13:08 My cousin had this, somehow survived it. It took nearly 100% of his skin over the course of like 3 months, but they wrapped him in some kind of synthetic skin until the skin could fully heal, they said they couldn’t believe he survived it at the end of it.
Just finished taking care of a guy in a hospital that needed a cholecystectomy (gallbladder removal). I was his nurse. Surgeon told me after the surgery that this guy’s gallbladder was half disintegrated due to infection and inflammation. Took them three hours to remove it to make sure they got all the pieces.
I was the patient with the unseen condition. I was born with something known as a branchial cleft whereby essentially the sinus/ear structures can form improperly. This is already pretty rare by itself. In a branchial cleft there is usually a cyst in the neck that is created where sinus fluid drains to. This eventually requires surgical removal. My branchial cleft however ended in a tiny pin-sized hole in my neck that I could actually push a milky white fluid from. Very rare, but not unheard of. When I was in high school, I suffered an infection to my branchial cleft as it was essentially an unprotected mucous membrane. I would go on to have two surgeries to attempt to correct the branchial cleft. The first doctor believed that it was a completely different structure from an branchial cleft entirely and basically ended up leaving me with a hole in my neck as wide as my pinky and an even worse infection (If I had been an adult I 100% would've sued for malpractice but apparently my parents didn't want to do that for some reason). Eventually I end up going to a different surgeon, an ENT specialist. During the second surgery it was discovered that my branchial cleft was formed by a bifurcation of my inner right ear canal that then intertwined with my carotid artery and primary facial nerve before leading to the drainage point in my neck. The surgeon would later tell me that he had never seen such an involved case before. TL;DR: I had two right inner ear canals thanks to a birth defect and one of them could be drained from my neck.
@@tomzimmerman8 yeah it was certainly an interesting thing to live with. Because of the nature of how it would fill with fluid l, it would become uncomfortable from time to time so I would have to drain it by pressing behind my ear and continuing the pressure down to my neck where the fluid would be pushed out. Before the infection it was a milky white with no particular odor so it was more just unsettling than actively disgusting.
@@tomzimmerman8 unfortunately I've looked into it and the state statue of limitations for malpractice is too short. It's been almost 10 years since then
@@LincDN couldn't you try some pain and suffering or emotional distress angle? Or is all of that considered part of the malpractice? That really sucks. Your parents should've pursued that. I HATE bad doctors. One mistake can cause a lifetime of pain and they seem to get away with it too often.
I'm not a doctor but I was the patient with a condition that my gynecologist never saw before So I have endometriosis, and one of the places I have endo tissue detected is the navel and I can bleed over there When I saw my gynecologist back in 2021 I wasn't diagnosed yet, but my navel was bleeding A LOT for a few days and I needed to see a doctor asap bc I was sure that was endo, and well... Navel endometriosis is rare, to the point my doctor firstly thought it was a umbilical hernia or something like that After inspecting my navel, seeing that pink-ish blood that is characteristic to endo bleeding and performing a biopsy of the tissue she was already convinced it was endo, which was confirmed by the biopsy results in the follow-up appointment My gynecologist saw patients with endo in their lungs, nose and even ears but NEVER saw someone with navel endo in her career before, especially a navel endo bleeding to the point I had to improvise a pad to prevent staining my clothes with blood This is kinda weird to comment about it (I still feel embarrassed when it bleeds, still waiting for the excision surgery bc the road to get this surgery is ridiculously bureaucratic in my country), but this was also a very peculiar condition... I just hope I gave some insight about how severe endometriosis can be and how it can affect some places you don't think endo can reach (it can even go to your brain), I hope better ways of treatment can be found in the near future tbh
Man the shotgun one hits especially sad cuz I’ve seen a vid of the same thing, except they found him instantly and flew him to a trauma center where he ended up surviving.
