I'm back!!! Hope you all have had a super summer! What have you all been up to? I have a bunch of stuff lined up for the channel, so let's kick it off with a visit inside our favourite body; Cells At Work! Enjoy Ed X
Glad to see you back. I wanted to note there is also : Cells at Work!: Cold Syndrome (Hataraku Saibō: Kaze Shōkōgun), which is a special episode of Cells at Work. I hope you'll get to it after you finish season 1. And then I look forward to season 2.
The most clever detail was in the end when the blood cell mentioned the *back of the neck and the armpits* were very cold, which are the places where ice packs are placed by victims of heat stroke.
This episode got my 7 year-old daughter to start drinking water without me having to constantly convince her to. She'll be like "Mom, my Platelets are thirsty, I need to help them". She loves this show. She's fascinated by anatomy, and now she has a logical reason to drink more fluids.
That is exactly the reason that has kept me from smoking a cigarette for months now. Well that and a quick read of Cells at Work BLACK, so it did work I guess.
@@tntkff9901 Unfortunately not animated and not planned to be animated as far as I read. I think that the air of negativity and direness makes it difficult to sell for an anime geared towards the same crowd that watches this cheerful anime.
I’m from Texas, and I can confirm that heat exhaustion, heat stroke, and other sun exposure related issues are a very serious matter. If your body gets to the point where it’s practically screaming for you to go and get cooled off, *_DO NOT TRY TO PUSH THROUGH._* People have *_DIED_* of heat stroke. If you find yourself in a situation where you’re going to be exposed to heat for a long period, take the proper precautions as necessary for that area!
There's been issues over the last decade where due to rising temperatures there have been record high heatwaves in Europe, and because europeans are used to chilly european weather, most of the houses lack air conditioning systems, and the worst heatwaves have actually racked up death tolls in the thousands (mostly among the elderly).
I don't even live in a particularly hot area (in fact, Wisconsin is more known for getting cold than hot), but the one time I was ever hospitalized was due to dehydration as a kid. People don't always realize it, but dehydration can be VERY serious business.
Australia here - hyperthermia and stuff like that is a big concern, and takes up a good portion of our First Aid courses, almost as long as bites and stings. And its become a lot worse in the past few years - whilst the nothern areas have ways to deal with it (every house around and above the Tropic of Capricorn has air conditioning standard), some of the southern areas can be badly hit with the rising temps. Over the last few years, Adelaide, one of our southern cities, has had periods of 40-45+ deg C heat, which the city is just not prepared for.
I live in Japan right now, and heat stroke is unfortunately a regular thing, hence it getting a whole episode. People are very bad at staying properly hydrated.
yeah and because that they have long summer vacation. but that long summer vacation is used for many events and many people died of heatstroke in those events.
You learn to cope with it honestly I was born, raised, and living in Japan, that's why most people tend to plan ahead for the summer, school is ridiculously hot tho because they turn off the A/C during summer since technically for half the break no one will be there except for teachers and some students for summer school
"'You bastard!' Have we heard that kind of language from Cells at Work before?" Yeah welcome to anime, due to odd quirks of language compatibility (no real swear _words,_ mostly just varying levels of (im)politeness) that's pretty much *_the_* go-to insult. Could probably make a drinking game out of it in action/drama series.
@@CryingZombie666 Depends on the context, but honestly a _lot_ of the bible's contents would get some pretty nasty looks from the FCC and parent groups. An interesting read, but the stories within can get pretty child-unfriendly. Even outside the frequent use of "Ass" (as in donkeys, usually) things get kinda nuts sometimes. Like Lot's two daughters getting him plastered on wine and raping him as payback for some messed up stuff he did before. _That'd_ be an interesting kindergarten tale.
@@CryingZombie666 I don't think using Bible as your anchor for language is a good idea though. Because one it's based on a very old text and second there is a dedicated chapter of porn in it.
There's a few translation errors in this episode that aren't actually errors in the original dialogue. "The sweat's not atomizing? Meaning the temperature outside the body's too high". The Japanese actually says it's too humid. Heat Stroke: The episode title probably more properly translates as Hyperthermia. Transfusion: The Japanese actually translates as "Infusion via an injection" I guess the subtitlers did the best job they could, but in a show full of a lot of precise medical terms, there were some things that got past them. As a forewarning, there are a few other small issues in the last episodes as well, but in every case I know of, it's always been an issue with the translation, and not actually an error in the show itself.
I always loved in this episode how they act so confused when some external medicine is introduced and how they react to it because its true your body is just wtf is this thing.
If the bacteria B. cereus, who is normally on dirt, is trying to infect the body just after the person pass out could indicate that the person fell on the ground, right? Poor human being.
Dr Hope: "Woah 'bastard'?! Who knew Cells at Work would use such a language!" Me: *_he literally says it since the very first episode what you talking about doc_*
8:40 You kind of hinted at this, but it's also worth noting that the reason fainting in order to increase blood supply to the brain is so useful is because of what could happen otherwise. After all, if any part of your brain loses blood supply for too long, that's an ischemic stroke, which is incredibly deadly and often leads to MAJOR complications even if you do live through it. After all, fainting definitely sucks, but when the alternative is having a stroke, you start to appreciate the fact that your body has an emergency response plan for situations like that.
I remember when I almost had a heat stroke once. It was summer, an extremely hot summer, but I wanted to go cycling. After a hour I was exhausted because of the hot and I didn't have any bottle of water, so I stopped near a little fountain and I started to drink fast (the water was kinda cold) because I was terribly thirsty; probably my blood pressure dropped quickly because I started had vertigo and my view became blurry and the light was blinding (in Italy we say "I saw the stars" because the light, the moment before fainting, looks like blinking stars). In that exact moment I had this sort of "instinct" to just sit down, put my head between my legs, close my eyes and stay calm, after 20 seconds everything came back to normal. Trust me that I didn't know anything about this, I've never had any heat stroke before, I just had the instinct to do that, it's strange to describe it, for some reason I knew that would helped me to feel better and it did. Thanks to this "instinct" I haven't fainted, and since I was alone in a kinda forgotten place, it probably saved my life too.
