The perfect moment for me is when you (the student) try to join in the conversation and are met with frosty glares. IDK why this is a thing w/ surgeons but yeah, we've all been there.
My very first surgery was a lap chol, and I got to hold the camera. Because I had no idea what the surgeon wanted, nor did he explain, I slammed his instrument straight into the gallbladder and caused a spill. Good thing it had to be removed anyway.
@@KLienne Well, I kind of... *bonked* the diathermy hook trying to keep everything in view, and it shot right up there. Don't worry, I'll never set foot in an OR as a doctor for as long as I live.
I thought he made that up but its real. CCK-stimulated cholescintigraphy - CCK-stimulated cholescintigraphy is used to estimate the gallbladder ejection fraction (GBEF) to support the diagnosis of functional gallbladder disorder and to select patients who may benefit from cholecystectomy. A GBEF of less than 35 to 40 percent is considered low. - UpToDate
You just got a sub, this is just pure gold, seriously HOW is every video so good in its rendition of the trauma we all went through, this baffles me. Amazing like such niche things, habits, attitudes and all that are actually universal across the globe. You are fantastic at observational comedy in any case. Greetings from Belgium
I attended a lap chole as a student and I felt bad for the resident as the specialist kept screaming at him with every movement and the stress from that caused him to be unsteady... But the specialist blew open the gallbladder inside and later broke up one of the stones it's just "ops". He also screamed at anesthesia because the patient twitched her arm but they shut him down and told him to be respectful (anesthesia noticed and was already giving her muscle relaxed when the surgeon screamed plus he was pissed off from the way he treated his own resident so he wasn't gonna take shit from him)
It’s soo tru about if the gas came from the patient or one of the OR staff, that could be a surgical complication if it came from the patient. So everyone has gotta take ownership of their farts as the OR team for certain cases.
I’m a med student in Prague, Czech Republic. The fact that I’ve had identical experiences here as well, says a lot about what kind of big assholes surgeons universally are! 😅😂
@@roejogan9322 that was my question! Are you English parallel? I graduated LF1 in 2016, currently working anesthesia at UVN. Surgeons all day every day 😂
Bro I actually saw a med student get asked about the ejection fraction of the gall bladder once! The attending was pimping the shit out of him. Thankfully I wasn't involved, I was chilling with anesthesia.
God I don’t miss this type of toxic bull shit…I really hope they stamp this crap out. Especially the surgical tech / nurse. Obviously the surgeons too… so many toxic one… the more “old school” the more toxic.
Just got off my first 3rd year 24 trauma call where I got to do this for the first time. I got pimped on that exact ejection fraction question. 3 hours in I was bathed in sweat from the lead vest. Patient will live. Gonna go into a coma now
I spent 6 weeks in Gen surg as a PA clerk… this is essentially 100% accurate. The pimping, the constant aggressive correction of hands, the swearing when converting to open. All of it- gold.
To this day. I wonder why the techs are so goddamn mean to med students. Like we don't know why we're here either, you treating us badly just rubs it in. 🙄
I don't know if this is an intentional Easter egg or not, but when he is addressing the anesthesiologist the operation on the screen actually looks like a sleeve resection 😂. Great video!
Why are these spaces so toxic? These are such young doctors the least the seniors could do is to be kind to them cmon it's not going to cost you money!
in my surgery oral exam during a case on cholecystitis the examiner suddenly interrupts the case and glares at me and goes "how much potassium is in your gallbladder....right....now...." and i go "ok one minute i'm going to have to think about how to reason this out" and he goes "HOW MUCH POTASSIUM. IS IN YOUR GALLBLADDER. RIGHT NOW. NOW." 😂
My favorite surgeon I ever worked with had zero patience with me, an incredibly uninterested in surgery family medicine resident, when it came to driving the camera 😂
I handled the trocar cam alot I've never seen a surgeon yell or say anything like come away lmao. I guess it's funny but you shouldn't be scaring people away from gen Surg. We need More surgeons.
@@wovenlion Definitely depends on an individual OR basis. The scrub nurses and scrub techs were very nice to me when I did a couple days in the cath lab & OR for a clinical rotation when I got my RN. I felt very welcomed. Wish that more people had that experience.
