see
It helps to control
temperature of the body
Sudoriferous glands,
coiled eccrine produce sweat
After puberty,
apocrine smell you bet
In the groin...armpits
Epidermal cells divide
make hair in follicle
Hair stands up, it's goose bumps
arrector pili muscle
Hair grows from the root
and the shaft is what you see
Sebaceous glands keep hair/skin soft
Sebum is oily
Makes it pliable...waterproof too
Nails are a part of skin
protect the digits well
Stratified squamous
keratinized epithelial cells
Also in the dermis,
neurons motor and sensory
For touch, temperature, pressure, pain,
work effectively
General senses...two t's two p's
Fibrous connective dermis
below subcutaneous
Where there are major blood
vessels-hypodermis
Mostly made of adipose
cushions and insulates
The integumentary system,
now ain't it great
You all learn about the skin now ya hear
- published: 16 Jul 2013
- views: 5096
Pilosebaceous unit Meaning
Video shows what pilosebaceous unit means. The structure consisting of hair, hair follicle, arrector pili muscle and sebaceous gland.. Pilosebaceous unit Meani...
Video shows what pilosebaceous unit means. The structure consisting of hair, hair follicle, arrector pili muscle and sebaceous gland.. Pilosebaceous unit Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say pilosebaceous unit. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
wn.com/Pilosebaceous Unit Meaning
Video shows what pilosebaceous unit means. The structure consisting of hair, hair follicle, arrector pili muscle and sebaceous gland.. Pilosebaceous unit Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say pilosebaceous unit. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
- published: 25 Apr 2015
- views: 128
Leg Waxing & Goosebumps : Waxing Tips & Tricks
Subscribe Now:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehowbeauty
Watch More:
http://www.youtube.com/ehowbeauty
Goosebumps are caused by tiny musc...
Subscribe Now:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehowbeauty
Watch More:
http://www.youtube.com/ehowbeauty
Goosebumps are caused by tiny muscles called erector pili in each hair follicle contracting making the hair stand up. Find out about leg waxing and goosebumps with help from an experienced fashion professional in this free video clip.
Expert: Summer Vasilas
Bio: Summer Vasilas is the Co-Founder and Director of Training for Waxing the City.
Filmmaker: John Wynne
Series Description: Body waxing can be a complicated topic, so you always want to make sure that you ask questions if you're concerned. Get waxing tips and tricks with help from an experienced fashion professional in this free video series.
wn.com/Leg Waxing Goosebumps Waxing Tips Tricks
Subscribe Now:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehowbeauty
Watch More:
http://www.youtube.com/ehowbeauty
Goosebumps are caused by tiny muscles called erector pili in each hair follicle contracting making the hair stand up. Find out about leg waxing and goosebumps with help from an experienced fashion professional in this free video clip.
Expert: Summer Vasilas
Bio: Summer Vasilas is the Co-Founder and Director of Training for Waxing the City.
Filmmaker: John Wynne
Series Description: Body waxing can be a complicated topic, so you always want to make sure that you ask questions if you're concerned. Get waxing tips and tricks with help from an experienced fashion professional in this free video series.
- published: 28 Apr 2014
- views: 4332
Work it Out
Remix of Acapella by Karmin for our Physiology project on Arrector Pili Muscle. Enjoy~...
Remix of Acapella by Karmin for our Physiology project on Arrector Pili Muscle. Enjoy~
wn.com/Work It Out
Remix of Acapella by Karmin for our Physiology project on Arrector Pili Muscle. Enjoy~
- published: 29 Sep 2013
- views: 73
Scalp Treatments for Hair Loss, Brush Therapy
Scalp Treatments for Hair Loss, Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/...
Scalp Treatments for Hair Loss, Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
Why Scalp Brush Therapy? Before you wash your hair next time consider this, scalp is skin, and you’re trying to wash away scalp scale, scalp oil and dandruff with a Hair Shampoo! Preparing the Scalp prior to washing your scalp skin with Scalp Brush Therapy is a simple effective way to ensure proper scalp cleansing to enhance topical Home Hair Loss Treatments and Natural Hair Loss Treatments.
Scalp Treatments for Hair Loss, Brush Therapy:
• Stimulates the scalp
• Exfoliates scalp skin
• Lifting scalp scale and dandruff off the scalp
• Stimulates oil gland attached to hair follicle
• Oil is released onto the surface of the scalp skin
• Scalp stuff can now be effectively washed away with a Scalp Cleanser, a Hair Shampoo can’t do this
Scalp Brush Therapy also stimulates the erector pili muscles attached to the hair follicles and in turn, the blood supply, so you are in effect, feeding you hair bulb and creating cellular energy plus flushing out unwanted oil all at the same time. You certainly don’t want all of that debris left sitting on your scalp skin so the scalp should be washed as soon as possible with a Scalp Cleanser after Scalp Brush Therapy. Scalp Brush Therapy is fantastic for those suffering oily hair problems because with most oily hair clients they can go an extra day without washing, which is a big deal if you have to wash your hair every day because of oily hair problems.
How to do scalp brush therapy: Start with Brush Therapy over the entire scalp for 1 – 2 minutes or until you feel a warm tingling sensation on the scalp. Brush Therapy must be on dry hair/scalp before you wash. Don’t do Brush Therapy unless you are going cleanse your scalp. We can teach you how with our in clinic program induction complimentary with any initial product purchase or watch Scalp Brush Therapy by Absolique Hair Health Clinic on YouTube. Scalp Brush Therapy feels good too!
wn.com/Scalp Treatments For Hair Loss, Brush Therapy
Scalp Treatments for Hair Loss, Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
Why Scalp Brush Therapy? Before you wash your hair next time consider this, scalp is skin, and you’re trying to wash away scalp scale, scalp oil and dandruff with a Hair Shampoo! Preparing the Scalp prior to washing your scalp skin with Scalp Brush Therapy is a simple effective way to ensure proper scalp cleansing to enhance topical Home Hair Loss Treatments and Natural Hair Loss Treatments.
Scalp Treatments for Hair Loss, Brush Therapy:
• Stimulates the scalp
• Exfoliates scalp skin
• Lifting scalp scale and dandruff off the scalp
• Stimulates oil gland attached to hair follicle
• Oil is released onto the surface of the scalp skin
• Scalp stuff can now be effectively washed away with a Scalp Cleanser, a Hair Shampoo can’t do this
Scalp Brush Therapy also stimulates the erector pili muscles attached to the hair follicles and in turn, the blood supply, so you are in effect, feeding you hair bulb and creating cellular energy plus flushing out unwanted oil all at the same time. You certainly don’t want all of that debris left sitting on your scalp skin so the scalp should be washed as soon as possible with a Scalp Cleanser after Scalp Brush Therapy. Scalp Brush Therapy is fantastic for those suffering oily hair problems because with most oily hair clients they can go an extra day without washing, which is a big deal if you have to wash your hair every day because of oily hair problems.
