My cardiology attending referenced this video on my first day! "You know that internet doctor who makes videos? Dr. Glookeyflookey? He says that cardiologists rip the computer interpretation off the top of EKGs-- don't ever trust a computer to interpret an EKG for you! That's how you get sued!"
Imagine being surrounded by 6 cardiologist and they are giving their opinion on what a rhythm is and you just speak up and a say " white wolff syndrome" and they all agree. Second proudest moment as an exercise physiologist.
@@DanSwerdlove-wb5jl I'm surprised you would think of loop diuretics first. Actually, clinical evidence that these diuretics significantly change lithium concentrations (without underlying fluid imbalance/hemodynamic instability) is almost nonexistent. I would be very scared for this profession if my students didn't know about the interaction with drugs that acutely reduce the GFR like NSAID (except sulindac), ACEi, ARB and HCTZ significantly and rapidly increasing the serum lithium. Sorry, I had to clarify. Also, hope this helps some collegues ;)
Internal medicine and their nephro consult arguing over lasix and fluids because GFR vs CHF. Literal argument I heard: "What's the point of their kidney function if they can't breath?!" "What's the outcome for a 89 year old on dialysis?!" Classic.
@@tagekarlsson6796 Supraventricular Tachycardia, basically as the comment above mentioned, but the cause is above the ventricles of your heart, be it the atrium or AV junction. Edit: corrected the last part because Sinus tachycardia is different from SVT
My parents are pediatricians and I showed them your "pediatrics is easier" short and we've all been hooked since. They say you've got everyone right! 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Last week we had an internal rotation where I, as the only boy of 7 students was picked for an ECG (It's Christmas time, hence 7 students). I was allowed to keep the "piece of paper" (I am not sure how you call it, English is not my first language). For some weird reasons I felt very proud of myself for having a healthy heart as if I achieved something lol. It's been hanging on my bedroom wall since then
I was in the hospital as a teen and the hospitalist walked in, bent down to listen to my heart, then whipped around to my parent with "You have a heart murmur?!" It was hilarious. I love that doctors really can do that.
Premature ventricular contractions are when the lower chambers of your heart have extra beats. Making a fluttering sensation. :D I learned something new today
Our hearts are amazing. When I was a cna I tried to sneak into everything cardiology was doing by following their nurses and just being an overall pain in the ass. Hearts are amazing.
I made a work experience with a cardiologist, the patient lies down, then the cardiologist just grappled her hand, felt the pulse and said a whole diagnosis. Later the Patient had an EKG and the doc was right with all of his diagnosis.😂
My first cardiologist never stopped using the toy stethoscope. I eventually had enough of him not caring and just medicating me so I changed cardiologists
As a paramedic when I did CCU rotations, a doctor compiled a list of EKGs that I had to interpret. All of them were done pre-hospitaly. It was great learned so much
Cardio was my first love (put my heart into it, one could say) but somehow I ended up in paediatrics, pumonal paediatrics to be specific. And I have no idea how that happened.🤣
Oh man, I've met with quite a lot of cardiologists in the past few months. Started going to the gym, started feeling sick and faint while exercising. My dad was teaching me how to use gym equipment at the time and he got worried because I was yawning so much and he thought there was something wrong with my heart and I wasn't getting enough oxygen. Pushed me to get checked out. EKG showed an extra beat and the regular doctor pointed me to a cardiologist. Long story and a Holter belt and a MRI later, turns out I have a massive amount of premature ventricular contractions, a slightly enlarged left chamber(I think that's the right English term) and a lowered ejection fraction. They have no idea why, but I'm glad it was caught and I have the proper medication now! Having an ultrasound of my heart was a fun experience too, because the cardiologists were talking all kinds of mumbo jumbo between each other while I just laid there confused with my titties out lmao.
"I just laid there confused with my titties out" I've definitely been there. It was my first childbirth, turned emergency cesarian. I had a surgical gown, but got INCREDIBLY hot, and then the baby coded. They got him back, but I was also confused with my titties out.