5:25 This reminds me of when I met a classmate I hadn't seen in about 20 years. He gave me a big smile which showed 3 visible tooth stumps and rotten gums. I convinced him to go to the dentist as he complained how much his mouth hurt. I was with him throughout all the meetings and examinations (not the surgeries as that's obviously not allowed). At one point when the dentist told him what was going to happen with removal of the remaining teeth, he started to cry and apologize. She comforted him with the usual "Ah, yours isn't even the worst!" but the quick look she gave me said "This is most certainly the worst I've ever seen!" The result was that he had every single tooth removed (5 in total were left) and had excessive jaw/gum surgery done for the dentures to even fit.
Not super dramatic but when I was in college, I woke up with an incredibly painful ulcer on the center of my tongue. I tried to self treat it for two days (I was in my last year of pharmacy school, so it wasn’t a crazy thing for me to treat myself) but on the third day, one of my fellow students took one look at me and demanded I go to the doctor because I was being stupid. I didn’t have health insurance at the time, which was why I had resisted at first and said I’d be fine. Well, that was a Wednesday, and my friend made me go to the local low income clinic and the doctor saw me, examined it and generally seemed perplexed at what caused it as it popped up out of nowhere and I hadn’t burned/injured/cut my tongue. I wasn’t dating anyone, wasn’t sticking my tongue where it didn’t belong, and it just cropped up out of nowhere, and it was the size of a dime within two days. He basically told me he wasn’t sure what it was, and hadn’t seen something like that before. He sent me on my way with some topical numbing agents and an antiviral. The next day, I was sitting in my pharmacy and I literally felt the left side of my face get weaker, like I had less control over it. I asked my friend if it looked weird, and she demanded I go back to the doctor. Within an hour, I had no control over the left side of my face. I couldn’t close my eye, and that side of my mouth didn’t move. Just split straight down the middle of my face. Once I decided I likely wasn’t having a stroke, I went back to the clinic and saw the same dr. Where he diagnosed me with Bells Palsy, which is a condition where the nerve that controls the facial muscles swells up and gets pinched off in the narrow hole that feeds through the skull and into the brain and while very rare, can happen with infections. So he put me on high dose steroids to decrease the inflammation. Three weeks later, I still had no control over the left half of my face. I had to manually blink my eye and tape it shut at night so that a) it didn’t dry out and b) the cat didn’t step in it while I slept. And let me say, three weeks on high dose prednisone is not a fun time. My dr was puzzled, openly said he’d never seen this before, and welcomed my input on what I wanted to try, as I was six months away from graduating and it was my face after all. I brought him a small study about vitamin b12 being used to treat Bell’s palsy. He agreed to give me b12 injections, as at least it wouldn’t hurt me any. Gave myself the first shot, and the next morning I could twitch the corner of my mouth. My doc openly admitted he had never seen it before, wasn’t sure why it worked but was happy it did. He just kept muttering “interesting” and “fascinating” during my follow ups and then would catch himself and say “well in sure that’s not what you want to hear as the patient but it really is interesting”. After a few b12 injections, I regained most of my movement back. I can operate my own eye, which was my primary concern because manually blinking your own eye all day sucks. 😅and I can smile again without it being lopsided. The only thing I didn’t get back was the upper lip control on the left side, so making a seal with my mouth is impossible (goodbye career as a woodwind musician) and for some reason, when I pucker my lips, my left eye closes on its own. I guess the nerve regenerated in a way that connected the two motions into one. But I’m honestly just happy I got control of my eye back. It’s the small things in life, like blinking normally, that matter, right?
I have an issue with CSF where it doesn't flow properly. It causes half of my face to be paralyzed. But when I tilt my head sideways, my face stops being paralyzed within seconds. I have had 10 shunt surgeries but it turns out I am allergic to all shunt parts. The neurosurgeon, who is well known on 5 continents, told me he had to stop operating because he didn't know what I have. I actually remembered something he told me but didn't put in my chart, which was that my dura were really tough, like plastic. I finally got diagnosed with a rare disease that is making my membranes turn into scar tissue because I have so many environmental allergies, but I can't get any relief because I am also allergic to all shunts. I figured it out before the doctors did. I have been dealing with this for 13 years now. All of the issues can be seen on MRIs of my brain, but doctors still enter "psychosomatic" and "non-organic" on my chart nearly every week. They also suggest emotional counseling at least once a month, as if that is what I need to fix being paralyzed. This is what it's like to have a super rare disease.
