Plastic Surgeon Reacts to BOTCHED by NATURE: Implant MESS in a MALE!
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- Опубліковано 29 чер 2021
- A man with pectus excavatum undergoes surgery to correct a botched chest implant! America's Holistic Plastic Surgeon Dr. Anthony Youn reacts to an episode of BOTCHED by NATURE!
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I got briefly very confused when Dr. Youn said "I had a facelift yesterday" until I realized he had one as the surgeon, not the patient :-D
Hahaha, same!
😂
His face does look like he gets face lifts too.
Haha same I thought he looked really good for someone who just had a facelift the day before
Not usually so tight assed, but showing a collapsing building for laughs right now, really?
I'm only hard on you because I love your channel so much and highly respect you as a person.
I'm sure it was just a oversight. Im assuming it is hard to be perfect when you are juggling so many things in your life-any one of which could be considered a respectful career.
So, you get a mulligan on this one. I don't think you intended to be in such bad taste.
I’m glad Botched isn’t just some shitty show, they seem to know what they’re doing, and actually help people.
The two doctors in the show are miracle workers, namely the rhinoplasties.
One of those doctors was a surgeon on the swan and did a lot o terrible things to women. One UA-camd I like calls him Dr. Debrowlift
@@Randomthingswithchelle2 luxeria!! i love her haha
Me too! God bless!
The doctor from My 600 Lb Life also seems to be professional and caring. At least, in the few episodes I saw, he seemed genuinely concerned for the patients.
My respect for Dr Youn has multiplied after hearing him say plastic surgery is a last resort.
Yes
@Joseph Blough
Yikes
@Joseph Blough WoKe WoKe WoKe is that all you say? Just call them a dumb parent how does woke matter
@Joseph Blough A certain sensitivity akin to making an unrelated topic circle around to the current flavor of the month arbitrary periah? You're the only one who was thinking about it until you brought it up.
@Joseph Blough Try finishing elementary school before pretending to be clever or remotely educated on grammar. 0/10 Needs improvement
"Wasn't that satisfying?"
NO. SEEING A MANS SKELETON GO *POP* LIKE ONE OF THOSE SUCTION CUP TOYS YOU CAN WIN AT AN ACRADE GAVE ME HEART PALPITATIONS
Literally :))) I just watched them flip it and involuntarily said "ow"
I had to close my eyes 🤣
Lol
“Wasn’t that satisfying?” I felt it in my CHEST
Watching something like that and feeling satisfied is definitely a surgeon thing 😂
I like his visuals for the wires , screws, and plates. 😂😂
Cartoon exaggerations are just the best.
Surgery is done.
Wow. That was fast.
Right 😂
Surgery is basically messing around with wires, screws and plates.
So dramatic. Just throw it all in.
My brother had that as a child, and the doctors were keeping an eye on it. I forgot at what age, but it popped itself back the right way, and he never needed surgery. My nephew had that as well, but his didn't correct itself. It started to impact him with shortness of breath and pain. He was also very involved in baseball and football. X-rays showed the chest was severely compromising his lung function and heart. He had surgery when, I think, he was 12ish, in which a curved metal bar was inserted and then literally "flipped" over and that cartilage was corrected. He had to keep that bar in for a year. A year goes by and it's time for surgery. He asked if he could have the bar, and he came home from the hospital with this curved titanium bar. I want to say I believe he put it up on the wall of his room, but I can't say so for sure. He was a great kid.
Might be worth sharing the disorder names: "Marfans" or "ehlers danlos syndrome" if he ever has long term onset of new complications 😬
What do you mean was? Is he okay?
@@GLGC688 He took his life in 2015. Forever 25
@@lisalynnmarie2448 :(
I was really hoping it was a happy story. My condolences.
@@lisalynnmarie2448 I'm so sorry to hear that... My condolences, friend.
It's a shame how surgeries that seriously impact quality of life are labeled cosmetic and therefore 'unnecessary' by insurance companies.
Yeh even in UK Where its meant to be stabilised I had to pay 9k for this same surgery
Depends if there is a medical reason. My husband had one for medical reasons and it was fully covered by the basic insurance here in the Netherlands.