It's interesting that sometimes our bodies know what to do even when "we" don't consciously know it. For another example, people and even very young children will often instinctively put a cut in their mouths or press their mouths to it. This is because saliva can help prevent infection. People don't usually know that fact, but they may still do this automatically
The lights, or stars, are from increased blood pressure against the back of the the eyes. Pressure will often register as stars. Which is why cartoons show stars around someone that was just clobbered. The blurred vision is due to reduced fluid to lubricate the cornea, eyeball. Glad you had a positive outcome. Knew of a guy that fainted, from heat stroke, while walking across a parking lot and injured his head quite badly. Dangerous situation! You, however, had better instincts.
@@gregreilly7328 wow this is really interesting. I always wondered how and why that blurry view occured when I had that heat stroke. Thank you for the explanation!
I cosplayed as a generic (male) red blood cell at an anime convention in Brussels. Got lot's of pics taken, tho it was quite sad to see I was the only guy into Hataraku Saibou.. Let's get this show to be more popular we need the damn conventions to look like blood vessels ! :D
Maybe a white cell next time? I hold off on a dagger however. White clothes and hat. Maybe something to make you white? Unless it is to warm. Maybe bring,if have one and they be ok to it. Your spouse to be a red cell. 😎
Basically a dark spinoff where the the cells work hard while their human often smokes, drinks excessively and has unprotected sex. These sickly habits have turned the cells' habitat into a black work environment.
They need to make this mandatory viewing in the US army. I was a medic pulling coverage for a firing range when I had to fight with all the way up to a SGM to medivac a heat stroke case. They didn't want to let me because medic leaving means they have to close the range until I get back. We were stationed in the Desert, marched to the range in the heat wearing full gear and body armor, Pt had vomited 2 times during the march. He was drenched in sweat, rapid respiration, and highly disoriented. I removed his gear and blouse, put him in the shade gave started an open bolus 1000ml normal saline and compelled him to also drink water. A short time later he appeared to stop sweating at all. At that moment I told the SGM i'm taking him in. He said no he will be fine doc (I'm only a medic but thats just what they call us). I replied did you complete medic training too, because if not i'm the senior medical person here, and this looks like heat stroke which can cause lasting harm or death. SGM did look pissed but he let me go. Te next day I got called into the office by our troop commander (who is an MD). He said I heard what you did talking back to an SGM. That took a lot of grit good job. We loose men to NCO's who are uninformed about how serious heat stroke is every year. Perhaps if they saw this as junior soldiers this would happen less often, because most junior medics will not stand up to the highest ranks of NCO.
Wow!! Rewatching this episode made me realize that the hemorrhagic shock episodes follow this one because this human fainted, hit his head, and sustained a traumatic injury leading to severe blood loss. The amount of detail in Cells at Work! Is incredible. I’m gonna buy the entire manga collection and use it for reference ❤️
It's unnerving to me how accurate this episode was. I've experienced heatstress before when I was 11, while I was at the beach. They perfectly described what I was going through. Heck, even White Blood Cell's brief pauses and staggering were perfectly portrayed. It was horrifying for me, and even more horrifying for my family with me. The panic the cells went through was so familiar to me- aside from the bacteria, of course, but that's a given. Please, stay hydrated, stay cool.
11:01 Doesn't passing out from heat exhaustion temporarily weaken your immune system, making you MORE vulnerable to illnesses? If so, this may be why the germ wound up coming in, because the body's defenses were weakened trying [and failing] to deal with the heat.
My guess is yes and no. I guess that heat stroke and exhaustion would be similar to a fever, thus not much pathogens can survive the high temperature. The pathogen that invaded the body in the episode comes from dirt, soil, pretty much the ground, and simply an indicator that the person collapsed.
Oh.. this is why I've become vulnerable to large amounts of running/light jogging because it can become fatal if I get lighthighted from it.. Then a week later I get a cold. Its not fun.
My guess is that since its a soil pathogen, the human they live in passed out ouside and collapsed onto some soil somewhere, the human migh have been doing farm work, garden work, or maybe just jogging outside on a really hot day
@@CryingZombie666 actually, no^^ alcohol is diuretic, meaning it decreases reabsorbtion of water and promote fluid loss through urination. Strictly speaking drinking whisky makes you more dehydrated than not drinking at all. You're losing some salts too. So if you're a drinker, make sure you drink lots of water and have decent amount of body salts. I don't drink so I'm good X) edit: reabsorbtion
I feel like it would have been good to include the part when the white blood cell tries to fight the pathogen, because it's saying that it's much harder for the body to fight against infections when it's dehydrated
Getting intravenous fluids after suffering dehydration was one of the best feelings in the world. Aaaaaaaaaaa I can't wait to see you do the season final!
One method I heard of in the US Army to combat severe heat injury was to actually insert a large-bore sterile tube into the pleura and run cold saline solution around the lungs. When it came out it was steaming. PT recovered.
I havn't heard that done. The few times a saw people heat cat they were put in body bags filled with ice till they got to the med station...Were they magically got the ice and why they were not handing it out was never answered.
Quickest click ever. I looked you up 2 minutes ago, lamenting the end of your channel. Glad to see you back with my favorite series. Definitely Season 2.
Thanks for this explanation. The body conditions featured in cells at work are the common illnesses or diseases here in Japan like Hay fever (during spring/cherry blossom season), Influenza (during winter), and Heat stroke (during summer). Your explanations are detailed and very easy to understand and the advice you give are very helpful since we experience these situations every year in Japan. ☺️
I learned a lot from your commentary this episode. Thanks, Doc. I had to be taken to the ER once because I passed out and fell off a roof. It was during a crazy heatwave and the two of us up there weren't even allowed to have water with us and the materials for the tar job didn't help, despite that it was already way too hot for the process to work well. Yeah, I woke up with the IV and the fans on me and the works. No injuries from the fall though, so small blessings there.
6:00 Honestly, I still wonder what this represents, as well, but to me it makes me think more of the autonomic nervous system than the brain itself, especially since I could swear that's the same guy who noticed the "reservoir" was low earlier in the episode. Obviously the autonomic nervous system is controlled by the brain, and everything you said about the hypothalamus holds true, but it's the autonomic nervous system that interacts with the sweat glands directly.