Idk man the scrub nurses sided with when the surgeon tried to bully me for a mistake, they told its OK to make mistakes because you're new and you shouldn't feel stupid
The perfect moment for me is when you (the student) try to join in the conversation and are met with frosty glares. IDK why this is a thing w/ surgeons but yeah, we've all been there.
I got lucky with very friendly surgical preceptors
The glare 😂😂😂😂😂
It’s bc you’re nervous so you say something awkward 😂
Weve all been there
I'm sorry, but this is literally fucking gold. The ending especially.
He said Kobe and smacked her in the face 😂
I mean that’s about how well Kobe’s currently shooting
😂😂😂💀
My very first surgery was a lap chol, and I got to hold the camera. Because I had no idea what the surgeon wanted, nor did he explain, I slammed his instrument straight into the gallbladder and caused a spill. Good thing it had to be removed anyway.
Well not really good with all the bile contaminating the whole abdomen lmao
@@gamplie it happens. The surgeon is only mad if he didn't cause it himself, if he did then it's just whoops and lavage.
@@gampliesmall amount is OK pretty sure
You ruptured the gallbladder with the camera? I hope you're not in the surgical field anymore.
@@KLienne Well, I kind of... *bonked* the diathermy hook trying to keep everything in view, and it shot right up there. Don't worry, I'll never set foot in an OR as a doctor for as long as I live.
« What is the normal ejection fraction of the gallbladder » 🤣🤣🤣
I thought he made that up but its real.
CCK-stimulated cholescintigraphy - CCK-stimulated cholescintigraphy is used to estimate the gallbladder ejection fraction (GBEF) to support the diagnosis of functional gallbladder disorder and to select patients who may benefit from cholecystectomy. A GBEF of less than 35 to 40 percent is considered low.
- UpToDate
@@BigNick3468 🤯
@@BigNick3468 Typical impossible to answer surgeon question
>35%
You just got a sub, this is just pure gold, seriously HOW is every video so good in its rendition of the trauma we all went through, this baffles me. Amazing like such niche things, habits, attitudes and all that are actually universal across the globe. You are fantastic at observational comedy in any case. Greetings from Belgium
That Gallbladder ejection fraction line had me bursting with laughter. You a creating gold my dude.
I attended a lap chole as a student and I felt bad for the resident as the specialist kept screaming at him with every movement and the stress from that caused him to be unsteady... But the specialist blew open the gallbladder inside and later broke up one of the stones it's just "ops". He also screamed at anesthesia because the patient twitched her arm but they shut him down and told him to be respectful (anesthesia noticed and was already giving her muscle relaxed when the surgeon screamed plus he was pissed off from the way he treated his own resident so he wasn't gonna take shit from him)
It’s soo tru about if the gas came from the patient or one of the OR staff, that could be a surgical complication if it came from the patient. So everyone has gotta take ownership of their farts as the OR team for certain cases.
I’m a med student in Prague, Czech Republic. The fact that I’ve had identical experiences here as well, says a lot about what kind of big assholes surgeons universally are! 😅😂
I'm from Chile, and same 😅
first fac?
@@roejogan9322 that was my question! Are you English parallel? I graduated LF1 in 2016, currently working anesthesia at UVN. Surgeons all day every day 😂
@@pochopmartin Czech surgeons be like a double whammy
The accuracy is top notch!!!! 🤣🤣🤣
Been out of medschool for 12 years and this is taking me back... so accurate
PTSD activated
I'm almost having a panic attack because this brings me back to rotations
How did you not mention maintaining “the horizon”?! Love your content man
As a surgical medical assistant this abuse convinced me to go into IT... yall be some masochists.
Bro I actually saw a med student get asked about the ejection fraction of the gall bladder once! The attending was pimping the shit out of him.
Thankfully I wasn't involved, I was chilling with anesthesia.
your channel is so underrated - sharing with all my colleagues hahahahah
It's uncanny how similar rotations are in different countries.
God I don’t miss this type of toxic bull shit…I really hope they stamp this crap out. Especially the surgical tech / nurse. Obviously the surgeons too… so many toxic one… the more “old school” the more toxic.