@@Nitzpitz it was for medical reasons i had 40 per cent lung capacity at 21 because of it the NHS here just sucks
@@HalfHarry that does suck. We didn’t pay anything for the surgery here.
@@Nitzpitz nhs are more concerend about offering boob jobs for free etc :(
My chest hurts just thinking about those bars in my ribs
Yeah. Like... a lot. I know someone with metal in their back from back injuries from the army. They are in constant pain. Can't imagine that in your nerve filled CHEST.
I was born with Pectus Excavatum. Had the bar put in when I was 11. Surgery was brutal but life saving for me. Never noticed the bar after the healing process wrapped up. Bar was removed three years later.
Yeah, I had the bar in my chest for a year and a half starting from when I was 16. The recovery from surgery was massively, intensely painful. But I'm glad I did it, because my sternum was compressing my heart and lungs, and getting worse.
Same, my chest is feeling ✨uncomfy✨
But at the same time I can't stop watching it.
Me sitting here waiting to get 3 bars put under my ribs in a few weeks...
I love how Dr YUN is sponsored by himself( his own skin care line) 😅
Its honestly a major flex lolol
*Youn
How can someone dislike this when it hasn’t even premiered yet?
Haters😔
fievty
Haters gonna hate.
@ALAN H Troll hater, or hater troll?
Their internet must be over 1000 Mbps
My boyfriend has pectus excavatum, I had never seen/heard about it before I met him. It has never affected how attractive I find him and to me it's just "normal", because it's just part of him. So if anyone who reads this has this and is feeling self-conscious about it because they're worried their partner/future partner might not find them attractive, this is for you: They will not care at all if they love you, they will still find you to be the sexiest person alive!
I know self image is important to people but I’d see their breathing as a greater concern
What does Pectus Excavatum sound like a Harry Potter spell? 😄😁
It’s been more like an evil curse for me.
Because potters spells are based on latin words.
@@elizabethharttley4073 that makes sense! A lot of medical terms are based on Latin too.... but you can't argue that it sounds exactly like it was straight from JK.
@@elizabethharttley4073 And not just based on latin either! Many if not most of the spells in Harry potter are straight up latin :)
@@RachelTech Yes, but it sounds like that because it's Latin.
Can we just take a moment to appreciate the "hard to work out or exert yourself" clips were all just pandas being cute?
I had the nuss bar procedure done! I had the bar removed and have it hanging on my wall like a taxidermy animal on a plaque.
That’s cool
I'm surprised they let you keep it. Usually that isnt done, because of various reasons, mostly because of laws regarding such things.
Exceptions are made, sometimes. I still have the screws and plate they used to hold my spine together after my car accident, until i was healed enough to undergo proper surgery.
@liam Anderson I know most would prefer to give it you, but legally, anything that has been used in a human body, like these rods, is considered a human body part, by the powers that be.
Its a weird bit of info i picked up during my few years working as a surgical nurse, right after college.
How long did it hurt after they put the bar in? And what about afterwards, when they removed it?
@@dreamwolf7302 I wonder if they’ll let me keep the part of my pelvis I’m about to have removed
My son was born with pectus excavatum. His was so severe that the doctor said his sternum was probably pretty close to touching his spine. He was about 4 when they did the Nuss procedure on him.
Oh lord I hope he's doing okay now
Oh, that must have been hard for baby and mom! 😢
Osteomyelitis is no joke, I had an infection in my leg that progressed to the bone and I had to have my lower leg amputated.
oh shit i hope you’re doing alright now !! wishing you well 💖
@@iburntmytoe3470 Yes, much better. Thank you for asking. I got fit for a prosthetic a few days ago, just have to see what the insurance says if I get the fancy microprocessor knee or not.
Edit: Insurance said yes! I'm very excited 😁
@@claritey yoooo congratulations on the insurance approval! Insurance is a bitch.
So sad
Updates on the leg please?!?
My husband had this so badly it caused fluid on his heart. Insurence wouldn’t pay for it until it was super bad. He had a bar implanted in high school and removed later. From what I understand the bar is the norm now.
What kind of insurance would only pay when it got super worse .😕
@@mangkanor9403 his parents had decent Insurence. This is considered a cosmetic procedure. When the doctor mentioned that not many people get it fixed and this is why. They had to wait until he had fluid on his heart and lungs. The hole was so large it fit a mans fist.