Honestly this episode reminds me of when I ended up with heat stroke at 12. The paramedics messed up when trying to take care of me without having to transport me to the emergency department and cooled me down far enough where I actually ended up turning blue from hypothermia in an arizona summer. Then they warmed me up too far and I ended up with heat exhaustion symptoms again, after they cooled me down a bit too far the SECOND time they decided to transport me to the hospital where I stayed in the emergency department for over 12 hours while they tried to stabilize me because my vitals were all over the place and wouldn't stay steady. My main question looking back was... okay.... why the hell didnt they just transport me in the first place
I've never minded the slow release of reactions to CAW episodes, if anything, it's just kind of a nice surprise when I see there's a new one. Can't wait for S2 and the subsequent reaction videos.
It's fun to imagine the cells as being sentient in their own right, and genuinely believing a religious practice like a rain dance would summon a giant needle from the sky to bring water. Oblivious to it being human medicine all along. After all, your body really is totally unaware of what's going on outside.
I remember getting heat stroke once when I was on holiday, the sheer fear I felt when I lost my sight for a short while was terrifying (thankfully since I live in Scotland I don’t have to worry about it at all)
One thing I love about this series is, besides the fact that it's pretty educational in a fun way, is the fact that they put so much emphasis on the fact that they are all working together to keep this human body alive. I think that could be very inspirational for a person feeling down on themselves :)
Man, this episode hit for me. I have a condition where i don't really sweat, in fact some parts of my body are literally incapable of sweating. It can be a huge problem. But it's something i've always lived with so i kind of forget how dangerous it really is and how normal people react to heat. So good job CaW ^^
the transfusion and infusion error seems to be a simple translation error rather than an error in the writing as the official Bluray of the series calls it an infusion now.
One of my favorite parts in this episode is when White Blood Cell refuses to give up the fight because the body is still alive. As long as you're still alive, your body is fighting to keep you that way no matter how bad things get--and I think this doubles as a subtle but powerful anti-suicide message. As long as you're alive, don't give up the fight to keep living!
I love this series and i hope you keep it up for the 2nd season. But i would to say if you are interested there is a manga that is called cells at work black. Its about a body that is unhealthy drinks and has high stress. Its and interesting read
I was in the ER just last night and just seeing that cannula is making my hand ache DX I'm difficult to get blood out of so back of my hand was the poor victim. I love seeing a dr react to this show and go even more in depth on the different aspects. I really enjoy the series and hope you continue with it :)
Hi, Dr. Hope! I haven't seen you for a bit. I really love your "Cells at Work" series. I can't wait to see you make more educational content; I'm interested in biology and medical science and I find these videos as a great way of learning some new things. I hope you have a nice day!
You’re back! Yay! I have a condition where my sweat glands dont work so i literally cannot sweat except for a few patches of skin that isnt enough to allow me to cool so heat exhaustion is a major problem for me, especially with global warming and me living in the tropics so it’s forever sunmer. I cant stay outside for too long and it’s a bummer.
My grandpa passed out from heat stroke when he was a young boy once. He lived in rural Idaho, and it gets VERY hot and extremely dry in the summer, causing dehydration rapidly if you're not careful. Well, there was a fair going on, with a hayride going around town to pick kids up and take them to the fair. Grandpa got excited and rushed out after his chores, running to catch the hayride.... he got on, but sitting in the sun after all that work quickly affected him and he wound up losing consciousness, causing him to fall off the trailer for the hay ride!! He had to be taken to a doctor for a head bump and his heat stroke.
I mean, the cancer was pretty old appearently and already took over some stuff. but eh, I never studied medicine and ages are weird in this anime anyways
Well, good to know about the "leave the fainted person lying where they are". o-o Wonder if they would ever tackle sleep deprivation and just plain dehydration without having excess heat involved..
The manga has not done so yet and likely won't; the former doesn't match the context of the series and the latter would be redundant. The host is likely a Tokyo Metropolis urbanite, there is no shortage of vending machines and drinks to allow for casually dehydrating in absence of the typical sweltering and humid heat of the Japanese summer and despite Japan still not exactly having central air conditioning systems be the norm
I love that it's almost like the rain dance works--obviously, they can't communicate directly, but their plight is what convinces the patient to go to the hospital and get help.
Yo doc, I've just binge watched all your Cells at work reaction vids, and now I crave more. Best reactions ever, seriously, you actually give additional information, explain things in details, I've learned more from this anime and your vids alone than in my biology class haha (and it's 100% more interesting). Please keep uploading!
Had a heat stroke on a walk during a 124°F summer and I remember waking up in an ambo, I remember hearing “BP dropping” before I slipped out. Woke up again with oxygen on and a needle in my hand with IV and a blue barf bag. Stayed semi conscious from the gurney to the ER. This episode literally makes me laugh cause it’s a MOOD.
Season 2 has been confirmed for so long and I was really wondering if you were gonna do it. Glad to know you will be! Also I think you should do episodes 12 & 13 together since it’s the same thing across a two parter. I do know that would mean a loner episode from you and also mean it takes longer to come out but I don’t really mind, I just think it’d work better to do them together.
And the show did a good job representing the Bacillus cereus: the bacterium has flagella for mobility and in some culture medium the colonies are white. Because the bacteria are from soil and environment, it can be found in dry foods as a spore.
As someone with low blood pressure, stuffy hot days are hell, and I have to agree that actually fainting feels better than trying _not_ to faint. I feel so good after
B. cereus is a spore forming bacteria, it's spores are highly resistant to heat and dehydration, so it makes sense that in an episode with increased temperature and low hydration levels you would see B. cereus.
When I was little uncle left in car in heat and had heat stroke. And fainted. They just took me home and put in cool room. But since then I can't handle even small heat. But I never image I was in THAT dangerous situation. Glad to be survivor.
