"Just because I'm a vet does not mean I'm a mentalcase!" Dr. Charles (in the most nonchalant way possible): "Well you did walk in here and stab yourself in the head"
As someone who has heard my heartbeat off and on since I hit puberty, I feel bad for him. But I also have a heart thing and migraines, so that's probably not the worst thing that happens to me.
@@angeldark404 IKR? In my case it has sometimes been a precursor to passing out. A very welcome signal btw. Having it happen while riding my bike has gotten me off the road instead of under someone's vehicle. Now that signal shows up I drop everything. Turn off stove top etc and pray I don't pass out for 48+ hours. I usually call the Dr within a day, if it doesn't resolve, for whatever pushed my health over the edge. It's also associated with my asthma, when my O2 or hydration goes down my heart pushes harder. So stupid to ignore that signal.
If a person is screaming at the top of his lungs, looking very distressed and that he needs help immediately, he needs to be sent to see a doctor/nurse immediately. Because something could be seriously wrong with him.
In theory sure, in reality they can't encourage that behaviour. If people knew all they needed to do to get immediate attention is cause a fuss everyone would do it, I don't think I need to explain why that's an issue. Also acting threatening towards people trying to do their jobs isn't okay. There's no real solution. Plenty of those people waiting could have had something seriously wrong with them, not really fair to assume someone should get priority if they look more or less physically fine just because they're yelling.
@@coffeekat5066 Simple, if they're admitted to a nurse and the tests find no issues, they will be fined, or even arrested for a period of time, if there is an issue, their distress is valid
@@ron3557 Because issues are never missed in an overworked ER. What do you do in the event of a panic attack? My heart rate was at 160 for hours, absolutely no electrical or structural issues. If I'd done what you suggest I could have taken a bed from someone suffering a heart attack. What about patients who are in severe distress but physically can't make a fuss because of COPD? What about someone who does kick up a fuss and the doctor gets annoyed and declares nothing wrong solely so they get fined? There was nothing immediately dangerous about this guy's condition that he couldn't have waited an hour or two for the triage nurse to get to him, and he took a lot of time and resources away from people who needed it. Basing triage on who's the loudest is about the stupidest way to do it imaginable.
He do resonate with people who know whats wrong with their body but can't explain it to other or the people around them just dismissed him and turn him down when they need help most.
I never used to look at it that way, "Your heart is fighting for you to live", until I saw this episode. Every time I get sick or have an anxiety attack I put my hand over my heart and just listen to it. Sometimes I had to keep my hand there for a couple of seconds and sometimes I would have to keep it there for hours but it would always make me cry tears of happiness to just hear my heart beating.
Lord I used to do the same thing. I had panic attacks, but they were also bolstered by paranoia and fear that something was wrong with my body. I would press down on my chest to feel if my heartbeat was normal, as if I could somehow feel a heart attack or a seizure or whatever else. No matter what I felt there I was never satisfied XD I can laugh about it now because it was YEARS ago, and I thankfully grew out of it, but I do wonder what caused those attacks. They're nonexistent now as a 22 year old :/
@kerstiny4698 Makes me think of that anime about the white and red blood cells. I think it was called "Cells at Work." Didn't actually watch it, but it turns our internal cells and organs AMD illnesses into cute anime people in a slice-of-life comedy.
SAME! That gave me such a different perspective on my anxiety. I saw this the other day. Every time I get ansty from my heart beating louder and/or faster, I keep saying "Hey buddy. Thank you." This was an short conversation that I never knew I needed to hear.
I've been having nightmares come to find out its one side effect of blood pressure meds. I wonder how many vets are suffering with the same issue and get told they are crazy.
Thats the problem with America. They actively recruit kids to join the military and send them to combat because of oil and when they returned all broken and wounded, they were forgotten. In Japan, military veterans are honoured and respected. Every single soldier, no matter the rank or vocation, will receive a lifetime of pension, free housing, free education for their children and for themselves and free lifetime healthcare in any hospitals or clinics in the country.
see it as a life scar and punishment for all the innocent killing they did. like at least 3 million in Irak between 2003 till now. Imagine what the family of those killed people are going thru. And for what? Oil?
U know y it is like tht? Its coz of the system.. The number of stamdard organisations who controls and emphasises the do's and don'ts inside a hospitals. Bcoz of whom hospitals nowadays should value more abt their methods and policies than patients needs. Its pity but true...
Why should he be able to cut everyone else in like for something non life threatening? People are there with heart attacks, strokes etc. hearing your own heartbeat isn’t exactly urgent
So, every time someone comes in panicked over anything we should take them back immediately? Wow, we'd never get to anyone with a life threatening emergency. People really need to stop telling us how to do our job, admin all the way down to people who think they need to be seen 'right now' for a stubbed toe.
It's not about the person who is sick that entering the hospital.or clinic with doctors it about the people he will hurt by his action, throwing things from that premises
@@butterflyhigh5237 so again, if the person is panicking for any reason we should take them back immediately regardless? Absolutely not! We don't have the beds and the staff for that! You get triaged, given a priority according to your complaint and we see you as quickly and safely as possible. You don't like it change the healthcare system. We do our best with what we're given.
Usually if a patient is that distressed and panicked with symptoms like that it's treated as an emergency and he'd get in fairly fast. Could be a sign of a cardiac emergency or a severe head/brain injury.
2:33 -- I'm half expecting the doctor to look in the ear to check for damage, then get a surprised look on this face: "Hey! This guy's heart really IS in his head! I can see it in here!"
For folks who don’t know, if you have this problem especially at night or very quiet times, you could have a thinning or hole in the bone in your inner ear called superior canal dehiscence syndrome… it’s thinning or hole forming causes sound to not go thru the ear, but thru the hole, getting to your brain receptors in another form. Basically you can hear things twice, a ‘reverberation’ or echo of your own voice, hearing your pulse and possibly the sound of your eyes moving. It’s rare, I had it.
I had a patient with the hole. He said it took decades for them to find it. He was put in institutions and medicated but nothing helped. After finding it they told him the only thing to fix it was surgery and it was high risk and not recommended.
I remember that one from Grey's Anatomy. I'm glad someone was able to diagnose you instead of just say that it was all in your head. They like to do that. My mother had an acoustic neuroma. I wish somebody had told one of us that those things can recur. We didn't know...
