new fears: 1. Eating 2. Drinking 3. not washing hands 4. Swimming in water 5. getting bitten by a random animal 5.1. Prions 6. Breathing 7. My own body 8. Mosquitos 9.
@@KhmerPlaysAndEdits no- the amoeba lives in FRESH hot water. Meaning ponds,lakes and swamps. And you need to actually jump hard enough into the water so that the amoeba actually gets sprayed far enough into your nose. So swimming wont do anything.
And even if the amoeba for some reason managed to get past filtration and into your shower then unless you put the shower on full blast up your nose,you have nothing to worry about.
as a medical student, I've met a pacient at our university hospital with CJD. It's absolutely devastating to see a healthy pearson degenerate and lose their whole personality and motor functions until they inevitably die. The craziest and scariest part is that CJD can acutally happen spontaneously. That's right. RANDOMLY. with no reason or clear cause, someone's proteins can adopt a defective and erroneous configuration and become a lethal uncurable prion - a death sentence out of nowhere.
Quick note: The terms “bubonic plague” and “Black Death” can’t be used interchangeably. The bubonic plague is the disease, and the Black Death is the most famous outbreak of said disease which occurred from 1346-1353. Additionally, Ebola doesn’t necessarily have a 90% mortality rate, it entirely depends on the strain of Ebola in question. Ebola Zaire does, in fact, have a 90% mortality rate. Ebola Sudan, on the other hand, has a mortality rate of around 60%.
The bubonic plague also isn't the only form of the disease. It's the most infamous, but actually the least deadly kind. The pneumonic and septicimic plagues were much deadlier and getting them almost guaranteed death. It's even thought that the pneumonic plague was responsible for more deaths than the bubonic plague was during the Black Death.
I don't think it's the strain that matters, but the health of those involved. The first people to catch ebola in Zaire had very poor health and nutritional standards, and as nutrition and health improved, so did survival rates. Thus when they had a recent outbreak in West Africa, only about 40% died because people were healthier, while a concurrent outbreak(well, 5 years later in 2020) in SE Congo where food was scarce due to ongoing conflict it killed around 76% of victims.
I got malaria when I was 13. Can confirm I was super confused. One example was when I saw a "flea man" from castlevania in my parent's room. It then morph into a dragon's head and breath fire at me. My body actually felt like it was on fire I had it for like a month. My joints was in pain. Couldn't walk. When I tried to sit, I simply drop like a sack of potatoes. I didn't even had the strength to open the door to my parent's car. Skin was hypersensitive. If I focus at one spot, it became a blind spot. High fever and in a constant state of delusion Overall, it was awful. Public hospital just gave me meds for fever which did nothing. Went to a private clinic, they gave me quinine. Only took about 30 minutes for me to sober up and realised I was not, in fact, a robot - which is a shame. Took about a week to make a recovery
Hey I thought you guys (freedom country) were buying malaria meds from us (the greatest medical and tech support country = India) and China. It is usually treated as nothing here (I am not kidding) most people get very mild symptoms and hardly need any meds. I never heard someone describe malaria as that problematic and most people are just immune to it
I lived in Africa for 12 years. Malaria was endemic there. People with money took prophylactic medication to suppress the malaria in their systems (which gets into you once you are bitten by an infected female.) If you get a flare-up, there were other medications to take, which included quinine. The American government provides official personnel the proper drugs. The French had their own medications, slightly different from ours. If American health personnel responsible for overseas employees can supply the right meds and know the treatments, why do doctors here freak-out and not know what to do when people bring it with them from other countries? The knowledge and meds exist. There is a med one can take if there are no plans to return to a country with malaria that is supposed to kill off all the malaria bugs and get it out of your system. Sorry that you had to wait so long to get treatment. I have had malaria several times but got treatment right away. And that was in the dead center of Africa 30-40 years ago.
7:40 Fun fact! If a deer gets Mad Cow Disease, or MCD, it’s called Chronic Wasting Disease, or CWD. But if a sheep gets this, it’s called scrapes (scrape E s) and gets its name from causing sheep to itch so much they scrape their wool off.
Not only that but Prions don't exist! The disease is caused by heavy metals trapped in the neural tissues of the body carried there by parasitic infection.
Note: Most of these diseases are INSANELY rare, you will most likely never get ANY of these, as we get vaccinations for a lot of them at a very young age. The bacteria that causes the bubonic plauge (yersinia pestis) has only emerged about 3 times in the past 250 years, almost all being in China/Mongolia. Polio is extinct in most parts of the world, except for India and some parts of Africa, and almost all of the prions mentions are INSANELY rare, only having about 5 to 6 cases a year. Anthrax is only really present in siberia and an island in Scotland called Anthrax Island which is were the UK were developing bio weapons during WW2. Malaria is the most common out of the list, but is also VERY treatable, and is mostly prominent in Africa and Asia.
My family has a history of CJD, my Grandpa passed from it when I was 2 or 3. My Mom has gotten very involved with CJD awareness and fundraising support in the last few years, she’s really been inspiring. Just this past week she flew to DC to lobby for research funding. The main research group working on a treatment and eventually cure for CJD has recently started their first drug trial!
You got something wrong. Rabies is not the most lethal disease on earth, TSEs are. (Mad Cow Disease, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, Fatal Insomnia (sporadic or famililal) and Kuru, among others). While there are a few survivors of rabies, although very few compared to the amount of cases, there are absolutely no survivors of any TSE.
@@sup3rhanny transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, the group where all the diseases I mentioned are. TSEs are caused by malformed proteins in the brain that mostly happen out of nowhere. Proteins are too small, and they can't be killed since they are not alive, resulting in an 100% deadly disease that practically turns your brain into a sponge (hence spongiform).
Not Fun Fact: The "hydrophobia" exhibited by victims of Rabies is a unique symptom with a deliberate purpose; rabies spreads by its presence in saliva, but ingesting water or swallowing saliva (two things rabies deliberately prevents) would reduce the viral load. Typically a virus would not have an advantage in being so completely lethal in such a short span of time, but Rabies gets by by being so effective at transmitting itself in this way.