@@Megan-ew5dp damn... thats pretty harsh..
@@mangkanor9403 yep, he was lucky to live in a major city that had a doctor that helped pioneered a type of the bar implantation, instead of have to have the break all his ribs alternative .
Holy F, i wonder how many ppl in the US die just because their insurance doesnt pay.
I have pectus excavatum. I think the lack of concrete information about the currently available treatment methods is to blame for people trying these borderline experimental stuff, at the end of the day you just gotta accept it because there's no proven effective method to fix it, even ''corrective'' surgery sometimes wear off with time...
Probably sounds so stupid but does this hurt?
i’m sorry if this is offensive or anything but it seems like it would make it harder to breathe. are there any side affects at all?
Yo bro, you can actually fix your pectus excavatum to a degree. I have it, and I made my chest look much more normal by working out my chest and doing dumbbell pullovers.
@@ellaedwards1375 it actually can! As a child I had to see a cardiologist for my pectus, to see if it would effect my breathing or heart. Sometimes if it’s too deep it presses on the lungs and heart and surgery is required. I sometimes have difficulty breathing during exercise but that’s it.
@@ellaedwards1375 I also have PE :) it doesn't hurt, but my case is somewhat severe and I get shortness of breath, my lung capacity is greatly reduced (so cardio is really difficult for me), and I get an arrhythmia occasionally.
Man literally got a gigantic nose on his chest from surgery 😭
🤣
I thought it looked like something else 😂😅
Yeah, I thought it looked as though he had an extra pec muscle that had slipped down, like a falsey that slipped out of a woman's bra.
I have pectus excavatum, and most people don't know that you can actually fix it to a degree. I was able to make my chest look much more normal by doing chest excersises. Also, dumbbell pullovers can actually change the shape of the chest cavity and make PE less severe.
If that avatar pic is you, you are doing an awesome job! You look great!!!!
meredith anderson yeah
I have it too man.
You definitely look amazing!
Hitting puberty and growing breasts really helped me. I now just look like I have A LOT of cleavage.
It’s really cool seeing an episode about this! I got the surgery for my pectus excavatum and have had the bars in for at least three years now, but I should be getting them out next year :D
Nice :D
I mean not nice but like. Yk what I mean, I hope-
I hope things go well for you!
How old were you when you had the surgery? And would you mind me asking any more questions? I'm considering the surgery and trying to connect with people online about it.
I just got mine out 13 days ago after three years. Best of luck!
@@TLK9419 go on the r/pectusexcavatum reddit. You can message someone and ask around freely.
I LOVE HOW SOMEONE ALREADY DISLIKED- like wtf, it hasn't even started? Haters are just going to hate bc they clearly have nothing better to do with their life. Please do something productive than bring someone down. tsk.
Tsk. Tsk. Tsk.
Tsk. Tsk. Tsk. Tsk
alot of people just misclick and dont notice they dislike.
They're just botss
It must suck to be that miserable.
The botched episodes are my favorite!!!
He drained it himself 😳
Me cringe all the way when he poke himself with that big needle!😱😵😵😵
He is really manly and strong
Its not as painful as you might think, as an NP, i wont lie, i have done a few self surgeries, relying on my knowledge and experience.
Difference being, i know all the tricks and safety methods to avoid serious issues, and limit myself to simple things.
My stitching up my leg after slicing it open on a ripped piece of metal roofing. that sucked, but the stitches were neat and trim. Barely left a scar.
Seriosuly though, i am a dumbass, and you should never try anything like this on yourself under any circumstance outside of being trapped on a desert island, or lost in the deep woods for weeks at a time.
America the great amirite
@@DoraM12 Thats more of an issue than you might think, outside the US.
I mean, according to the media (in the US at least), Canada has the best healthcare ever.
But the fact i see more Canadians coming to the walk in clinic than i do Americans, in a town quite a distance from the border, says otherwise.
I've seen patients coming over from Canada, to get cancer screenings, who were given 3-6 month WAIT TIMES to get lumps, bumps, and lesions tested for cancer.
I love the stupid wire, screws and plates visual joke.