Oh man, finding this comment is both fortunate and unfortunate. I have been going to the gym for two years now on and off. Not much since I got into med school. But the last couple weeks I just felt sleepy during workouts and yawned a lot, ONLY while training. I've been worried about it for a couple months but hadn't worried enough to actually go to the doctor.
Yesterday was my first day of cardiology - as a doctor - and it was still EXACTLY like this 😂. (Although the ward team are nice, I must admit!) EDIT: I forgot to mention the funky EKGs like bigeminy, electrical alternans, atrial-sensed/ventricular-paced... and one episode of Ventricular Fibrillation where the crash team were called!
Hey man! Im heavily considering going into the Cardiovascular surgeon specialty! Im a Junior in High school right now and would lOve to hear about you experience in college and wether or not its a good idea for me lol
Yes it's standard. There are two broad categories or atrial fibrillation: valvular and non-valvular (essentially "is a problem with a heart valve involved"), and the treatment may be different depending on the results of the echo. Hope you are Ok!
One of my favorite things is the look on the faces of the ER staff when I comprehend more of what they are talking about than the other people they normally talk to. It makes going to the hospital an interesting affair.
Towards the end of my father's course, I periodically got asked by one or another of the medical professionals, are you a doctor? I didn't know whether to be flattered or whether I was going beyond my station.
At every checkup at cardiology, I always get an EKG and then and echo. Then an appointment with my cardiologist to discuss the results. The first test is NEVER mentioned in that conversations. ONLY the echo results, every time. And some times he says "well the results seem to be a bit different from last year, but not enough to be significant, so I'm ordering an MRI as well" and then the MRI shows no difference either 😂
EKGs are the most anxiety inducing things for me. A couple months after graduating I had a job interview and the interviewer gave an EKG to test me and my contact lense slid into the corner of my eye I dead serious thought I had a TIA bc of an EKG....
My son has a pretty serious heart issue. His cardiologist straight up tells me the EKG is done solely for insurance purposes. Nurse doesn’t even bother handing her the results. 😂
When i was on the bicycle test after i asked if they could feel my heart skip a beat at the end,, and they told me, "oh it skipped multiple times during the test" I WAS SO SHOCKED TO HEAR THAT,, but the good news my medicine is helping to control that :)
The cardiologist in my med school actually said the opposite about stethoscope. “Don’t use shitty stethoscope when you can’t even hear shit with the good ones”
I wanted to say “I’m so happy to be part of the glaucomflecken gang!” but said “I’m so happy to be part of the glaucoma gang!” instead and laughed at myself for a solid minute that now I forgot what I initially wanted to write before that 🤣
Coming from an EKG tech, thank you for exposing the rumored fact that the doctors scolding me for the uneven baseline I captured while the patient unexpectedly moved probably don’t need me much at all anyway 🙃
I’ve watched this before but came across it again at 7am having had no sleep and thought what the heck, and I still had a great chuckle at the end 😂 such a good punchline haha
"We already know what the Computer will tell us. The patient needs a screening." Thats why 2 hospitals told me i was fine... at the 3 they finally found out what i had.
As a cardio patient, I can 100% tell when it's the med students first day lol. They'll ask me about my condition (in a smug way because I guess I don't look that smart? Lol) anyway. I love watching their mouths drop open when I explain not only what my heart condition is, I explain how the surgery was done. One dude asks me if I know why I have to keep coming back, I quite literally roll my eyes and proceeded to give the correct answer
I can relate, my baby has a single ventricle heart and I constantly have to educate medical professionals on his condition. Luckily his cardiologist is awesome. In fact the last time he was in hospital she stopped in to help with the echo because "the poor sonographer has never seen a hypoplastic left heart before", the hospital cardiologist decided to watch the echo because "it's been years since I've seen a Sano shunt". 😆
"patient needs an echo" and my brain says taken them to a canyon and yell really loud at them. As stupid as that sounds, Im sure it would be a lovely vacation
I'm a retired RN, and resonate so much by either personal experience or observation of new docs. Your facial expressions of both the newbie & the old hat are spot-on and incredibly funny because of it. So grateful God spared your life when you had that near-miss! God bless you and your family!
