Contagious Paralysis or a Hidden Tick? | Chicago Med | MD TV
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- Опубликовано: 17 май 2022
- When Dr. Halstead starts showing signs of paralysis after direct contact with a patient with the same symptoms, the doctors worry the paralysis is contagious.
From Chicago Med Season 3 Episode 5 'Mountains and Molehills' - An ethical debate arises when a patient refuses to take an HIV test but still demands treatment; Natalie and Will try to diagnose a young girl with increasing paralysis; Noah deals with his first death as a resident; Sarah continues to avoid work.
Chicago Med (2015) The doctors and nurses who work at the emergency ward of the Gaffney Chicago Medical Center strive to save the lives of their patients while dealing with personal and interpersonal issues.
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Not the craziest place for a tick to be. House holds that title.
I think house holds the title for most craziest anything tbh
I had one on my stomach once
What really makes the eyes widen for this comment is that all the thumbs up so far indicate they each *KNEW* exactly where the tick was.
And likely remember House was damn near dragged to court and the clink after the fact...
Had to lock himself in an elevator to find it too 😂
That elevator scene was hilarious omg, the dad was ready to kill House.
TV: Doc walks in and sees patient immediately.
Real life: Patient waits three hours before seeing a nurse, then another hour before finally seeing a doctor.
In the episode's defense, the mom went up to the desk to ask someone to see her daughter and was clearly not the first time she had. We have no idea how long they had been waiting before Will and Natalie arrived.
And then another hour to be treated, and then another hour till they check on you, but suddenly you're instantly discharged. When I had an allergic reaction, I went in at 12. Left the hospital by 7 am.
Please understand what happens in an ED. It’s not first come first serve. They take in patients based on severity
@@erin6614 And being paralyzed on one side isn't severe? I would be very worried if all of a sudden my leg just stopped working.
I'm not from the United States but I think it's the same everywhere, it depends on the severity and not on who got there first.
For example, when I was 10 years old I went to the emergency room At 12 am because I had been all day vomiting and an intense pain in my stomach and in the last hours my fever was high.
A doctor from my health insurance came to my house and suggested that it might be appendicitis, so he recommended going to the emergency room as soon as possible. When we arrived it was full of People since it was flu season, mean, there were thousands of sick children (in my country emergency rooms are divided into pediatric and adult) We checked in and sat down to wait, but after half an hour we explained the situation again and they made us go to a to a room before others who were perhaps before us. And luckily because i had a 40 degree fever, severely dehydrated and a gangrenous appendicitis.
In real life Australian tick paralysis is really only of concern in veterinary medicine - it can be deadly for cats and dogs but it hardly ever affects humans.
But I’m guessing that it does happen sometimes?
@@marycanary It's possible but it's really rare. The tick needs to be attached for several days to inject enough toxin to affect a person, and most people will notice and remove it well before that. It usually causes irritation and numbness at the site of the tick bite, so generally people will know pretty quickly that something is going on if they have a tick attached.
Very very rare, but just like Lou Gehrig's disease, it can almost be so unique you get it named after you
its so funny how they say australia like its so foreign, thats coming from me, an australian
In France we have to be super careful about ticks because they cary a lot of disease such as Lyme
When they said "Austrial" and "paralysis" I'm like "Ah yes. Paralysis tick". My constant binging of Bondai Vet taught me this one xD
Saaaame.
Yep!!
Same 😂
I know this comment is old but the entire time I was watching I was basically checking off the symptoms as they mentioned them down to paralysis of the lungs. Thank you Bondai Vet
Its actually Bondi Vet but im sure you accidentally spelled it wrong :)
For as tough as these problems are, this is a condition that the doctors know how to handle. Diagnosticians have come such a long way in medicine. Sometimes we take for granted that it's all just deductive reasoning. When a problem is atypical, the fear grows.