Tetanus is fucking scary, imagine a guy back in the days just layed there cramping in pain until he died from dehydration or simply out of too much pain
Ig rabies is scarier you not only can't drink water but you're scared of it.. Throwing up waters and having Seizures with foaming mouth is a worst ways to die
I'm 90% convinced that Tetanus is the reason why medical people thought demonic possessions where real. Like imagine not knowing why someone is laying in a bed with its back arched and unable to speak, no wonder why they thought they have the devil inside...
yeah, and a few of these don’t feel quite fit to me. ebola is severe but highly highly uncommon, and the diarrhea tends to kill you before the hemorrhage does. I don’t get the point of having both CJD and Kuru. It’s still better than most microbio content directed at people who aren’t med students, though, which I appreciate
In 2014, freeze-dried smallpox virus vials were found at the NIH, with origins tracing back to the 1950s. David Evans demonstrated in 2016 that recreating smallpox-like viruses in a lab could be achieved with modest resources. Additionally, ancient human remains have provided another potential source of smallpox viruses, as evidenced by the recovery of a complete smallpox genome from a 17th-century child mummy and virus genome parts from a permafrost-preserved corpse.@@emilypurdy2097
a former teacher of mine passed due to CJD recently. people only noticed that she seemed uncharacteristically forgetful about a week before she took off work. she died within a month of being diagnosed. she was very young and very healthy otherwise. it literally came out of nowhere.
Fun fact: there's actually a thrash metal band called "Anthrax" So there's essentially a good and bad Anthrax that exists The good Anthrax: the band kind The bad Anthrax: the Disease kind
I was going to say that! Anthrax got their name from that disease. They are the pioneers of thrash metal (part of the big four of pioneers alongside Old Metallica, Slayer and Megadeth).
interesting fact abt kuru: since it was most popular in papua new guinea due to a native group’s culture making it extraordinarily common. since it was so common within this group, some people have developed immunity to kuru
kuru is caused by misfolded proteins, you can't be immune to it. you can only be lucky enough to die before symptoms appear, which can take years after you're infected.
Wow I'm from PNG and I didn't even know about this disease. I don't think many people know of it nowadays anyway, but I did notice that he said "Kuru" meant "shiver", while our common laguage's word for it is "guria" which sounds kinda similar
Popular is not really a word to describe a disease. Also, Kuru was eradicated because scientists managed to stop them from consuming their dead loved ones. And no one can truly have immunity to any other prion disease.
No, there are multiple channels doing the same style videos, exactly the same, just different topics… Also multiple Sam o’nella copies trying to become something.. It’s sad that no one has originality these days…
CJD is no joke, it’s like Alzheimer’s on fast forward. About 3 years ago my bishop announced that one of our priests was diagnosed with it, and so he would be retiring early and moving in with family in another state. At his farewell address to his parish, he was wheelchair-bound and was struggling to put sentences together. Barely a month later, he was dead.
I was so convinced this was a video from a channel with thousands If not millions of subs, I can’t believe you have less than 50! Bro is going up in the world soon mark my words
No, there are multiple channels doing the same style videos, exactly the same, just different topics… Also multiple Sam o’nella copies trying to become something.. It’s sad that no one has originality these days…
This is barely original content and the only reason it looks highly presentable is because it's a foreign-owned AI-generated video mill. Please don't support this kind of lazy content guys. There's real youtubers out there that don't have a team of chatbots and third-worlders cranking out videos for them.
Oh yeah, also on rabies: untreated, it is pretty much always fatal. There actually IS sort of a treatment for it, despite many sources stating that there is no treatment at all. "A treatment known as the Milwaukee protocol, which involves putting a person into a chemically induced coma and using antiviral medications." However, the thing is... If I remember correctly, the Milwaukee protocol was reportedly attempted about 40 times, and only about 4 patients actually ended up surviving. (Numbers might not be precise, I can't find the source right now.) So even if someone were to receive that treatment in time... The fatality rate would still be around, or even higher, than 90%, which are very grim chances indeed.
You’re only talking about *symptomatic* rabies. Rabies gets by for many days, weeks, and maybe even months before it starts showing symptoms. However, by symptomatic time, it’s too late, as it has already hijacked the brain. But if you get bit and suspect the animal was rabid you can go get checked and fix it before it’s too late.😊
IIRC only 16 people hace survived from the rabies, but yeah the treatment is convoluted, long and really not worth going through. Rabies is one thing you don't wanna gamble on with your life.
Actually, 3 of those 4 people got a vaccine after getting infected + got treated by the protocol. Getting the profilactic vaccine fast enough can save your life. Only one person survived rabies without any form of vaccine and profilactic at all, and the Milwaukee protocol worked in her case.
apparently if you survive the thingy to cure symptomatic rabies youre stuck in a vegetetive state. not a pleasent way to live, but take this with a bucketload of salt, i saw it on tumblr and dont have a refetence
Great and interesting video. However, I must make one correction. Unlike you claimed on the video, the fatality rate of rabies is actually not 98%, but basically 100% (or like 99.99999%). Only 16 people have EVER survived the infection after the symptoms have appeared, while literally tens of millions of people have died from the disease over the entire history of humanity. And even those 16 survivors received a wery special and rare modern treatment protocol, which among other things involved putting the patients into a coma for multiple months, and if I recall correctly the "recovery" from the disease resulted to the survivors having serious brain damage and being crippled for the rest of their lives or at least for many years. So in practice, getting rabies is basically a certain death sentence. However, the lucky thing is that if you realize in time that you have been bitten by a rabid animal and you receive the vaccination/medicin before the symptoms start (which usually doesn't happen until multiple weeks or even months after the bite) it's also 100% preventable. Also ebola's mortality rate is not that high, but more like 50%. Or the 90% fatality rate mentioned on the video is only the fatality rate of the absolute deadliest strain of the virus, and on average it's a bit lower. Receiving high quality supportive treatment for the symptoms can also significantly reduce the mortality rate of that disease. For example, in the great ebola outbreak of 2014 in West Africa, "only" 30-40% of the around 30 000 people who got the disease died from it. And out of the 7 or 8 ebola cases recorded in America and other western countries, only 1 resulted in death, as they received high quality western healthcare. However, it's obviously still a terrifying disease.
I thought this video was from a bigger youtuber but when I checked your channel, I see 2 videos and not so much subscribers... I was absolutely surprised that your first videos are already so _high quality and entertaining_ You ABSOLUTELY NEED (and deserve) more subs
You’re wrong about Anthrax. They are a thrash metal band based out of NYC in 1981. Their widespread popularity led them to be one of the Big Four of thrash metal along side with Metallica, Megadeth, and Slayer.