The cardiologist is just over here with ASA, Inotropes, beta blockers, all sorts of neat stuff and nephrology and hepatology are both crying because of the hepatotoxic and nephrotoxic cardiac meds
Me, a nurse: * hands new grad a warm ecg strip* *Nurses begin placing bets on how long until the new grad pulls out phone to google results* Me, a nurse: *whispers* "I believe in you".
When you have anxiety about your heart and have done so many hours of research that you understand exactly what a cardiologist says with zero formal education lmao
You do not need formal education to know what a premature ventricular contraction is. Besides, if you're so worried about conditions such as myocardial infarctions then why are you interpreting electrocardiography rhythms?
I was told I had had an major silent m.i.(heart attack) with significant cardiomegaly ( heart enlargement) by a nurse practitioner, who just told me what the EKG printout said. Fortunately, I have medical background, and i made an appointment with my cardiologist, who put me through my paces and said I was fine.
the indomitable human will to have our egos stroked by a nonliving hunk of raw materials we designed intricately to do complex series of calculations 👌
love how the new med student always looks like he's about to cry
As a med student, I might go to placement like this, but I’ll try my best not to look like that😄
All med students look like they're about to cry. This is from personal experience.
Me, all time
me in my apprenticeship all the time...
As a med student, i can say, we all look like we’re about to cry 😂
My cardiology attending referenced this video on my first day! "You know that internet doctor who makes videos? Dr. Glookeyflookey? He says that cardiologists rip the computer interpretation off the top of EKGs-- don't ever trust a computer to interpret an EKG for you! That's how you get sued!"
🤣🤣🤣 "Dr. Glookyflooky" 🤣🤣🤣
I needed that. Thanks!!🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😮
You mean ECG ?
@@sushantrai4002 the two are used interchangeably
Doc is one of the funniest people on UA-cam. I didn’t realize how much until I saw his live video. I’m so glad to be part of the glauc flock!🥰
B'gawwk!
He is/was a stand up comedian too.
💩
🎽
🦵🏿🦵🏿
💩💩💩
Edit:- no hate to this comment just random
Doc Glock
Oh heyy i knkw youu, you're that X-ray technician or surgeon ive seen comment on
The med students always have this weird mix of "bright eyed and bushy tailed" and..."terrified"🤣
Because unlike real squirrels, they can't get out of traffic fast enough and KNOW the truck will hit them.
Imagine being surrounded by 6 cardiologist and they are giving their opinion on what a rhythm is and you just speak up and a say " white wolff syndrome" and they all agree. Second proudest moment as an exercise physiologist.
What was the first proudest?
@@DanSwerdlove-wb5jl I'm surprised you would think of loop diuretics first. Actually, clinical evidence that these diuretics significantly change lithium concentrations (without underlying fluid imbalance/hemodynamic instability) is almost nonexistent. I would be very scared for this profession if my students didn't know about the interaction with drugs that acutely reduce the GFR like NSAID (except sulindac), ACEi, ARB and HCTZ significantly and rapidly increasing the serum lithium. Sorry, I had to clarify. Also, hope this helps some collegues ;)
They named a hear condition after Geralt of rivia ? Noice
@@jamesliang1380 hmm, yes. I understood some of those words.
@@vakar9779 Just played a little today!
Cardiologist be like: don't drink fluids, you don't wanna strain the heart.
Triggered nephrologist be like: hold my glass of water
No, the Neurologist would be chugging his salt.
*nephrologist
@@pokedude720 huh lol an imbalance of sodium is not good for the kidneys or the heart.
Nephrologists and cardiologists are like the vampires and werewolves of the medical world. Eternal enemies...
