How Chemotherapy Works

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  • Опубліковано 24 лип 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 231

  • @TheOfficialCzex
    @TheOfficialCzex 5 років тому +348

    Thanks for this! My mother was diagnosed with Stage IV Type-A lung cancer a little over a month ago. She started chemotherapy a couple of weeks ago, so this information is very relevant to me and definitely simplifies the concept enough for me to adequately understand it.

    • @darkscienceyt
      @darkscienceyt  5 років тому +110

      I'm sorry to hear about your mother, I hope she responds well to the treatments and gets rid of that nasty cancer. I also want to say that your response to the video is exactly what my goal was for this channel. Helping people understand things even just a little bit better so they're less uncomfortable and little more confident in how things work. Knowledge is power. I hope your mother beats her cancer. Excelsior!

    • @ultralaggerREV1
      @ultralaggerREV1 3 роки тому +9

      It’s been a year, what happened then?

    • @TheOfficialCzex
      @TheOfficialCzex 3 роки тому +99

      @@ultralaggerREV1 She's doing great! The cancer hasn't spread since.

    • @ultralaggerREV1
      @ultralaggerREV1 3 роки тому +14

      @@TheOfficialCzex i’m glad to read this...
      Out of topic: I noticed your profile pic is a GIF, how do you do that?

    • @TheOfficialCzex
      @TheOfficialCzex 3 роки тому +8

      @@ultralaggerREV1 Just upload a GIF instead of an image.

  • @lishd
    @lishd 5 років тому +115

    questions for science: teaching me the answers to questions i didn't know i have & am now fascinated by.

  • @weirdpuzzledude1876
    @weirdpuzzledude1876 4 роки тому +59

    I remember in the h3 podcast in where totalbiscuit (may the emperor bless his soul) said that chemo was basically about hoping that you kill the cancer faster than you kill the patient. Those words have stuck with me for a long time.

    • @marguskiis7711
      @marguskiis7711 3 роки тому +4

      Basically its true.

    • @weirdpuzzledude1876
      @weirdpuzzledude1876 3 роки тому +2

      @@NinoCristianini i miss him too
      I wish that he stuck around long enough to play doom eternal he would have loved it.

    • @nanobotsaviour3733
      @nanobotsaviour3733 2 роки тому +6

      @@weirdpuzzledude1876 At least he didn't have to witness Diablo Immortal announcement and recent Blizzard direction, he would have hated it.

  • @srinivasann512
    @srinivasann512 2 роки тому +29

    Our doctor also told us that the chemo drugs, in addition to directly destroying cancer cells as you mentioned, "mark" them in some way for radiation to target and destroy them. Interesting stuff!

  • @nnnnn777bbbb
    @nnnnn777bbbb 3 роки тому +54

    My old school friend didn't survive the blood cancer despite hard battle....he was just 17....10 years of togetherness...may God give his soul eternal peace.

  • @alexwasdreaming9440
    @alexwasdreaming9440 5 років тому +37

    serious love your stuff, I always find it really educational on things i have always wanted to know about.

  • @sherdest5141
    @sherdest5141 5 років тому +13

    I love your channel man and I'm glad your still making videos after you lost your videos, keep it up and pursue for more knowledge

    • @darkscienceyt
      @darkscienceyt  5 років тому +4

      Thank you! It means alot right now

  • @lightningii7305
    @lightningii7305 5 років тому +123

    We learn more here on this channel than a full 4 years of science in high school

    • @darkscienceyt
      @darkscienceyt  5 років тому +15

      :D thanks!

    • @TheReck12
      @TheReck12 5 років тому +15

      Why the fuck would you need to know how chemotherapy works in general education

    • @praimchandplays3257
      @praimchandplays3257 3 роки тому

      No cappity

    • @5falltv895
      @5falltv895 3 роки тому +11

      @@TheReck12 if you ever reincarnate as a cancer cell

    • @birdies8397
      @birdies8397 3 роки тому +7

      Do you still learn about the cell cycle in high school? That’s extremely relevant to how chemotherapy works. Certain chemo drugs target different parts of the cell cycle. So, in a way, you do kinda learn some of the basics.