An interesting detail about Kuru that wasn't mentioned here is that it's also a prion disease like CJD. As far as I know, it's the only prion disease which originated in humans that primarily spreads through meat (specifically the brain, which is why you generally shouldn't eat the brains of cow, sheep, or deer either). Thankfully, it only had the one major outbreak in New Guinea several decades ago, and the community has since stopped practicing funerary cannibalism. If I have to know all this information, so do the rest of you :)
@@kolliwanne964 I believe you are right. I didn't want to say that it *was* CJD, because I couldn't remember for certain. I also meant that it's the only outbreak that was caused by consumption, not that others can't be transmitted the same way.
CJD is the sporadic disease. It exists as long as humanity exists. Kuru originated from getting mutated, because many people contracted it from one person who developed sporadic CJD, and it just kept getting more different.
Dangerous diseases have always fascinated me. They're absolutely awful and I wouldn't wish them on anyone, but at the same time it's interesting to learn about the affects each one has on the human body, so I knew about some of these already through my own research, but this is a very educational video nonetheless, I enjoyed it!
my great-grandmother had malaria. it can be tricky to spot because initially it presents as a regular fever, and sometimes the fever is intermittent. it was only discovered that she had malaria when she started vomiting black blood. something interesting to note: vultures have highly corrosive stomach acid that kills bacteria like anthrax and safely removes them from the environment. also, in case anyone is confused as to why he calls rabies the "deadliest" disease and not a prion disease like mad cow or CJD, it's because you are simply more likely to die of rabies than mad cow, because rabies is just far more common and so you have a higher chance of contracting it. so even though something like CJD has a 100% mortality rate, more people are killed by rabies every year than they are by CJD
I really enjoyed. I have no clue in which direction you want to go with this channel, but I'd be delighted to see more videos with a focus on Bio/Biochem. Perhaps something about nerve toxins? Toxins in general? Great video!
Jeanna Geise was only 15 years old when she became the world's first known survivor of Rabies without receiving any vaccination. Her miraculous survival has not only challenged a time-honored scientific fact, but has also brought about a new method of Rabies treatment, known as the Milwaukee Protocol.
Hey, I just wanted to stop by and say this video quite possibly could've saved my life. I had a nasty accident stepping on a chunk of broken glass last week; and I saw this video in my recommended feed. I saw the tetanus orb. After googling what tetanus actually was and could do, and not remembering the last time I got a booster, I high tailed it to the nearest Walgreens and got the shot. Never would've thought about it had I not seen this video show up in my recommended feed. Thank you so very much ❤
It’s not original at all. there are many that have done these types of videos, with same thumbnail and style, way before this guy. So it’s not different than the other copies… 🙄
@@sarahequestrian4833 , are you just gonna argue with every positive and / or supportive comment? I've just gone through the last few, and all of them had YOU comment something negative. I would understand it, if you weren't writing THE SAME POINT EVERY TIME. Wanna talk about originality? Well, why don't you get yourself some first?
I once had Tuberculosis 😊 Luckily it was latent (do you say it like this?: Not yet active). I just had to take pills for 3-4 months and my pee was red 😅 (because of the medicine).
@@heatheralwaysqueen318 It's really a strange feeling when you find out that you have Tuberculosis. Because you're feeling just fine and then the doctors tell you: "I'm sorry to tell you but you have Tuberculosis... (convo goes on)" I also heard Tuberculosis is still very active in some parts of Russia.
I work in a tuberculosis clinic. We tell the patients they’ll have super pee. Some of the kids think it’s cool. A lot of countries do not treat latent tuberculosis, but our state does. If it’s left untreated you can become active and run in to a lot of problems 😵💫
3:21 A fun fact Thanks to the wonderful work of István Széchenyi, who funded the rerouting of the Tisza river, Hungary's malaria mosquito population completely died out in the 1800's!
An amazing video! Thank you very much for the interesting content and keep up the good work - wishing you and your channel lots of luck and deserved recognition!
3:51 a research paper a few years ago theorized that sickle cell is so prominent in Africa is because it makes it harder for malaria to attack your blood cells
So little correction, rabies has 2 variants with the one that causes hydrophobia and foaming at the mouth being the most common type the other is more silent with symptoms being mostly neurological causing seizure like symptoms and is quite fatal
3:16 I’ve had malaria multiple times in my life, but twice the deadliest form of it, the neurological one. I almost died. Last time was in 2020, my whole body was in pain for hours, muscles and bones. My head felt like a jackhammer had taken place inside of it. Had to take 2 bottles of paracetamol iv every other hours for the fever and pain despite that it didn’t even work. My extremities became literally cold and blue and the fever varying from 39 degree celsius (102,2 F) to 41 (105,8F), I was dizzy and shaky because I was feeling cold. Even my blood samples were burning hot. Couldn’t walk, talk, eat, think. I was literally in a vegetative stated. My bloods cells levels, in hell. One night I almost got into a coma. Spent 5 days in hospital but somehow survived lol. Without any peculiar sequells.
Anthrax is an amazing band! I loved being infected by their sound 😂! Once you come to their show, you may die in the pit lol. It's amazing how except from metallica, all of the big four tried to make band names that sound lethal. Megadeth, Anthrax and ofc, Slayer!
i have ebola, lemme tell you my story: i got it in school. i dont particularly know how i got it, but my body was hurting really bad so i told my teacher and she said to go to the nurse. i got up and ran to the nurse only for my body to hurt more and i fell crying. i felt a but sick at the same time and coughed up a little blood. a teacher in the hallway saw me and picked me up (it happened in fifth grade, last year. i still have it obviously) and she brought me to the office. the principal called my dad and he came and told my tecaher what happened and i went home. we went to the hospital a few hours later because my body kept hurting. when we came i got my room. they did xrays and saw some bleeding parts in my blood cells. she did surgery on me and told me i had ebola, and i didnt know what it was. i was crying in pain. she said it was when your body is bleeding on the inside nonstop and i might not make it. i asked her where i was bleeding and she said some of my blood cells were bleeding but it was probably from the bacteria in the air around me if no one else got it. she wrapped some of my legs and arms up and told me to get some rest. i fell asleep and when i woke up my eyes were blurry for a minute. here in sixth grade, still in pain, have enough to write this. gotta go cough up some blood 🙄. anyways i can know when i need to cough up blood because i feel like im sick and sometimes i throw up blood, and when i now it comes, i only have like a minute until i actually throw it up. its less common then coughing blood. im so busy. still not in school mostly, cant be around much people because the pills i take are only for eating and you cant breath it in long for my pills but some people are different. ❤❤
Rabie is the one disease that truly terrifies me. What you didn't mention is that it can take months or even years to develop after infection. So, imagine you go on a camping trip one day. You wake up one morning with a small cut on your body and shrug it off, not knowing some critter bit you in the night. Months later you start feeling unwell. You are already dead at this point.