I had a hip surgeon replace my shoulder after I managed to shove my humerus up through my shoulder and out the top. He said it was the the same basic joint as a hip. The only difference was a smaller work area. How I damaged my shoulder so badly? Flip turn too close to the edge of the pool. I didn’t even realize how bad it was until I saw the X-Rays. I thought it was just scratched. Never felt any pain, until after the first surgery to push my humerus back down into place and stabilize my shoulder. Surgery two was the actual replacement done by the hip surgeon. I’m pretty sure it was a first for him, plus a first for the ER too. Shock is a powerful drug.
The kid who shattered both femurs and her hip was either hit by a car or had a very, very bad fall. Kids legs and hips are incredibly durable, so it takes a lot to break them.
That last one, I know that feeling. I shadowed a vet when I was in high school, and had never had any problems with medical stuff before, but when I saw them give a dog a shot, I started getting flushed and dizzy. I didn't have any problems with the rest of the procedure (I think it was a neuter or a spay) but for some reason I couldn't handle seeing the needle prick.
When my cat got really sick from a bad flea infestation we had to take her to the vet (she was a kitten so those little dracula bugs didn't have to do much to make her so lethargic). I wasn't there when she was dropped off because I think I had school that day, but I went along when we picked her up later. They gave her a blood transfusion and my mom told me that the vet said she had about 10% of the red blood cell count a healthy kitten should have, but that they'd seen worse and she'd be fine. I remember not really believing it when she told me because that was such a low number that even my 15-16 year old self couldn't imagine being survivable. I still genuinely believe they were just saying that to make us feel better, because she looked absolutely terrible and was practically limp when we put her in the carrier. I've seen other cats die due to fleas in the years since then, so I honestly think she was very close to dying herself if we hadn't taken her in that day. I was relieved to see her alert and snuggly as usual when we took her home
Fleas scare me, they are so nasty and can mess a baby animal up so quickly. I may have given my own vet a “we’ve never a seen that before” - I had to call and preface with I know this is ridiculous but my indoor hairless cat has fleas, both of them. What can I put on them? They gave me a script for my two sphynx and I had to give my furry cats otc treatment but it worked for them. Yes, the furry cats brought the fleas in to the situation, but yet they clung. to the sphynx. Couldn’t believe it.
I have had Strep throat a bazillion times as a young adult and one time I got it on vacation. The doctor looked at my tonsils and said "oh my God" 😅 don't say that!!! Anxiety 🚀 😂
Not a medical professional, but my doc literally kept telling me he didn’t know what was wrong with me cause i kept getting hot flashes & my body was itching all over when they would occur. I’m a 23 year old (at the time 21-22) male 🤦🏾♂️😂 They eventually stopped, but it did happen again once here recently. Since then, nothing 🤷🏾♂️
I’m not a doctor but I can share a rare medical condition my ex friend had So back in middle school and high school my friend had to eat 7 times his body weight in food and as he puts it he has a black hole for a stomach, Now I envy him but the problem arises when he can’t gain weight or gain fat and he’s like skinny and constantly eating school lunches snacking from the vending machine it’s a mess. I’m grateful I don’t have a hyper metabolism since I can eat but I’ll burn the weight off the next day since I’m constantly moving and drinking water.
You should do ; Dear Cancer patients of reddit: what cancer jokes did you invent about your cancer ? or what jokes did you hear other patients hear tell about their cancer?
Had a pilonidal cyst and it wasn't embarrassing but was very painful. Didnt need surgery for it cause I stupidly poked it with a needle thinking I failed to pop it. Only to realize later that if I poked a certain spot it would squirt. Drained that painful fucker in the bathtub and got no infection. Did itch and leak a clear fluid for 3 days. Never did come back either
8:18 : I am a little confused. Is that 1000ml that rare ? My personal record is 1,5L. It feel like a little heavy ball, but it is not like I am in a frenzy run for toilet, if you know what I mean. When I had surgery on my back, the nurses freaked out for 900cc. I had to reassured them that it was nothing urgent for me, but they would not leave me until I pee that out. (which I did, finally) My boyfriend told me that my GA (General Anxiety) have build my body differently since I was terrified to raised my hand and ask for going to the toilet.