How to do scalp brush therapy: Start with Brush Therapy over the entire scalp for 1 – 2 minutes or until you feel a warm tingling sensation on the scalp. Brush Therapy must be on dry hair/scalp before you wash. Don’t do Brush Therapy unless you are going cleanse your scalp. We can teach you how with our in clinic program induction complimentary with any initial product purchase or watch Scalp Brush Therapy by Absolique Hair Health Clinic on YouTube. Scalp Brush Therapy feels good too!
- published: 13 Oct 2014
- views: 1327
10 Useless Body Parts
Check out which of your 10 body ports are virtually useless.
Our bodies are intricate in nature. Every single part is supposed to have its own function, howev...
Check out which of your 10 body ports are virtually useless.
Our bodies are intricate in nature. Every single part is supposed to have its own function, however that's not entirely true. Here are 10 useless human body parts.
Number 10 -- Following childbirth, nipples on women are very useful, but on men.... well there's no purpose whatsoever.
Number 9 -- Ahh yes, the ever attractive body hair. Fear and other emotions can cause hair to stand up, which for animals gives them a threatening appearance to fend off predators, but the reason why people grow furry masses of fluff remains unknown.
Number 8 -- The pinky toe, while some render it as cute, serves no critical purpose, although it does help with balance. Apes use all toes to swing from trees, fueling the speculation that humans evolved from them.
Number 7 -- In ancient times, wisdom teeth came in handy, especially because dental hygiene wasn't exactly the greatest, causing many to lose important teeth. These days, however, the jaw has gotten smaller, leaving no room for wisdom teeth to grow in. Nowadays the job of them appears to be limited to causing pain and requiring dentist trips for removal.
Number 6 -- We have billions of arrector pili muscles. They are attached to every single hair follicle and are responsible for creating that completely useless hair standing phenomenon known as goose bumps.
Number 5 -- The Adam's apple is an obvious trait many men possess. Although woman also have one, its far more noticeable in males due to their larger voice boxes. Described as thyroid cartilage, it does nothing, absolutely nothing.
Number 4 -- Men seem to be blessed with non functioning body parts. All males have an undeveloped uterus. It hangs off the male prostate gland, having no job at all.
Number 3 -- Adenoids, situated in human skulls at the back of the nose, trap bacteria, at least at a young age. The problem is that from adolescence into adulthood, they shrink down to nothing, becoming ineffective, begging the question, what is the point in having them?
Number 2 -- Women have the epoophoron, described as a "cluster of blind-ending tubules". Located near the ovaries, they are basically remnants of the male reproductive system.
Number 1 - The Plica semilunaris -- you might be wondering what that is. Located right in the corner of the eye near the tear duct, it's actually our third eyelid which does absolutely nothing.
wn.com/10 Useless Body Parts
Check out which of your 10 body ports are virtually useless.
Our bodies are intricate in nature. Every single part is supposed to have its own function, however that's not entirely true. Here are 10 useless human body parts.
Number 10 -- Following childbirth, nipples on women are very useful, but on men.... well there's no purpose whatsoever.
Number 9 -- Ahh yes, the ever attractive body hair. Fear and other emotions can cause hair to stand up, which for animals gives them a threatening appearance to fend off predators, but the reason why people grow furry masses of fluff remains unknown.
Number 8 -- The pinky toe, while some render it as cute, serves no critical purpose, although it does help with balance. Apes use all toes to swing from trees, fueling the speculation that humans evolved from them.
Number 7 -- In ancient times, wisdom teeth came in handy, especially because dental hygiene wasn't exactly the greatest, causing many to lose important teeth. These days, however, the jaw has gotten smaller, leaving no room for wisdom teeth to grow in. Nowadays the job of them appears to be limited to causing pain and requiring dentist trips for removal.
Number 6 -- We have billions of arrector pili muscles. They are attached to every single hair follicle and are responsible for creating that completely useless hair standing phenomenon known as goose bumps.
Number 5 -- The Adam's apple is an obvious trait many men possess. Although woman also have one, its far more noticeable in males due to their larger voice boxes. Described as thyroid cartilage, it does nothing, absolutely nothing.
Number 4 -- Men seem to be blessed with non functioning body parts. All males have an undeveloped uterus. It hangs off the male prostate gland, having no job at all.
Number 3 -- Adenoids, situated in human skulls at the back of the nose, trap bacteria, at least at a young age. The problem is that from adolescence into adulthood, they shrink down to nothing, becoming ineffective, begging the question, what is the point in having them?
Number 2 -- Women have the epoophoron, described as a "cluster of blind-ending tubules". Located near the ovaries, they are basically remnants of the male reproductive system.
Number 1 - The Plica semilunaris -- you might be wondering what that is. Located right in the corner of the eye near the tear duct, it's actually our third eyelid which does absolutely nothing.
- published: 06 Jan 2014
- views: 7999
Anatomy of Skin
Sorry the beginning got cut off! The beginning said, the epidermis is made up of tons of stratified squamous epithelium. Others as shown: dermis, hair shaft, ha...
Sorry the beginning got cut off! The beginning said, the epidermis is made up of tons of stratified squamous epithelium. Others as shown: dermis, hair shaft, hair root, artery, vein, arrector pili muscle, sweat gland, sweat duct, sebaceous gland, receptors (pain, temperature, touch), pacinian corpuscle
wn.com/Anatomy Of Skin
Sorry the beginning got cut off! The beginning said, the epidermis is made up of tons of stratified squamous epithelium. Others as shown: dermis, hair shaft, hair root, artery, vein, arrector pili muscle, sweat gland, sweat duct, sebaceous gland, receptors (pain, temperature, touch), pacinian corpuscle
- published: 19 Jul 2012
- views: 478
Natural Hair Loss Treatment Start with Scalp Brush Therapy
Natural Hair Loss Treatment – Start with Scalp Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss...
Natural Hair Loss Treatment – Start with Scalp Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
info@absolique.com.au
Scalp is skin, the scalp skin is home, incubator and protector of your hair follicle and all of its essential appendages. So why is it that we never consider the intrinsic scalp skin when washing our hair? The hair is the focus of our style, our look, our image yes, but without a healthy scalp the hair will eventually suffer. So it is quite simple, let's look after your scalp skin during the process of washing your hair, which you are doing anyway, so you will have healthier hair and healthy scalp skin eliminating the majority of common scalp problems along the way.
The process of washing the hair will need to begin with gentle scalp exfoliating to remove dead skin cells, particles and product from scalp and hair. For this we use a scalp brush, ok, it is also a hair brush, but it has some special features that make it ideal as a scalp brush. Starting with the bristles, they should be flexible not ridged, have well rounded, connected tips, not separate tips that can wear away or fall of. The tips of the bristles that will connect with the scalp must not be sharp in any way and should not scratch the scalp, you can test this by brushing the back of your hand, not your palm, with the brush tips.