So... This isn't a normal thing to have? How loud does it have to be to indicate something like that? I can only hear it faintly, and it doesn't really bother me, so is it still indicative of something like that?
My sister has been going through this for months on end ,after lots of testing the ENT decided that she needs surgery but it's life threatening and for her age he is not willing to risk it,she was given a hearing aid to help her
I had a similar problem. I’ve had tinnitus for 22 years; since I was 10/11. My tinnitus had gotten so bad that I couldn’t sleep for more than an hour because of the constant deafening ringing. I couldn’t hear myself think. It’s a very scary feeling to be so tortured by horrific sound that you can’t sleep, can’t function, can’t anything. You become an immobilized jailed passenger in your own body. I went to the ENT who sent me to the audiologist who gave me hearing aids. I don’t need hearing aids for loss/lack of hearing, I have normal hearing, but my hearing aids play constant noise (Brownian “Brown” Noise) that helps retrain my brain to not hear the ringing. I’ve had my hearing aids for almost 1.5 years now and things are much better. These hearing aids are such a blessing and necessity for my life and I’m taking these hearing aids with me to my grave. In case anyone may be wondering about any other health history correlation for themselves. I’m autistic, have ADD, an anxiety disorder (which is helped by my hearing aids), and sensory issues/SPD (also helped by hearing aids).
We thought he was being unreasonable as 2 other ENT specialists and a neurosurgeon wanted to perform the dangerous surgery for whatever reason but after much debate they all decided she was ultimately too young and the risk too high, now we wait and see whether this hearing aid helps or not
I'm sorry to ask but what exactly has she been going through? In the case of the video, the heartbeat sound was PTSD. I'm just a little confused and not trying to be mean.
I have super ventricular tachycardia, so many doctors appointments they didn’t catch it until it I had a tachycardic episode in dead sleep. Granted you can’t actually SEE or predict tachycardia and I wasn’t good at explaining my symptoms. I was pretty sure I knew what it was after hearing Miley Cyrus of all people talk about her tachycardia in one of those teeny bopper magazines( I was a lil old for them but I still read them at the time) But when the doc diagnosed me and got me on meds it was such a relief it’s like “no I’m not med shopping, I’m actually suffering”
They actually have to watch you have the seizure to know what is going on. They will even induce a seizure with rapidly blinking lights in patients with suspected epilepsy lol. Everyone is such a professional victim in these medical comments 🙄
@matthew92604 I agree. So many of these commenters just have a score to settle since doctors weren’t able to diagnose them. Doctors are human, they make mistakes too… shouldn’t hold it against them.
I was saying this in the beginning, to do a chest and head scan. They finally decided to do it. Lesson learned: Actually LISTEN TO THE PATIENT AND DO EVERYTHING YOU CAN TO FIND THE ISSUE!
I once had a panic attack and for three days straight, I could hear my heart beat. Just a constant awareness that would never go away. I couldn’t sleep. It was a psychological thing and not physical but man I understood what this guy was going through. It’s just so discomforting, so never ending.
Until you said this I'd blocked this out of my memory because it happened to me as well. I could feel every heartbeat for days on end, the feeling of the muscles in my wrists tension increasing and decreasing, creepiest thing ever
I started having panicked attacks 3 years ago and they lasted for like a month,the fear the anxiety,depression, ear ringing made me very aware of my surroundings and myself it was a very bizarre constant feeling 24/7. It was a nightmare for the very 1st year and 2nd year I started living more with that fear knowing it's just an anxiety fight or flight mode that makes me so aware of everything but still scared of it and my brain not wanting to accept that was anxiety. By the third year bad anxiety is gone but irrational thought still there and the awareness but don't fear it as much as before since I know it's just there to save me that's why I'm so aware of everything cause my subconscious remembers those years of panic attacks and anxiety so it's always on the lookout for trouble I need to rewire my brain more and more and learn to relax more And more. Slowly but surely. But the brain is powerful. I am sure people like the patient realized that hearing his heartbeat is not gonna hurt him but is actually saving him, keeping him alive the Brian realized there was nothing to fear just like me hearing the tinnitus at night, I was a complete mess fearing that sound and not wanting to be alone hearing it at night so I would always had something muffing the sound but nothing worked since I was fearing it. Until I realized it just another sound and I started hearing this sound because I developed it after panic attacks it was just my brain trying to protect me amplifying sound to hear everything better, then I started getting used to more and more.❤
I can hear my heart beat in my head. It's nowhere near as drastic as this though. I do have medical issues that complicate life but I take it as a welcome sign that my heart is still pumping. It's annoying, downright painful when my blood pressure elevates, but I also have PTSD so it's really encouraging to see people with PTSD being listened to. Albeit very late sometimes, It's still nice to know you're being listened to.
i get the same emotional resonance from you as the man in this episode. i am so very happy people are listening to you now. get better and have a good day. ⛅️🌷🌱
I have a malformation on the left side of my brain, I know exactly what he means with the heartbeat thumping in your head. The actor playing the patient played this very well as you can probably imagine it does get very annoying hearing your heartbeat every day of your life for real sufferers
I feel for him. Sometimes, because of certain health issues, I can hear my heart beating and it is the worst thing when you are trying to sleep. Just the constant noise in your ear, it’s like torture
"I can hear my heart beat in my head" "we don't beleive you, you're insane" sees gelo "we were wrong" "Haaa told you, fix me" "we can't, think positif when you hear it...." that is the stupidest thing that could have come out of this....
I had to have an epi-pen injection once because of an antibiotic (had my father not been allergic to bees-and immediately recognized what it was-I had not been at their house I probably would not be alive). There for a few minutes, and the subsequent panic attack the whole thing it induced, I swear I could feel -and hear-my heart pounding in my ears for a few minutes. It was the most…unsettling and upsetting physical experience I’ve ever had. I’ve had several surgeries-one major one- and would rather wake up with a tube down my throat in pain than experience that again. I can absolutely imagine that having this happen all the time would drive a person quite literally insane. That being said, had someone given me the whole “your heart is their for you speech”…I might have thought about ripping theirs out for a moment.