Unfortunately, most docs don’t. So many people go undiagnosed and have chronic health issues
I have a rare autoimmune disorder. First in area with the diagnosis. For months I was told I was just dying and that I'd never walk again. 7 years later I'm alive and mobile (though I wouldn't be running any marathons in the near future). It took one doctor to actually dive a little deeper and actually listen to me. It changed my life. I had to make a decision that this was something I could either live with or die from and I chose to live with it. But initially when everyone tells you that you're going to die its hard not to take it to heart.
@@mamaraya8818 May God bless you richly for it. I really mean it. I wish you strength and wisdom in dealing with situations like this. Thank you.
@@mamaraya8818 ✨😭😁😤Tkf,okod
Tkf,ofk
Agreed, the medical field has come a long way. In the 60's they still thought a lobotomy was a viable option so I guess they had a lot of room for improvement and nowhere to go but up lol.
I’m litterally addicted to this channel now. I watched all the videos in like 2 days. 😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣😆😆😆😆
Same
Me toooooooo 😂😂😂
Mine was 26 hours,
@@JayLoves124 LMAO
same omg
Something similar happened to my sibling as an allergic reaction to medication. Paralysis spreading up her body, and though I didn't know at the time, the doctors suspected it would've reached her lungs if they didn't figure it out.
What disease they had?
@@reorio7376 Never anything diagnosed. Just a very rare reaction to nitroglycerin cream (very rare in pill form, even more rare in the cream)
@@rebeccalambert3240 paralysis from allergic recation damn!!
@@reorio7376 Yep, it was wild. She was in the ER all day, multiple days, when she was 17 or 18 trying to get it sorted, considering wheelchair options. Then our dad and a nurse figured it out lol.
what was the allergic reaction to?
Spinal taps are very intursive, I've had one as a baby.. typically they don't allow the parents to stay in the room when it happens because its distressing to both the child and parent.
when I had mine they let my mom stay in the room and hold one of my hand while a nurse held my other one and my baby cousin also had one and her mom was allowed to stay
My 9 week old son had one, I cried and was so scared the entire time
@@isabellabaragana4636 what’s a spinal tap?
@@elizabethr8812 It's a needle that gets inserted to your spine and they take out fluid but it very dangerous since one wring move can injure the spine
And you really should’nt be getting up much for a few days after it - gotta let the dura heal. Spinal CSF leaks are no joke
I'm glad I've never been bitten by a tick. The closest I've ever come was during a tick check my dad did on me after a walk in the woods I as wearing shorts for. I had bug spray on with a high concentration of deet. There was a tick crawling on my leg that hadn't bitten me yet. He just brushed it away & we went on with our lives.
I've lived in the country my whole life, had maybe two or three dozen tick bites, and some of them even got full. Never gotten sick.
Not all Ticks carry diseases, but a lot of them do, and only very select people are susceptible to the neurotoxin.
B.REASON
You do know that deet is highly poisonous for humans as well... We use this stuff like sugar...
They stung a little after they’re pulled off. Or at least in my case.
If House made an appearance, he’d have fun playing with Will’s hair
True
Truė
Still true.
First of all, if someone is becoming paralyzed right in the ER, I doubt a nurse would say, "Okay sit down and wait for a doctor". There are NO doctors available??
Unfortunately, I'm sure there are some places that are like that.. Luckily, when I went into the ER with partial paralysis on my left side, they moved VERY quickly with everything!! Within like 5 minutes, I was in a room with about 10 nurses rushing around me and hooking me up to so many IVs and wires, I couldn't even count!
@@ChanCantBeCHANgedI had a concussion, it wasn't super bad, but I could not hold water and I was wearing sunglasses indoors because it was too bright. My mom called ahead so a few minutes later, I'm lying down and I end up getting some anti-nausea medicine and a brain scan, the doctors told me to get a lot of rest preferably in a very dark room, for at least 2 days.
you know there really are times no doctors are available & nurses even nurse practitioner. can't do or know everything my mother was a nurse & father a doctor & neither of them knew everything even when they finally retired. Both spent 40 some years in medicine & were people who the hospital staff management & even the courts would turn too & both would always admit at times being puzzled & having to talk to someone about something they didn't know. Hospitals even big expensive ones don't have thousands of doctors or nurse on staff every minute of everyday & even those on call there's a point where there's no one left. There's lots of things we now that people dont study or worry about because medicine & our bodies have adapted but yet at times they can come back or be made improved by someone evil & thus something we thought no longer a big deal suddenly returns or suddenly becomes a big deal again.