I got severe heat stroke last year and while I realised at the time it was serious, somehow this drove home a lot of problems my body had with the high heat (pro tip, just like being too cold to shiver is bad, being too hot to sweat anymore is a health emergency). I was very lucky I was at an event with good medical staff, but it was touchy for a bit. Not seeing my vessels plump anymore through my skin as they all collapse and then seeing them return when I finally got hydrated enough again was wild, as was having to manually cool down because of lack of any sweating. I was nearly sent to the hospital for IV fluids, but they got me around without having to do that (the distance to the nearest hospital was significant)
Fortunately I have never personally experienced heatstroke or any severe heat stress. Occasionally I've become dehydrated and gotten headaches, but that's the extent of it. However there was a bit of a scare with this one girl on one of my school field trips, back when I was in middle school. It was May and really hot, and we all went to an amusement park after performing in front of judges (it was a music class). Towards the end of the field trip, one of the girls apparently got so dehydrated she threw up. I didn't witness it myself, thankfully, but I heard about it from someone else when there was a bit of a delay getting back on the buses. Fortunately, she got better and I don't think there were any severe repercussions of the dehydration. I can't remember if she fainted or not. Either way the teachers and chaperones gave the girl some gatorade or something to replenish her electrolytes and we all went home.
I'm back!!! Hope you all have had a super summer! What have you all been up to? I have a bunch of stuff lined up for the channel, so let's kick it off with a visit inside our favourite body; Cells At Work! Enjoy Ed X
You should watch jojos bizarre adventure next and solve the big question: how do they suffer puncture wounds from punches and explosions?
YAY, MORE OF THIS 😊😊
Glad to see you back. I wanted to note there is also : Cells at Work!: Cold Syndrome (Hataraku Saibō: Kaze Shōkōgun), which is a special episode of Cells at Work. I hope you'll get to it after you finish season 1. And then I look forward to season 2.
Southern hemisphere :p
Summer vacation's in a few months! But we did just have spring break, and my class trip! It's been a wild month.
Hi! Welcome back! I hope among that bunch of stuff there are reactions to "Once upon a time... Life" Best!
Heatstroke: *happens frequently in hot climates*
British Doctor: *hasn't seen the sun in 20 years*
No no, that's Scottish. British people do see the sun occasionally, it just doesnt help. Not that they deserve to even see it in the first place.
@@karry299 The sun never sets on the British Empire, because it never rises on it to begin with :P
@@ToastyMozart The sun never sets on the British Empire because the rain won't let them see the sun setting.
You literally can't, Yah really though...
@@karry299 As a Brit, I don't want to see the sun. I like being a vampire, thank you very much! What do you mean we don't "deserve" the sun? Rude.
The ending made me think that doctors, nurses and paramedics are gods to the cells, in the same way that the patient is their home.
That's probably true
That's probably true from the cells' perspective.
Sure, if your talking about Cthulhu and his pantheon.
Yeah, it seems like the Human in this anime is the earth just as the cells are like humans living on earth.
@Mr. Al also one of the T Cells prayed for rain.
13:05 "Right now is the most severe we've ever seen the patient so far" -sweats nervously-
laughs in last episode XD
also, atleast he's not reacting to Cells at Work Black
@@Kaimax61 It'd be sweet if he read CAW Black, though.
Oh he has no idea...
SporeMovieMaker23 You can’t sweat you’re under heat stroke!!
But honestly, thoughts are the same
Well until the end a more severe will happen haha, I just hope he do a special reacts because this will be a 2 episode story
The most clever detail was in the end when the blood cell mentioned the *back of the neck and the armpits* were very cold, which are the places where ice packs are placed by victims of heat stroke.
Good point
This episode got my 7 year-old daughter to start drinking water without me having to constantly convince her to. She'll be like "Mom, my Platelets are thirsty, I need to help them". She loves this show. She's fascinated by anatomy, and now she has a logical reason to drink more fluids.
am i the only one that feels slightly guilty about the fact my unhealthy habits are making these characters in my body work harder?
I think that’s the point. Treat yourself well, so that your cells will be healthy! They work so hard for you!
That is exactly the reason that has kept me from smoking a cigarette for months now. Well that and a quick read of Cells at Work BLACK, so it did work I guess.
You think this is bad, you should read Cells at Work: Code Black🔞
(not sure if they animated it yet...)
Aw,,, you should read that manga
@@tntkff9901 Unfortunately not animated and not planned to be animated as far as I read. I think that the air of negativity and direness makes it difficult to sell for an anime geared towards the same crowd that watches this cheerful anime.
I’m from Texas, and I can confirm that heat exhaustion, heat stroke, and other sun exposure related issues are a very serious matter. If your body gets to the point where it’s practically screaming for you to go and get cooled off, *_DO NOT TRY TO PUSH THROUGH._* People have *_DIED_* of heat stroke. If you find yourself in a situation where you’re going to be exposed to heat for a long period, take the proper precautions as necessary for that area!
Here in Brazil is the same, but the whole year around 😭🤒
There's been issues over the last decade where due to rising temperatures there have been record high heatwaves in Europe, and because europeans are used to chilly european weather, most of the houses lack air conditioning systems, and the worst heatwaves have actually racked up death tolls in the thousands (mostly among the elderly).
I don't even live in a particularly hot area (in fact, Wisconsin is more known for getting cold than hot), but the one time I was ever hospitalized was due to dehydration as a kid. People don't always realize it, but dehydration can be VERY serious business.
Florida here - what he said. Heat stroke is serious business.
Australia here - hyperthermia and stuff like that is a big concern, and takes up a good portion of our First Aid courses, almost as long as bites and stings.
And its become a lot worse in the past few years - whilst the nothern areas have ways to deal with it (every house around and above the Tropic of Capricorn has air conditioning standard), some of the southern areas can be badly hit with the rising temps. Over the last few years, Adelaide, one of our southern cities, has had periods of 40-45+ deg C heat, which the city is just not prepared for.
I live in Japan right now, and heat stroke is unfortunately a regular thing, hence it getting a whole episode. People are very bad at staying properly hydrated.
The 30+C during summer and high humidity (especially around Typhoons) doesn't help.
yea, especialy around Tokyo, considering the amount of buildings, steel and concrete, that place becomes a heat island at the drop of a hat.
yeah and because that they have long summer vacation. but that long summer vacation is used for many events and many people died of heatstroke in those events.