Natural Hair Loss Treatment – Start with Scalp Brush Therapy
• Helps exfoliate scalp
• Effectively stimulates scalp
• Triggers scalp circulation
• Empties out oil gland
• Prepares scalp for natural hair loss treatment
• Must be followed by scalp cleansing
Back to the bristles, they should not be boar bristles, these are far too sharp for the scalp skin. Boar bristles have a place in history with hair, and that is where they should stay. With the scalp brush it will also need to be a suitable hair brush to be time effective and practice, it will be difficult to brush the scalp and hair separately. This is why our recommended scalp brush is also a suitable hair brush, simply makes sense doesn't it. We then look at the bristle length, it needs to be long enough to get through the hair to reach the scalp to deliver the desired effect, and around 17mm is a good bristle length.
The brush base should be a soft cushion, acting like a shock absorber when it touched the scalp with the rapid motions needed to stimulate the arrector pili muscle attached to the hair follicle, connected to the hair bulb, where the hair is fed by the blood supply delivered to each and every hair follicle, in most cases the blood supply cannot even be seen, let alone considering what may be in the blood supply or what is lacking, iron for instance is a very common deficiency, related to the delivery of oxygen and nutrients throughout the body, and yes, the hair bulb.
So the scalp brush therapy in effect is feeding your hair bulb and also creating cellular energy, this energy can be felt as heat on the surface of the scalp, this little sign also tells you the energy has travelled back up the follicle passing by the sebaceous gland, the hair follicle oil gland, which can be overactive or under active or blocked or simply normal, but this energy passing by, no matter the state of the sebaceous a gland, will trigger it to release the contacts that will spill out onto the scalp. Now this is a good this, but only if you can immediately wash this oil and other associated debris away. Remember the old tales, 100 strokes a day to help the natural oils travel along your hair strand to naturally condition you hair, this is not only gross but grossly untrue. The real function of the sebaceous gland is to lubricate the passageway for the hair as it goes through the hardening process you know as keratinisation. It has no benefit to the fully formed hair which is completely hard with a closed, locked cuticle. This oil with nowhere to go will build up in the oil gland or be expelled onto the scalp delivering the commonly described oily hair that is associated with thin or fine hair.
Scalp brush therapy should always be followed by scalp cleansing. A hair shampoo is not designed to do the job, only a special scalp cleanser such as Absolique scalp cleanser with no harmful ingredients.
Suitable scalp brush is available from Absolique Hair Health Clinic. Email Trichologist Carolyn Evans for further information info@absolique.com.au or call reception team on 07 3229 3242.
Copyright © 2015 Absolique Hair Health Clinic. All Rights Reserved
wn.com/Natural Hair Loss Treatment Start With Scalp Brush Therapy
Natural Hair Loss Treatment – Start with Scalp Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
info@absolique.com.au
Scalp is skin, the scalp skin is home, incubator and protector of your hair follicle and all of its essential appendages. So why is it that we never consider the intrinsic scalp skin when washing our hair? The hair is the focus of our style, our look, our image yes, but without a healthy scalp the hair will eventually suffer. So it is quite simple, let's look after your scalp skin during the process of washing your hair, which you are doing anyway, so you will have healthier hair and healthy scalp skin eliminating the majority of common scalp problems along the way.
The process of washing the hair will need to begin with gentle scalp exfoliating to remove dead skin cells, particles and product from scalp and hair. For this we use a scalp brush, ok, it is also a hair brush, but it has some special features that make it ideal as a scalp brush. Starting with the bristles, they should be flexible not ridged, have well rounded, connected tips, not separate tips that can wear away or fall of. The tips of the bristles that will connect with the scalp must not be sharp in any way and should not scratch the scalp, you can test this by brushing the back of your hand, not your palm, with the brush tips.
Natural Hair Loss Treatment – Start with Scalp Brush Therapy
• Helps exfoliate scalp
• Effectively stimulates scalp
• Triggers scalp circulation
• Empties out oil gland
• Prepares scalp for natural hair loss treatment
• Must be followed by scalp cleansing
Back to the bristles, they should not be boar bristles, these are far too sharp for the scalp skin. Boar bristles have a place in history with hair, and that is where they should stay. With the scalp brush it will also need to be a suitable hair brush to be time effective and practice, it will be difficult to brush the scalp and hair separately. This is why our recommended scalp brush is also a suitable hair brush, simply makes sense doesn't it. We then look at the bristle length, it needs to be long enough to get through the hair to reach the scalp to deliver the desired effect, and around 17mm is a good bristle length.
The brush base should be a soft cushion, acting like a shock absorber when it touched the scalp with the rapid motions needed to stimulate the arrector pili muscle attached to the hair follicle, connected to the hair bulb, where the hair is fed by the blood supply delivered to each and every hair follicle, in most cases the blood supply cannot even be seen, let alone considering what may be in the blood supply or what is lacking, iron for instance is a very common deficiency, related to the delivery of oxygen and nutrients throughout the body, and yes, the hair bulb.
So the scalp brush therapy in effect is feeding your hair bulb and also creating cellular energy, this energy can be felt as heat on the surface of the scalp, this little sign also tells you the energy has travelled back up the follicle passing by the sebaceous gland, the hair follicle oil gland, which can be overactive or under active or blocked or simply normal, but this energy passing by, no matter the state of the sebaceous a gland, will trigger it to release the contacts that will spill out onto the scalp. Now this is a good this, but only if you can immediately wash this oil and other associated debris away. Remember the old tales, 100 strokes a day to help the natural oils travel along your hair strand to naturally condition you hair, this is not only gross but grossly untrue. The real function of the sebaceous gland is to lubricate the passageway for the hair as it goes through the hardening process you know as keratinisation. It has no benefit to the fully formed hair which is completely hard with a closed, locked cuticle. This oil with nowhere to go will build up in the oil gland or be expelled onto the scalp delivering the commonly described oily hair that is associated with thin or fine hair.
Scalp brush therapy should always be followed by scalp cleansing. A hair shampoo is not designed to do the job, only a special scalp cleanser such as Absolique scalp cleanser with no harmful ingredients.
Suitable scalp brush is available from Absolique Hair Health Clinic. Email Trichologist Carolyn Evans for further information info@absolique.com.au or call reception team on 07 3229 3242.
Copyright © 2015 Absolique Hair Health Clinic. All Rights Reserved
- published: 31 Aug 2015
- views: 758
"In the Epidermis" Anatomy Project - Music Video
Parody of "I Want It That Way" by the Backstreet Boys. The song is a lower pitched recording of our voices because it just sounded weird higher pitched :P Not t...
Parody of "I Want It That Way" by the Backstreet Boys. The song is a lower pitched recording of our voices because it just sounded weird higher pitched :P Not the best video, but it worked for the time we had :D
"In the Epidermis" Lyrics
Skin
Integumentary
Is what, protects me
insulates me and
keeps organs in my body
And first, is hair shafts
they grow, from follicles
Arrector Pili Muscles
Pull the hair when youre cold
Tell me why
Doesnt matter if youre black or white
Tell me why
We all have melanocytes
Tell me why
They are in the epidermis
The topmost layer
Stratified squamous cells
Make up your epidermis
Yes I know, it's too late
Since the cells are dead anyway
Tell me why
Doesnt matter if youre black or white
Tell me why
We all have melanocytes
Tell me why
They are in the epidermis
The topmost layer
Now I can see that we've reached the dermis
Its composed of two layers, papillae and
Reticular layer
has so many things
Now well describe them to you
Papillary
Fingerprints and
Meissners Corpuscles (feel touch)
Feel pain, feel pain, feel pain, feel pain (by free nerves)
But thats not all!!!
