improved video over earlier release
Directory of \TTC Video - How We Fail, How We Heal 2007
8.22 GB (8,835,923,968 bytes)
26 File(s)
01. How We Fail.mkv
02. Cell Biology - Introduction and Definitions.mkv
03. Inflammation - Basic Principles.mkv
04. The Inflammatory Response.mkv
05. Inflammation - Clinical Manifestations.mkv
06. The Immune Response.mkv
07. The Immune Response Continued.mkv
08. Hypersensitivity and the Allergic Response.mkv
09. Infectious Diseases - Introduction.mkv
10. Bacteria.mkv
11. Viruses.mkv
12. Spirochetes, Rickettsiae, Chlamydiae, Prions .mkv
13. Malaria.mkv
14. Schistosomiasis, Filariasis, Tapeworms.mkv
15. Infectious Diseases - Treatment.mkv
16. Infectious Diseases - Triumph and Failure.mkv
17. Shock - Principles and Hypovolemic Shock.mkv
18. Categories of Shock.mkv
19. Cancer - The Enemy Within.mkv
20. Environmental Carcinogens.mkv
21. Mechanisms of Carcinogenesis.mkv
22. Invasion, Metastasis, Angiogenesis.mkv
23. Treatment - Surgery, Radiation, Chemotherapy.mkv
24. How We Heal.mkv
Course Guidebook.PDF
files.txt
Directory of \TTC Video - How We Fail, How We Heal 2007
8.22 GB (8,835,923,968 bytes)
26 File(s) 8,835,861,403 bytes
The Human Body: How We Fail, How We Heal
Dr. Anthony A. Goodman, M.D.
Goodman earned a B.A. from Harvard College, and an M.D. from Cornell Medical College. He trained as a surgical intern and resident at the University of Michigan Medical Center in Ann Arbor. He completed his surgical training and served as chief resident at the Harvard Surgical Service of Boston City Hospital, the New England Deaconess Hospital, the Lahey Clinic, and Cambridge Hospital.
For 20 years, he worked as a general surgeon in south Florida[3] and served as Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery at the University of Miami School of Medicine.
He also served as a surgeon with the U.S. Army Medical Corps during the Vietnam War and on the hospital ship, Project HOPE.
He was also Visiting Professor of Surgery at the Christchurch, New Zealand, Clinical School of Medicine. Founder of the Broward Surgical Society, Dr. Goodman is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and a Diplomate of the National Board of Medical Examiners and the American Board of Surgery.
Course Summary by Dr. Anthony A. Goodman, M.D.
This lecture series looks at how the human body responds to attacks both from without and within. We will explore the many ways in which the body meets these challenges and how, in some cases, it may either fail or overreact.
Lecture One serves as an introduction, while Lecture Two examines cell biology, exploring the smallest functioning unit in the body, the cell. We will see how the cell micro-structure and molecular structure function to maintain the status quo, how cells respond to assault from both physical and chemical abnormalities, and how cells can change to meet these challenges.
Lectures Three, Four, and Five cover the inflammatory response, that immediate and primitive response to almost all forms of physical, chemical, and biological attack.
Lectures Six, Seven, and Eight look at the immune response, which in contrast to the inflammatory response is slower and more highly evolved, more specific and long-lasting, and has a distinct memory.
Lectures Nine through Sixteen are devoted to all forms of infectious diseases. These eight lectures examine humankind?s most persistent and deadly threats which continue to impact mortality and morbidity rates worldwide. We will examine all their forms, from bacteria and viruses to prions and parasites. We will also look at the history, prevention, and treatment of these categories of disease.
Lectures Seventeen and Eighteen cover the broad area of shock, another all-too-common physiological body failure from attack. We will look at what causes shock, the body?s specific responses to it, and options for treating shock.
Lectures Nineteen through Twenty-Three will conclude our look at the world of pathophysiology with an in-depth study of the causes and natural history of one of humankind?s most prevalent and dangerous diseases, cancer. We will explore both the environmental causes and the specific steps in the molecular biology of cancer as well as its treatment.
Finally, in Lecture Twenty-Four, we close the course with a presentation on wound healing.
The purpose of this course is to provide the tools for understanding how the body generally responds to injury and disease, tools that can be applied to further investigations. In addition, scientific vocabulary is introduced to increase our understanding of how our bodies fail and how they heal.
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