You learn to cope with it honestly I was born, raised, and living in Japan, that's why most people tend to plan ahead for the summer, school is ridiculously hot tho because they turn off the A/C during summer since technically for half the break no one will be there except for teachers and some students for summer school
The workaholism doesn't help either...
I'm a simple person.
I see Dr Hope upload a "DOCTOR reacts to CELLS AT WORK!" episode, I drop everything and go to watch.
Yeah, I was about to go to bed. Nope! Gotta watch!
That's my reaction exactly.
Saaaaaame🤣
@@xstitched yes but now I kinda want Doctor Mike to react to Cells at Work too.
"'You bastard!' Have we heard that kind of language from Cells at Work before?"
Yeah welcome to anime, due to odd quirks of language compatibility (no real swear _words,_ mostly just varying levels of (im)politeness) that's pretty much *_the_* go-to insult. Could probably make a drinking game out of it in action/drama series.
Bastard is not really an inappropriate word, though. I mean, if the bible uses “bastard child”, then it’s not a prob, right?
@@CryingZombie666 Depends on the context, but honestly a _lot_ of the bible's contents would get some pretty nasty looks from the FCC and parent groups. An interesting read, but the stories within can get pretty child-unfriendly.
Even outside the frequent use of "Ass" (as in donkeys, usually) things get kinda nuts sometimes. Like Lot's two daughters getting him plastered on wine and raping him as payback for some messed up stuff he did before. _That'd_ be an interesting kindergarten tale.
@@ToastyMozart A shouting match between the FCC and the Westboro Baptist Church? Prepare the popcorn!
Nandato?
@@CryingZombie666 I don't think using Bible as your anchor for language is a good idea though. Because one it's based on a very old text and second there is a dedicated chapter of porn in it.
There's a few translation errors in this episode that aren't actually errors in the original dialogue.
"The sweat's not atomizing? Meaning the temperature outside the body's too high". The Japanese actually says it's too humid.
Heat Stroke: The episode title probably more properly translates as Hyperthermia.
Transfusion: The Japanese actually translates as "Infusion via an injection"
I guess the subtitlers did the best job they could, but in a show full of a lot of precise medical terms, there were some things that got past them. As a forewarning, there are a few other small issues in the last episodes as well, but in every case I know of, it's always been an issue with the translation, and not actually an error in the show itself.
I figured it was something like that. Translating Japanese can be very confusing at times.
I mean, heat stroke IS hyperthermia
@@tzukishiro Not quite. Hyperthermia can be caused by heat stroke, but can also happen with adverse reaction to drugs.
You can watch the English dub on Netflix, where they say “infusion” instead of “transfusion”
Yeah medical terms are a problem to traslate
I always loved in this episode how they act so confused when some external medicine is introduced and how they react to it because its true your body is just wtf is this thing.
If the bacteria B. cereus, who is normally on dirt, is trying to infect the body just after the person pass out could indicate that the person fell on the ground, right? Poor human being.
That was what i figured when i saw the ep
Someone's connecting the dots... Not like me 😅
Thanks, I didn't notice, but it's a nice detail 😊
The bacteria could've been on some vegetables that weren't properly washed.
Genin99 well, yes... but I don’t think somebody will eat anything while been unconscious
@@legonosh it lived in the body before the person passed out.
Dr Hope: "Woah 'bastard'?! Who knew Cells at Work would use such a language!"
Me: *_he literally says it since the very first episode what you talking about doc_*
There was also language like that in the "Cancer" episode too.
I was laughing when the captain did the rain dance
8:40 You kind of hinted at this, but it's also worth noting that the reason fainting in order to increase blood supply to the brain is so useful is because of what could happen otherwise. After all, if any part of your brain loses blood supply for too long, that's an ischemic stroke, which is incredibly deadly and often leads to MAJOR complications even if you do live through it.
After all, fainting definitely sucks, but when the alternative is having a stroke, you start to appreciate the fact that your body has an emergency response plan for situations like that.
I remember when I almost had a heat stroke once. It was summer, an extremely hot summer, but I wanted to go cycling. After a hour I was exhausted because of the hot and I didn't have any bottle of water, so I stopped near a little fountain and I started to drink fast (the water was kinda cold) because I was terribly thirsty; probably my blood pressure dropped quickly because I started had vertigo and my view became blurry and the light was blinding (in Italy we say "I saw the stars" because the light, the moment before fainting, looks like blinking stars). In that exact moment I had this sort of "instinct" to just sit down, put my head between my legs, close my eyes and stay calm, after 20 seconds everything came back to normal. Trust me that I didn't know anything about this, I've never had any heat stroke before, I just had the instinct to do that, it's strange to describe it, for some reason I knew that would helped me to feel better and it did.
Thanks to this "instinct" I haven't fainted, and since I was alone in a kinda forgotten place, it probably saved my life too.
It's interesting that sometimes our bodies know what to do even when "we" don't consciously know it. For another example, people and even very young children will often instinctively put a cut in their mouths or press their mouths to it. This is because saliva can help prevent infection. People don't usually know that fact, but they may still do this automatically
@@Rachel-og8jy
Saliva is 2% hydrogen peroxide, your body naturally produces.
The lights, or stars, are from increased blood pressure against the back of the the eyes. Pressure will often register as stars. Which is why cartoons show stars around someone that was just clobbered. The blurred vision is due to reduced fluid to lubricate the cornea, eyeball.
Glad you had a positive outcome. Knew of a guy that fainted, from heat stroke, while walking across a parking lot and injured his head quite badly. Dangerous situation! You, however, had better instincts.
@@gregreilly7328 wow this is really interesting. I always wondered how and why that blurry view occured when I had that heat stroke. Thank you for the explanation!
@@NKG_Grimm
Thanks. Forgot that the Iris muscles that control focus would be weakened by dehydration and high sodium levels.
I cosplayed as a generic (male) red blood cell at an anime convention in Brussels. Got lot's of pics taken, tho it was quite sad to see I was the only guy into Hataraku Saibou.. Let's get this show to be more popular we need the damn conventions to look like blood vessels ! :D
bring a box of oxygen and a basket of nutrients
@@Elliyan4 lolololol
that will teach people wtf congestion is!
