
Channel: Lecturio Medical
Category: Education
Tags: normal hemostasismedicallecturio medicalmedical educationmedical studentscellular pathologyhealthmedicinemedical schoolusmle reviewusmleusmle review normal hemostasis
Description: This video “Normal Hemostasis” is part of the Lecturio course “Cellular Pathology” ► WATCH the complete course on lectur.io/cellularpathology ► LEARN ABOUT: - the 3 important factors that influence thrombus formation - the function of the endothelial cells lining the blood vessels - the mechanism of vasoconstriction that occurs at the site of injury - how to describe primary and secondary hemostases occur at the injury site, and name the important mediators of these processes - how antithrombotic counter-regulation takes place, and name the important mediators of this process ► THE PROF: Dr. Richard N. Mitchell is the Lawrence J. Henderson Professor of Pathology and Health Sciences and Technology, at Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts, USA. He obtained his PhD in Cell Biology and Immunology from Rockefeller University in 1980, and his MD from Harvard Medical School in 1984. Currently, he is Program Director of the Health Sciences and Technology Education and Curriculum at Harvard Medical School. ► LECTURIO is your daily study companion for med school: Created and taught by medical experts, Lecturio combines videos, recall quizzes, an advanced clinical question bank, and study hacks delivered in a way to maximize the use of learning science-validated strategies, no matter if you are a pre-medical, medical, physician associate, or nursing practitioner student studying for USMLE® Step 1 & Step 2 CK, COMLEX Level 1 & 2, NBME® exams, MCAT, MBBS, NEET-PG, or other boards. Create your free account now: lectur.io/medicalpremium ► INSTALL our free Lecturio app iTunes Store: app.adjust.com/z21zrf Play Store: app.adjust.com/b01fak ► LET’S CONNECT: • Facebook: facebook.com/lecturio.medical.education.videos • Instagram: instagram.com/lecturio_medical_videos #medicalschool #medicaleducation #cellularpathology #usmle #medschool



