I had my first anxiety attack about 8 months after my deployment...I had no idea what was wrong but I was losing it, and feeling claustrophobic and a severe fear of being out in the open, it was terrifying. Many years later and I've had to increase my meds then switch them, my triggers started getting worse and I was re-diagnosed (kinda, it's hard to explain) with C-PTSD and I'm going through intense counseling as a vet AND as a female Army Combat Veteran. It's a nightmare, a prison without physical walls, but MY VA has definitely been a source of outstanding care when I needed it the most...It broke my soul when I found out that my experience was not the norm. I've had run ins especially when I was homeless with a disabled son, whom I gave birth to while in the Army, the social worker was an absolute asshole and they had to get her away from me. I appreciate the overall care for Veterans, but as a woman, myyyyy GOD it's been HARD....NO REGRETS, I just bless God that I still have a passion for being a mother, comedian and prayerfully soon, an author, I may have lost everything else about me, but I'm so very grateful for what remains🫶🏾
I actually cried with this one. This medical show is not that scary which is good. House is like that. I'm sure it appeals to a lot of viewers but not me. This show is softer and makes me actually feel sympathy. Not just fear.
I hear my heartbeat in my ear too. For me it’s Pulsatile Tinnitus, it comes and goes. Im glad it’s not constant. Sometimes it’s annoying, other times it’s actually kinda soothing.
I can so relate to this guy. About 2 years ago I developed severe pulsatile tinnitus. I will never forget waking up at 2am on a Monday to my heartbeat loudly pounding in my head. Good news was MRI ruled out an aneurysm, bad news was it was constantly pounding and looked like something I'd have to just live with. I had trouble sleeping, working.... Like the patient there were days it was driving me crazy. Then there were a couple times it just literally stopped - went silent for a few seconds. The first time that happened I was like oh crap did my heart stop? Am I dying? About 8 months later the intensity greatly diminished. Eventually the condition went away - thank goodness. Don't know why it started, or why it stopped. I will say though that even though I was learning to live with it, I could still feel it chipping away at my sanity.
I have an anxiety disorder and when I get really anxious I can hear and feel my heartbeat in my head. He said this started for him 6 months ago. I'd be acting the same way. It's a very unnerving sensation
I have a condition called Atrial Fibrillation as a result of post childbirth sepsis. Due to the meds I take, it makes the heart beat harder but slower. I can feel and hear my heartbeat in a very similar fashion. I sympathize with this poor guy. Out returned servicemen need to be treated like the heroes that they are. Sacrificing good health and the love of family and community to enlist to fight for our freedom, only to come home injured and permanently mentally scarred, only for the government they served to pretty much turn it's back on them until they go off the edge.
Im personally the type to calm down with some repetitive sounds in the background, like a clock ticking and heartbeats. Ever since I was a kid, I always calmed down while listening to my parents' heartbeats, even my older brother's. So, whenever i start hearing my own, i actually feel relaxed and calm.
Not really. I'm a bit jaded to gore and medical injuries. I've had to clean my grandfather's open chest from liver transplant. The doctors couldn't close it all the way because of inflammation. We had to take him home that way and wait two weeks before the swelling went down and he could be closed up completely.
Using "shop talk" that the vet was accustomed to was a brilliant way of communicating on the patient's level. A metaphor that automatically brings to mind strength, perseverance, keeping the good fight. Brilliant writing, and acting here on all sides.
I developed tinnitus on my left side a couple months ago. I don’t know if it’s permanent, and I have been managing, but it gets bad some days. Imagining having it as loud as this guys’ and connected to my heartbeat is chilling.
I got a skull fracture over a year ago. Also fractured a small bone in my ear in the impact. There is now a little piece of titanium in my head to replace that small bone. At some point in the whole process, I remember that I could hear my heart beating for a short time. That pulse is gone now, but has been replaced with tinnitus (ringing) due to the hearing loss I sustained from the whole thing, and was never completely fixed by the operation. It is only in one ear, but it is a near-constant ringing nonetheless. it’s probably actually constant, but my ADHD lets me ignore it half the time. I have read that the ringing from tinnitus has driven some people to madness and/or suicide. Extremely unlikely to happen with me, but I would imagine that the man in this video’s PTSD probably had an additionally detrimental effect on his mental health.
This kind of thing really will destroy a person mentally. Imagine 24/7/365 "boom, boom, boom, boom...." loud and all the time. I remember a story about a wealthy restraunteur who committed suicide after contracting covid and recovering because he had chronic tinnitus as a side effect. It drove him mad and he couldn't live like that anymore. There wasn't anything the doctors were able to do to help the problem.
Brilliant actors. Damn, they carried this episode. The vet-to-vet interaction is so good. 4:47 is my favourite, so much pain, so much understanding. All those small details… mwah.
Sounds like pulsatile tinnitus, tinnitus is absolutely awful. I've had it since 11/21/21 and I was getting to a point like him. People don't realize how panicky hearing something NONSTOP is. Mines a high frequency constant pitch. I get pulsatile tinnitus of hearing my heart beating in my ears when I go shooting and wear putty earplugs and I bend down to pick up bullets, I couldn't deal with it 24/7. My heart goes out to everyone with tinnirus
What frustrates me is that it's a representation of how people (front staff) don't listen until the customer/client/patient gets unruly and ridiculous in their language or request
It's true - the fact that he was right and they almost didnt do anything for him and furthermore saw him as crazy when he had a rational response to an issue any one of us could have...
DAMN this was powerful... daaaamn. Not just medical, not just physical, they not only tell him the truth that they can't do anything physically, they find a way to do something for him emotionally. Hits HARD.
I deal with my heart beat in my ear, by back ground noises, chewing gum. I also at night try to put words to the melody, lol. I fall a sleep faster. It’s been with me so long that I have noticed it’s loudest when over tired. So rest keeps it in check. Anyway that is my take on the noise I hear 24/7 minus when I finally sleep. My fault I’m a night owl! Be safe, Be well.
I'd seen this clip already a while ago, but recently I've gone through some acute anxiety and began associating the sensations and sounds of my heart in a nagative way, the constant palpitations and feeling like it wasn't beating properly really freaked me out and it wasn't until I was given Propranolol AND went through some tough mental adjustments to that I learned to subdue some of that medical paranoia, try and remind myself that my heart is beating normally, that its working hard to keep me alive ❤
this is actually a phobia and i suffered with this for a LONG time, i had severe melt down because of it. safe to say its been years since its happened
Man, I know how that feels. There are times in the night I couldn't sleep when my room is completely silent, and all I can hear is my heartbeat... But damn, this actor is good, the way he played desparateness, I was so convinced that he could hear his heartbeat
I have very bad anxiety I can feel my eyes rattling like a tail of a rattle snake and I can also hear my heart beating through my head and it beats so fast and so loud it’s like a drum set and I’ve been diagnosed with it for the past 5 years
With enough mental fortitude, he could eventually learn to tune out the sound or muffle it. Just like how people control the sensations from taste or smell.