RSD. I have gone to the hospital and the doctors didn't know what it was. I have been to doctors who have told me I can't help you I don't know what it is.
Jesus, props to that General Pediatrician. I guess if their one thing medical school teaches, its how to absorb, understand and apply knowledge.
I was thinking the same. Even for a professional, that's very impressive.
😅
11:19 did i just have a stroke
Glad I'm not the only one who noticed
kignakignakignakignakignakignakignakignakignakignakignakigna
13:08 My cousin had this, somehow survived it. It took nearly 100% of his skin over the course of like 3 months, but they wrapped him in some kind of synthetic skin until the skin could fully heal, they said they couldn’t believe he survived it at the end of it.
11:21 brain skipped a beat thinking my phone crashed in a interesting way
Just finished taking care of a guy in a hospital that needed a cholecystectomy (gallbladder removal). I was his nurse. Surgeon told me after the surgery that this guy’s gallbladder was half disintegrated due to infection and inflammation. Took them three hours to remove it to make sure they got all the pieces.
"I've got your nose!" Best line of the whole video 🤣
That line actually made me almost puke. Like, the description of the injury primed it, but that last comment is what did it.
I was the patient with the unseen condition. I was born with something known as a branchial cleft whereby essentially the sinus/ear structures can form improperly. This is already pretty rare by itself. In a branchial cleft there is usually a cyst in the neck that is created where sinus fluid drains to. This eventually requires surgical removal. My branchial cleft however ended in a tiny pin-sized hole in my neck that I could actually push a milky white fluid from. Very rare, but not unheard of. When I was in high school, I suffered an infection to my branchial cleft as it was essentially an unprotected mucous membrane. I would go on to have two surgeries to attempt to correct the branchial cleft. The first doctor believed that it was a completely different structure from an branchial cleft entirely and basically ended up leaving me with a hole in my neck as wide as my pinky and an even worse infection (If I had been an adult I 100% would've sued for malpractice but apparently my parents didn't want to do that for some reason). Eventually I end up going to a different surgeon, an ENT specialist. During the second surgery it was discovered that my branchial cleft was formed by a bifurcation of my inner right ear canal that then intertwined with my carotid artery and primary facial nerve before leading to the drainage point in my neck. The surgeon would later tell me that he had never seen such an involved case before.
TL;DR: I had two right inner ear canals thanks to a birth defect and one of them could be drained from my neck.
You actually had a hole in your neck from which fluid would drain?
That is fascinating and gross at the same time.
@@tomzimmerman8 yeah it was certainly an interesting thing to live with. Because of the nature of how it would fill with fluid l, it would become uncomfortable from time to time so I would have to drain it by pressing behind my ear and continuing the pressure down to my neck where the fluid would be pushed out. Before the infection it was a milky white with no particular odor so it was more just unsettling than actively disgusting.
@@LincDN you should try and explore some options to sue that first doctor. Surely there is some way.
@@tomzimmerman8 unfortunately I've looked into it and the state statue of limitations for malpractice is too short. It's been almost 10 years since then
@@LincDN couldn't you try some pain and suffering or emotional distress angle? Or is all of that considered part of the malpractice?
That really sucks. Your parents should've pursued that.
I HATE bad doctors. One mistake can cause a lifetime of pain and they seem to get away with it too often.