  • @Sirpokemaniaco
    @Sirpokemaniaco 5 років тому +7

    You never fail to amaze me with your videos, keep up the good work!
    Also please consider using a gray backdrop since white can feel like too much sometimes

  • @justforknowledge6550
    @justforknowledge6550 5 років тому +3

    Crisp and clean information. Beautiful video!

  • @yussuf2096
    @yussuf2096 3 роки тому +2

    I'm really grateful for your sophisticated explanation

  • @Ben-fx5pb
    @Ben-fx5pb 3 роки тому +77

    It's like dropping nuke on a city and hoping the good guys survive and are able to rebuild the population

    • @ulick1692
      @ulick1692 3 роки тому +6

      No it’s not

    • @hectorsandoval1976
      @hectorsandoval1976 3 роки тому +12

      @@ulick1692 how he explained it. Yes it is lol

    • @Convertscafe
      @Convertscafe 3 роки тому +4

      @@ulick1692 yea it is lmao

    • @mikep11218
      @mikep11218 3 роки тому +4

      Exactly. Chemotherapy is a murderous scam. Tremendous shame how easy it is to fool people. But then again, many people want to be fooled.

    • @jessepinkman1471
      @jessepinkman1471 2 роки тому +4

      @@mikep11218 nice satire you got there

  • @sgtdonagon
    @sgtdonagon 5 років тому +6

    i always wondered this exact thing...thanks for the great explanation!!

  • @SmegmaGoblin
    @SmegmaGoblin 5 років тому +3

    Yet again great video!

  • @dmatuzo
    @dmatuzo 5 років тому +2

    Great to see a video from you

  • @EnchantedAlana
    @EnchantedAlana 5 років тому +1

    Great general info - FYI, medical typist here for oncology and haematology patients. Knowledge is Power

  • @obvioustroll3617
    @obvioustroll3617 5 років тому +6

    Been under chemo for two years .... it has helped quite a bit !!

    • @chucky7285
      @chucky7285 3 роки тому +1

      Been a year since you wrote that.. How are you doing? You still with us?

    • @ice-mm6em
      @ice-mm6em 3 роки тому +5

      @@chucky7285 his name - “obvious troll”

    • @chucky7285
      @chucky7285 3 роки тому +2

      @@ice-mm6em I can't stand fictitious accounts

  • @soyeah590
    @soyeah590 5 років тому +10

    My grandma recently died after a long battle with cancer in the uterus...

  • @chronikuad
    @chronikuad 3 роки тому +4

    damn, I learned a lot in 4 minutes. thank you

  • @ashleyjackson8595
    @ashleyjackson8595 3 роки тому +18

    My buddy friend who had been diagnosed with breast cancer in year of 2020. I am so worried and nervous about my best buddy friend because my grandfather passed away from esophagus cancer on October 30,2018.

    • @jakeg3126
      @jakeg3126 3 роки тому +1

      Wish him/her luck for me.

    • @mr.boostang2064
      @mr.boostang2064 2 роки тому +1

      Hope all is well 🙏

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      If it makes you feel any better... breast cancer has way more advancements, research, and funding than esophagus cancer. I hope your friend is okay.

  • @nightfury66
    @nightfury66 2 роки тому +1

    thanks for the video, i really had no idea how chemo therapy worked ^^

  • @santanumondal9906
    @santanumondal9906 3 роки тому

    Sir, i have understaned.

  • @seashell1038
    @seashell1038 Рік тому +1

    Would you make a video about how low dose chemo is used to treat rheumatoid arthritis.

  • @TatsukiHashida
    @TatsukiHashida 5 років тому +6

    Question: what exactly is heart disease
    Or what types of heart disease are there?

  • @boat73jr
    @boat73jr 3 роки тому +3

    I took an immunotherapy for stage 4 melanoma in 2018 and haven't even had a cold since.

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      That's HUGE! CONGRATULATIONS!!! Fantastic news!!

  • @atakorkut5110
    @atakorkut5110 Рік тому +2

    Jesus the older I get the better a gun looks I can’t imagine going through chemotherapy it’s aweful my moms best friend of 15 years our neighbor just passed and this is really hitting home 😢

    • @cr34t_
      @cr34t_ Рік тому

      I've gone through very tough chemotherapy myself. Even though I felt awful I wasn't sad. Us humans are really good at adopting to situations.