Maybe a white cell next time? I hold off on a dagger however. White clothes and hat. Maybe something to make you white? Unless it is to warm. Maybe bring,if have one and they be ok to it. Your spouse to be a red cell. 😎
I also cosplayed as a RBC, and held a large carrot to represent nutrients!
Cant wait to see your reaction to the last two episodes! It was very intense and dramatic!!
Yes.. Ive been waiting for those since the beginning
*next two. They released one more well after the season ended
@@LHerra
Oh yeah, the OVA. That's pretty good as well
“This is the most severe we’ve seen the body so far”
Me: just wait...it gets worse.
Have you checked out Cells At Work: Black yet? It's the internal life of cells in an older, out of shape guy.
Doctor reacts to manga, yes!
I'd happily buy an audiobook version of that if Dr. Hope would voice it
Basically a dark spinoff where the the cells work hard while their human often smokes, drinks excessively and has unprotected sex. These sickly habits have turned the cells' habitat into a black work environment.
Balázs Szeidl it’d be kinda hard to do an audiobook of a manga, since a lot of the story is told in drawings...
3l H4ck3r C0mf0r7 Maybe give shock factor,shocking view for smokers,drug users and dealers. The effects your doing to yourself & or others.
So THIS was your master plan all along! Spread the reviews to fill the gap between seasons! Now that's just diabolical.
I mean he could also read/react to the Cells at Work: BLACK in the time before the next season starts.
Cells at Work: when you want to study immunology, practice your conversational Japanese and slack off all at once.
Welcome back, Doc Hope!
Back at it with our favorite show
They need to make this mandatory viewing in the US army. I was a medic pulling coverage for a firing range when I had to fight with all the way up to a SGM to medivac a heat stroke case. They didn't want to let me because medic leaving means they have to close the range until I get back. We were stationed in the Desert, marched to the range in the heat wearing full gear and body armor, Pt had vomited 2 times during the march. He was drenched in sweat, rapid respiration, and highly disoriented. I removed his gear and blouse, put him in the shade gave started an open bolus 1000ml normal saline and compelled him to also drink water. A short time later he appeared to stop sweating at all. At that moment I told the SGM i'm taking him in. He said no he will be fine doc (I'm only a medic but thats just what they call us). I replied did you complete medic training too, because if not i'm the senior medical person here, and this looks like heat stroke which can cause lasting harm or death. SGM did look pissed but he let me go. Te next day I got called into the office by our troop commander (who is an MD). He said I heard what you did talking back to an SGM. That took a lot of grit good job. We loose men to NCO's who are uninformed about how serious heat stroke is every year. Perhaps if they saw this as junior soldiers this would happen less often, because most junior medics will not stand up to the highest ranks of NCO.
"I've never seen them use inappropriate language before" The bacteria in episode one swear in their first line of dialog lmao
Wow!! Rewatching this episode made me realize that the hemorrhagic shock episodes follow this one because this human fainted, hit his head, and sustained a traumatic injury leading to severe blood loss.
The amount of detail in Cells at Work! Is incredible. I’m gonna buy the entire manga collection and use it for reference ❤️
Just a reccomendation, episodes 12 and 13 should prolly be done together. It's a two parter so it might make it easier to understand or something, idk
It's unnerving to me how accurate this episode was. I've experienced heatstress before when I was 11, while I was at the beach.
They perfectly described what I was going through. Heck, even White Blood Cell's brief pauses and staggering were perfectly portrayed.
It was horrifying for me, and even more horrifying for my family with me. The panic the cells went through was so familiar to me- aside from the bacteria, of course, but that's a given.
Please, stay hydrated, stay cool.
11:01 Doesn't passing out from heat exhaustion temporarily weaken your immune system, making you MORE vulnerable to illnesses? If so, this may be why the germ wound up coming in, because the body's defenses were weakened trying [and failing] to deal with the heat.
My guess is yes and no. I guess that heat stroke and exhaustion would be similar to a fever, thus not much pathogens can survive the high temperature. The pathogen that invaded the body in the episode comes from dirt, soil, pretty much the ground, and simply an indicator that the person collapsed.
@@AdmiralPenguin The pathogen in this episode is said to have quite a high heat tolerance, hence I think why its featured here.
Oh.. this is why I've become vulnerable to large amounts of running/light jogging because it can become fatal if I get lighthighted from it..
Then a week later I get a cold. Its not fun.
My guess is that since its a soil pathogen, the human they live in passed out ouside and collapsed onto some soil somewhere, the human migh have been doing farm work, garden work, or maybe just jogging outside on a really hot day
Jormungand13324 which is one of the reasons why Dr Hope said, that the human would have to be admitted to the hospital.
Anyone els pause the video to go & get a drink of water?
huh... i didnt realize that i even went to get it
I went to get a drink of whisky, is that alright? xD
WatcherFromThePlateauofShorn141 I guess we’ll know in season 2.
@@CryingZombie666 actually, no^^ alcohol is diuretic, meaning it decreases reabsorbtion of water and promote fluid loss through urination. Strictly speaking drinking whisky makes you more dehydrated than not drinking at all. You're losing some salts too.
So if you're a drinker, make sure you drink lots of water and have decent amount of body salts. I don't drink so I'm good X)
edit: reabsorbtion
@Nan Wijanarko Thanks. You’re a big help. May the Booze God smile upon you! Cheers!
Dr Hope: This is the most severe condition we've ever seen the patient in.
Hemorrhagic Shock: *ゴゴゴゴゴゴゴゴ...*
Cancer cell: bruh
@btamamura … you called it XD
I feel like it would have been good to include the part when the white blood cell tries to fight the pathogen, because it's saying that it's much harder for the body to fight against infections when it's dehydrated
Getting intravenous fluids after suffering dehydration was one of the best feelings in the world. Aaaaaaaaaaa I can't wait to see you do the season final!
One method I heard of in the US Army to combat severe heat injury was to actually insert a large-bore sterile tube into the pleura and run cold saline solution around the lungs. When it came out it was steaming. PT recovered.