I'm not a doctor but I was the patient with a condition that my gynecologist never saw before
So I have endometriosis, and one of the places I have endo tissue detected is the navel and I can bleed over there
When I saw my gynecologist back in 2021 I wasn't diagnosed yet, but my navel was bleeding A LOT for a few days and I needed to see a doctor asap bc I was sure that was endo, and well... Navel endometriosis is rare, to the point my doctor firstly thought it was a umbilical hernia or something like that
After inspecting my navel, seeing that pink-ish blood that is characteristic to endo bleeding and performing a biopsy of the tissue she was already convinced it was endo, which was confirmed by the biopsy results in the follow-up appointment
My gynecologist saw patients with endo in their lungs, nose and even ears but NEVER saw someone with navel endo in her career before, especially a navel endo bleeding to the point I had to improvise a pad to prevent staining my clothes with blood
This is kinda weird to comment about it (I still feel embarrassed when it bleeds, still waiting for the excision surgery bc the road to get this surgery is ridiculously bureaucratic in my country), but this was also a very peculiar condition... I just hope I gave some insight about how severe endometriosis can be and how it can affect some places you don't think endo can reach (it can even go to your brain), I hope better ways of treatment can be found in the near future tbh
A turtle has approved of this video
I approved the Turtle
A Bug approves of A Turtle to approve this video. 😅
Was it lagging out here for anyone one else or just me 11:22
Man the shotgun one hits especially sad cuz I’ve seen a vid of the same thing, except they found him instantly and flew him to a trauma center where he ended up surviving.
you WHAT
@@TheEmeraldMenOfficial yeah. I’ve seen a lot of really F’d up vids on YT cuz I study medicine and surgery in my free time lol
@@TheEmeraldMenOfficial it was published by channel MedicVideo if you’re curious
5:25 This reminds me of when I met a classmate I hadn't seen in about 20 years. He gave me a big smile which showed 3 visible tooth stumps and rotten gums. I convinced him to go to the dentist as he complained how much his mouth hurt. I was with him throughout all the meetings and examinations (not the surgeries as that's obviously not allowed). At one point when the dentist told him what was going to happen with removal of the remaining teeth, he started to cry and apologize. She comforted him with the usual "Ah, yours isn't even the worst!" but the quick look she gave me said "This is most certainly the worst I've ever seen!"
The result was that he had every single tooth removed (5 in total were left) and had excessive jaw/gum surgery done for the dentures to even fit.
Not super dramatic but when I was in college, I woke up with an incredibly painful ulcer on the center of my tongue. I tried to self treat it for two days (I was in my last year of pharmacy school, so it wasn’t a crazy thing for me to treat myself) but on the third day, one of my fellow students took one look at me and demanded I go to the doctor because I was being stupid. I didn’t have health insurance at the time, which was why I had resisted at first and said I’d be fine.
Well, that was a Wednesday, and my friend made me go to the local low income clinic and the doctor saw me, examined it and generally seemed perplexed at what caused it as it popped up out of nowhere and I hadn’t burned/injured/cut my tongue. I wasn’t dating anyone, wasn’t sticking my tongue where it didn’t belong, and it just cropped up out of nowhere, and it was the size of a dime within two days.
He basically told me he wasn’t sure what it was, and hadn’t seen something like that before. He sent me on my way with some topical numbing agents and an antiviral. The next day, I was sitting in my pharmacy and I literally felt the left side of my face get weaker, like I had less control over it. I asked my friend if it looked weird, and she demanded I go back to the doctor.
Within an hour, I had no control over the left side of my face. I couldn’t close my eye, and that side of my mouth didn’t move. Just split straight down the middle of my face.
Once I decided I likely wasn’t having a stroke, I went back to the clinic and saw the same dr. Where he diagnosed me with Bells Palsy, which is a condition where the nerve that controls the facial muscles swells up and gets pinched off in the narrow hole that feeds through the skull and into the brain and while very rare, can happen with infections.
So he put me on high dose steroids to decrease the inflammation. Three weeks later, I still had no control over the left half of my face. I had to manually blink my eye and tape it shut at night so that a) it didn’t dry out and b) the cat didn’t step in it while I slept. And let me say, three weeks on high dose prednisone is not a fun time.
My dr was puzzled, openly said he’d never seen this before, and welcomed my input on what I wanted to try, as I was six months away from graduating and it was my face after all. I brought him a small study about vitamin b12 being used to treat Bell’s palsy. He agreed to give me b12 injections, as at least it wouldn’t hurt me any.