Vets deserve more treatment than they are given so many of them end up homeless and on the streets and this man stuck with his Belief that he was in pain and he refused to give up and that takes a great deal of strenght
I was ignored and sent away repeatedly everywhere I went for non seizure convulsions happening every time I fell asleep at night. Most medical people acted like it was mental despite the obvious fact FULL BODY CONVULSIONS are as physical as it gets. Until my arm broke in the hospital after being ignored for 5 HOURS. I was still left for another 5 HOURS and sent home with an unexamined broken arm. Only two days later when a finally sane doctor called to yell at the ER did I finally get help. Now it was magically real. This guy's behavior is a completely sane reaction to an insane culture in the medical system. On top of all this, I was unusually capable of advocating for myself because I'm a youth counselor with a long history in trauma healing. Medical professionals often outright reject trauma and nervous system theory/ practice before they can ever learn anything or begin healing themselves, and realize how shut down or dissociated they were.
Surprisingly, the heart-pounding I get in my head with my migraines has never bothered me. I mean, the pain, certainly, but the pounding itself? It's kind of comforting, to be honest.
I needed to see this today. I'm not a vet but I do have some similar scar tissue from past surgeries and procedures...this echo thing is not nearly as bad as this guy's but it was TERRIFYING when it started. In one way it's kind of like waterboarding torture, the unendingness of it all...in another way there's a constant fear that suddenly it's going to just...stop. Keeping my weight way, way down has been helpful in reducing the pressure sensation and therefore the sound, but I always have to have some other kind of sound happening, particularly when I'm trying to sleep, to drown it out. A loud fan and some white noise or some calming music along with the fan. It's manageable now but that silence with only your heartbeat to keep you company is one of the most scary things. No escape from it!
The monitor at 7:07 makes me laugh at the inconsistencies to reality on medical dramas. The screen is showing a transesophageal echo (produced from a probe down the throat). Note that the heart is flipped vertically on the screen and TEE is written in the top right corner. The doctor is clearly doing a transthoracic echo (TTE) from outside the body! lol
I had the same problem. I could hear my heartbeat in my head and would feel like my body was floating and swaying like an ocean wave when I would lay down or sit down. In my case, it was all in my head.
My very calm, practical, down-to-earth mother had Chrohn’s disease in the 70’s before anyone knew what it was all about. The doctors were very dismissive as she told them what was going on with her as she was also dealing with crushing migraines and wanted to call in a psychiatrist for her, which really frustrated her. Finally, to shut her up, they called in a doctor visiting from Sweden who dealt with intestinal issues. So glad he was there because he confirmed her problems were medical, not psychological. She finally got medication to help her. The Swedish doctor was there only for one more week!
"Just because I'm a vet does not mean I'm a mentalcase!"
Dr. Charles (in the most nonchalant way possible): "Well you did walk in here and stab yourself in the head"
Dr. Charles is the best
Pft-
To be fair …. Lmao
Sounds like sarcasm that Dr. House would have used.
I miss House.
Oh gee biscuits. I thought a vet as in a veterinarian. Must be because I’m not American...
For goodness sake! I hear my heart in my head with extreme migraines this is a real symptom and should never have been dismissed so negligently.
Yep.
As someone who has heard my heartbeat off and on since I hit puberty, I feel bad for him. But I also have a heart thing and migraines, so that's probably not the worst thing that happens to me.
@@angeldark404 IKR? In my case it has sometimes been a precursor to passing out. A very welcome signal btw. Having it happen while riding my bike has gotten me off the road instead of under someone's vehicle. Now that signal shows up I drop everything. Turn off stove top etc and pray I don't pass out for 48+ hours. I usually call the Dr within a day, if it doesn't resolve, for whatever pushed my health over the edge. It's also associated with my asthma, when my O2 or hydration goes down my heart pushes harder. So stupid to ignore that signal.
Me too they gave me imitrex it doesn't work
Yeah sometimes it just happens from sleeping on my ear wrong.
It took me halfway through this video to realize that when they said “vet” they meant “veteran” and NOT “veterinarian”
🤦
lol
Me: English is fun they said it will help you to get work they said
English: ...
Ditto
It took me 5 years went from A2 in English to a C2 😂
If a person is screaming at the top of his lungs, looking very distressed and that he needs help immediately, he needs to be sent to see a doctor/nurse immediately. Because something could be seriously wrong with him.
In theory sure, in reality they can't encourage that behaviour. If people knew all they needed to do to get immediate attention is cause a fuss everyone would do it, I don't think I need to explain why that's an issue.
Also acting threatening towards people trying to do their jobs isn't okay.
There's no real solution. Plenty of those people waiting could have had something seriously wrong with them, not really fair to assume someone should get priority if they look more or less physically fine just because they're yelling.
@@coffeekat5066 Simple, if they're admitted to a nurse and the tests find no issues, they will be fined, or even arrested for a period of time, if there is an issue, their distress is valid
Omg no way, you’ll have hundreds of ppl getting irate just to he seen sooner
@@ron3557 not if hundreds of ppl start trying this method.
@@ron3557 Because issues are never missed in an overworked ER.
What do you do in the event of a panic attack? My heart rate was at 160 for hours, absolutely no electrical or structural issues. If I'd done what you suggest I could have taken a bed from someone suffering a heart attack.
What about patients who are in severe distress but physically can't make a fuss because of COPD? What about someone who does kick up a fuss and the doctor gets annoyed and declares nothing wrong solely so they get fined?
There was nothing immediately dangerous about this guy's condition that he couldn't have waited an hour or two for the triage nurse to get to him, and he took a lot of time and resources away from people who needed it. Basing triage on who's the loudest is about the stupidest way to do it imaginable.
the patient’s actor is VERY good!
He do resonate with people who know whats wrong with their body but can't explain it to other or the people around them just dismissed him and turn him down when they need help most.
I never used to look at it that way, "Your heart is fighting for you to live", until I saw this episode. Every time I get sick or have an anxiety attack I put my hand over my heart and just listen to it. Sometimes I had to keep my hand there for a couple of seconds and sometimes I would have to keep it there for hours but it would always make me cry tears of happiness to just hear my heart beating.