I love the animations/pictures he and his editor(s) use. I’m living for the red panda
Fun fact: pectus excavatum can be associated with certain types of genetic connective tissue disorders like Marfan Syndrome.
yep, that's where know it, my first partner had marfan. had not fixed the PE because it was necessary to nail his spine together because else the back would collapse
Not every pectus craninatum and excavatum are related to this syndromes
@@minecraftbasics8992and that’s why they clearly stated “CAN BE” related
Woman with pectus excavatum here. Glad to see a video about pectus deformities and the surgeries used to fix them. I have been thinking about getting mine fixed.
Ps: my sister and her daughter have pectus carnatum.
What does the other condition mean?
@@lisamessenger3713 it’s pretty much the opposite. Pigeon chested is another term for it. The breast bone is pushed out instead of in
I'm so distracted by your hat with your own logo it's so perfect
I had such severe pectus excavatum that my sternum was nearly touching my spine. It caused some other medical problems I'm still dealing with today. My pediatrician had never seen a case so severe and recommended me to a specialist surgeon. He did the Nuss procedure when I was 17 over 10 years ago. I had to have the bar removed much earlier than recommended due to a change in insurance and that's probably why my pectus has returned to about half of what it used to be. This is the first time I've ever heard of alternate ways to correct it
How does this affect the patient if he ever needs CPR ?? Does the patient's body ever reject the bar like it's a foreign body ?
Good questions! I'd like to know the answers, too.
I’m curious as well
My Bf had the Nuss procedure done at 14 (he’s 22). He’s never had any complications with it. idk if it’s common to have complications with it or not, but as far as I know since it’s not an organ and is placed in a spot that won’t interrupt anything the body is trying to do, it shouldn’t be rejected. He’s asleep rn but I’ll ask him about the CPR thing
I think they said that the bar comes out after 3 years so after that, it shouldn't make a difference. With the bars in, I doubt chest compressions would be possible
@@zekrell9381 to be fair a good medical professional should pay attention to how deep the compressions go. For the average person though that bar would definitely impact how well compressions would work
would you mind talking about top surgery from the surgeon's perspective? like, how you fix certain things or get a certain look to their chest, experiences working with trans folks, why some have to be revised, etc?
Being a holistic doctor, I wager he probably doesn’t do top surgery. Most plastic surgeons who do top surgeries or feminization/masculization surgeries will advertise it and how long as it’s fairly new.
@@KateandBree yeah, he seems pretty responsible; if someone went to him for these things, he'd probably refer them to someone who specializes in it and has a good reputation, because i've seen pictures of people with botched surgeries online, and it's not pretty. at all. mental health is already a struggle with even relatively-minor gender dysphoria (source: me), and i know that when i do it, if i were to get butchered by the surgeon who was supposed to help me reclaim my body, it would be absolutely devastating.
youtu. be/5tyZoqT-X5U this is one of Dr. scott Mosser's videos on the "gender confirmation center" account. All his videos are extremely informative and I highly recommend watching whatever you're interested in. (There's a space in the link so it doesn't get caught up in spam.) R/ftm on Reddit is also a good place to look. I had mine a few years ago, so chances are things have changed since then, but mosser and medalie were informative on techniques, what they consider a good candidate for a certain procedure, risks, etc.
Hope this helped!
9:40 Good lord, my brother had this surgery a few years back and I didn't even know it was that dangerous!! It went very well, though recovery was tough. He is so much stronger than anyone knows ❤
where did he get his surgery?
dr. youn is literally so awesome i swear. he knows so much and also tells us what he suggests and what he doesn’t
When the surgery is smooth like butter
Doctor Youn: 🥰☺😍😊
Dr Youn has such a trustworthy aura. So genuine and empathetic
how does someone hate an innocent doctor
That poor man 😟 that implant looked so painful! Glad he got the surgery he needed ❤️
Some people have this condition as the result from Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome. My cousin has it, as does our daughter to a lesser degree.
I have EDS and I have it
Also with Marfan syndrome
@@213243D I have marfan syndrome and I have it to a degree- all on one side so my sternum is vertical (according to the cardiothoracic surgeon who just operated on me). My brother, also part of the marfam, has a more traditional and seriously deep excavatum.