Internal medicine and their nephro consult arguing over lasix and fluids because GFR vs CHF.
Literal argument I heard:
"What's the point of their kidney function if they can't breath?!"
"What's the outcome for a 89 year old on dialysis?!"
Classic.
I wonder if the cardiologist heard my HR spike with excitement when i saw a gluac upload
If one must ask, the answer is yes.
“We already know what the EKG says, it’s says they need an echo”
As someone with SVT i laughed at this
Yeah I thought that was funny too bc echo sucks for a lot of diseases. My husband’s can only be seen with cMR, ECG, and mayyybe a holter.
Wait what is svt?
@@tagekarlsson6796 Supraventricular Tachycardia, basically as the comment above mentioned, but the cause is above the ventricles of your heart, be it the atrium or AV junction.
Edit: corrected the last part because Sinus tachycardia is different from SVT
Haha I also have SVT, didn't even realize how relatable that is. I also had to have a holter though.
My parents are pediatricians and I showed them your "pediatrics is easier" short and we've all been hooked since. They say you've got everyone right! 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Last week we had an internal rotation where I, as the only boy of 7 students was picked for an ECG (It's Christmas time, hence 7 students). I was allowed to keep the "piece of paper" (I am not sure how you call it, English is not my first language). For some weird reasons I felt very proud of myself for having a healthy heart as if I achieved something lol. It's been hanging on my bedroom wall since then
That sounds like a fun time, getting to identify your own heart's motions.
(Also, in case you were curious, the word is "printout.")
That’s cute ☺️
i imagine it was silly being shirtless in the class full of pretty ladies hearing your heart
@@edarddragon it didn't include auscultation.... unfortunately
@@c.m.mccormack8902 tttftt
I was in the hospital as a teen and the hospitalist walked in, bent down to listen to my heart, then whipped around to my parent with "You have a heart murmur?!"
It was hilarious. I love that doctors really can do that.
“This is a toy...”
“You gotta walk before you can run.”
Premature ventricular contractions are when the lower chambers of your heart have extra beats. Making a fluttering sensation. :D I learned something new today
“It says the patient needs an echo” as a patient of multiple cardiologists I laughed my ASS off
Our hearts are amazing. When I was a cna I tried to sneak into everything cardiology was doing by following their nurses and just being an overall pain in the ass. Hearts are amazing.
I was in the hospital with pericarditis and the cardiologist dropped the "you're nervous" on me with the exact same delivery
I made a work experience with a cardiologist, the patient lies down, then the cardiologist just grappled her hand, felt the pulse and said a whole diagnosis. Later the Patient had an EKG and the doc was right with all of his diagnosis.😂
your pfp fits perfectly
@@maX0229567 😂
@@maX0229567😭😭😭
WH P
Honestly the cardiologists are the kindest in the building they're not trying to stress your heart out any more ❤
My first cardiologist never stopped using the toy stethoscope. I eventually had enough of him not caring and just medicating me so I changed cardiologists
“This is a toy” took me OUT 😂😂😂😂
As a paramedic when I did CCU rotations, a doctor compiled a list of EKGs that I had to interpret. All of them were done pre-hospitaly. It was great learned so much
"To furosemide or not to furosemide - that is the question" (60% of cardiology)
I think the answer is always frusemide.
You would in four cases
Heart failure
Pulmonary edema
Ascites
Renal failure.
Lasix and a Foley are my favorite things 😂
Always start with maximum furosemide. Let GP evaluate in 2 months
@@user-wu1cp6kq1r add single ventricle to that list. My baby boy was on furosemide for 4 months after his Norwood
While I don't really understand the social dynamic of hospitals, I love the relatability you bring to it!