Yersinis pestis, the bacterium responsible for the Black Death, comes in three forms: bubonic, the iconic and most common which makes the buboes and about 60% fatal; pneumonic, which affected the lungs and was about 80% fatal; and septicemic which affected the bloodstream and was 100% fatal.
amidst the despair, tales of resilience and triumph emerge, reminding us of our capacity for courage and hope in the face of adversity. Together, we stand stronger, united in our quest for a brighter tomorrow.
Join us discord.gg/53msuc757H
1 like????
@@UsTube.now 2
I think I have that cough cough
new fears:
1. Eating
2. Drinking
3. not washing hands
4. Swimming in water
5. getting bitten by a random animal
5.1. Prions
6. Breathing
7. My own body
8. Mosquitos
9.
Brain eating amoeba only lives in hot fresh water though
@@BorkiiborksquitealotSo your telling me, I have been taking showers with that virus the whole time?!?
@@BorkiiborksquitealotNevermind, ima take cold showers from now on
@@KhmerPlaysAndEdits no- the amoeba lives in FRESH hot water. Meaning ponds,lakes and swamps. And you need to actually jump hard enough into the water so that the amoeba actually gets sprayed far enough into your nose. So swimming wont do anything.
And even if the amoeba for some reason managed to get past filtration and into your shower then unless you put the shower on full blast up your nose,you have nothing to worry about.
POV: you googled "i have a headache"
"my head hurts a little"
google: you have stage 4 cancer
" i have small cramps in my limbs "
" YOU HAVE TETANUS "
“My neck is a bit sore”
Google: You have hepatitis B
"my hair feels itchy"
google: "you have ebola"
@@urubudopix976”Stage 5 Brain Cancer, you have 5 seconds to live.”
“Imagine this, it’s 1890 and you start to develop a horrible cough…”
Me: ARTHUR MORGAAAAN!
Every red dead player knows that disease like the back of their hand
@@herrflammen6487ohhh dutch.. hes a rat
My exact reaction 💀💀💀
You got tuberculosis im really sorry son its a hell of a thin
@@Mentobro you've got... Well the best thing is rest and finding a nice warm and dry place.
as a medical student, I've met a pacient at our university hospital with CJD. It's absolutely devastating to see a healthy pearson degenerate and lose their whole personality and motor functions until they inevitably die. The craziest and scariest part is that CJD can acutally happen spontaneously. That's right. RANDOMLY. with no reason or clear cause, someone's proteins can adopt a defective and erroneous configuration and become a lethal uncurable prion - a death sentence out of nowhere.
The only mistake is pacient, it's patient.
So, wait, can it happen randomly throughout your life or just a random chance to get it once you’re born?
@@MT_4876throughout your life
@@MT_4876the former
@@MT_4876every breathing moment a protein is generated, it has a small chance of being a misfolded protein
Good Luck with that information
bro made Diseaseballs
They look cute too 😭
@@BratisIavamore like creepy, disgusting, and terrifying
@@BratisIava Ah yes, so adorable, ebola sphere.
@@Popilopsebolachan
This means we need Diseaseballs 2: The Search for More Pathogens!
One more video before bed :
The video :
Shit, that's me right now! Hope I don't get nightmares lol
@@trevortni_driew me too… sweet dreams 😬
@@Bamboo_RocheSAME lmao
Your gonna be traumatized and unable to sleep
@@Chloeiswatching999 ngl I slept like a baby
Quick note: The terms “bubonic plague” and “Black Death” can’t be used interchangeably. The bubonic plague is the disease, and the Black Death is the most famous outbreak of said disease which occurred from 1346-1353.
Additionally, Ebola doesn’t necessarily have a 90% mortality rate, it entirely depends on the strain of Ebola in question. Ebola Zaire does, in fact, have a 90% mortality rate. Ebola Sudan, on the other hand, has a mortality rate of around 60%.
good to know
The bubonic plague also isn't the only form of the disease. It's the most infamous, but actually the least deadly kind. The pneumonic and septicimic plagues were much deadlier and getting them almost guaranteed death. It's even thought that the pneumonic plague was responsible for more deaths than the bubonic plague was during the Black Death.
The name isn't based off of transmission, but its the actual name
I don't think it's the strain that matters, but the health of those involved. The first people to catch ebola in Zaire had very poor health and nutritional standards, and as nutrition and health improved, so did survival rates. Thus when they had a recent outbreak in West Africa, only about 40% died because people were healthier, while a concurrent outbreak(well, 5 years later in 2020) in SE Congo where food was scarce due to ongoing conflict it killed around 76% of victims.
Nerd emoji
I got malaria when I was 13. Can confirm I was super confused. One example was when I saw a "flea man" from castlevania in my parent's room. It then morph into a dragon's head and breath fire at me. My body actually felt like it was on fire
I had it for like a month. My joints was in pain. Couldn't walk. When I tried to sit, I simply drop like a sack of potatoes. I didn't even had the strength to open the door to my parent's car. Skin was hypersensitive. If I focus at one spot, it became a blind spot. High fever and in a constant state of delusion
Overall, it was awful. Public hospital just gave me meds for fever which did nothing. Went to a private clinic, they gave me quinine. Only took about 30 minutes for me to sober up and realised I was not, in fact, a robot - which is a shame. Took about a week to make a recovery
Oh
public health system once again proving how highly unhelpful it is.
god bless america 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Hey I thought you guys (freedom country) were buying malaria meds from us (the greatest medical and tech support country = India) and China.
It is usually treated as nothing here (I am not kidding) most people get very mild symptoms and hardly need any meds. I never heard someone describe malaria as that problematic and most people are just immune to it
@@the_actual_alexAmerica is going to become a 3rd world country soon where everyone is African and LGBT
I lived in Africa for 12 years. Malaria was endemic there. People with money took prophylactic medication to suppress the malaria in their systems (which gets into you once you are bitten by an infected female.) If you get a flare-up, there were other medications to take, which included quinine. The American government provides official personnel the proper drugs. The French had their own medications, slightly different from ours. If American health personnel responsible for overseas employees can supply the right meds and know the treatments, why do doctors here freak-out and not know what to do when people bring it with them from other countries? The knowledge and meds exist. There is a med one can take if there are no plans to return to a country with malaria that is supposed to kill off all the malaria bugs and get it out of your system. Sorry that you had to wait so long to get treatment. I have had malaria several times but got treatment right away. And that was in the dead center of Africa 30-40 years ago.