  • @primephoenix1.077
    @primephoenix1.077 3 роки тому +2

    P.S Lysosomes are organelles which contain cell digesting enzymes.If cell is not working well,they burst and digest the cell.Therefore the Cell commits suicide....

  • @anthonyaloysius8940
    @anthonyaloysius8940 3 роки тому

    This is 3am in the morning,i had exam this morning and i watched a cemotheraphy video

  • @maxcovfefe
    @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому +3

    2:49 - Thank you for explaining this. Also, not mentioned here, it's not just vomiting that can occur. It's unfair that I went into this without any warning that chemo can also cause GI tract issues down on the other end. Although, I think the most common side effect I get is tired. I was told a few months ago at the local cancer center than by 2025, most chemo will be oral.

    • @jakeg3126
      @jakeg3126 2 роки тому +2

      I was told when I was in middle school things were going to be flying out all ends until I got adjusted or if i ever got adjusted by doctors and the people that were going to stab me when I was at the clinic. I had an I think an LGL leukemia. You might've had something else. I thought they left out a lot, that's why I mentioned the radiation part. I didn't notice they left out the GI stuff. Did they add all the emotional stuff that sometimes happens too?

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      @@jakeg3126 I think maybe different types of chemo do different things(?). The emotional stuff is probably due to the illness and feeling sick or being afraid than the actual chemo itself. Sorry to hear you had to deal with it so young! That would be awful. I hope you feel better now.

    • @jakeg3126
      @jakeg3126 2 роки тому

      @@maxcovfefe Thanks, I didn't think of age. I'm sorry you, or anyone has to go through that. I would assume different drugs to different things, but I think i know what you mean by I'm guessing side effects and what each poison(drug) does what effect. It's like concentration camp bad for some people, you probably saw them, but people hives all over the body, any symptoms/rashes are worse on someone else. I have to say though I was lucky I cancer and went through chemo when I was young, because as a kid I was somewhat clueless to how dangerous it was, what was going on, and the like 100+ things that could or might happen. Also, it was pre- everyone googles everything just to see stuff that can/probably will happen. Good being clueless.

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому +1

      @@jakeg3126 LOL, you reminded me of the Google lesson I learned very early in my diagnosis. (It's not that Google is wrong; it's that Google is too right, and I was wrong. They thought my cancer had moved to my liver, so I looked it up and got all sorts of scared only to find out it wasn't in my liver; it had spread to my lungs instead. I unnecessarily put myself through that crap TWICE!) Now I let the docs tell me what's up BEFORE Googling anything. YES, I think age is a huge factor. I feel so badly for cancer kids. It sucks as an adult, but at least I under5stand all the poking and prodding. As a kid, I think it woulda been scarier, but the way you put it actually made me feel better even as a grownup. Not thinking about the risks is what got me through a lot of it. Being clueless for the win!

    • @jakeg3126
      @jakeg3126 2 роки тому +1

      @@maxcovfefe yea, No one was really complaining it was watching the small tv, for your chair, maybe a movie, but mainly play with the brand-new PlayStation 2 that some people didn't even have at home. Not the old crabby ladies bitching and moaning about everything, and everyone being impatient. I'm 32 and I know I'm a worse patient.

  • @tball5677
    @tball5677 3 роки тому +5

    I'm 6 months in and it is Hell!

    • @marguskiis7711
      @marguskiis7711 3 роки тому +1

      Yes it is. But it can save you.

    • @GunsNGames1
      @GunsNGames1 3 роки тому +1

      My father passed away in 2010 5 months in treatment for lung and throat cancer

    • @xxrapidfirexx08
      @xxrapidfirexx08 2 роки тому +1

      My mom went through 3 bouts of lung cancer and 1 of brain cancer, she's in remission now thanks to chemo so keep at it! I wish you all the best 👍👍

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      I've been on chemo for nearly 2 years, but it's not like yours. Mine is a more gentle kind, I think because it hasn't been "hell" so far, thank goodness! Nevertheless, I know I'm fortunate, and I'm aware that others may be on way more toxic types of chemo than me. I hope it's helping you the way mine has helped me! I wish you all the best!!!

