Menu
|
111-222-292 (Ext: 245)
Home
|
About US
|
Creditors
|
Mentorship
|
Faq
Home
About US
Creditors
Mentorship
Faq
Lecture
SEARCH COURSES / LECTURES
Search Lectures
Search Courses
All Disciplines
Basic and Health Sciences
Biology
Chemistry
Mathematics
Physics
Medicine
Test Prep
Applied Sciences
Agricultural Science
Computer Science
Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Energy
Engineering
Healthcare
Social Sciences
Business and Finance
Economics
English
History
Arts and Humanities
Law
Literature and Linguistics
Management
Marketing
Mass Communication
Philosophy
Physical Education
Political Science
Psychology
Sociology
All Levels
Undergraduate
School
College
Graduate
All Institutes
Harvard
Khan Academy
Khan Academy Urdu
MIT
Oxford
Stanford
UCI Open
Udacity
Virtual Education Project Pakistan (VEPP)
Virtual University
Yale University
Home
>>
Test Prep
>>
NCLEX-RN (K-A)
>>
Circulatory system physiology (K-A)
>>
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
(7 Lectures Available)
S#
Lecture
Course
Institute
Instructor
Discipline
1
Calcium puts myosin to work (K-A)
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
Khan Academy
Basic and Health Sciences
2
Heart cells up close! (K-A)
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
Khan Academy
Basic and Health Sciences
3
How tropomyosin and troponin regulate muscle contraction (K-A)
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
Khan Academy
Basic and Health Sciences
4
Myosin and actin (K-A)
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
Khan Academy
Basic and Health Sciences
5
Sympathetic nerves affect myosin activity (K-A)
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
Khan Academy
Basic and Health Sciences
6
Three types of muscle (K-A)
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
Khan Academy
Basic and Health Sciences
7
Why doesn't the heart rip?-video (K-A)
Heart muscle contraction (K-A)
Khan Academy
Basic and Health Sciences
Basic and Health Sciences
Biology
Chemistry
Mathematics
Physics
Medicine
Test Prep
Applied Sciences
Agricultural Science
Computer Science
Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Energy
Engineering
Healthcare
Social Sciences
Business and Finance
Economics
English
History
Arts and Humanities
Law
Literature and Linguistics
Management
Marketing
Mass Communication
Philosophy
Physical Education
Political Science
Psychology
Sociology