7:40
Fun fact!
If a deer gets Mad Cow Disease, or MCD, it’s called Chronic Wasting Disease, or CWD.
But if a sheep gets this, it’s called scrapes (scrape E s) and gets its name from causing sheep to itch so much they scrape their wool off.
Chronic Wasting Disease is the name of my favorite song
how the actual fuck is that a *fun* fact
@@oingle.zoingle It’s fun because you learned something new! :)
@@user-es2yz2yg3q riproducer fan???? (or am i just assuming)
Not only that but Prions don't exist! The disease is caused by heavy metals trapped in the neural tissues of the body carried there by parasitic infection.
This is the perfect video for my health anxiety.
REAL
Real 🤩
I wanna watch it so bad but these type of things make my skin crawl
*me worrying ab rabies bc what if I’m one of the 5000 ppl that get it a year in the US even tho my lazy ass never goes outside:*
Fr. I have a phobia of tetanus now
Seriously, A FREAKING RUSTY NAIL AND MY BODY WILL BE LOCKED IN PLACE? IM TRAUMATIZED FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE
@@StarjellybearExactly like??? 😟
Note: Most of these diseases are INSANELY rare, you will most likely never get ANY of these, as we get vaccinations for a lot of them at a very young age. The bacteria that causes the bubonic plauge (yersinia pestis) has only emerged about 3 times in the past 250 years, almost all being in China/Mongolia. Polio is extinct in most parts of the world, except for India and some parts of Africa, and almost all of the prions mentions are INSANELY rare, only having about 5 to 6 cases a year. Anthrax is only really present in siberia and an island in Scotland called Anthrax Island which is were the UK were developing bio weapons during WW2. Malaria is the most common out of the list, but is also VERY treatable, and is mostly prominent in Africa and Asia.
tb is also very common, but easily treatable
What about rabies?
@@eggman3908we don’t talk about rabies
Pls cure my tetanus anxiety
@@eggman3908pretty sure there’s a special type of treatment for rabies even though many people believe it’s unable to be cured.
My family has a history of CJD, my Grandpa passed from it when I was 2 or 3. My Mom has gotten very involved with CJD awareness and fundraising support in the last few years, she’s really been inspiring. Just this past week she flew to DC to lobby for research funding. The main research group working on a treatment and eventually cure for CJD has recently started their first drug trial!
i wish your family the best of luck!!!
You got something wrong. Rabies is not the most lethal disease on earth, TSEs are. (Mad Cow Disease, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, Fatal Insomnia (sporadic or famililal) and Kuru, among others). While there are a few survivors of rabies, although very few compared to the amount of cases, there are absolutely no survivors of any TSE.
Prion diseases?
what is TSE
@@sup3rhanny transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, the group where all the diseases I mentioned are. TSEs are caused by malformed proteins in the brain that mostly happen out of nowhere. Proteins are too small, and they can't be killed since they are not alive, resulting in an 100% deadly disease that practically turns your brain into a sponge (hence spongiform).
@@IMADINOSAURNOTABIRD yep
some notorious diseases like Mad Cow Disease and Chronic Wasting Disease are caused by prions.
Not Fun Fact:
The "hydrophobia" exhibited by victims of Rabies is a unique symptom with a deliberate purpose; rabies spreads by its presence in saliva, but ingesting water or swallowing saliva (two things rabies deliberately prevents) would reduce the viral load.
Typically a virus would not have an advantage in being so completely lethal in such a short span of time, but Rabies gets by by being so effective at transmitting itself in this way.
However, it is 100 percent curable as long as symptoms haven’t appeared yet
@@steamedclams5689thats the problem. You dont know you have it until it is too late
@@NeviusZI mean it’s quite easy to assume when you’ve been bitten by an animal that had rabies
@@gavindominico9595 nah man, i heard it can lay dormant for along time
@@NeviusZit can’t be transmitted until symptoms show, though.
Tetanus is fucking scary, imagine a guy back in the days just layed there cramping in pain until he died from dehydration or simply out of too much pain
Ig rabies is scarier you not only can't drink water but you're scared of it..
Throwing up waters and having Seizures with foaming mouth is a worst ways to die
I'm 90% convinced that Tetanus is the reason why medical people thought demonic possessions where real. Like imagine not knowing why someone is laying in a bed with its back arched and unable to speak, no wonder why they thought they have the devil inside...
I had a brain eating amoeba once, it died of starvation :(
😂😂
Good one😂😂
@@New-so4mw lol 😆
@@AquaArt379h
@@AquaArt379 f
I feel like you're missing Smallpox, Although it's is almost eradicated, there are still some samples left on earth
It only exists in 2 places now
A lab in Russia, and the US
yeah, and a few of these don’t feel quite fit to me. ebola is severe but highly highly uncommon, and the diarrhea tends to kill you before the hemorrhage does. I don’t get the point of having both CJD and Kuru. It’s still better than most microbio content directed at people who aren’t med students, though, which I appreciate
In 2014, freeze-dried smallpox virus vials were found at the NIH, with origins tracing back to the 1950s. David Evans demonstrated in 2016 that recreating smallpox-like viruses in a lab could be achieved with modest resources. Additionally, ancient human remains have provided another potential source of smallpox viruses, as evidenced by the recovery of a complete smallpox genome from a 17th-century child mummy and virus genome parts from a permafrost-preserved corpse.@@emilypurdy2097
@@emilypurdy2097 I don't like the fact that Russia has it
@@cloudytea.I’m sure they feel the same way about us
a former teacher of mine passed due to CJD recently. people only noticed that she seemed uncharacteristically forgetful about a week before she took off work. she died within a month of being diagnosed. she was very young and very healthy otherwise. it literally came out of nowhere.
Most likely from infected meat that she would have ate
0:53 "red dead redemption 2 lore intensifies"
LENNY MAH BOI
OH MY GOD IT IS THOMAS DOWNES 😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱🏃🏽
Fun fact: there's actually a thrash metal band called "Anthrax"
So there's essentially a good and bad Anthrax that exists
The good Anthrax: the band kind
The bad Anthrax: the Disease kind
I was going to say that! Anthrax got their name from that disease.
They are the pioneers of thrash metal (part of the big four of pioneers alongside Old Metallica, Slayer and Megadeth).
You sound like you belong in the Madhouse
@Gorttheduck "Cuz it's a Madhouse! Or so they claim? It's a Madhouse! Oh, am I insane!?"