  • @iWayneJr
    @iWayneJr 2 роки тому +2

    I saw the word "chemotherapy " and automatically thought of Walter White's Lung Cancer

  • @igostupidfast3
    @igostupidfast3 2 місяці тому +2

    My grandpa was crazy, now he's dead. Get more than just the surgery

  • @smellthel
    @smellthel 3 роки тому +4

    I used to always think it was radiation

  • @aizulhoque9464
    @aizulhoque9464 3 роки тому +2

    Sir infom us quickly =Breast cancer stage 4. Are this possible to cure this cancer by chemotherapy

    • @marguskiis7711
      @marguskiis7711 3 роки тому

      Radical surgery + the strongest chem + total etc abandoning of ALL meat, eggs, milk, sugar until end of your life

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      No, not that I know of. My cancer is Stage 4, and I've been on chemotherapy for 2 years. That's not gonna change unless it quits working, and if/when that happens my oncology crew has more ideas. Also, certain kinds of breast cancer can be managed for years, even decades for some people. It just depends what kind and how aggressive it is. I wish you all the best! Take care.

  • @thestandardcouture
    @thestandardcouture 5 років тому +6

    Pharmacology mechanisms ♥️

    • @darkscienceyt
      @darkscienceyt  5 років тому +1

      Glad to see you're still around. How's med school going?

    • @thestandardcouture
      @thestandardcouture 5 років тому +2

      Questions for Science It is grueling! But I got through the first year and have a small summer break now :) I think my brain tripled in size 😂 So thoughtful of you to check in!!!! Hope you are well!

    • @missyb9526
      @missyb9526 3 роки тому

      My nightmare 😓😂🤷‍♀️

  • @djoeke2675
    @djoeke2675 3 роки тому +1

    Can the normal cells still replicate? (When effected by chemo-therapy)

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      Chemo patient here... Good question! The answer is YES, my hair and fingernails/toenails, for example, are still growing even after being on chemo for 2 years.

    • @rexjabay2727
      @rexjabay2727 Рік тому

      ​@@maxcovfefehow are you now?

  • @polarbear1888
    @polarbear1888 5 років тому +1

    Can you redo the alkaline water video?? Please!

    • @darkscienceyt
      @darkscienceyt  5 років тому +1

      Working on it. Sorry to be delaying all the old videos. At any one instant I'm writing, recording, or editing 2-3 videos a week. Thank you, It'll be out

  • @Ref6969
    @Ref6969 2 роки тому +1

    I love the term 'suicide mechanism'

  • @kiemi5437
    @kiemi5437 2 роки тому +3

    my mom had cancer when i was a kid and until now i always thought chemotherapy and radiation were the same thing. i feel pretty dumb now

    • @kiemi5437
      @kiemi5437 2 роки тому

      i also didnt know what it entailed other than "laying down inside a big tube for hours"

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому +1

      Don't feel dumb! I'm a cancer patient, and the things I had to learn when I got my diagnosis...! It felt like a semester of college.

    • @rexjabay2727
      @rexjabay2727 Рік тому

      ​@@maxcovfefehow are you now?

  • @deepkleenclogbusters1145
    @deepkleenclogbusters1145 3 роки тому

    The pie chart at 0:15 - Should be PROSTATE: 8%

  • @drasiella
    @drasiella Рік тому

    I have heard from one woman who knew a female cancer patient in chemotherapy, particularly intereinteresting thing she said was that the woman carried a bottle of frozen water with her and as the water melted during her chemo she drank it and this is how she saved her hair from falling of.
    Is there any science in this?

    • @DarkZerol
      @DarkZerol Рік тому

      Cooling will cause the blood vessels to narrow, which results in less chemotherapy reaching the hair follicle save her hair from falling out however medical professionals use a specific cooling device that sits on your scalp specifically targeting your hair follicles during chemotherapy. Just drinking ice cold water alone will do very little to nothing as the water you drank goes directly to your stomach and digestive system not the scalp thus it wouldn't have any noticeable impact in preventing the chemo drug from specifically reaching the follicles in your scalp.

    • @cr34t_
      @cr34t_ Рік тому

      There is a thing called cold caps, that many cancer patients use. It's just a cold helmet that works because blood vessels contract when cold.