Just got off my first 3rd year 24 trauma call where I got to do this for the first time. I got pimped on that exact ejection fraction question. 3 hours in I was bathed in sweat from the lead vest. Patient will live. Gonna go into a coma now
I spent 6 weeks in Gen surg as a PA clerk… this is essentially 100% accurate.
The pimping, the constant aggressive correction of hands, the swearing when converting to open. All of it- gold.
Oh man, flashbacks.
As once a med stud in Indonesia, I guess the surgery atmosphere are all similar across the world
best surgical tools are the 2 grabbers and the good ol meat temp tester
To this day. I wonder why the techs are so goddamn mean to med students. Like we don't know why we're here either, you treating us badly just rubs it in. 🙄
I don't know if this is an intentional Easter egg or not, but when he is addressing the anesthesiologist the operation on the screen actually looks like a sleeve resection 😂. Great video!
Why are these spaces so toxic? These are such young doctors the least the seniors could do is to be kind to them cmon it's not going to cost you money!
My go-to line: “Look where you’re currently aiming. Now aim for the pelvis.”
God this gives me flashbacks.
in my surgery oral exam during a case on cholecystitis the examiner suddenly interrupts the case and glares at me and goes "how much potassium is in your gallbladder....right....now...." and i go "ok one minute i'm going to have to think about how to reason this out" and he goes "HOW MUCH POTASSIUM. IS IN YOUR GALLBLADDER. RIGHT NOW. NOW." 😂
Why the fuck would that matter anyway ? 😂
As a tech who grew up gaming, it kills me watching people drive the camera badly.
This feels like I'm back in UPT lmaooooo
The scrub tech attitude is so accurate😂😂
My favorite surgeon I ever worked with had zero patience with me, an incredibly uninterested in surgery family medicine resident, when it came to driving the camera 😂
so much productive value...i feel so attacked right now lmfao
Maybe medicine isn't for me 😭😭😭
It isn’t for anyone. It fucking sucks.
Makes me really glad I went to EMT school 😂
It sucks being a student sometimes for those reasons.
Man are surgeons really that mean? Lol
They can be
Generally, yes.
Yes
Oh this surgeon was actually pretty nice compared to the ones I've met lmao
In the OR, yes. Outside, usually not.
stahp it. you're triggering all my trauma from surg
this is why i don’t do general 😭😭
This is hilarious but my God, surgery was traumatic.
I WILL TELL EVERYONE ABT THIS CHANNEL ONCE WE START OUR ROTATIONS 😭😭😭😭😭
BRUH…..just change out lap Chole with facial nerve dissection on ENT &&&&& this might as well be a live action of my life in 3rd year
I hate how accurate this is LOL
COME AWAY. ☠️
COME AWAY 😂😂😂😂😂😭😭😭
0:37 the glaring eyes of disapproval, I felt that
Yep. The cold stone scrub techs that only warm up to the surgeons. Accuracy 💯
My first lapchole holy shoes HAHAHA
Anaesthesia peeping is the most real thing 😂
lmfao this is gold
0:36 I'm dead 🤣
Lmaooooo this needs to blow up
100% accurate.
We don’t control what your insurance covers, take that up with your insurance providers
Can we talk about the large amount of knives on the wall
I was the wooooorst at driving the camera
Lmao 🤣
Why are you so aggressive😂
Is the skin just a tortilla wrap 😂
Sleeve gastrectomy video huh 😅…
There wasn’t a lot of open source cholecystectomies to choose from
I handled the trocar cam alot I've never seen a surgeon yell or say anything like come away lmao.
I guess it's funny but you shouldn't be scaring people away from gen Surg. We need More surgeons.
Scrub techs are literally the worst type of human beings. Like you don't even have a degree and you're gonna try to bully me?
So true, as a student I was interested in OR but those scrub nurses are so mean and they feel superior. Anesthesia team is always more approachable.
@@wovenlion Definitely depends on an individual OR basis. The scrub nurses and scrub techs were very nice to me when I did a couple days in the cath lab & OR for a clinical rotation when I got my RN. I felt very welcomed. Wish that more people had that experience.
Bullying is never okay, but being a credentialist snob like that makes you an asshole too
Idk man the scrub nurses sided with when the surgeon tried to bully me for a mistake, they told its OK to make mistakes because you're new and you shouldn't feel stupid