Gave myself the first shot, and the next morning I could twitch the corner of my mouth.
My doc openly admitted he had never seen it before, wasn’t sure why it worked but was happy it did. He just kept muttering “interesting” and “fascinating” during my follow ups and then would catch himself and say “well in sure that’s not what you want to hear as the patient but it really is interesting”.
After a few b12 injections, I regained most of my movement back. I can operate my own eye, which was my primary concern because manually blinking your own eye all day sucks. 😅and I can smile again without it being lopsided. The only thing I didn’t get back was the upper lip control on the left side, so making a seal with my mouth is impossible (goodbye career as a woodwind musician) and for some reason, when I pucker my lips, my left eye closes on its own. I guess the nerve regenerated in a way that connected the two motions into one.
But I’m honestly just happy I got control of my eye back. It’s the small things in life, like blinking normally, that matter, right?
I have an issue with CSF where it doesn't flow properly. It causes half of my face to be paralyzed. But when I tilt my head sideways, my face stops being paralyzed within seconds. I have had 10 shunt surgeries but it turns out I am allergic to all shunt parts. The neurosurgeon, who is well known on 5 continents, told me he had to stop operating because he didn't know what I have. I actually remembered something he told me but didn't put in my chart, which was that my dura were really tough, like plastic. I finally got diagnosed with a rare disease that is making my membranes turn into scar tissue because I have so many environmental allergies, but I can't get any relief because I am also allergic to all shunts. I figured it out before the doctors did. I have been dealing with this for 13 years now. All of the issues can be seen on MRIs of my brain, but doctors still enter "psychosomatic" and "non-organic" on my chart nearly every week. They also suggest emotional counseling at least once a month, as if that is what I need to fix being paralyzed. This is what it's like to have a super rare disease.
whats csf???
@@consumingkazoos Cerebrospinal fluid
@@kiwifreund oof that sucks
Thathing, Thathing, Thathing, Thathing, Thathing, Thathing
I had a hip surgeon replace my shoulder after I managed to shove my humerus up through my shoulder and out the top. He said it was the the same basic joint as a hip. The only difference was a smaller work area.
How I damaged my shoulder so badly? Flip turn too close to the edge of the pool. I didn’t even realize how bad it was until I saw the X-Rays. I thought it was just scratched. Never felt any pain, until after the first surgery to push my humerus back down into place and stabilize my shoulder. Surgery two was the actual replacement done by the hip surgeon. I’m pretty sure it was a first for him, plus a first for the ER too.
Shock is a powerful drug.
The kid who shattered both femurs and her hip was either hit by a car or had a very, very bad fall. Kids legs and hips are incredibly durable, so it takes a lot to break them.
That last one, I know that feeling. I shadowed a vet when I was in high school, and had never had any problems with medical stuff before, but when I saw them give a dog a shot, I started getting flushed and dizzy. I didn't have any problems with the rest of the procedure (I think it was a neuter or a spay) but for some reason I couldn't handle seeing the needle prick.
When my cat got really sick from a bad flea infestation we had to take her to the vet (she was a kitten so those little dracula bugs didn't have to do much to make her so lethargic). I wasn't there when she was dropped off because I think I had school that day, but I went along when we picked her up later. They gave her a blood transfusion and my mom told me that the vet said she had about 10% of the red blood cell count a healthy kitten should have, but that they'd seen worse and she'd be fine. I remember not really believing it when she told me because that was such a low number that even my 15-16 year old self couldn't imagine being survivable. I still genuinely believe they were just saying that to make us feel better, because she looked absolutely terrible and was practically limp when we put her in the carrier. I've seen other cats die due to fleas in the years since then, so I honestly think she was very close to dying herself if we hadn't taken her in that day. I was relieved to see her alert and snuggly as usual when we took her home
Fleas scare me, they are so nasty and can mess a baby animal up so quickly.
I may have given my own vet a “we’ve never a seen that before” - I had to call and preface with I know this is ridiculous but my indoor hairless cat has fleas, both of them. What can I put on them?