  • @shaneharper6851
    @shaneharper6851 9 місяців тому +1

    So your telling me these healing crystals I bought on ebay don't work.

  • @IrishAmericanconnection
    @IrishAmericanconnection 3 роки тому +4

    Thanks, never quite knew what chemo was

  • @nrfbjvdfh7723
    @nrfbjvdfh7723 3 роки тому

    I think that the video will be better without music 👍

  • @adeleaviv8058
    @adeleaviv8058 5 років тому +3

    1:38
    How do the drugs "recognise" damaged DNA?

    • @darkscienceyt
      @darkscienceyt  5 років тому +10

      The drugs don't recognize DNA damage, they cause it. I think you may be asking, how do the drugs recognize the specific DNA in a cancer cell, and not just any regular cell. Well it's important to note that mitosis plays a huge role in drug induced DNA damaged. When cells aren't in mitosis, the DNA is tightly wound around proteins called histones, much like a spool of yarn. When DNA is wrapped up like this its difficult for the drugs to interact with it. When cells enter into mitosis, the DNA unwinds, also like unwinding a spool of yarn. The unwound DNA is easier for the chemo drugs to access, and so they do. Hope this helps

    • @adeleaviv8058
      @adeleaviv8058 5 років тому

      @@darkscienceyt what about the drugs that inhibit the DNA-replicating proteins? Why do they attack the cancer cells more often?

    • @darkscienceyt
      @darkscienceyt  5 років тому +5

      Speaking strictly on mitotic inhibitors (not sure about other chemo drugs), the enzymes that are inhibited are present, because again, the cells are in mitosis. Theoretically, if you treat a cell with a mitotic inhibitor drug that will inhibit mitotic enzymes and the cell is NOT in mitosis, the cell would be unaffected, because the enzymes aren't present and can't be inhibited. Remember, cancer cells are higher in probability of being in mitosis, and therefore are more likely to be targeted. Think of it like this: You have two garbage shoots in which you throw out scrap metal. On any other day, you throw the scrap metal down the shoot and it goes into the garbage. The metal is going through the shoot without any different effect. Then one day, you line the shoot with magnets. Now when you throw the scrap metal down the shoot, it's attracted to the magnets and stays in the shoot. This is because the conditions of the shoot permitted the scrap metal to behave differently. It's the same with mitotic inhibitors. Mitotic inhibitors passed through a cell with no mitotic enzymes simply pass through without effecting anything or being effected. Now you have a cell in mitosis with the enzymes present (think of the magnets in the shoot), now the mitotic drugs are going to interact with the enzymes because they're present. Hope this helps!

    • @adeleaviv8058
      @adeleaviv8058 5 років тому

      @@darkscienceyt Thank you!! It's a little question I've always been curious about :) keep up the good work!

  • @lachlandean2773
    @lachlandean2773 3 роки тому

    Immunotherapy. That's where it's at.

  • @DreadBirate
    @DreadBirate 5 років тому +1

    You should debunk German New Medicine.

    • @darkscienceyt
      @darkscienceyt  5 років тому +3

      Never heard of it. I'll look into it, I can't promise I'll get to it soon or even the next few months as I'm way backed up editing old content and producing new as well. Thanks for the suggestion

  • @eenpaard3915
    @eenpaard3915 2 роки тому +1

    I lost my mom this year after 5 years of battle

  • @gimiter7463
    @gimiter7463 7 місяців тому

    i am confused. then why all chemo patience drop dead?

  • @A.R.77
    @A.R.77 3 роки тому

    Ah, I see.

  • @Portalcat9000
    @Portalcat9000 Рік тому

    Wait I'm perplexed so if the cancer drug is slowing or stopping the cell cycle to prompt apoptosis why would the cell even care if it's a tumor suppressor gene that's busted and that was the gene responsible for telling the cell to undergo apoptosis would the cell not just kind of float around in a suspended state with no working genes to tell it to die or alternatively couldn't it just not care and keep cranking out janky DNA it seems like this type of process could be more damaging to cells that have functioning apoptosis pathways rather than cancer cells

  • @1marcelfilms
    @1marcelfilms 4 місяці тому

    What a nice day to not have cancer

  • @ye-tj6ws
    @ye-tj6ws 2 роки тому +1

    Jada smith is really going through it huh.