@@AnkothOfficial my past behind me, why can I do? My dreams haunt my sleep at night!
Hell yeah
This dude is CRIMINALLY underrated, 146 subscribers??
Almost doubled since, let's hope this video gets him to at least a few thousands.
you got a point
Not really, he stole the concept
@seek9903 no concept is original
1.46k now
interesting fact abt kuru: since it was most popular in papua new guinea due to a native group’s culture making it extraordinarily common. since it was so common within this group, some people have developed immunity to kuru
kuru is caused by misfolded proteins, you can't be immune to it. you can only be lucky enough to die before symptoms appear, which can take years after you're infected.
Wow I'm from PNG and I didn't even know about this disease. I don't think many people know of it nowadays anyway, but I did notice that he said "Kuru" meant "shiver", while our common laguage's word for it is "guria" which sounds kinda similar
@@heidenrosleinmondschein3933 that’s so cool!
Popular is not really a word to describe a disease. Also, Kuru was eradicated because scientists managed to stop them from consuming their dead loved ones. And no one can truly have immunity to any other prion disease.
@@heidenrosleinmondschein3933and im from jpg
0:40 ARTHUR MORGAN 😭
ol Blacklung
😭
“Imagine this: it’s 1890…”
**Arthur Morgan wants to know where you live to collect money you owe to Herr Strauss**
I got Ebola while i was a baby. I don't know how i survived.
💀💀 yo just have good genetics
Dang
I knew an ebola once.
Bro built different
@@yarlodek5842 was he your uncle or what?
Said it here ,Bro is going places 📌📌📌
Big up
💯
Cancer left the chat
No, there are multiple channels doing the same style videos, exactly the same, just different topics…
Also multiple Sam o’nella copies trying to become something..
It’s sad that no one has originality these days…
@@sarahequestrian4833Nobody can be original because everything has already been done.
CJD is no joke, it’s like Alzheimer’s on fast forward. About 3 years ago my bishop announced that one of our priests was diagnosed with it, and so he would be retiring early and moving in with family in another state. At his farewell address to his parish, he was wheelchair-bound and was struggling to put sentences together. Barely a month later, he was dead.
May he fly to the highest of the heavens. R.I.P
CJD is also physically painful.
I was so convinced this was a video from a channel with thousands If not millions of subs, I can’t believe you have less than 50! Bro is going up in the world soon mark my words
Maybe one day!
No, there are multiple channels doing the same style videos, exactly the same, just different topics…
Also multiple Sam o’nella copies trying to become something..
It’s sad that no one has originality these days…
@@sarahequestrian4833 Well it's kind of hard to be original these days, almost all ideas are taken.
This is barely original content and the only reason it looks highly presentable is because it's a foreign-owned AI-generated video mill. Please don't support this kind of lazy content guys. There's real youtubers out there that don't have a team of chatbots and third-worlders cranking out videos for them.
@@ChrisNahrgang it is kinda hard, and besides, how do you know its Fucking AI generated? I'm just curious?
Oh yeah, also on rabies: untreated, it is pretty much always fatal.
There actually IS sort of a treatment for it, despite many sources stating that there is no treatment at all.
"A treatment known as the Milwaukee protocol, which involves putting a person into a chemically induced coma and using antiviral medications."
However, the thing is... If I remember correctly, the Milwaukee protocol was reportedly attempted about 40 times, and only about 4 patients actually ended up surviving. (Numbers might not be precise, I can't find the source right now.)
So even if someone were to receive that treatment in time... The fatality rate would still be around, or even higher, than 90%, which are very grim chances indeed.
You’re only talking about *symptomatic* rabies. Rabies gets by for many days, weeks, and maybe even months before it starts showing symptoms. However, by symptomatic time, it’s too late, as it has already hijacked the brain. But if you get bit and suspect the animal was rabid you can go get checked and fix it before it’s too late.😊
IIRC only 16 people hace survived from the rabies, but yeah the treatment is convoluted, long and really not worth going through. Rabies is one thing you don't wanna gamble on with your life.
Actually, 3 of those 4 people got a vaccine after getting infected + got treated by the protocol. Getting the profilactic vaccine fast enough can save your life.
Only one person survived rabies without any form of vaccine and profilactic at all, and the Milwaukee protocol worked in her case.
apparently if you survive the thingy to cure symptomatic rabies youre stuck in a vegetetive state. not a pleasent way to live, but take this with a bucketload of salt, i saw it on tumblr and dont have a refetence
@@szarixon2798with presumed crazy brain damage
1:00 is that an rdr2 reference?
No it's not
No
Great and interesting video. However, I must make one correction. Unlike you claimed on the video, the fatality rate of rabies is actually not 98%, but basically 100% (or like 99.99999%). Only 16 people have EVER survived the infection after the symptoms have appeared, while literally tens of millions of people have died from the disease over the entire history of humanity. And even those 16 survivors received a wery special and rare modern treatment protocol, which among other things involved putting the patients into a coma for multiple months, and if I recall correctly the "recovery" from the disease resulted to the survivors having serious brain damage and being crippled for the rest of their lives or at least for many years.
So in practice, getting rabies is basically a certain death sentence. However, the lucky thing is that if you realize in time that you have been bitten by a rabid animal and you receive the vaccination/medicin before the symptoms start (which usually doesn't happen until multiple weeks or even months after the bite) it's also 100% preventable.
Also ebola's mortality rate is not that high, but more like 50%. Or the 90% fatality rate mentioned on the video is only the fatality rate of the absolute deadliest strain of the virus, and on average it's a bit lower. Receiving high quality supportive treatment for the symptoms can also significantly reduce the mortality rate of that disease. For example, in the great ebola outbreak of 2014 in West Africa, "only" 30-40% of the around 30 000 people who got the disease died from it. And out of the 7 or 8 ebola cases recorded in America and other western countries, only 1 resulted in death, as they received high quality western healthcare. However, it's obviously still a terrifying disease.
Not true. An entire population in peru has had a 10% survival rate
Amazing job. Would love a part 2 with stuff like diphtheria, pneumonia, whooping cough, typhoid, syphilis, and HIV/AIDS.
Or Dementia
@@ThatOneDogeYTwould that be considered a disease though?
Smallpox left the chat
Alzheimer's, Cancer, Measles, Parkinson's, Sepsis, Dengue Fever, Chagas, Spanish Flu, SARS or COVID-19, Dum-Dum fever, Myocarditis
@@munkoman Why would it not?