YOU'RE GONNA PUT THAT DOWN HER THROAT?! Actually things nursing family members have heard families of patients say.
Yes, ma'am, we have found through years of medical research that patients tend to live when they breathe.
It’s almost as if normal people have emotions including fear and sadness🤔🤔🤔
I'm so surprised at the amount of people who have never been bitten by a tick! Ticks are everywhere up here in Northeast America. My dad had one on his chest when I was a kid, that's the first one I remember. The last was the one I pulled of my 12ye old daughter's leg a month ago, and 7 off my puppy. We tick check like it's as normal as eating dinner, and every one knows how to do it, even the kids so they can do it to each other when playing outside. Every single person I know know has been buten by a tick in one extreme or the other. Including all outdoor animals I've ever known
Huh. I mean yeah, my little sister (with a head FULL of curly brown hair) got lice when we were younger, but I don't believe I ever actually seen a tick. We live in Canada if that helps.
@@cancertourmaline6798 maybe it's city living? Canada is irrelevant because I'm less than 5hrs from the eastern border and there's still ticks. 🤷🏻♀️. I didn't see many when I lived in a more populous neighborhood, however I was always taught to do checks after going swimming at local pond where there's lots of trees and wood. Now that I live in the middle of the woods, tick checks need to be done just by walking the dog.
I have lyme disease from getting bit by a tick
Exactly! I had a few ticks when I was younger, and then one year at summer camp (in the Midwest) I got about 7!
I've been bitten by ticks many times. I've had them on the back of my neck, my leg, and my arm. Every time I go camping or go into the woods by my house, I tick check to ensure that I haven't been bitten by one
I had a tick right above my bellybutton when I was five. Luckily my mom is a nurse so she knew what to do. She got the whole thing out and calmed me down so she could do the job. Never had one again.
I immediately knew that this was a paralysis tick thanks to all the Bondi Vet I like to watch
4:09 I'm happy to see him show a bit of emotion
It infuriates me when I am yelling at my TV screaming ITS A TICK.
Does anyone else wince in pain when the doctors order a bunch of tests? Just imagine the sky high medical bills 😱
Pricing seems all over the place in real life
ER trip for when I was so dehydrated I couldn’t stay awake and couldn’t keep anything down. It was the rare bad covid. Was given a Iv, some anti nausea medicine and stayed there about 4 hours. 1k
ER trip: SO got a hole in his stomach, had surgery, and stayed almost a week in the hospital: only about 500 dollars
5:15 is it weird to non-medical people that the entire room has PPE ON - yellow gowns and gloves but not one actor has a mask on when face to face with an unknown possible contagion?
They would only have them on if there was evidence that it was transmitted through droplets or airborne. Considering the entire waiting room and the mom weren’t symptomatic it was safe to assume at that point that it was not transmitted it that way
Australia or Lupus. It's always Australia or Lupus.
It’s never lupus.
I've watched so much BondiVet that even without the title the second mom said "Australia" my immediate thought is paralysis tick!!! Needs to be removed immediately and girl needs to be treated with antiserum and given supportive care specifically monitoring breathing. Of course it's really not that common in humans but it can be deadly. Pets are at a much higher risk.
Yeah. I've definitely watched WAY to much BondiVet 😅.
I'm so happy I've never been bitten by a tick. Although a family friend did when I was around, he didn't even know until he was about to get in the shower then he was screaming for someone to come with tweezers. I was the only one brave enough to pull it out of him, thankful we got head and all! It was still awful, I'm terrified of creepy crawlies but I'm brave if someone else is scared. I also had an outside cat and had to give him regular checks, he thankfully only ever had a couple and they were never embedded they were just trying to get through his fur when I found him. He was very patient with my searches
So basically had you not been there your friend would've become paralyzed.