Collagen and elastin
Are in the reticular layer
Pacinian Corpuscles
Feel pressure when youre pinched
Dont forget
Nerves help us feel the world
Arteries
Take the blood to the skin
And the veins
Take the blood to the heart
Still in the reticular
And our sweat
Comes from the sudoriferous
So you smell too
Sebaceous glands makes skin oily
Were at the
last layer of the skin
It is hypodermis
Made of those fat cells
(Adipose)
wn.com/In The Epidermis Anatomy Project Music Video
Parody of "I Want It That Way" by the Backstreet Boys. The song is a lower pitched recording of our voices because it just sounded weird higher pitched :P Not the best video, but it worked for the time we had :D
"In the Epidermis" Lyrics
Skin
Integumentary
Is what, protects me
insulates me and
keeps organs in my body
And first, is hair shafts
they grow, from follicles
Arrector Pili Muscles
Pull the hair when youre cold
Tell me why
Doesnt matter if youre black or white
Tell me why
We all have melanocytes
Tell me why
They are in the epidermis
The topmost layer
Stratified squamous cells
Make up your epidermis
Yes I know, it's too late
Since the cells are dead anyway
Tell me why
Doesnt matter if youre black or white
Tell me why
We all have melanocytes
Tell me why
They are in the epidermis
The topmost layer
Now I can see that we've reached the dermis
Its composed of two layers, papillae and
Reticular layer
has so many things
Now well describe them to you
Papillary
Fingerprints and
Meissners Corpuscles (feel touch)
Feel pain, feel pain, feel pain, feel pain (by free nerves)
But thats not all!!!
Collagen and elastin
Are in the reticular layer
Pacinian Corpuscles
Feel pressure when youre pinched
Dont forget
Nerves help us feel the world
Arteries
Take the blood to the skin
And the veins
Take the blood to the heart
Still in the reticular
And our sweat
Comes from the sudoriferous
So you smell too
Sebaceous glands makes skin oily
Were at the
last layer of the skin
It is hypodermis
Made of those fat cells
(Adipose)
- published: 28 Feb 2010
- views: 6451
Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy
Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com...
Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
Before you wash your hair next time consider this, scalp is skin, and your trying to wash away scalp scale, scalp oil and scalp dandruff with a Hair Shampoo! Preparing the Scalp prior to washing your scalp skin with Scalp Brush Therapy is a simple effective way to ensure proper scalp cleansing to enhance topical Home Treatments for Hair Loss.
Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy will:
• Stimulate the scalp
• Exfoliate the scalp skin
• Lift scalp scale and scalp dandruff away from the scalp
• Stimulates the oil gland attached to the hair follicle
• Draw oil to the surface of the scalp to be cleansed away with Scalp Cleanser
• Stimulate arrector pili muscles attached to the hair follicles
• Increase scalp circulation in effect feeding you hair
You certainly don’t want all of this debris left sitting on your scalp skin so it must be washed away as soon as possible with a Scalp Cleanser not a hair shampoo. Scalp Brush Therapy is fantastic for those suffering oily hair problems and in most oily hair cases, they can go an extra day without washing, and this is a big deal if you have to wash your hair every day because of oily hair problems.
Scalp Brush Therapy should take no longer than 1-2 minutes before you feel the warmth or tingling sensation on your scalp skin, and or the scalp oil spreading through the hair. Please remember, the old wives tail of ’100 brush strokes a day for healthy hair’ is wrong it is all about the scalp where the living growing hair comes from.
How to do scalp brush therapy: Start with Brush Therapy over the entire scalp for minimum 1 minute or until you feel a warm or tingling sensation on the scalp. Brush Therapy must be on dry hair/scalp before you wash. Don’t do Brush Therapy unless you are going cleanse your scalp. We will teach you how or watch Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy by Absolique Hair Health Clinic on YouTube.
wn.com/Home Treatments For Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy
Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy
http://www.hair-loss-treatments.com.au/
http://www.brisbanehairloss.com.au/
http://www.hair-loss-sydney.com.au/
Before you wash your hair next time consider this, scalp is skin, and your trying to wash away scalp scale, scalp oil and scalp dandruff with a Hair Shampoo! Preparing the Scalp prior to washing your scalp skin with Scalp Brush Therapy is a simple effective way to ensure proper scalp cleansing to enhance topical Home Treatments for Hair Loss.
Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy will:
• Stimulate the scalp
• Exfoliate the scalp skin
• Lift scalp scale and scalp dandruff away from the scalp
• Stimulates the oil gland attached to the hair follicle
• Draw oil to the surface of the scalp to be cleansed away with Scalp Cleanser
• Stimulate arrector pili muscles attached to the hair follicles
• Increase scalp circulation in effect feeding you hair
You certainly don’t want all of this debris left sitting on your scalp skin so it must be washed away as soon as possible with a Scalp Cleanser not a hair shampoo. Scalp Brush Therapy is fantastic for those suffering oily hair problems and in most oily hair cases, they can go an extra day without washing, and this is a big deal if you have to wash your hair every day because of oily hair problems.
Scalp Brush Therapy should take no longer than 1-2 minutes before you feel the warmth or tingling sensation on your scalp skin, and or the scalp oil spreading through the hair. Please remember, the old wives tail of ’100 brush strokes a day for healthy hair’ is wrong it is all about the scalp where the living growing hair comes from.
How to do scalp brush therapy: Start with Brush Therapy over the entire scalp for minimum 1 minute or until you feel a warm or tingling sensation on the scalp. Brush Therapy must be on dry hair/scalp before you wash. Don’t do Brush Therapy unless you are going cleanse your scalp. We will teach you how or watch Home Treatments for Hair Loss Scalp Brush Therapy by Absolique Hair Health Clinic on YouTube.
- published: 08 Sep 2014
- views: 1918
7 Most Interesting Useless Body Parts of Animals
If you enjoy my content, please follow me on:
Website - http://7topmost.com
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/7topmost
Twitter - https://twitter.com/7topmost
...
If you enjoy my content, please follow me on:
Website - http://7topmost.com
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/7topmost
Twitter - https://twitter.com/7topmost
Source:
7 Most Interesting Useless Body Parts of Animals
Description:
Male Breast Tissue and Nipples
The subject of male nipples is a sensitive topic to many. Those who wish to invalidate evolutionary theory might pose the question, "Was man descended from woman?"
The answer, of course, is no. Both men and women have nipples because in early stages of fetal development, an unborn child is effectively sexless.
Nipples are present in both males and females; it is only in a later stage of fetal development that testosterone causes sex differentiation in a fetus.