Maybe rephrase that
Oh. I have this and didn't know. I swear there's so little info around this condition beyond "bendy" given.
my partner had surgery to repair his severe pectus excavatum back in november! he had the Ravitch procedure done and he's healed really well and breathing better than ever. I'm hoping my surgery will help relieve some of the pressure on my heart and lungs and improve my asthma and cardiac arrhythmias. until then it's getting winded every time I sit up for me 😅
Wishing you all the best in the future! (and present)
95 minutes left and I can't wait
It kills me that he sponsors himself I just love it
The two main hosts on the Super Carlin Brothers channel talked about a surgery for pectus excavatum they both went through as teens and how painful it was for months. I'm assuming it was this. Pretty cool! My husband has a very mild pectus excavatum indent and he didn't know what it was until I recognized it (from a previous boyfriend) and told him, so I guess that means it's never been a cause for concern.
I can imagine that it would be painful since it is forcing cartalige in the chest to rearrange itself.
Maybe convince your husband to at least get checked out, because what can seem normal for one person does not necessarily mean that it's actually normal. Similar to how my brother grew up thinking that for everyone bananas tasted almost fizzy (similar to carbonation in sodas), turns out he has a banana intolerance.
I’m female and mine is pretty deep and I had my lungs and heart checked before getting pregnant and having children to make sure I was good and I was.
@@itssteph263 Oh... I thought bananas just did that... huh, apparently I have a banana intolerance 😆
It made my heart feel so warm when he mentioned pectus excavatum, I’ve had it my whole life and I’m going in for a surgery in august!
Congrats dude
Good for you!
I’ve got pectus excavatum! I’d say I have it mild to medium, I don’t particularly think it affects my lungs but I’m not exactly sure since I can’t tell if I’m either out of shape or run out of breath faster, and my ribs stick way out. It makes shopping for bras and swimsuits pretty difficult since I’m pretty small, and it doesn’t help that I’ve had severe body dysmorphia since around middle school. Overall I haven’t had too much trouble with having a funnel chest, I’ve always joked about being Iron Man and I’m not too self conscious about it. I do get the occasional questions especially when I lay on my back since it’s very obvious how much my ribs stick out, but other than that my experience hasn’t been all too bad
While running my chest starts to hurt
@@atsushiedits4677 mine has hurt also when I run further than I am used to. It is normal for me as my lungs are expanding getting used to a larger lung capacity. That's what happens to me and I don't have this condition.
I love this type of plastic surgery that actually changes somebody's life ❤
For some reason I find very reassuring that these surgeons feel comfortable enough to have a camera in the operating room. To me it means that they feel confident that everything will go well.
More a reflection that everything will be done Properly, not guaranteed to go Well though. Risk that person takes.
What I really love about these kind of videos is that you praise the other surgeons for their work. So many times when you see one doctor talking about another doctors work, they only criticize or brag about how much better they could do it themselves. I see it in every line of work be it contractors, electricians everything. Even hairdressers, they always criticize what the last person did
I swam with a lot of boys over the years that had some pretty severe cases, it’s crazy
Most definitely know people with Pectus Excavatum and also the other one, Pectus Carniatum (may have spelled that wrong) also known as pigeon chest. And yes, I have friends with Marfan Syndrome and Pectus deformities are a very common feature for the condition, some of my friends with Marfan have had the Nus procedure done because their Pectus Excavatum was so severe that it affected their lungs and heart negatively so it was medically necessary to correct the PE, for one of my friends it was done to give them a better circumstance for an upcoming open heart surgery to deal with an aneurysm by the aortic root (also very common in Marfan Syndrome) that needed to be addressed before growing more and increasing the risk of dissecting, when possible it’s always better to do those aortic repairs as elective surgeries rather than waiting for it to become a medical emergency when dissection is imminent or already happened.
I am immensely impressed by this man's chest operation. The skill and integrity of Dr Debrow, Dr Nassiff, and Dr Youn is really admirable I think of all the years and years of study and experience these fine doctors have and especially the strength and self-discipline it takes for a person to become a doctor or a surgeon. Thankyou Dr Debrow, Dr Nassiff and Dr Youn for your honourable work which is truly life-changing to your patients and me as a viewer.