I havn't heard that done. The few times a saw people heat cat they were put in body bags filled with ice till they got to the med station...Were they magically got the ice and why they were not handing it out was never answered.
It feels so weird listening to a video about heatstroke while I'm quite hot and the fan is blowing on me, lol
FairySlash Yeah makes you think huh? Don’t forget to drink water lol
ive always got my water bottle next to me, so im good!
Quickest click ever. I looked you up 2 minutes ago, lamenting the end of your channel. Glad to see you back with my favorite series. Definitely Season 2.
Thanks for this explanation. The body conditions featured in cells at work are the common illnesses or diseases here in Japan like Hay fever (during spring/cherry blossom season), Influenza (during winter), and Heat stroke (during summer).
Your explanations are detailed and very easy to understand and the advice you give are very helpful since we experience these situations every year in Japan. ☺️
Episodes 12 and 13 will be a rather interesting one for ya, it's a 2 episode thing. 14 is hilarious though.
I learned a lot from your commentary this episode. Thanks, Doc. I had to be taken to the ER once because I passed out and fell off a roof. It was during a crazy heatwave and the two of us up there weren't even allowed to have water with us and the materials for the tar job didn't help, despite that it was already way too hot for the process to work well. Yeah, I woke up with the IV and the fans on me and the works. No injuries from the fall though, so small blessings there.
Dude I was wondering where you were I thought you got isekaied (transported into another world)
Nah, think he knows not to step in front of truck-kun
Ascdren what if hes treating truck kun with severe anxiety due to isekai’ng 1 too many people :>
Truck-kun ran him down, but his cheat skill is being a fuck mothering doctor so he patched himself back up and sued the Hero Delivery Company.
You missed the best bit - where Baccilus Cerus finally gets caught
11:46 We've seen them call Cancer cell a buggy bastard before, just from the top of my head
I'm so happy he still reacts to Cells At Work. I love Cells At Work, who else is with me?
Can we take a moment to appreciate how horrible this person is luck is, considering all the things that have happened to them this season?
White blood cell: *stands up and immediately feels dizzy*
Me: I feel that
6:00 Honestly, I still wonder what this represents, as well, but to me it makes me think more of the autonomic nervous system than the brain itself, especially since I could swear that's the same guy who noticed the "reservoir" was low earlier in the episode. Obviously the autonomic nervous system is controlled by the brain, and everything you said about the hypothalamus holds true, but it's the autonomic nervous system that interacts with the sweat glands directly.
Love the way you call the human body the “patient” 😂 Such a doctor thing to do
"We don't really store fluids in your body like a reservoir"
Camels: you tell me about it
To be technical, Camel humps are fat reserves for when food is scarce, no water storage in there. :P
camels are obese confirmed
@@michaelvansise4887 They've got more efficient kidneys than humans though I think?
Honestly this episode reminds me of when I ended up with heat stroke at 12. The paramedics messed up when trying to take care of me without having to transport me to the emergency department and cooled me down far enough where I actually ended up turning blue from hypothermia in an arizona summer. Then they warmed me up too far and I ended up with heat exhaustion symptoms again, after they cooled me down a bit too far the SECOND time they decided to transport me to the hospital where I stayed in the emergency department for over 12 hours while they tried to stabilize me because my vitals were all over the place and wouldn't stay steady. My main question looking back was... okay.... why the hell didnt they just transport me in the first place
I think Heat Stroke in japan is probably very common, considering the heat in summer is very extreme in there
I've never minded the slow release of reactions to CAW episodes, if anything, it's just kind of a nice surprise when I see there's a new one. Can't wait for S2 and the subsequent reaction videos.
It's fun to imagine the cells as being sentient in their own right, and genuinely believing a religious practice like a rain dance would summon a giant needle from the sky to bring water. Oblivious to it being human medicine all along.
After all, your body really is totally unaware of what's going on outside.
I remember getting heat stroke once when I was on holiday, the sheer fear I felt when I lost my sight for a short while was terrifying (thankfully since I live in Scotland I don’t have to worry about it at all)
Bacteria: just pops out during the heat stroke
Dr. Hope: wHO THE HELL IS THIS GUY?!
One thing I love about this series is, besides the fact that it's pretty educational in a fun way, is the fact that they put so much emphasis on the fact that they are all working together to keep this human body alive. I think that could be very inspirational for a person feeling down on themselves :)
I remember when I had a heatstroke. The IV was very unique you could feel the coolness in the veins.
Man, this episode hit for me. I have a condition where i don't really sweat, in fact some parts of my body are literally incapable of sweating. It can be a huge problem. But it's something i've always lived with so i kind of forget how dangerous it really is and how normal people react to heat. So good job CaW ^^
the transfusion and infusion error seems to be a simple translation error rather than an error in the writing as the official Bluray of the series calls it an infusion now.
Roboshi pretty sure the dub also says infusion, correct me if I’m wrong
One of my favorite parts in this episode is when White Blood Cell refuses to give up the fight because the body is still alive. As long as you're still alive, your body is fighting to keep you that way no matter how bad things get--and I think this doubles as a subtle but powerful anti-suicide message. As long as you're alive, don't give up the fight to keep living!
9:46 The "Blain" Dr. Hope? I see the Japanese is rubbing off on you.
😂😂😂👌
I love this series and i hope you keep it up for the 2nd season. But i would to say if you are interested there is a manga that is called cells at work black. Its about a body that is unhealthy drinks and has high stress. Its and interesting read
This English doctor talking to me about a strange Japanese Osmosis Jones gives my Texan heart life.
I was in the ER just last night and just seeing that cannula is making my hand ache DX I'm difficult to get blood out of so back of my hand was the poor victim. I love seeing a dr react to this show and go even more in depth on the different aspects. I really enjoy the series and hope you continue with it :)
Hi, Dr. Hope! I haven't seen you for a bit. I really love your "Cells at Work" series. I can't wait to see you make more educational content; I'm interested in biology and medical science and I find these videos as a great way of learning some new things.
I hope you have a nice day!
You’re back! Yay!