Lord I used to do the same thing. I had panic attacks, but they were also bolstered by paranoia and fear that something was wrong with my body. I would press down on my chest to feel if my heartbeat was normal, as if I could somehow feel a heart attack or a seizure or whatever else. No matter what I felt there I was never satisfied XD I can laugh about it now because it was YEARS ago, and I thankfully grew out of it, but I do wonder what caused those attacks. They're nonexistent now as a 22 year old :/
Every time we get sick, there are armies of cells fighting for us all over our body!
@kerstiny4698 Makes me think of that anime about the white and red blood cells. I think it was called "Cells at Work." Didn't actually watch it, but it turns our internal cells and organs AMD illnesses into cute anime people in a slice-of-life comedy.
Same
SAME! That gave me such a different perspective on my anxiety. I saw this the other day. Every time I get ansty from my heart beating louder and/or faster, I keep saying "Hey buddy. Thank you." This was an short conversation that I never knew I needed to hear.
What these vets have to go through is heart wrenching.
I've been having nightmares come to find out its one side effect of blood pressure meds. I wonder how many vets are suffering with the same issue and get told they are crazy.
Heh heart
Thats the problem with America. They actively recruit kids to join the military and send them to combat because of oil and when they returned all broken and wounded, they were forgotten. In Japan, military veterans are honoured and respected. Every single soldier, no matter the rank or vocation, will receive a lifetime of pension, free housing, free education for their children and for themselves and free lifetime healthcare in any hospitals or clinics in the country.
@@ShadowMoon878 Not for oli
see it as a life scar and punishment for all the innocent killing they did. like at least 3 million in Irak between 2003 till now. Imagine what the family of those killed people are going thru. And for what? Oil?
He is already panicking still you don't listen to him you still wait for him to destroy things
U know y it is like tht?
Its coz of the system..
The number of stamdard organisations who controls and emphasises the do's and don'ts inside a hospitals. Bcoz of whom hospitals nowadays should value more abt their methods and policies than patients needs.
Its pity but true...
Why should he be able to cut everyone else in like for something non life threatening? People are there with heart attacks, strokes etc. hearing your own heartbeat isn’t exactly urgent
So, every time someone comes in panicked over anything we should take them back immediately? Wow, we'd never get to anyone with a life threatening emergency. People really need to stop telling us how to do our job, admin all the way down to people who think they need to be seen 'right now' for a stubbed toe.
It's not about the person who is sick that entering the hospital.or clinic with doctors it about the people he will hurt by his action, throwing things from that premises
@@butterflyhigh5237 so again, if the person is panicking for any reason we should take them back immediately regardless? Absolutely not! We don't have the beds and the staff for that! You get triaged, given a priority according to your complaint and we see you as quickly and safely as possible. You don't like it change the healthcare system. We do our best with what we're given.
He's a good actor, almost had me in tears
He was a terrible actor what are you talking about?!😂😂😂
@@Oblivisci........um ok
@@Oblivisci........ upload a clip of you doing this entire scene then
His reaction to the VA is spot on
the actor patient is actually great, i almost teared up at how sad it is to watch him go insane
@@amogusamogos ah ah why kwan ??
@@amogusamogos the better actors are the patients in these types of shows
@@amogusamogos fr the pain n sadness in his voice sounds so real
Yes the VA,will fix it by giving him antidepressants drugs are their only way to fix all out problems. Navy vet
Usually if a patient is that distressed and panicked with symptoms like that it's treated as an emergency and he'd get in fairly fast. Could be a sign of a cardiac emergency or a severe head/brain injury.
Been there. The shakes get attention.
@@joshuahudson2170what type of shakes?
@@becky2235 In my case, stress overload.
@@joshuahudson2170 how are you doing now? Better I hope
@@becky2235 Yes
The actor who played this poor man he should get an Emmy
2:33 -- I'm half expecting the doctor to look in the ear to check for damage, then get a surprised look on this face: "Hey! This guy's heart really IS in his head! I can see it in here!"
All we need now is a laugh track
For folks who don’t know, if you have this problem especially at night or very quiet times, you could have a thinning or hole in the bone in your inner ear called superior canal dehiscence syndrome… it’s thinning or hole forming causes sound to not go thru the ear, but thru the hole, getting to your brain receptors in another form. Basically you can hear things twice, a ‘reverberation’ or echo of your own voice, hearing your pulse and possibly the sound of your eyes moving.
It’s rare, I had it.
I had a patient with the hole. He said it took decades for them to find it. He was put in institutions and medicated but nothing helped. After finding it they told him the only thing to fix it was surgery and it was high risk and not recommended.
I remember that one from Grey's Anatomy. I'm glad someone was able to diagnose you instead of just say that it was all in your head. They like to do that.
My mother had an acoustic neuroma. I wish somebody had told one of us that those things can recur. We didn't know...
So... This isn't a normal thing to have? How loud does it have to be to indicate something like that? I can only hear it faintly, and it doesn't really bother me, so is it still indicative of something like that?
Or a migraine with your blood vessels
IT’S NOT NORMAL TO HEAR ALL THAT?!?!?!
My sister has been going through this for months on end ,after lots of testing the ENT decided that she needs surgery but it's life threatening and for her age he is not willing to risk it,she was given a hearing aid to help her
I had a similar problem. I’ve had tinnitus for 22 years; since I was 10/11. My tinnitus had gotten so bad that I couldn’t sleep for more than an hour because of the constant deafening ringing. I couldn’t hear myself think. It’s a very scary feeling to be so tortured by horrific sound that you can’t sleep, can’t function, can’t anything. You become an immobilized jailed passenger in your own body. I went to the ENT who sent me to the audiologist who gave me hearing aids. I don’t need hearing aids for loss/lack of hearing, I have normal hearing, but my hearing aids play constant noise (Brownian “Brown” Noise) that helps retrain my brain to not hear the ringing. I’ve had my hearing aids for almost 1.5 years now and things are much better. These hearing aids are such a blessing and necessity for my life and I’m taking these hearing aids with me to my grave.
In case anyone may be wondering about any other health history correlation for themselves. I’m autistic, have ADD, an anxiety disorder (which is helped by my hearing aids), and sensory issues/SPD (also helped by hearing aids).
so they won't help because it will lower their stats ? that's just great....