I am a woman with the same condition. My chest pain was dismissed by countless doctors as "growing pains" and was told to keep my back straight because I have bad posture (literally can't breathe with a straight back). I only accidentally stumbled upon the name at the age of 30 while googling leg bruises. The next doctor I went to for confirmation was like "duh, this should have been treated in adolescence". He would only refer me for the invasive type of surgery in Russia. Getting the Nuss surgery as an adult costs as much as a house and is obviously not covered by insurance. Not to mention the pain, recovery and stress of being in a foreign country for the whole thing.
Btw, any thoughts on taulinoplastia? It's fairly new.
My ex-boyfriend had a caved in sternum and my fiance has a caved in rib cage where the bottom half of his left rib cage is fairly caved in but they were both born with it so they were both kind of used to it. It is a bit of a trip though when they took off their shirts for the first time
My girlfriend has this and she hated it but I told her that it’s part of her and I love her nonetheless and now she isn’t bothered by it anymore.
Edit: Her doctors said it doesn’t have to corrected because it wouldn’t do anything bad to her or else it already would’ve been corrected.
Love the recognition of the other doctors and their skills. Most people these days are out to prove why they're the best. It's great to see someone showing humility!
My brother has the caved in chest (idk how to spell). They talked to my parent's about surgery cuz he was on the boarder of needing it. I didn't even know they did implants for this.
I had the nuss procedure performed on me as an adult. It's life changing. Wish they shared more about who the surgeons were performing the surgery. No way would Dr. D be qualified to perform such on a patient over the age of 18. Anyways great stuff.
1:00 I actually have it. It’s not that severe and we discovered it when I was twelve. A kid at my school at the time told me I had a “bubble chest” so I went to my parents and asked what I could do about it. They ended up taking me to a pediatric hospital and I was then told about a brace that I was supposed to wear 20 or some hours a day. It just had a squishy pad on the front and a hard back panel. On the side was tightening jobs or whatever that I could use to bring the back and the front closer and tighter press on the elevated pec. I wore it until I was 16 and it actually rlly helped and it’s not noticeable now.
The stack of paper plates, I am *a s c e n d i n g*
I had a classmate who had a caved chest. I only know he had it cause he left for a while then came back to class and told everyone about his surgery to fix it, I think it was similar to the nass surgery with the bar.
My brother had the Nuss procedure done a few years ago pectus excavatum . He had his bar in for 4-5 years
I don't know why, but I feel so happy watching this
You gotta love how a surgeon talks about preforming a procedure as 'i had a face lift recently', reduces a person to a body part.
All in all dr y does good, his vids are creative and entertaining even educational.
Ciao!
Being a surgeon is such an amazing and critical job. Hats off to all of you.
is anyone gonna talk about how hilarious the graphics for the "wires, screws and plates" is?
You know what I learned watching this surgeon is he is a good guy because I never knew the risks around implants and these problems can kill people a number of ways
I also have a way higher regard for plastic surgeons and the work they do
Dr. Youn is so honest I like him
Such a professional! That man’s confidence so clearly goes up and so does his quality of life
"Wasn't that satisfying?" NO! That scared me. I thought they broke it or something.
Could you react to The Bad Skin Clinic? It's similar to Dr. Pimple Popper except she treats a wider variety of skin conditions. Dr. Emma is great and her bedside manner is amazing. ☺️
Loved the "Butter" analogy 💜💜💜🧈 🧈🧈
Omg I can't believe he would do that. Thanks for the mapping out of this procedure Dr. Y. Wow what a difference.
The Gudetama and panda clips! 😂
Humans and what we've learned to do and the advancements we've made are just mind boggling. I always say the human body is a strange place to be.
Dr. Youn is SO SO GOOD!
Great outcome!! So happy for this man!!!
Ohhh, I think this is the procedure (Nuss) that Steven Crowder went through about a month ago. I believe it was something like his ribs were pressing into his heart which obviously restricted blood flow and so he had three bars fitted into his chest.
Had a bit of a death scare a week after the surgery, but he's alright now, thank God.
"The second operation is much more invasive" WHUUUU
I love your reacts to Botched! Please never stop doing them
the moment I watched a couple of Dr. Youn's reviews, I subscribed automatically. I love how informative he is. I always learn a lot of info in every video.