The Blind Fish Astyanax Mexicanus
In an experiment designed by nature, the species of fish known as Astyanax mexicanus, dwelling in caves deep underground off the coast of Mexico, cannot see.
The pale fish has eyes, but as it is developing in the egg, the eyes begin to degenerate, and the fish is born with a collapsed remnant of an eye covered by flap of skin.
fish of the same species live right above, near the surface, where there is plenty of light, and these fish have fully functioning eyes.
Erector Pili and Body Hair
The erector pili are smooth muscle fibers that give humans "goose bumps".
If the erector pili are activated, the hairs that come out of the nearby follicles stand up and give an animal a larger appearance that might scare off potential
Humans, though, don't have thick furs like their ancestors did, and our strategy for several thousand years has been to take the fur off other animals to stay warm.
Fake Sex in Virgin Whiptail Lizards
Only females exist in several species of the lizards of the genus Cnemidophorus, which might seem like a problem when it comes time to propagate the species.
The females don't need the males though, they reproduce by parthenogenesis, a form of reproduction in which an unfertilized egg develops into a new individual.
So basically, the females don't need the males; they just produce clones of themselves as a form of reproduction.
The Wings on Flightless Birds
a French anatomist, É´ienne Geoffroy St. Hilaire, traveled to Egypt with Napoleon where he witnessed and wrote about a flightless bird whose wings appeared useless for soaring.
The bird that Hilaire described was an ostrich, but he described it as a "cassowary", a term used back then to describe various birds of ostrich-like appearance.
Ostriches and cassowaries are among several birds that have wings that are vestigial. Besides the cassowary, other flightless birds with vestigial wings are the kiwi
Wisdom Teeth in Humans
With all of the time and money that are put into dealing with wisdom teeth, humans have become a little more than tired of these remnants from their large jawed ancestors.
the wisdom teeth remain, and force their way into mouths regardless of the pain inflicted. here are two possible reasons why the wisdom teeth have become vestigial.
The first is that the human jaw has become smaller than its ancestors -and the wisdom teeth are trying to grow into a jaw that is much too small.
Hind Leg Bones in Whales
Biologists believe that for 100 million years the only vertebrates on Earth were water-dwelling creatures, with no arms or legs.
At some point these "fish" began to develop hips and legs and eventually were able to walk out of the water, giving the earth its first land lovers.
Once the land-dwelling creatures evolved, there were some mammals that moved back into the water. Biologists estimate that this happened about 50 million years ago
wn.com/7 Most Interesting Useless Body Parts Of Animals
If you enjoy my content, please follow me on:
Website - http://7topmost.com
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/7topmost
Twitter - https://twitter.com/7topmost
Source:
7 Most Interesting Useless Body Parts of Animals
Description:
Male Breast Tissue and Nipples
The subject of male nipples is a sensitive topic to many. Those who wish to invalidate evolutionary theory might pose the question, "Was man descended from woman?"
The answer, of course, is no. Both men and women have nipples because in early stages of fetal development, an unborn child is effectively sexless.
Nipples are present in both males and females; it is only in a later stage of fetal development that testosterone causes sex differentiation in a fetus.
The Blind Fish Astyanax Mexicanus
In an experiment designed by nature, the species of fish known as Astyanax mexicanus, dwelling in caves deep underground off the coast of Mexico, cannot see.
The pale fish has eyes, but as it is developing in the egg, the eyes begin to degenerate, and the fish is born with a collapsed remnant of an eye covered by flap of skin.
fish of the same species live right above, near the surface, where there is plenty of light, and these fish have fully functioning eyes.
Erector Pili and Body Hair
The erector pili are smooth muscle fibers that give humans "goose bumps".
If the erector pili are activated, the hairs that come out of the nearby follicles stand up and give an animal a larger appearance that might scare off potential
Humans, though, don't have thick furs like their ancestors did, and our strategy for several thousand years has been to take the fur off other animals to stay warm.
Fake Sex in Virgin Whiptail Lizards
Only females exist in several species of the lizards of the genus Cnemidophorus, which might seem like a problem when it comes time to propagate the species.
The females don't need the males though, they reproduce by parthenogenesis, a form of reproduction in which an unfertilized egg develops into a new individual.
So basically, the females don't need the males; they just produce clones of themselves as a form of reproduction.
The Wings on Flightless Birds
a French anatomist, É´ienne Geoffroy St. Hilaire, traveled to Egypt with Napoleon where he witnessed and wrote about a flightless bird whose wings appeared useless for soaring.
The bird that Hilaire described was an ostrich, but he described it as a "cassowary", a term used back then to describe various birds of ostrich-like appearance.
Ostriches and cassowaries are among several birds that have wings that are vestigial. Besides the cassowary, other flightless birds with vestigial wings are the kiwi
Wisdom Teeth in Humans
With all of the time and money that are put into dealing with wisdom teeth, humans have become a little more than tired of these remnants from their large jawed ancestors.
the wisdom teeth remain, and force their way into mouths regardless of the pain inflicted. here are two possible reasons why the wisdom teeth have become vestigial.
The first is that the human jaw has become smaller than its ancestors -and the wisdom teeth are trying to grow into a jaw that is much too small.
Hind Leg Bones in Whales
Biologists believe that for 100 million years the only vertebrates on Earth were water-dwelling creatures, with no arms or legs.
At some point these "fish" began to develop hips and legs and eventually were able to walk out of the water, giving the earth its first land lovers.
Once the land-dwelling creatures evolved, there were some mammals that moved back into the water. Biologists estimate that this happened about 50 million years ago
- published: 09 Oct 2013
- views: 3372
10 Useless Body Parts That We Don't Need Anymore
Top 10 parts of your body that we don't need anymore, according to Nickipedia!
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/9CwQhg
Subscribe to Nickipedia: http://b...
Top 10 parts of your body that we don't need anymore, according to Nickipedia!
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/9CwQhg
Subscribe to Nickipedia: http://bit.ly/1G97GmA
Other Videos You Might Like
Why Yawning Is Contagious: https://youtu.be/LKed9j5Vvlc
People Born With Extra Body Parts: https://youtu.be/orvnkDzv4ow
Description:
Our friend Nick Uhas from Nickipedia gave us his list of the top 10 useless human body parts. As humans evolve, we no longer need certain components of our body... yet we are still born with them. Some of these parts of our bodies can be quite annoying, and other parts could be hard to imagine without. Either way, we can live without them!
Our Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheRichest.org
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheRichest_Com
Instagram: http://instagram.com/therichest
Featuring:
The Appendix
Tail Bone
Male Nipples
Wisdom Teeth
Erector Pili and Body Hair
Plica Semilunaris AKA the Third Eyelid
Tonsils
Pink Toes
Sinuses
Extrinsic Ear Muscles
Music Track: Fun Times
For more videos and articles visit:
http://www.therichest.com/
wn.com/10 Useless Body Parts That We Don't Need Anymore
Top 10 parts of your body that we don't need anymore, according to Nickipedia!