@@controlman7490 well we're in North America so maybe not paralyzed but potentially VERY sick- same for my cat if I didn't check him daily 😌
I need to take better measure against tick. I’ve had up to 16 ticks on me in a day.
First of all if they think it is contagious they would have put both of them in isolation rooms making sure they have limited contact with everyone everyone would be extra careful to make sure not to get infected. When she first came into the ED they would have checked her head to toe including between her toes hair everything with a fine tooth comb always they do this to check for anything on her body that may be the cause of her paralyzes.
In emergency situations like this everyone that's not staff would be escorted out of the room.
Got encephalitis as a kid. Tick in my left ear. Life altering. Never goes away completely.
The fear in all the doctors when one of their own collapses
When a doctor or prince or law enforcement officer is in ED the priorities and urgencies shift.
I agree but at the same time, it's your friend. It would be the same as if a good friend of the doctor/law enforcement/famous person came in. You care about that person more than a stranger you've never met before.
And this is why I have a phobia of ticks. When I was younger there was an infestation at my day care, and one of the workers had to be hospitalized, and if I recall she didn't make it. Ever since then I can't stand ticks even the word alone makes me anxious
Literally found a tick in the middle of the night. Blood-fat tick about an inch behind my ear. Yanked it out and woke up my grandparents freaking out. Growing up in the country tick checks were a normal evening activity most of the time. Mommy'd pick'em out and throw'em in the ash tray to burn'em to death with her cigarette lighter.
I just like the fact that they are schooling people on Guiliam Barre syndrome my son got this when he was a healthy 17 year old looking forward to getting his drivers license and leaving for college-after 7 doctors and 6 months later and permanent nerve damage and almost a million dollars in hospital visits they finally figured out what it was but could no longer fix it-my son is 25 now and uses a cane after a few years in a wheelchair has brain fog memory issues and his leg shakes there are days when he can’t get out of bed because his legs won’t work he attends college but only part time and he deals with PTSD and anxiety caused by everything he went through especially when some doctors didn’t believe he was sick
I'm sorry he has to deal with that. I have the same symptoms and issues with doctors not believing me and I was hit by a car. I hope he finds ways to cope with his new normal. It's been years for me as well.
@@BettyAlexandriaPride I’m so sorry that happened to you and that you are struggling-my heart goes out to you❤️
I’m sorry he’s had to go through this! I’m a 19 year old guy and I had something similar happen to me. I suddenly got sick last year and went to 6 doctors before I found one that knew what was wrong with me. I was weak, would turn pale, had brain for, and couldn’t really walk for a couple weeks. The doctor I went to was great and I’m doing better now. It been almost 8 months and I’m still not great, but I wanted to encourage you and say that maybe there is a doctor out there that can help! Go to a Lyme literate doctor. These tick-born illnesses have to be treated for a while. I have a friend who has has Lyme, babeisia, bartonella, and toxoplasmosis (or something like that) and the friend has been on treatment for about two years. She had to use a cane to walk at one point but now she can walk fine. Or lease reach out if you want to know what doctor I used!! I know how distressing it is to have doctors give up on your case!
The doctor I go to is name Krista Michener. Her practice is in Wooster ohio and called affordable healthcare partners. I would encourage you to reach out to her and get another opinion on your sons condition.
I had GBS at 5yrs old in 1988. I was the youngest case that severe at that point, and even had a Russian lady doctor come visit me to write a paper on me.
It took a year of physical therapy for me to walk by myself again, several years to walk without extreme exhaustion. My leg reflexes reappeared at 15, and I was able to walk on my toes at 30.
Im 40 now, and I deal with wonky nerves…when I have a migraine, whichever hemisphere it is on, that side’s leg reflexes disappear. I’ve got spinal issues that has left me in chronic pain because the body doesn’t like remyelinating itself more than once.