I cant wait!!
Dr. would you be able to do a depression skin care routine? For us girls or guys that are literally struggling to get out of bed and keep up with our hygiene, what can we do with our skin care that will keep us from ruining our skin but can potentially be done from our bed? Can we use cleansing wipes? (I heard they are bad) can we use moisturizer after cleansing wipes?
Cleansing wipes are awful, youre better off just splashing your face with water. They're awful for the environment too. If you cant keep wipes on your bedside table, can't you keep micellar water and cotton pads as well??? Nonetheless eating poorly and not going outside means no matter your routine your skin is gonna be pretty fucked.
Depression definitely can impact your hygiene. While skin health is important, depression can also cause people not to take care of their teeth. Bad skin can always be taken care of, but with teeth once they are damaged good luck. :(
Best start is simply drink enough water, water is skin's best friend. They also sell "shampoo caps" I used them at work to bathe patients who didnt want/couldn't get out of bed. They also sell no-rinse skin cleanser for the same purpose. Its not perfect but its a good start when depression leaves you debilitated. On the days you can motivate yourself tru doing a shower that does either only hair or only skin, cuts the shower down to one task. A little less daunting.
I struggle with depression and sometimes cannot be bothered with my skincare. At the bare minimum I try to stand in front of the sink long enough to brush my teeth, wipe my face with micellar water on a cotton pad, rinse it off with water (you don’t have to rinse but my preference) , and slather on moisturizer. You can do the micellar water and moisturizer from bed it need be.
I’m with someone else who replied. Make sure you focus on the teeth more than the skin. The skin can manage ok on its own for most people (especially if you’re an adult) but the risk of teeth being messed up due to neglect is high. But water to rinse the face and a light moisturiser/oil depending on skin type should honestly be enough
Wow, that surgery was amazing. Seeing the heart and the bar so close made me hold my breath.
By profession, I’m physiotherapist but I love to see your videos❤️ well done dr
a friend of mine has a chest like that we used it as a shot glass more than once
Oh my god😂
y’all drunk out of his chest I couldn’t 🤢
@@fbi397 Body shots but different
I would like to see you react to an episode of The Swan. I bet alot has changed and it would be interesting to hear your take on it
He looks great! Kudos to the doctors! Sending 💘 and prayers!
The exercise graphics were brilliant! Love it.
I’m one of the first people to comment! I love his content. You are the best
Wow!
Funny story
My hubs has polans syndrome.
His mother thought the doc said polio so my hubs believed until his 30s that he'd had polio as a kid.
He's nearly 60 now.
Sheesh thats terrible
I really love your logo! I stared at it on your head almost the entire video. It looks lovely on the navy scrubs you use too!
I’m the type of person I go to tingly watching stuff like this and right now my whole body is just tingling
Hahahaha smooth just like butter 🧈 XD noice Dr Youn BTS stan 10:31
I love you so much dr youn! I’ve lost over 85 pounds and NEED a tummy tuck. I’m in your area I swear one day I’ll be in your office 🥲🥰
The clips you used from 8:13-8:23 had me rolling. You're videos are not only incredibly informative, but are so funny and entertaining as well. You are awesome! 🐼
I'm always impressed by him... 🥺🥺🥺
I'm 13 years old and just looked this up. I have asthma, and it has impacted my ability to perform well in cross-country running. I'm starting to make myself more aware of this condition because I noticed that I might have this. I'm not exactly sure what to do.
Talk to your doctor or primary care physician about it. It’s something you need to get checked out. I know someone who has it, and she also has issues with running and exercise, and is something that your doctor needs to know about. I’d also tell your parents.
Asthma is very common
If you would do this surgery on a child, does this have to stay in for 3 years too? Is it even possible to do on a child since they are still growing?
Usually they recommend having the surgery around 12yr old, the length of time the bars stay in depends on the case
@@BarnBaby100 thanks :)
Love your channel Dr Youn!
Pandaaaaaaaaas!!!😍😍😍😍😍
I would also love if I could find your products in Greece!
Dr. Nassif & Dr. Dubrow seem like miracle workers to me! Wow!!!