Cardio was my first love (put my heart into it, one could say) but somehow I ended up in paediatrics, pumonal paediatrics to be specific. And I have no idea how that happened.🤣
Oh man, I've met with quite a lot of cardiologists in the past few months. Started going to the gym, started feeling sick and faint while exercising. My dad was teaching me how to use gym equipment at the time and he got worried because I was yawning so much and he thought there was something wrong with my heart and I wasn't getting enough oxygen. Pushed me to get checked out. EKG showed an extra beat and the regular doctor pointed me to a cardiologist. Long story and a Holter belt and a MRI later, turns out I have a massive amount of premature ventricular contractions, a slightly enlarged left chamber(I think that's the right English term) and a lowered ejection fraction. They have no idea why, but I'm glad it was caught and I have the proper medication now! Having an ultrasound of my heart was a fun experience too, because the cardiologists were talking all kinds of mumbo jumbo between each other while I just laid there confused with my titties out lmao.
wish you good recovery
@@urilou777 Thank you! :)
"I just laid there confused with my titties out"
I've definitely been there. It was my first childbirth, turned emergency cesarian. I had a surgical gown, but got INCREDIBLY hot, and then the baby coded. They got him back, but I was also confused with my titties out.
Oh man, finding this comment is both fortunate and unfortunate. I have been going to the gym for two years now on and off. Not much since I got into med school. But the last couple weeks I just felt sleepy during workouts and yawned a lot, ONLY while training. I've been worried about it for a couple months but hadn't worried enough to actually go to the doctor.
"Confused with my titties out" - and that, kids, is how I met your mother. Her nipples glistened against the bright, white exam lights 😂
Yesterday was my first day of cardiology - as a doctor - and it was still EXACTLY like this 😂. (Although the ward team are nice, I must admit!) EDIT: I forgot to mention the funky EKGs like bigeminy, electrical alternans, atrial-sensed/ventricular-paced... and one episode of Ventricular Fibrillation where the crash team were called!
Ok, glad your still alive doc!
I don’t miss working the tele floor
A guy in my medic class had bigeminy and it threw me everytime I'd put him on the monitor.
Hey man! Im heavily considering going into the Cardiovascular surgeon specialty! Im a Junior in High school right now and would lOve to hear about you experience in college and wether or not its a good idea for me lol
"On the next Ventricular Fibrillation..." S1E2 "Angina"
Went to the ER for Atrial Fibrillation 2 months ago. The Cardiologist said I needed an Echocardiogram within 4 seconds of seeing my EKG printout.
Yes it's standard. There are two broad categories or atrial fibrillation: valvular and non-valvular (essentially "is a problem with a heart valve involved"), and the treatment may be different depending on the results of the echo. Hope you are Ok!
😂😂😂😂😂
I work in patient transport. "It says they need an echo." is spot on and hilarious.
“Now read this EKG” *immediately starts crying*
These old fischer price stethoscopes actually worked to some degree.
Cardiologist have been the heart whisperers since the beginning of time 🤷🏻♀️ 😂
It says the patient needs an echo... The echo tech "does he though"
One of my favorite things is the look on the faces of the ER staff when I comprehend more of what they are talking about than the other people they normally talk to. It makes going to the hospital an interesting affair.
Towards the end of my father's course, I periodically got asked by one or another of the medical professionals, are you a doctor? I didn't know whether to be flattered or whether I was going beyond my station.
At every checkup at cardiology, I always get an EKG and then and echo. Then an appointment with my cardiologist to discuss the results. The first test is NEVER mentioned in that conversations. ONLY the echo results, every time. And some times he says "well the results seem to be a bit different from last year, but not enough to be significant, so I'm ordering an MRI as well" and then the MRI shows no difference either 😂
EKGs are the most anxiety inducing things for me. A couple months after graduating I had a job interview and the interviewer gave an EKG to test me and my contact lense slid into the corner of my eye I dead serious thought I had a TIA bc of an EKG....
Omg 🤣
Thanks for the laugh
My son has a pretty serious heart issue. His cardiologist straight up tells me the EKG is done solely for insurance purposes. Nurse doesn’t even bother handing her the results. 😂
Ah, prior authorization. Can't live with thee; can't live without thee.