We thought he was being unreasonable as 2 other ENT specialists and a neurosurgeon wanted to perform the dangerous surgery for whatever reason but after much debate they all decided she was ultimately too young and the risk too high, now we wait and see whether this hearing aid helps or not
@@kevinwaag9976 less about their stats and more about not killing the patient...
I'm sorry to ask but what exactly has she been going through? In the case of the video, the heartbeat sound was PTSD. I'm just a little confused and not trying to be mean.
I teared up when he showed him his heart and said how much it was fighting to keep him alive. Damn
That was such a great way to think of his heart that way. That poor man, I can’t imagine the things he’s been through and at probably such a young age
A physician watched me have a seizure... After 2 hours of me telling him it would happen. My mom caught it occurring. I have sickle cell disease.
I have super ventricular tachycardia, so many doctors appointments they didn’t catch it until it I had a tachycardic episode in dead sleep. Granted you can’t actually SEE or predict tachycardia and I wasn’t good at explaining my symptoms. I was pretty sure I knew what it was after hearing Miley Cyrus of all people talk about her tachycardia in one of those teeny bopper magazines( I was a lil old for them but I still read them at the time)
But when the doc diagnosed me and got me on meds it was such a relief it’s like “no I’m not med shopping, I’m actually suffering”
They actually have to watch you have the seizure to know what is going on. They will even induce a seizure with rapidly blinking lights in patients with suspected epilepsy lol. Everyone is such a professional victim in these medical comments 🙄
@matthew92604 I agree. So many of these commenters just have a score to settle since doctors weren’t able to diagnose them. Doctors are human, they make mistakes too… shouldn’t hold it against them.
His acting made me hold my breathe. That was overwhelming.
I was saying this in the beginning, to do a chest and head scan. They finally decided to do it. Lesson learned: Actually LISTEN TO THE PATIENT AND DO EVERYTHING YOU CAN TO FIND THE ISSUE!
He is such a phenomenal actor!!
As someone with sensory issues... I can’t even imagine
Literally what I was thinking, I almost teared up cause I could just feel his frustration.
Your sensory issues are caused by tiktok
@@midnight_x_edits nah it’s cause I’m autistic. Diagnosed and everything.
I once had a panic attack and for three days straight, I could hear my heart beat. Just a constant awareness that would never go away. I couldn’t sleep. It was a psychological thing and not physical but man I understood what this guy was going through. It’s just so discomforting, so never ending.
Until you said this I'd blocked this out of my memory because it happened to me as well. I could feel every heartbeat for days on end, the feeling of the muscles in my wrists tension increasing and decreasing, creepiest thing ever
I started having panicked attacks 3 years ago and they lasted for like a month,the fear the anxiety,depression,
ear ringing made me very aware of my surroundings and myself it was a very bizarre constant feeling 24/7. It was a nightmare for the very 1st year and 2nd year I started living more with that fear knowing it's just an anxiety fight or flight mode that makes me so aware of everything but still scared of it and my brain not wanting to accept that was anxiety. By the third year bad anxiety is gone but irrational thought still there and the awareness but don't fear it as much as before since I know it's just there to save me that's why I'm so aware of everything cause my subconscious remembers those years of panic attacks and anxiety so it's always on the lookout for trouble I need to rewire my brain more and more and learn to relax more
And more. Slowly but surely. But the brain is powerful. I am sure people like the patient realized that hearing his heartbeat is not gonna hurt him but is actually saving him, keeping him alive the Brian realized there was nothing to fear just like me hearing the tinnitus at night, I was a complete mess fearing that sound and not wanting to be alone hearing it at night so I would always had something muffing the sound but nothing worked since I was fearing it. Until I realized it just another sound and I started hearing this sound because I developed it after panic attacks it was just my brain trying to protect me amplifying sound to hear everything better, then I started getting used to more and more.❤
Imagine finally hearing you're not crazy and you actually have a problem, but it's not fixable...
I've had moments when I could feel my heartbeat in my head. Since elementary school. Really pumping away.
the heart goin "im here, im here, im workin brother"
The way they handled that was perfect. This guy was clearly no okay from being a vet but they really knew how to handle it
I can hear my heart beat in my head. It's nowhere near as drastic as this though. I do have medical issues that complicate life but I take it as a welcome sign that my heart is still pumping. It's annoying, downright painful when my blood pressure elevates, but I also have PTSD so it's really encouraging to see people with PTSD being listened to. Albeit very late sometimes, It's still nice to know you're being listened to.
i get the same emotional resonance from you as the man in this episode. i am so very happy people are listening to you now. get better and have a good day. ⛅️🌷🌱
"where is your heart? behind your chest, behind your bra???" 😂 I found that funny.
If you tell a doctor that you have a certain condition they will investigate everything BUT the condition you claim to have.
Choi makes sure every patient is calm and knows they are safe god bless him for becoming a dad and bless him if he decides to be a realdoctor
I have a malformation on the left side of my brain, I know exactly what he means with the heartbeat thumping in your head. The actor playing the patient played this very well as you can probably imagine it does get very annoying hearing your heartbeat every day of your life for real sufferers
The sad look on his face when someone finally believed him made me so sad 😭😭
Certain antianxiety drugs can cause you to hear your heartbeat. Rather ironic as the sound can increase your anxiety!
I feel for him. Sometimes, because of certain health issues, I can hear my heart beating and it is the worst thing when you are trying to sleep. Just the constant noise in your ear, it’s like torture
1:54 That is the best response for this
"I can hear my heart beat in my head"
"we don't beleive you, you're insane"
sees gelo
"we were wrong"
"Haaa told you, fix me"
"we can't, think positif when you hear it...."
that is the stupidest thing that could have come out of this....
I can hear my heartbeat. I thought this was normal.
I had to have an epi-pen injection once because of an antibiotic (had my father not been allergic to bees-and immediately recognized what it was-I had not been at their house I probably would not be alive). There for a few minutes, and the subsequent panic attack the whole thing it induced, I swear I could feel -and hear-my heart pounding in my ears for a few minutes. It was the most…unsettling and upsetting physical experience I’ve ever had. I’ve had several surgeries-one major one- and would rather wake up with a tube down my throat in pain than experience that again. I can absolutely imagine that having this happen all the time would drive a person quite literally insane. That being said, had someone given me the whole “your heart is their for you speech”…I might have thought about ripping theirs out for a moment.