I thought this video was from a bigger youtuber but when I checked your channel, I see 2 videos and not so much subscribers...
I was absolutely surprised that your first videos are already so _high quality and entertaining_
You ABSOLUTELY NEED (and deserve) more subs
Thanks, we’ll have more videos to come
Lol I thought the same thing and was happily surprised with not good but great content! Keep up the work! :D
You’re wrong about Anthrax. They are a thrash metal band based out of NYC in 1981. Their widespread popularity led them to be one of the Big Four of thrash metal along side with Metallica, Megadeth, and Slayer.
LoL,
Arthur Morgan would hate this video
He definitely wouldn't be so happy after watching this.
My friend was bitten by a groundhog and almost got rabies. It was terrifying! Luckily, he got his medication before his mouth started foaming.
An interesting detail about Kuru that wasn't mentioned here is that it's also a prion disease like CJD. As far as I know, it's the only prion disease which originated in humans that primarily spreads through meat (specifically the brain, which is why you generally shouldn't eat the brains of cow, sheep, or deer either). Thankfully, it only had the one major outbreak in New Guinea several decades ago, and the community has since stopped practicing funerary cannibalism.
If I have to know all this information, so do the rest of you :)
All CJD is transmittable like Kuru...because Kuru is nothing else but CJD.
@@kolliwanne964 I believe you are right. I didn't want to say that it *was* CJD, because I couldn't remember for certain. I also meant that it's the only outbreak that was caused by consumption, not that others can't be transmitted the same way.
CJD is the sporadic disease. It exists as long as humanity exists. Kuru originated from getting mutated, because many people contracted it from one person who developed sporadic CJD, and it just kept getting more different.
Fatal Familial Insomnia is also a prion disease.
And sporadic CJD is responsible for most of CJD cases.
Dangerous diseases have always fascinated me. They're absolutely awful and I wouldn't wish them on anyone, but at the same time it's interesting to learn about the affects each one has on the human body, so I knew about some of these already through my own research, but this is a very educational video nonetheless, I enjoyed it!
my great-grandmother had malaria. it can be tricky to spot because initially it presents as a regular fever, and sometimes the fever is intermittent. it was only discovered that she had malaria when she started vomiting black blood.
something interesting to note: vultures have highly corrosive stomach acid that kills bacteria like anthrax and safely removes them from the environment.
also, in case anyone is confused as to why he calls rabies the "deadliest" disease and not a prion disease like mad cow or CJD, it's because you are simply more likely to die of rabies than mad cow, because rabies is just far more common and so you have a higher chance of contracting it. so even though something like CJD has a 100% mortality rate, more people are killed by rabies every year than they are by CJD
Vultures are our savior from the illness
I really enjoyed. I have no clue in which direction you want to go with this channel, but I'd be delighted to see more videos with a focus on Bio/Biochem. Perhaps something about nerve toxins? Toxins in general?
Great video!
Jeanna Geise was only 15 years old when she became the world's first known survivor of Rabies without receiving any vaccination. Her miraculous survival has not only challenged a time-honored scientific fact, but has also brought about a new method of Rabies treatment, known as the Milwaukee Protocol.
Hey, I just wanted to stop by and say this video quite possibly could've saved my life. I had a nasty accident stepping on a chunk of broken glass last week; and I saw this video in my recommended feed. I saw the tetanus orb. After googling what tetanus actually was and could do, and not remembering the last time I got a booster, I high tailed it to the nearest Walgreens and got the shot. Never would've thought about it had I not seen this video show up in my recommended feed. Thank you so very much ❤
Wait I thought this was from a multi million subscriber channel????? This is fire!
same!
Fr
Bro you deserve many, MANY more subs than that. This is amazing content! Keep up the good work bro :D
Thanks, will do!
It’s not original at all. there are many that have done these types of videos, with same thumbnail and style, way before this guy. So it’s not different than the other copies… 🙄
@@sarahequestrian4833 , are you just gonna argue with every positive and / or supportive comment? I've just gone through the last few, and all of them had YOU comment something negative.
I would understand it, if you weren't writing THE SAME POINT EVERY TIME.
Wanna talk about originality? Well, why don't you get yourself some first?
Agreed
I once had Tuberculosis 😊
Luckily it was latent (do you say it like this?: Not yet active). I just had to take pills for 3-4 months and my pee was red 😅 (because of the medicine).
yes, latent tb is how you say it if it isn't noticeable yet (it could be like this for years without you noticing)
@@heatheralwaysqueen318 It's really a strange feeling when you find out that you have Tuberculosis. Because you're feeling just fine and then the doctors tell you: "I'm sorry to tell you but you have Tuberculosis... (convo goes on)"
I also heard Tuberculosis is still very active in some parts of Russia.
@@ortwinlust1454 didnt research much into it, but I will look into it
I work in a tuberculosis clinic. We tell the patients they’ll have super pee. Some of the kids think it’s cool.
A lot of countries do not treat latent tuberculosis, but our state does. If it’s left untreated you can become active and run in to a lot of problems 😵💫
@@ortwinlust1454 "you Got tuberculosis. I'm sorry for you son, it's a hell of a thing"
Finally someone that instantly starts and just ends the video. We need more of that, no ads, no senseless intros
6:14 is bros thought process “ooh a rusty nail let me take one of my shoes off”
Nails might be able to penetrate the shoe, piercing your feet.
3:21
A fun fact
Thanks to the wonderful work of István Széchenyi, who funded the rerouting of the Tisza river, Hungary's malaria mosquito population completely died out in the 1800's!
MAKING IT OUT OF MEDIEVAL EUROPE WITH THIS ONE 🗣️🗣️💯💯🔥🔥
this gone make my ocd act up again 😔
It's rather amazing anyone has survived, particularly in the days before antibiotics and modern internal medicine.
Had a brain eating amoeba once, poor fella died hungry
An amazing video! Thank you very much for the interesting content and keep up the good work - wishing you and your channel lots of luck and deserved recognition!
Awesome playlist! Thank you! 🙏
Glad you like it!
Saw Kuru and immidatley subscribed
It's my fav disease to learn about. it's so interesting
Disturbing fact: its also called the "laughting death", because it causes involuntary laugh bursts, without the victim being able to control it.
Damn, made me think about the Joker version played by Phoenix
Cannibalism...enough said.
simply a great video in common disease knowledge.
4:42 “nah I’d adapt”
mahoraga virus
TYSM BRO, MY INSECT LIKE ATTENTION NEEDED THIS. SERIOUSLY SERIOUSLY, THIS IS SO GOOD. THEY NEED THIS VIDEO FOR BIOLOGY CLASSES.