  • @jmseipp
    @jmseipp 2 місяці тому +3

    Should be titled ‘How chemotherapy DOESN’T work!

  • @jaxn54
    @jaxn54 5 років тому +1

    Okay with this video ..... Nerds find a cure

  • @isanesali8169
    @isanesali8169 3 роки тому +1

    I'm guessing vitamin B17 is not good then?

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      Chemo zaps all the D outta me. I'm on a somewhat high dose of 3000 IU per day.

  • @raverkidloki
    @raverkidloki 5 років тому

    Youre saying "apohtosis" it's cellular "Apoptosis"

  • @nouseformyname3788
    @nouseformyname3788 2 роки тому +2

    Yep, this just helps prove the earth is flat-I mean c'mon, don't be a sheeple; open your eyes!

  • @robertfield5904
    @robertfield5904 5 місяців тому

    Cancer feeds on (eats) sugar.

  • @ghostagent3552
    @ghostagent3552 3 роки тому

    Luckily we think more about the patient than the promises on paper.
    Also how many times did he say "and the cell commits suicide"

  • @Montalto45
    @Montalto45 2 роки тому

    U should do a video on how a healthier diet with fasting can heal cancer

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому +1

      I've done quite a lot of reading since my diagnosis, and I have yet to read any credible source claiming that there's any kind of diet or exercise that will prevent or cure cancer with any measurable efficacy. Be careful what you advise. I think diet and exercise have a HUGE part in prevention and recovery, but these aren't foolproof, and they alone aren't enough to take out cancer.

    • @aquilescastro1335
      @aquilescastro1335 Рік тому

      It only works if the diet kills you

  • @ffrreeddyy123456
    @ffrreeddyy123456 3 роки тому

    I don’t mind the idea of ten more hours, compared to lots of hours of chemotherapy.

  • @antigonooo
    @antigonooo 3 роки тому +2

    Thc oil helps more than chemo

  • @chriswilkes2438
    @chriswilkes2438 3 роки тому

    It doesn't

  • @joelmcgee2280
    @joelmcgee2280 2 роки тому +6

    So here's the question for you, if you were diagnosed with a quick growing cancer would you get chemotherapy?
    I looked into this 6 years ago after my father was diagnosed and shortly thereafter died from pancreatic cancer. Most of the information I found pointed to chemo not being a good idea for cancer since the statistics for a "successful" treatment ended shortly after chemo and there was a high mortality rate several years later. I read that even if the cancer is gone and then comes back that chemo was considered successful. I understand there are many many variables here, but I guess I'm just looking for your personal opinion on cancer if you were diagnosed

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому +3

      It always depends on the type of cancer and the type of chemo. There are lots of different kinds of chemotherapeutic drugs. The one I take is daily (3 weeks on, 1 week off to recover lost t-cells and white blood cells, blood work is done to confirm cell counts, then repeat), and my chemo is 100% oral. Local pharmacies don't carry it, so my oncologist orders it shipped from a specialty oncology pharmacy from out of state, and it comes right to my house. The rumor at our local cancer center is "most chemo will be oral by 2025." Each year more new research adds to the mounting number of cures they're finding for cancers if caught early enough. My own cancer IS CURABLE, but not for me - if only I'd been less stubborn and just had it checked out sooner. (Cancer doesn't hurt. If it hurts, you might've waited too long, which is another factor in your question! I put up with really minor, easily ignored pain in my side for over a year before having it checked.) Mine was stage 4 when they found it, and it's slow-growing (Grade 2). I feel fine BECAUSE OF my chemotherapy; it hasn't made me sick, but it shrank my tumors FAST! (Within weeks me and my oncologist could no longer feel my main tumor just with our hands like it kinda was before! Within months, the scans show such TINY tumors that you need a medical degree just to see them!) It's been almost 2 years on the chemo, and I still feel mostly healthy, and I still have hair! Toward the 3rd week of each round I get kinda tired, but that's mainly the most common side effect I've encountered.
      I don't share this to get sympathy! Like I said, I feel great! But I share it as word to the wise for people like me who might be too stubborn to actually get checked out. That and DON'T freak out if you ever hear the C-word. HEAR out all the options BEFORE you let your imagination run wild! Chances are fairly good that you may hear about recent developments for that disease. That said, ultimately I hop[e you don't have to deal with it at all anymore. Sounds like you've already endured enough cancer in your lifetime. Sorry about your dad!!