As someone who works as a medical assistant for cardiology, this is all too accurate 🤣🤣
Your voice is so relaxing I can’t explain it
When i was on the bicycle test after i asked if they could feel my heart skip a beat at the end,, and they told me, "oh it skipped multiple times during the test" I WAS SO SHOCKED TO HEAR THAT,, but the good news my medicine is helping to control that :)
"Knock, knock, hi I'm the new med student." :D :D YES I love this series.
I'm having an absolute blast discovering your skits lmao this channel is an absolute gem
The cardiologist in my med school actually said the opposite about stethoscope. “Don’t use shitty stethoscope when you can’t even hear shit with the good ones”
I had my dilated eye exam yesterday, asked the ophthalmologist if she watches him and she does! She loves him!
"You gotta walk before you can run."
Savage.
Hahaha 😂, “It says the patient needs an echo”. YEP! Lol.
I wanted to say “I’m so happy to be part of the glaucomflecken gang!” but said “I’m so happy to be part of the glaucoma gang!” instead and laughed at myself for a solid minute that now I forgot what I initially wanted to write before that 🤣
GLAUC🛌MA GANG 💥💥👺🔥🔥 🔫🔫🔫🔫
BING BONG 🔫🔫😠😠🥵🥵
lmaooo I'm at high risk for getting glaucoma please never welcome me for this gang i don't wanna be in it 😔😂
@@toniamor3187 lmaooo fingers crossed!! 🤞 🤞🤞
@@toniamor3187 😭😭😭 okay I permanently ban you from ever joining the glaucoma gang LOOOOL 😂🤣
@@sunnyyish TYSM HAHSHAHAHGS
Coming from an EKG tech, thank you for exposing the rumored fact that the doctors scolding me for the uneven baseline I captured while the patient unexpectedly moved probably don’t need me much at all anyway 🙃
As a tele tech, we wonder why we bother when no one cares at all what we see or report! Lol
Cool. Cool. Feeling super good about my choice to change careers this late in life.
Former cardiac nurse, always loved our cardiologists ❤️ they were the BEST. The ones I worked with were really collaborative with our nursing staff
I’ve watched this before but came across it again at 7am having had no sleep and thought what the heck, and I still had a great chuckle at the end 😂 such a good punchline haha
Me bringing in a friend who works in cardiology so I can get the bass drum on this mix to sound like a heartbeat.
This one is one of my all time favourites ❤️
"We already know what the Computer will tell us. The patient needs a screening." Thats why 2 hospitals told me i was fine... at the 3 they finally found out what i had.
Love your videos. Cardiology vs Nephrology. 🤣🤣
God I wish I had this cardiologist.
I was hoping for cardiologist "ego", that would be real funny 😂
Did my medical assisting externship in cardiology. Main doctor at the practice was EXACTLY like this
"You're nervous"
No shit, I'm new
“We already know what the ekg says, it says they need an echo”, just like the ED doc and their answer machine, the CT
As a cardio patient, I can 100% tell when it's the med students first day lol. They'll ask me about my condition (in a smug way because I guess I don't look that smart? Lol) anyway. I love watching their mouths drop open when I explain not only what my heart condition is, I explain how the surgery was done. One dude asks me if I know why I have to keep coming back, I quite literally roll my eyes and proceeded to give the correct answer
I can relate, my baby has a single ventricle heart and I constantly have to educate medical professionals on his condition. Luckily his cardiologist is awesome. In fact the last time he was in hospital she stopped in to help with the echo because "the poor
sonographer has never seen a hypoplastic left heart before", the hospital cardiologist decided to watch the echo because "it's been years since I've seen a Sano shunt". 😆
Been in primary care 11 years and love these videos. 😂 you're humor is the best medicine
"patient needs an echo" and my brain says taken them to a canyon and yell really loud at them. As stupid as that sounds, Im sure it would be a lovely vacation
hope your all okay and gets well soon
Love these 1st days videos!
can't wait for the 1st day Ortho so i can share it with my younger Ortho bro!