Subscribe to our channel: http://goo.gl/9CwQhg
Subscribe to Nickipedia: http://bit.ly/1G97GmA
Other Videos You Might Like
Why Yawning Is Contagious: https://youtu.be/LKed9j5Vvlc
People Born With Extra Body Parts: https://youtu.be/orvnkDzv4ow
Description:
Our friend Nick Uhas from Nickipedia gave us his list of the top 10 useless human body parts. As humans evolve, we no longer need certain components of our body... yet we are still born with them. Some of these parts of our bodies can be quite annoying, and other parts could be hard to imagine without. Either way, we can live without them!
Our Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheRichest.org
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheRichest_Com
Instagram: http://instagram.com/therichest
Featuring:
The Appendix
Tail Bone
Male Nipples
Wisdom Teeth
Erector Pili and Body Hair
Plica Semilunaris AKA the Third Eyelid
Tonsils
Pink Toes
Sinuses
Extrinsic Ear Muscles
Music Track: Fun Times
For more videos and articles visit:
http://www.therichest.com/
- published: 11 Jul 2015
- views: 1204832
How To Prevent Hair Loss - The Hair Loss Vitamins
http://stoplosinghairnow.info/
How To Prevent Hair Loss - The Hair Loss Vitamins
What is Hair Growth?
While many of us may wish for long, luscious, healt...
http://stoplosinghairnow.info/
How To Prevent Hair Loss - The Hair Loss Vitamins
What is Hair Growth?
While many of us may wish for long, luscious, healthy hair, we are not always that
lucky. Growing your hair requires time, effort and patience! Often people who have
dry, damaged or very thin, limp hair struggle to grow their hair. This may
partly be due to a poor diet, underlying diseases, hormonal changes, certain
medications, hair treatments such as bleaching, dyeing, tight braiding, blow
drying, straightening or hot curlers.
Most people are not even aware that the hair on their heads has a lifespan of their
own and that shedding of hair is normal, natural and healthy. To understand
how your hair works, you firstly have to understand the anatomy of hair and how
hair grows.
More nformacion:
http://stoplosinghairnow.info/
Anatomy of Hair
Hair is composed of two basic structures the follicle which is found in the skin
and the hair shaft lies above the skin. The follicle consists of several layers and
each layer has its own specific functions. At the base of the follicle is a stockinglike
structure called papilla which contain capillaries and supply blood to the cells.
Surrounding the bottom part of papilla is a structure known as the bulb. The
follicle is surrounded by two sheaths inner and outer sheaths. There primary
function is to protect the hair shaft and to help shape it so that it grows in the
correct direction. The inner sheath runs next to the hair shaft, ending at the
sebaceous gland. The outer sheath runs next to the gland, ending at the erector pili
muscle hair stand on end when this muscle contracts.
The hair shaft is made up of three layers of dead, hard protein called keratin. The
innermost layer is called the medulla and may not always be present in the
hair shaft. The cortex is situated in the second layer and makes up most of the hair
shaft this is part of the hair that provides bounce and curl.
Pigment cells that are spread throughout the cortex determine the color of your
hair. The outermost layer is known as the cuticle and is responsible for the
hairs luster and sheen.
wn.com/How To Prevent Hair Loss The Hair Loss Vitamins
http://stoplosinghairnow.info/
How To Prevent Hair Loss - The Hair Loss Vitamins
What is Hair Growth?
While many of us may wish for long, luscious, healthy hair, we are not always that
lucky. Growing your hair requires time, effort and patience! Often people who have
dry, damaged or very thin, limp hair struggle to grow their hair. This may
partly be due to a poor diet, underlying diseases, hormonal changes, certain
medications, hair treatments such as bleaching, dyeing, tight braiding, blow
drying, straightening or hot curlers.
Most people are not even aware that the hair on their heads has a lifespan of their
own and that shedding of hair is normal, natural and healthy. To understand
how your hair works, you firstly have to understand the anatomy of hair and how
hair grows.
More nformacion:
http://stoplosinghairnow.info/
Anatomy of Hair
Hair is composed of two basic structures the follicle which is found in the skin
and the hair shaft lies above the skin. The follicle consists of several layers and
each layer has its own specific functions. At the base of the follicle is a stockinglike
structure called papilla which contain capillaries and supply blood to the cells.
Surrounding the bottom part of papilla is a structure known as the bulb. The
follicle is surrounded by two sheaths inner and outer sheaths. There primary
function is to protect the hair shaft and to help shape it so that it grows in the
correct direction. The inner sheath runs next to the hair shaft, ending at the
sebaceous gland. The outer sheath runs next to the gland, ending at the erector pili
muscle hair stand on end when this muscle contracts.
The hair shaft is made up of three layers of dead, hard protein called keratin. The
innermost layer is called the medulla and may not always be present in the
hair shaft. The cortex is situated in the second layer and makes up most of the hair
shaft this is part of the hair that provides bounce and curl.
Pigment cells that are spread throughout the cortex determine the color of your
hair. The outermost layer is known as the cuticle and is responsible for the
hairs luster and sheen.
- published: 13 May 2009
- views: 11038
Care of the Hair and Nails 1951 Encyclopaedia Britannica Films
more at http://quickfound.net/
"A fairy tale character uses magic to help youngsters learn good health habits."
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archive,...
more at http://quickfound.net/
"A fairy tale character uses magic to help youngsters learn good health habits."
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair
Hair is a filamentous biomaterial that grows from follicles found in the dermis. Hair is one of the defining characteristics of mammals.
The human body, apart from areas of glabrous skin, is covered in follicles which produce thick terminal and fine vellus hair. Most common interest in hair is focused on hair growth, hair types and hair care, but hair is also an important biomaterial primarily composed of protein, notably keratin. In many human societies, women predominantly grow the hair on their head long while men cut theirs short...
Description
Each strand of hair is made up of the medulla, cortex, and cuticle. The innermost region, the medulla, is not always present and is an open, unstructured region. The highly structural and organized cortex, or middle layer of the hair, is the primary source of mechanical strength and water uptake. The cortex contains melanin, which colors the fiber based on the number, distribution and types of melanin granules. The shape of the follicle determines the shape of the cortex, and the shape of the fiber is related to how straight or curly the hair is. Asian hair typically has a round fiber and is quite straight. Oval and irregularly shaped fibers are generally more wavy or even curly. The cuticle is the outer covering. Its complex structure slides as the hair swells and is covered with a single molecular layer of lipid that makes the hair repel water. The diameter of human hair varies from 17 to 180 micrometers (0.00067 to 0.0071 in).
Hair growth begins inside the hair follicle. The only "living" portion of the hair is found in the follicle. The hair that is visible is the hair shaft, which exhibits no biochemical activity and is considered "dead". The base of the root is called the bulb, which contains the cells that produce the hair shaft. Other structures of the hair follicle include the oil producing sebaceous gland which lubricates the hair and the arrector pili muscles, which are responsible for causing hairs to stand up. In humans, with little body hair, the effect results in goose bumps...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nail_(anatomy)
A nail is a horn-like envelope covering the dorsal aspect of the terminal phalanges of fingers and toes in humans, most non-human primates, and a few other mammals. Nails are similar to claws in other animals. Fingernails and toenails are made of a tough protein called keratin, as are animals' hooves and horns. The mammalian nail, claw, and hoof are all examples of unguis [plural ungues]...