Nice pun
I had my first anxiety attack about 8 months after my deployment...I had no idea what was wrong but I was losing it, and feeling claustrophobic and a severe fear of being out in the open, it was terrifying. Many years later and I've had to increase my meds then switch them, my triggers started getting worse and I was re-diagnosed (kinda, it's hard to explain) with C-PTSD and I'm going through intense counseling as a vet AND as a female Army Combat Veteran. It's a nightmare, a prison without physical walls, but MY VA has definitely been a source of outstanding care when I needed it the most...It broke my soul when I found out that my experience was not the norm. I've had run ins especially when I was homeless with a disabled son, whom I gave birth to while in the Army, the social worker was an absolute asshole and they had to get her away from me. I appreciate the overall care for Veterans, but as a woman, myyyyy GOD it's been HARD....NO REGRETS, I just bless God that I still have a passion for being a mother, comedian and prayerfully soon, an author, I may have lost everything else about me, but I'm so very grateful for what remains🫶🏾
Bless ❤
@@truenokill 🥰
Best luck👍
I actually cried with this one. This medical show is not that scary which is good. House is like that. I'm sure it appeals to a lot of viewers but not me. This show is softer and makes me actually feel sympathy. Not just fear.
This just too sweet! *"Brother in arms!"*
A doctor's job is to heal not just the physical but also the psychological. And that's what those two doctors did for this veteran.
I hear my heartbeat in my ear too. For me it’s Pulsatile Tinnitus, it comes and goes. Im glad it’s not constant. Sometimes it’s annoying, other times it’s actually kinda soothing.
I can so relate to this guy. About 2 years ago I developed severe pulsatile tinnitus. I will never forget waking up at 2am on a Monday to my heartbeat loudly pounding in my head. Good news was MRI ruled out an aneurysm, bad news was it was constantly pounding and looked like something I'd have to just live with. I had trouble sleeping, working.... Like the patient there were days it was driving me crazy. Then there were a couple times it just literally stopped - went silent for a few seconds. The first time that happened I was like oh crap did my heart stop? Am I dying? About 8 months later the intensity greatly diminished. Eventually the condition went away - thank goodness. Don't know why it started, or why it stopped.
I will say though that even though I was learning to live with it, I could still feel it chipping away at my sanity.
Sorry to hear that man so glad ur better now 🙏🙏🙏
My heart does the same thing, it makes my entire body move, except i dont hear it pounding.
The meta critique of the US health care system is spot on, I mean, how far you have to go to be finally taken seriously
Choi was so kind to him and even showed him his patient’s heart so it wasn’t so bad. Now that’s a true doctor 🥲🥲🥲🥲🥲🥲🥲
I have an anxiety disorder and when I get really anxious I can hear and feel my heartbeat in my head. He said this started for him 6 months ago. I'd be acting the same way. It's a very unnerving sensation
I have a condition called Atrial Fibrillation as a result of post childbirth sepsis. Due to the meds I take, it makes the heart beat harder but slower. I can feel and hear my heartbeat in a very similar fashion. I sympathize with this poor guy. Out returned servicemen need to be treated like the heroes that they are. Sacrificing good health and the love of family and community to enlist to fight for our freedom, only to come home injured and permanently mentally scarred, only for the government they served to pretty much turn it's back on them until they go off the edge.
I have always been able to feel/hear my heart. I didn't know this was weird!
Im personally the type to calm down with some repetitive sounds in the background, like a clock ticking and heartbeats.
Ever since I was a kid, I always calmed down while listening to my parents' heartbeats, even my older brother's. So, whenever i start hearing my own, i actually feel relaxed and calm.
Did anyone else stomach turn hearing and watching that pencil slowly enter his ear
yes!!
This comment helped me. I thought it would be so much worse. So, I was fine, thanks to your comment that I read before watching! 😊
Not really. I'm a bit jaded to gore and medical injuries. I've had to clean my grandfather's open chest from liver transplant. The doctors couldn't close it all the way because of inflammation. We had to take him home that way and wait two weeks before the swelling went down and he could be closed up completely.
Ear cleaning ASMR
Yes
That was a terrible speech at the end. It's not a "brother in arms" it's an organ that is malfunctioning!
Using "shop talk" that the vet was accustomed to was a brilliant way of communicating on the patient's level. A metaphor that automatically brings to mind strength, perseverance, keeping the good fight. Brilliant writing, and acting here on all sides.
I developed tinnitus on my left side a couple months ago. I don’t know if it’s permanent, and I have been managing, but it gets bad some days. Imagining having it as loud as this guys’ and connected to my heartbeat is chilling.
How’d u get it?
Sometimes, I do hear my heart beating when I lie on my stomach, it's very comforting to me
That's why I like doctor Choi
Dr.Choi probably is one my favorites bc he can keep calm but also help by relating to his vet patients
I'm wondering if he could have gotten medical attention faster by calling emergency 911 from his home or somewhere.
I know how he feels… I got so upset once I told them let me go get hit by car and then come back. Sometimes you have to yell. Pain does crazy things.
“Just because I am a vet does not mean I am a mental case!”
“Wel u did stab youreelf in the head”
I love this
I got a skull fracture over a year ago. Also fractured a small bone in my ear in the impact. There is now a little piece of titanium in my head to replace that small bone.
At some point in the whole process, I remember that I could hear my heart beating for a short time. That pulse is gone now, but has been replaced with tinnitus (ringing) due to the hearing loss I sustained from the whole thing, and was never completely fixed by the operation.
It is only in one ear, but it is a near-constant ringing nonetheless. it’s probably actually constant, but my ADHD lets me ignore it half the time. I have read that the ringing from tinnitus has driven some people to madness and/or suicide. Extremely unlikely to happen with me, but I would imagine that the man in this video’s PTSD probably had an additionally detrimental effect on his mental health.
This kind of thing really will destroy a person mentally. Imagine 24/7/365 "boom, boom, boom, boom...." loud and all the time. I remember a story about a wealthy restraunteur who committed suicide after contracting covid and recovering because he had chronic tinnitus as a side effect. It drove him mad and he couldn't live like that anymore. There wasn't anything the doctors were able to do to help the problem.
He had constant ringing not pulsing ! he was the owner of Texas road house
Brilliant actors. Damn, they carried this episode. The vet-to-vet interaction is so good. 4:47 is my favourite, so much pain, so much understanding. All those small details… mwah.