I'm a retired RN, and resonate so much by either personal experience or observation of new docs. Your facial expressions of both the newbie & the old hat are spot-on and incredibly funny because of it. So grateful God spared your life when you had that near-miss! God bless you and your family!
The cardiologist is just over here with ASA, Inotropes, beta blockers, all sorts of neat stuff and nephrology and hepatology are both crying because of the hepatotoxic and nephrotoxic cardiac meds
Keeping the heart alive even if it means destroying every other organ in the process. That's just how Cardiologists roll.
Don't forget about GI as cardiology with poison their patients' coagulation pathways in as many ways as possible
Fuck yes his eyebrows in the pause before the Cardiologist says have a seat
Me, a nurse: * hands new grad a warm ecg strip*
*Nurses begin placing bets on how long until the new grad pulls out phone to google results*
Me, a nurse: *whispers* "I believe in you".
Wow
No please dont. I really need to google.😢
You gotta walk before you can run
-a wise cardiologist
3 PVCs since you walked thru that door 👂🏼 💀
As cardiac patient I appreciate this
I had the same talk..."you gotta walk before you can run!"
When you have anxiety about your heart and have done so many hours of research that you understand exactly what a cardiologist says with zero formal education lmao
You do not need formal education to know what a premature ventricular contraction is. Besides, if you're so worried about conditions such as myocardial infarctions then why are you interpreting electrocardiography rhythms?
I like how quiet the environment is and how the doc knows exactly how things will go
let's just appreciate the fact that ophthalmologist actually had ekg tape (and knows how it looks like)
Reminds me of every single day of my med school! Lol! So relatable! Finally, some amazing content for the doctors! Haha
I don’t understand any of the medical lingo but still find this hilarious 🤣
JARVIS, sometimes you gotta run before you can walk.
Not sure why I thought of this, but this quote will stay with me forever. Love you 3000...
I was told I had had an major silent m.i.(heart attack) with significant cardiomegaly ( heart enlargement) by a nurse practitioner, who just told me what the EKG printout said. Fortunately, I have medical background, and i made an appointment with my cardiologist, who put me through my paces and said I was fine.
Im really to the point i ignore what they say, if you feel, look and act healthy... you probably are regardless of what tests say
I couldn't relate more
I've never felt as lost as i did in the cardiology service, intimidating 😖
It's so cool how each character looks different but it's the same dude
Omg I died. 😂😂 As a provider in cardiology myself, I feel attacked! But omg was this hilarious! 😂🔥
You are so hysterical with all this different perspective
..." No, then we throw it in the trash because that's hiw we feel about a computer trying to take our job." 🤣🤣🤣
Love this. Thanks Peter!
The walk before you can run is kinda funny to me cuz I did the opposite lolol
Crap I'm feeling the pressure
from here haha
You guys got it rough
40 year Cardiac Sonographer here. Thanks for the shout out to echo! And for all the spot on hilarious videos. 😂😂😂
Mid systolic ejection murmur 😂😂
I feel like this is the kindest Cardiology has ever been in the entire series. By, like. A fair margin.
Love your work.
Entertaining content, one more sub for you. ❤️
the indomitable human will to have our egos stroked by a nonliving hunk of raw materials we designed intricately to do complex series of calculations 👌
I laughed at this while blowing my nose and almost blew out my eardrums 😵💫
uploaded 3 seconds ago. jesus.
When you know for sure he's looking at the comments section - Hi doc!
@@hqi1321 It says you joined UA-cam in 2007?! Either great foresight, you got lucky or you changed your name. Amazing
These are fun! Glad I was a computer programmer and not a doctor.
When I was a kid my toy stethoscope worked. I got it at the hospital when my brother was born.
“you gotta walk before you can run”
OMG that's a good one, I subscribed,you bet I did, because I love you 🙏💯❤️❤️❤️
Just discovered this guy’s channel-he’s hilarious and spot-on!!!