Here before 500 subs. You deserve a lot more than that, amazing video!
Wow, thanks!
I was only here for the countryballs in the picture but this is some nice information!
Same here. They look very cute
@@Yourlocalbacteriumah yes, a dog holding a needle with it looking like it wants to kill you is cute.
Ikr like Cholera gives off Ohio vibes
Im never going outside again.
It’s crazy how weak I feel after watching this video
Great video , Amazing Delivery.
Thanks for watching
@@TheEvaluat0r You're welcome
To avoid Red Dead Redemption 2 spoilers go to 1:30
stfu diseases exist outside of video games
This was way more interesting than it needed to be. I'm subscribing.
3:00 Lego man but you can’t put back together :c
0:53 Rip Arthur Morgan
It’s 1890 and you develop a horrible cough
RDR2 flashbacks
3:51 a research paper a few years ago theorized that sickle cell is so prominent in Africa is because it makes it harder for malaria to attack your blood cells
Interesting - like the CCR5^32 genome from the plague which shows resistance to hiv
This video is very informative!
You really deserve more subs
Seeing what symptoms tuberculosis causes made me realize how much Arthur Morgan is a badass
So little correction, rabies has 2 variants with the one that causes hydrophobia and foaming at the mouth being the most common type the other is more silent with symptoms being mostly neurological causing seizure like symptoms and is quite fatal
"Tuberculosis"
*red dead redemption community comes*
no way they made disease balls
That sound so wrong
Sounds like Cancer
Maaan great content, an inspiration i would say so !
The perfect video to start the day!
What about Small Pox? it killed 2/3 people leaving those who survived with scars and 1/3 times, deaf and/or blindness.
It's also eradicated.
@@onionman8160 Not completely, there is still samples of the disease.
It is in a lab in russia and the US
3:16 I’ve had malaria multiple times in my life, but twice the deadliest form of it, the neurological one. I almost died.
Last time was in 2020, my whole body was in pain for hours, muscles and bones. My head felt like a jackhammer had taken place inside of it. Had to take 2 bottles of paracetamol iv every other hours for the fever and pain despite that it didn’t even work.
My extremities became literally cold and blue and the fever varying from 39 degree celsius (102,2 F) to 41 (105,8F), I was dizzy and shaky because I was feeling cold. Even my blood samples were burning hot. Couldn’t walk, talk, eat, think. I was literally in a vegetative stated. My bloods cells levels, in hell. One night I almost got into a coma. Spent 5 days in hospital but somehow survived lol. Without any peculiar sequells.
oh wow I hope you never catch it again
0:00 Bubonic Plague (Black Death)
0:40 Tuberculosis
1:30 Ebola
2:33 Leprosy
3:14 Malaria
4:06 Anthrax
5:11 Polio
5:54 Tetanus
6:48 Cholera
7:40 Mad cow Disease
9:00 Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
10:12 Brain-eating Ameoba
11:02 Familial Fatal Insomnia (FFI)
11:49 Kuru
12:39 Rabies
Anthrax is an amazing band! I loved being infected by their sound 😂!
Once you come to their show, you may die in the pit lol.
It's amazing how except from metallica, all of the big four tried to make band names that sound lethal. Megadeth, Anthrax and ofc, Slayer!
0:48 rdr2 reference
5:54
No
6:15 thats taught in kindergarten in my country
i have ebola, lemme tell you my story: i got it in school. i dont particularly know how i got it, but my body was hurting really bad so i told my teacher and she said to go to the nurse. i got up and ran to the nurse only for my body to hurt more and i fell crying. i felt a but sick at the same time and coughed up a little blood. a teacher in the hallway saw me and picked me up (it happened in fifth grade, last year. i still have it obviously) and she brought me to the office. the principal called my dad and he came and told my tecaher what happened and i went home. we went to the hospital a few hours later because my body kept hurting. when we came i got my room. they did xrays and saw some bleeding parts in my blood cells. she did surgery on me and told me i had ebola, and i didnt know what it was. i was crying in pain. she said it was when your body is bleeding on the inside nonstop and i might not make it. i asked her where i was bleeding and she said some of my blood cells were bleeding but it was probably from the bacteria in the air around me if no one else got it. she wrapped some of my legs and arms up and told me to get some rest. i fell asleep and when i woke up my eyes were blurry for a minute. here in sixth grade, still in pain, have enough to write this. gotta go cough up some blood 🙄. anyways i can know when i need to cough up blood because i feel like im sick and sometimes i throw up blood, and when i now it comes, i only have like a minute until i actually throw it up. its less common then coughing blood. im so busy. still not in school mostly, cant be around much people because the pills i take are only for eating and you cant breath it in long for my pills but some people are different. ❤❤
Bro you grew so much. Congrats!
Can you do a video talking about rare diseases like amyloidosis or huntingtons and stuff like that?
Ya
Hopefully you do part 2
Dude this guy is gonna get famous
Rabie is the one disease that truly terrifies me. What you didn't mention is that it can take months or even years to develop after infection. So, imagine you go on a camping trip one day. You wake up one morning with a small cut on your body and shrug it off, not knowing some critter bit you in the night. Months later you start feeling unwell. You are already dead at this point.
this guy is undeserving of such a low sub count, how are you not racking in thousands of subs?!
Yersinis pestis, the bacterium responsible for the Black Death, comes in three forms: bubonic, the iconic and most common which makes the buboes and about 60% fatal; pneumonic, which affected the lungs and was about 80% fatal; and septicemic which affected the bloodstream and was 100% fatal.
Very informative and easy to follow I like it
Thanks for the polio one ☝️
I swear this is the new norm for content, not complaining though
Yeah, there are so many doing these kind of videos, same thumbnail and style.. 🙄 no originality
@@sarahequestrian4833nah they’re cewl imo
@@sarahequestrian4833nothing is original, just be happy it’s decently quality content
i love how this guy is just straight to the point
Great video, the only problem I could find were the different animation styles, improve that and the series gets immediately better
amidst the despair, tales of resilience and triumph emerge, reminding us of our capacity for courage and hope in the face of adversity. Together, we stand stronger, united in our quest for a brighter tomorrow.
why do you only have 65 subs you deserve at least 400.000
6:48 i am Polish, and this desease is translated into "damn"
No cholera means f*ck
Damn. My sister had malaria as a kid and I never realized how serious it was. She said she was out of school for over a month. I now see why