I have a condition where my sweat glands dont work so i literally cannot sweat except for a few patches of skin that isnt enough to allow me to cool so heat exhaustion is a major problem for me, especially with global warming and me living in the tropics so it’s forever sunmer. I cant stay outside for too long and it’s a bummer.
he's back, and ready to *Work*
My grandpa passed out from heat stroke when he was a young boy once. He lived in rural Idaho, and it gets VERY hot and extremely dry in the summer, causing dehydration rapidly if you're not careful. Well, there was a fair going on, with a hayride going around town to pick kids up and take them to the fair. Grandpa got excited and rushed out after his chores, running to catch the hayride.... he got on, but sitting in the sun after all that work quickly affected him and he wound up losing consciousness, causing him to fall off the trailer for the hay ride!! He had to be taken to a doctor for a head bump and his heat stroke.
"Right now is the most severe we've seen in this patient so far"
Cancer cell: AM I A JOKE TO YOU?
it is kinda funny how too much heat creates more danger than fucking endstage cancer
@@lpfan4491 that was beginning stage cancer...
I mean, the cancer was pretty old appearently and already took over some stuff. but eh, I never studied medicine and ages are weird in this anime anyways
Well, good to know about the "leave the fainted person lying where they are". o-o
Wonder if they would ever tackle sleep deprivation and just plain dehydration without having excess heat involved..
The manga has not done so yet and likely won't; the former doesn't match the context of the series and the latter would be redundant. The host is likely a Tokyo Metropolis urbanite, there is no shortage of vending machines and drinks to allow for casually dehydrating in absence of the typical sweltering and humid heat of the Japanese summer and despite Japan still not exactly having central air conditioning systems be the norm
its been a while since you've reviewed Cells at Work
I love that it's almost like the rain dance works--obviously, they can't communicate directly, but their plight is what convinces the patient to go to the hospital and get help.
Yo doc, I've just binge watched all your Cells at work reaction vids, and now I crave more. Best reactions ever, seriously, you actually give additional information, explain things in details, I've learned more from this anime and your vids alone than in my biology class haha (and it's 100% more interesting). Please keep uploading!
Sweet, I can't wait. The next two episodes are my absolute favorites.
I absolutely want to see you cover season 2! I love your videos, you're so informative.
“This is the worst we’ve seen the patient so far” oh man you are in for a treat in the next couple episodes!
If possible you may want to watch the next two episodes back to back.
I cannot wait for your thoughts on the finale.
All I gathered from this episode was: Rain dance actually works, the real solution to heat-based ailments
Rain dance/prayer may or may not help... But the ceremonial fire (and heated air) in rainmaking definitely does!
Had a heat stroke on a walk during a 124°F summer and I remember waking up in an ambo, I remember hearing “BP dropping” before I slipped out. Woke up again with oxygen on and a needle in my hand with IV and a blue barf bag. Stayed semi conscious from the gurney to the ER. This episode literally makes me laugh cause it’s a MOOD.
Each of the humanoid cells of this show has another system just like this inside of them... it goes deeper forever.
Inb4 this is how Earth-chan's body looks like.
"To pump to the blain. The blain? The brain."
Replayed this at least 10 times because of how funny it was.
Season 2 has been confirmed for so long and I was really wondering if you were gonna do it. Glad to know you will be! Also I think you should do episodes 12 & 13 together since it’s the same thing across a two parter. I do know that would mean a loner episode from you and also mean it takes longer to come out but I don’t really mind, I just think it’d work better to do them together.
And the show did a good job representing the Bacillus cereus: the bacterium has flagella for mobility and in some culture medium the colonies are white. Because the bacteria are from soil and environment, it can be found in dry foods as a spore.
More Cells At Work Please !!!!!
As someone with low blood pressure, stuffy hot days are hell, and I have to agree that actually fainting feels better than trying _not_ to faint. I feel so good after
Remember that time at band camp I fainted from heat exhaustion?
*cries* * i miss those days
absolutely absoluetly keep covering this series. please dont just stop at season 1
I'm Brazilian and I know how this poor cells fells.
B. cereus is a spore forming bacteria, it's spores are highly resistant to heat and dehydration, so it makes sense that in an episode with increased temperature and low hydration levels you would see B. cereus.
I can relate to this a lot, especially the fact this affected me when I play sports
When I was little uncle left in car in heat and had heat stroke. And fainted. They just took me home and put in cool room. But since then I can't handle even small heat. But I never image I was in THAT dangerous situation. Glad to be survivor.
Yay more Cells at Work! Excited for next season for sure, wait for the 12th episode!
I got severe heat stroke last year and while I realised at the time it was serious, somehow this drove home a lot of problems my body had with the high heat (pro tip, just like being too cold to shiver is bad, being too hot to sweat anymore is a health emergency). I was very lucky I was at an event with good medical staff, but it was touchy for a bit. Not seeing my vessels plump anymore through my skin as they all collapse and then seeing them return when I finally got hydrated enough again was wild, as was having to manually cool down because of lack of any sweating. I was nearly sent to the hospital for IV fluids, but they got me around without having to do that (the distance to the nearest hospital was significant)
I'm so happy you are back!! Please keep reacting to Cells at work, there are a few caps left ♥
Watching episode related to heat stroke and dehydration. I considered drinking water and nearly choked myself to laughter when he said "Blain".
How heavy are your Dumbbells is also an educational series but heavy fan service
Fortunately I have never personally experienced heatstroke or any severe heat stress. Occasionally I've become dehydrated and gotten headaches, but that's the extent of it. However there was a bit of a scare with this one girl on one of my school field trips, back when I was in middle school. It was May and really hot, and we all went to an amusement park after performing in front of judges (it was a music class). Towards the end of the field trip, one of the girls apparently got so dehydrated she threw up. I didn't witness it myself, thankfully, but I heard about it from someone else when there was a bit of a delay getting back on the buses. Fortunately, she got better and I don't think there were any severe repercussions of the dehydration. I can't remember if she fainted or not. Either way the teachers and chaperones gave the girl some gatorade or something to replenish her electrolytes and we all went home.
Wait, so what's the medical term for when your cells do a rain dance? You never told us!