    • @joelmcgee2280
      @joelmcgee2280 2 роки тому +1

      @@maxcovfefe this is actually great news to hear and an encouraging story! The great news being the new medical approach and research towards cancer of course. Thank you for sharing, have you considered promoting your story on a bigger platform? Many people especially here in the US with the healthcare system we have will not go to the doctor unless it's severe, me included. Hearing this type of a story definitely inspires others to take better care of themselves and simply get things checked out.
      I'm sorry to hear you've got cancer, I truly hope your quality of life continues being great for as many years as possible.

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому +1

      @@joelmcgee2280 Thanks! I'm glad if it helps you feel more hopeful about the advancements they've made and will keep making. I considered filming the diagnostic process, but Covid, so it didn't seem like the right time because they were limiting appointments, guests, and general exposure at the cancer center. Covid has created a lot of change in oncology, but they're still managing to keep most of us healthy.

  • @223rockmaster
    @223rockmaster 2 роки тому +2

    Chemo absolutely sucks. Don't try it. It did make me piss all the different kool-aid colors though. So that's cool.

    • @cr34t_
      @cr34t_ Рік тому

      Chemo>Dying of cancer

    • @223rockmaster
      @223rockmaster Рік тому

      @@cr34t_ Ok you can try it.

  • @douchebagpatrol7237
    @douchebagpatrol7237 3 роки тому +1

    where's gun related deaths?

  • @vikramlall6182
    @vikramlall6182 5 років тому +3

    EXPLAIN crystal healing

  • @mikep11218
    @mikep11218 3 роки тому +6

    How chemotherapy works: It doesn't.

    • @mikep11218
      @mikep11218 2 роки тому

      @@maxcovfefe All the studies which exist have proven that it simply does not work. Chemo actually causes cancer. It doesn't cure it. Chemo cannot distinguish between healthy cells and cancer cells. The rate at which it destroys healthy cells is the same rate at which it could target any cancer cell. If you're on it, you'll only get weaker and weaker, until eventually meeting your maker. I do not wish that for you. It would be great, if at the very least, you researched the true history of cancer "treatment". Also while you're at it, look up the history of AIDS. There is a documentary called House of Numbers. You will learn a lot. AIDS and cancer "treatment" are strongly connected. Watch House of Numbers. You will be stunned to learn the truth.

    • @mikep11218
      @mikep11218 2 роки тому

      @@maxcovfefe My father was a medical scientist, and I myself have in-depth knowledge on this subject matter. In fact, more than you do. I am aware of what is being taught, as well as what happens in the real world. But it's not in my best interest whether you watch the film or not. It might only have been in yours. I cannot beg you, nor will I attempt to convince you. Take care, and be safe.

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      @@mikep11218 I deleted my other comments in this conversation. After what I told you, you ignored everything I said and replied to me with this HOAX stuff?? Are you even a human being? I'm beyond insulted. Anyway, I reported that UA-cam video for disinformation (at least one good thing came of this), and I don't think I want to continue any conversation with you or anyone who'd treat me with such disdain without provocation. I was just trying to be nice.

  • @liam.4454
    @liam.4454 3 роки тому

    Worst idea for a cure ever

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      As far as I know, chemotherapy isn't a cure by itself. It may be part of a cure, but mostly it's just a treatment to keep cancer patients alive. The chemotherapy I'm on is fairly gentle, it's oral, and I still have hair even after taking it for almost 2 yrs.

  • @michaelreyesmaagad9131
    @michaelreyesmaagad9131 3 роки тому

    How Chemotherapy Works??? Duh..... It doesn't!!!

    • @maxcovfefe
      @maxcovfefe 2 роки тому

      It does work on many people. Me, for example.

  • @ffrreeddyy123456
    @ffrreeddyy123456 3 роки тому

    More likely to be cancer in your toes is what? You never finished the sentence.