They gave me a script for my two sphynx and I had to give my furry cats otc treatment but it worked for them. Yes, the furry cats brought the fleas in to the situation, but yet they clung. to the sphynx. Couldn’t believe it.
Warning: do not watch this video while eating. Your appetite will commit sudoku.
Did you mean seppuku?
seeing someone say sudoku instead of seppuku is kinda funny
@@KobiHameed nah, sudoku is just the "undemonetizable" word for suicide
I have had Strep throat a bazillion times as a young adult and one time I got it on vacation. The doctor looked at my tonsils and said "oh my God" 😅 don't say that!!! Anxiety 🚀 😂
Not a medical professional, but my doc literally kept telling me he didn’t know what was wrong with me cause i kept getting hot flashes & my body was itching all over when they would occur. I’m a 23 year old (at the time 21-22) male 🤦🏾♂️😂 They eventually stopped, but it did happen again once here recently. Since then, nothing 🤷🏾♂️
"I got your nose" about killed me on that last one.
I’m not a doctor but I can share a rare medical condition my ex friend had
So back in middle school and high school my friend had to eat 7 times his body weight in food and as he puts it he has a black hole for a stomach,
Now I envy him but the problem arises when he can’t gain weight or gain fat and he’s like skinny and constantly eating school lunches snacking from the vending machine it’s a mess.
I’m grateful I don’t have a hyper metabolism since I can eat but I’ll burn the weight off the next day since I’m constantly moving and drinking water.
Can't even trust shotguns. Damn.
Sure glad my pilonidal cyst excision was not that bad, but that sucks no matter how big or small it is.
The story with the old lady in the nurse home is why I never want to be in one
I love these doctor videos . Please make more .
12:54 I’m a surgeon; I, too, have seen a mannequin’s arm! Now we have two nickels! …which isn’t a lot, but it’s weird that it’s happened twice!
You should do ; Dear Cancer patients of reddit: what cancer jokes did you invent about your cancer ? or what jokes did you hear other patients hear tell about their cancer?
No one’s talking about 11:21
The very last line has me in shock omg !! EMOTIONAL DAMAGE! hahahahaha
the story about the dude that shot himself in the head and cured his depression tho
I wonder...for the liquid poop situation...was it cause some kind of pressure from the device? 🤢Bless you all health care workers ✨🙏
12:35 not going for a week is normal
Rectum? Freaking killed him! -punchline from old joke
that last one was literally traumatizing oh my gosh
11:23 didn't anyone else get that glitch?
Had a pilonidal cyst and it wasn't embarrassing but was very painful. Didnt need surgery for it cause I stupidly poked it with a needle thinking I failed to pop it. Only to realize later that if I poked a certain spot it would squirt. Drained that painful fucker in the bathtub and got no infection. Did itch and leak a clear fluid for 3 days. Never did come back either
7:55 thats not even a lot lmao
Oh god, the perfect ending! 🤣
This'll be wild
Last story like:
I hate kids being hurt... but im just gonna let them do their own thing without watching
8:18 : I am a little confused. Is that 1000ml that rare ? My personal record is 1,5L. It feel like a little heavy ball, but it is not like I am in a frenzy run for toilet, if you know what I mean. When I had surgery on my back, the nurses freaked out for 900cc. I had to reassured them that it was nothing urgent for me, but they would not leave me until I pee that out. (which I did, finally)
My boyfriend told me that my GA (General Anxiety) have build my body differently since I was terrified to raised my hand and ask for going to the toilet.
This video justifies me not wanting to have ever have existed. Life is awful. It's suffering, it's all suffering.
Updoot, why the hell does your robot voice often get stuck studdering? I have the same robot voice, Ryan Trial, for FREE and this NEVER happens!
RSD. I have gone to the hospital and the doctors didn't know what it was. I have been to doctors who have told me I can't help you I don't know what it is.
boyzoy dog the let me do it for you meme
ive got your nose lol
Hotdog fingers.
7:33 any/all have made me nauseous 🤢
ooh
Ee
I’m a Potato
Dammit. I wish this wasn’t AI. It’s hard for me to understand all they are saying. I’m out.