Sounds like pulsatile tinnitus, tinnitus is absolutely awful. I've had it since 11/21/21 and I was getting to a point like him. People don't realize how panicky hearing something NONSTOP is. Mines a high frequency constant pitch. I get pulsatile tinnitus of hearing my heart beating in my ears when I go shooting and wear putty earplugs and I bend down to pick up bullets, I couldn't deal with it 24/7. My heart goes out to everyone with tinnirus
Knowing that I used to hear my heart beat, I feel this man's pain.
Yes I know it's a show, but hearing your heart beat can be very annoying.
i can hear mine,but it doesnt make me crazy,it's kinda calming.
What frustrates me is that it's a representation of how people (front staff) don't listen until the customer/client/patient gets unruly and ridiculous in their language or request
It's true - the fact that he was right and they almost didnt do anything for him and furthermore saw him as crazy when he had a rational response to an issue any one of us could have...
DAMN this was powerful... daaaamn. Not just medical, not just physical, they not only tell him the truth that they can't do anything physically, they find a way to do something for him emotionally. Hits HARD.
As if the first thing they wouldn’t have done was a head CT and EKG when he said “my heart is beating in my head” 😂
The patient is such a great actor ❤
I deal with my heart beat in my ear, by back ground noises, chewing gum. I also at night try to put words to the melody, lol. I fall a sleep faster. It’s been with me so long that I have noticed it’s loudest when over tired. So rest keeps it in check. Anyway that is my take on the noise I hear 24/7 minus when I finally sleep. My fault I’m a night owl! Be safe, Be well.
I would love if they said: ‘so what are you gonna do?’ and then the doctor responds with ‘or we remove your heart… or we remove your head…’
When he shoved the pencil in his ear I shriveled up, that gave me physical discomfort.
I feel for the guy. I've had pulsatile tinnitus for over 10 years and I hear my heart. Used to drive me crazy too
Is this not normal? I literally always hear my heartbeat when I'm lying down
I watched some of the videos now when I see the people in pain I actually feel the same pain
I'd seen this clip already a while ago, but recently I've gone through some acute anxiety and began associating the sensations and sounds of my heart in a nagative way, the constant palpitations and feeling like it wasn't beating properly really freaked me out and it wasn't until I was given Propranolol AND went through some tough mental adjustments to that I learned to subdue some of that medical paranoia, try and remind myself that my heart is beating normally, that its working hard to keep me alive ❤
this is actually a phobia and i suffered with this for a LONG time, i had severe melt down because of it. safe to say its been years since its happened
God Bless Our Vets 🇺🇸
if they're not war criminals
I have Tinnitus and I never fought in any wars.
Just stressed. This is heart wrenching to know he has to deal with this.
I love that they always call security and five seconds later they call Choi, since security is useless in 9 out of 10 cases...
Imagine how hard your heart has to be beating for it to effect things around you. Now imagine being able to hear it internally
Man, I know how that feels. There are times in the night I couldn't sleep when my room is completely silent, and all I can hear is my heartbeat...
But damn, this actor is good, the way he played desparateness, I was so convinced that he could hear his heartbeat
The sound of a heartbeat calms babies. Maybe if he got used to it, it could calm him.
If you can’t change it, change the way you think about it
I have very bad anxiety I can feel my eyes rattling like a tail of a rattle snake and I can also hear my heart beating through my head and it beats so fast and so loud it’s like a drum set and I’ve been diagnosed with it for the past 5 years
The last few words really made me cry
With enough mental fortitude, he could eventually learn to tune out the sound or muffle it.
Just like how people control the sensations from taste or smell.
Vets deserve more treatment than they are given so many of them end up homeless and on the streets and this man stuck with his Belief that he was in pain and he refused to give up and that takes a great deal of strenght
I was ignored and sent away repeatedly everywhere I went for non seizure convulsions happening every time I fell asleep at night. Most medical people acted like it was mental despite the obvious fact FULL BODY CONVULSIONS are as physical as it gets. Until my arm broke in the hospital after being ignored for 5 HOURS. I was still left for another 5 HOURS and sent home with an unexamined broken arm. Only two days later when a finally sane doctor called to yell at the ER did I finally get help. Now it was magically real. This guy's behavior is a completely sane reaction to an insane culture in the medical system. On top of all this, I was unusually capable of advocating for myself because I'm a youth counselor with a long history in trauma healing. Medical professionals often outright reject trauma and nervous system theory/ practice before they can ever learn anything or begin healing themselves, and realize how shut down or dissociated they were.
Surprisingly, the heart-pounding I get in my head with my migraines has never bothered me. I mean, the pain, certainly, but the pounding itself? It's kind of comforting, to be honest.
I needed to see this today. I'm not a vet but I do have some similar scar tissue from past surgeries and procedures...this echo thing is not nearly as bad as this guy's but it was TERRIFYING when it started. In one way it's kind of like waterboarding torture, the unendingness of it all...in another way there's a constant fear that suddenly it's going to just...stop. Keeping my weight way, way down has been helpful in reducing the pressure sensation and therefore the sound, but I always have to have some other kind of sound happening, particularly when I'm trying to sleep, to drown it out. A loud fan and some white noise or some calming music along with the fan. It's manageable now but that silence with only your heartbeat to keep you company is one of the most scary things. No escape from it!
I think the most said line in Chicago Med is "PAGE DR CHARLES!!!!!"
The monitor at 7:07 makes me laugh at the inconsistencies to reality on medical dramas.
The screen is showing a transesophageal echo (produced from a probe down the throat). Note that the heart is flipped vertically on the screen and TEE is written in the top right corner.
The doctor is clearly doing a transthoracic echo (TTE) from outside the body! lol
I had the same problem. I could hear my heartbeat in my head and would feel like my body was floating and swaying like an ocean wave when I would lay down or sit down. In my case, it was all in my head.
My very calm, practical, down-to-earth mother had Chrohn’s disease in the 70’s before anyone knew what it was all about. The doctors were very dismissive as she told them what was going on with her as she was also dealing with crushing migraines and wanted to call in a psychiatrist for her, which really frustrated her. Finally, to shut her up, they called in a doctor visiting from Sweden who dealt with intestinal issues. So glad he was there because he confirmed her problems were medical, not psychological. She finally got medication to help her. The Swedish doctor was there only for one more week!
Making your enemy your friend, in a good way. Genius, coming from someone understands military injuries.
Am I not supposed to hear my heart??
The comments here. I have this and this super rare condition.