Human anatomy
The nail consists of the nail plate, the nail matrix and the nail bed below it, and the grooves surrounding it.
Parts of the nail
The matrix is sometimes called the matrix unguis, keratogenous membrane, nail matrix, or onychostroma. It is the tissue (or germinal matrix) which the nail protects. It is the part of the nail bed that is beneath the nail and contains nerves, lymph and blood vessels. The matrix is responsible for producing cells that become the nail plate. The width and thickness of the nail plate is determined by the size, length, and thickness of the matrix, while the shape of the fingertip itself shows if the nail plate is flat, arched or hooked. The matrix will continue to grow as long as it receives nutrition and remains in a healthy condition. As new nail plate cells are made, they push older nail plate cells forward; and in this way older cells become compressed, flat, and translucent. This makes the capillaries in the nail bed below visible, resulting in a pink color.
The lunula ("small moon") is the visible part of the matrix, the whitish crescent-shaped base of the visible nail...
The nail bed is the skin beneath the nail plate. Like all skin, it is made of two types of tissues: the deeper dermis, the living tissue which includes capillaries and glands, The epidermis, the layer just beneath the nail plate, moves toward the finger tip with the plate. The epidermis is attached to the dermis by tiny longitudinal "grooves" called matrix crests (cristae matricis unguis). In old age, the nail plate becomes thinner so that these grooves become more visible.
The nail sinus (sinus unguis) is where the nail root is; i.e. the base of the nail underneath the skin. It originates from the actively growing tissue below, the matrix.
The nail plate (corpus unguis) is the hard part of the nail, made of translucent keratin protein...
wn.com/Care Of The Hair And Nails 1951 Encyclopaedia Britannica Films
more at http://quickfound.net/
"A fairy tale character uses magic to help youngsters learn good health habits."
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair
Hair is a filamentous biomaterial that grows from follicles found in the dermis. Hair is one of the defining characteristics of mammals.
The human body, apart from areas of glabrous skin, is covered in follicles which produce thick terminal and fine vellus hair. Most common interest in hair is focused on hair growth, hair types and hair care, but hair is also an important biomaterial primarily composed of protein, notably keratin. In many human societies, women predominantly grow the hair on their head long while men cut theirs short...
Description
Each strand of hair is made up of the medulla, cortex, and cuticle. The innermost region, the medulla, is not always present and is an open, unstructured region. The highly structural and organized cortex, or middle layer of the hair, is the primary source of mechanical strength and water uptake. The cortex contains melanin, which colors the fiber based on the number, distribution and types of melanin granules. The shape of the follicle determines the shape of the cortex, and the shape of the fiber is related to how straight or curly the hair is. Asian hair typically has a round fiber and is quite straight. Oval and irregularly shaped fibers are generally more wavy or even curly. The cuticle is the outer covering. Its complex structure slides as the hair swells and is covered with a single molecular layer of lipid that makes the hair repel water. The diameter of human hair varies from 17 to 180 micrometers (0.00067 to 0.0071 in).
Hair growth begins inside the hair follicle. The only "living" portion of the hair is found in the follicle. The hair that is visible is the hair shaft, which exhibits no biochemical activity and is considered "dead". The base of the root is called the bulb, which contains the cells that produce the hair shaft. Other structures of the hair follicle include the oil producing sebaceous gland which lubricates the hair and the arrector pili muscles, which are responsible for causing hairs to stand up. In humans, with little body hair, the effect results in goose bumps...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nail_(anatomy)
A nail is a horn-like envelope covering the dorsal aspect of the terminal phalanges of fingers and toes in humans, most non-human primates, and a few other mammals. Nails are similar to claws in other animals. Fingernails and toenails are made of a tough protein called keratin, as are animals' hooves and horns. The mammalian nail, claw, and hoof are all examples of unguis [plural ungues]...
Human anatomy
The nail consists of the nail plate, the nail matrix and the nail bed below it, and the grooves surrounding it.
Parts of the nail
The matrix is sometimes called the matrix unguis, keratogenous membrane, nail matrix, or onychostroma. It is the tissue (or germinal matrix) which the nail protects. It is the part of the nail bed that is beneath the nail and contains nerves, lymph and blood vessels. The matrix is responsible for producing cells that become the nail plate. The width and thickness of the nail plate is determined by the size, length, and thickness of the matrix, while the shape of the fingertip itself shows if the nail plate is flat, arched or hooked. The matrix will continue to grow as long as it receives nutrition and remains in a healthy condition. As new nail plate cells are made, they push older nail plate cells forward; and in this way older cells become compressed, flat, and translucent. This makes the capillaries in the nail bed below visible, resulting in a pink color.
The lunula ("small moon") is the visible part of the matrix, the whitish crescent-shaped base of the visible nail...
The nail bed is the skin beneath the nail plate. Like all skin, it is made of two types of tissues: the deeper dermis, the living tissue which includes capillaries and glands, The epidermis, the layer just beneath the nail plate, moves toward the finger tip with the plate. The epidermis is attached to the dermis by tiny longitudinal "grooves" called matrix crests (cristae matricis unguis). In old age, the nail plate becomes thinner so that these grooves become more visible.
The nail sinus (sinus unguis) is where the nail root is; i.e. the base of the nail underneath the skin. It originates from the actively growing tissue below, the matrix.
The nail plate (corpus unguis) is the hard part of the nail, made of translucent keratin protein...
- published: 10 Feb 2013
- views: 3582
SUMMER TOUR 2011 - THE OUTTAKES
SUMMER TOUR 2011 - THE OUTTAKES
Sezione contenuti speciali, solo per assidui collezionisti e fan instancabili.
directed by Giuseppe Fiori
Hair is a fil...
SUMMER TOUR 2011 - THE OUTTAKES
Sezione contenuti speciali, solo per assidui collezionisti e fan instancabili.
directed by Giuseppe Fiori
Hair is a filamentous biomaterial, that grows from follicles found in the dermis. Found exclusively in mammals, hair is one of the defining characteristics of the mammalian class.[1] The human body, apart from its glabrous skin, is covered in follicles which produce thick terminal and fine vellus hair. Most common interest in hair is focused on hair growth, hair types and hair care, but hair is also an important biomaterial primarily composed of protein, notably keratin.
The word "hair" often refers to two distinct structures: 1) the part beneath the skin, called the hair follicle or when pulled from the skin, called the bulb. This organ is located in the dermis and maintains stem cells which not only re-grow the hair after it falls out, but also are recruited to regrow skin after a wound;[2] and 2) the shaft, which is the hard filamentous part that extends above the skin surface. A cross section of the hair shaft may be divided roughly into three zones.
Hair fibers have a structure consisting of several layers. Starting from the outside: 1) the cuticle which consists of several layers of flat, thin cells laid out overlapping one another as roof shingles, 2) the cortex, which contains the keratin bundles in cell structures that remain roughly rod-like; and in some cases, 3) the medulla, a disorganized and open area at the fiber's center.[3] Hair is composed mainly of the protein keratin. Keratin assembles into rope-like intermediate filaments. The structure of these filaments provides strength to the hair shaft.
Hair growth begins inside the hair follicle. The only "living" portion of the hair is found in the follicle. The hair that is visible is the hair shaft, which exhibits no biochemical activity and is considered "dead".[4] The base of the root is called the bulb, which contains the cells that produce the hair shaft.[5] Other structures of the hair follicle include the oil producing sebaceous gland which lubricates the hair and the erector pili muscles, which are responsible for causing hairs to stand-up. In humans, with little body hair, the effect results in goose bumps.[6]
Strand of human hair at 200x magnification
Each strand of hair is made up of the medulla, cortex, and cuticle.[7] The innermost region, the medulla, is not always present and is an open, unstructured region.[4][8] The highly structured and organized cortex, or middle layer of the hair, is the primary source of mechanical strength and water uptake. The cortex contains melanin, which colors the fiber based on the number, distribution and types of melanin granules. The shape of the follicle determines the shape of the cortex, and the shape of the fiber is related to how straight or curly the hair is. Asian hair typically has a round fiber and is quite straight. Oval and irregularly-shaped fibers are generally more wavy or even curly.[4] The cuticle is the outer covering. Its complex structure slides as the hair swells and is covered with a single molecular layer of lipid that makes the hair repel water.[7] The diameter of human hair varies from 17 to 180 micrometers (0.00067 to 0.0071 in).[9]
Natural Color
Main article: Human hair color
All natural hair colors are the result of two types of hair pigment. Both of these pigments are melanin types, produced inside the hair follicle and packed into granules found in the fibers. Eumelanin is the dominant pigment in dark-blond, brown, and black hair, while pheomelanin is dominant in red hair.[4] Blond hair is the result of having little pigmentation in the hair strand. Gray hair occurs when melanin decreases or disappears.
wn.com/Summer Tour 2011 The Outtakes
SUMMER TOUR 2011 - THE OUTTAKES
Sezione contenuti speciali, solo per assidui collezionisti e fan instancabili.
directed by Giuseppe Fiori
Hair is a filamentous biomaterial, that grows from follicles found in the dermis. Found exclusively in mammals, hair is one of the defining characteristics of the mammalian class.[1] The human body, apart from its glabrous skin, is covered in follicles which produce thick terminal and fine vellus hair. Most common interest in hair is focused on hair growth, hair types and hair care, but hair is also an important biomaterial primarily composed of protein, notably keratin.
The word "hair" often refers to two distinct structures: 1) the part beneath the skin, called the hair follicle or when pulled from the skin, called the bulb. This organ is located in the dermis and maintains stem cells which not only re-grow the hair after it falls out, but also are recruited to regrow skin after a wound;[2] and 2) the shaft, which is the hard filamentous part that extends above the skin surface. A cross section of the hair shaft may be divided roughly into three zones.
Hair fibers have a structure consisting of several layers. Starting from the outside: 1) the cuticle which consists of several layers of flat, thin cells laid out overlapping one another as roof shingles, 2) the cortex, which contains the keratin bundles in cell structures that remain roughly rod-like; and in some cases, 3) the medulla, a disorganized and open area at the fiber's center.[3] Hair is composed mainly of the protein keratin. Keratin assembles into rope-like intermediate filaments. The structure of these filaments provides strength to the hair shaft.
Hair growth begins inside the hair follicle. The only "living" portion of the hair is found in the follicle. The hair that is visible is the hair shaft, which exhibits no biochemical activity and is considered "dead".[4] The base of the root is called the bulb, which contains the cells that produce the hair shaft.[5] Other structures of the hair follicle include the oil producing sebaceous gland which lubricates the hair and the erector pili muscles, which are responsible for causing hairs to stand-up. In humans, with little body hair, the effect results in goose bumps.[6]
Strand of human hair at 200x magnification
Each strand of hair is made up of the medulla, cortex, and cuticle.[7] The innermost region, the medulla, is not always present and is an open, unstructured region.[4][8] The highly structured and organized cortex, or middle layer of the hair, is the primary source of mechanical strength and water uptake. The cortex contains melanin, which colors the fiber based on the number, distribution and types of melanin granules. The shape of the follicle determines the shape of the cortex, and the shape of the fiber is related to how straight or curly the hair is. Asian hair typically has a round fiber and is quite straight. Oval and irregularly-shaped fibers are generally more wavy or even curly.[4] The cuticle is the outer covering. Its complex structure slides as the hair swells and is covered with a single molecular layer of lipid that makes the hair repel water.[7] The diameter of human hair varies from 17 to 180 micrometers (0.00067 to 0.0071 in).[9]
Natural Color
Main article: Human hair color
All natural hair colors are the result of two types of hair pigment. Both of these pigments are melanin types, produced inside the hair follicle and packed into granules found in the fibers. Eumelanin is the dominant pigment in dark-blond, brown, and black hair, while pheomelanin is dominant in red hair.[4] Blond hair is the result of having little pigmentation in the hair strand. Gray hair occurs when melanin decreases or disappears.
- published: 15 Sep 2011
- views: 139
Video 67.wmv
Itch (Latin: pruritus) is an unpleasant sensation that evokes the desire or reflex to scratchAlso attached to the follicle is a tiny bundle of muscle fiber call...
Itch (Latin: pruritus) is an unpleasant sensation that evokes the desire or reflex to scratchAlso attached to the follicle is a tiny bundle of muscle fiber called the arrector pili that is responsible for causing the follicle lissis to become more perpendicular to the surface of the skin, and causing the follicle to protrude slightly above the surrounding skin (piloerection)and a pore incased with skin oil This process results in goose bumps (or goose flesh). Stem cells are located at the junction of the arrector and the follicle, and are principally responsible for the ongoing hair production during a process known as the Anagen stage.Static electricity left the hair positively charged so that the individual hairs repel one another. The hair may also be attracted to the negatively charged slide surface. they would say bugs were on you or thier was aghost touching you
wn.com/Video 67.Wmv
Itch (Latin: pruritus) is an unpleasant sensation that evokes the desire or reflex to scratchAlso attached to the follicle is a tiny bundle of muscle fiber called the arrector pili that is responsible for causing the follicle lissis to become more perpendicular to the surface of the skin, and causing the follicle to protrude slightly above the surrounding skin (piloerection)and a pore incased with skin oil This process results in goose bumps (or goose flesh). Stem cells are located at the junction of the arrector and the follicle, and are principally responsible for the ongoing hair production during a process known as the Anagen stage.Static electricity left the hair positively charged so that the individual hairs repel one another. The hair may also be attracted to the negatively charged slide surface. they would say bugs were on you or thier was aghost touching you
- published: 28 Dec 2009
- views: 142