Ascending symmetrical paralysis? One side clearly progressed more quickly. That is not symmetrical.
This is my favorite episode of Med
I had a tick on me twice, once on my face and once on my back, luckily the tick only bit me on my back, but my back was super itchy, I was sick after but nothing serious, always do tick checks after days outside
I think this was my favorite episode.
What episode
@@ruthshropshire8516 I can’t remember off the top of my head
The episode and season is in the description
Dr. Manning's "Don't move" 💀
When Wil said “Nat…”
It’d have been clever writing if Natalie said;
“Close! A tick.”
Can't believe they left MS out of their differential. This is near textbook presentation; it's how I was diagnosed.
This is why you triple check yourself for ticks or have someone checked you
They were so good together 😥
Stay safe yall
I seriously need to get back into this show.
Can really tick you off sometimes when. You can't figure out what's wrong
I've ripped hundreds of ticks off me. Growing up as an outdoorsy kid in the South makes them a normal part of life. Never had paralysis though, hm.
I got bit by a tick once on my leg after playing with my dog. I was little and very afraid of bugs so when I went inside and saw it attached to me I started to freak out and scream trying to get it off of me. My mom came over and pinched my leg around the tick and just pluck it off. She never took me to the doctor for it or anything. I lived though 😂
Didn't they order a full check for insects and rashes?? How the heck did that go out the door so quickly for them to jump into a spinal tap?
In this show they seem to intubate almost all the time. I believe that rarely happens in Emergency Depts.
It is pretty scary what ticks can do!
This Chanel is addicting it all ready 12 Pm ❤😂
I'm so sad about the nurse talking to Dr. Manning has cancer.
Like this episode
Medical TV shows be like:
Show A: "Can I copy your case for an episode?"
Show B: "You can copy the symptoms... but please don't expy any characters!"
Seriously, there’s 9 doctors in the room with Will and they have no idea what’s wrong with him or if he’s contagious... They’re all doctors and none of them are worried about getting whatever he and the young girl has? Yeah right! In the real world all of them would have been gowned-up with masks and gloves! (At least l would have been!) At that point they didn’t know what was wrong with the girl... Or that she fully recovered! 😳🙄🤦🏻♀️
I mean it's just a show 🤷🏻♀️
Bruh…they WERE all gowned up and were wearing gloves!! Masks are not necessary because clearly there has been no evidence of possible droplet or airborne spread. Therefore, they’re following contact precautions. At the end, when the lady doctor was removing the tick from the dude doctor, he said something like; “you shouldn’t be here,” as she wasn’t wearing a gown or whatever. I forgot exactly what he said and obviously there’s context missing, but yeah. Point is: all of the doctors followed contact precautions as was appropriate for the case :)
I dnt accept the scenario bcos noone was sure about how did it spread... Via airborn Or droplets or.. So always better to wear mask.. And one more those who says it's jus a show.. When this show was based on medical issues, it should accordingly..
Thank you Bondi Vet for informing me on tick paralysis lol
I once flew a Southwest Airlines redeye flight from Denver to Sacramento, and the nearly empty was literally crawling with ticks. When I showed the stewardesses, they only said, "Eh!", and gave me a baggie to put the ones I found crawling on me.
How was it possible ?
"Deep tendon reflexes are absent" - after one half-arsed attempt to elicit it at one site😂
"don't move"
you just to say it didn't you
yep
I had a tick attached to my neck one time. I thought it was one of my moles but when I reached back to feel it I felt something else. My husband(bf at the time) was the one who got it off me. I freaked out when he told me it was a tick. He lives in a yard with lots of pine trees and I assume that's where it jumped on me.
Great series. Supposedly very much like reality. I would not know. Chapter closed.
If she was in the grass, why didn't they check for ticks. Didn't she tell them to check for insect bites when she first was admitted? Someone didn't do their job!
Best show
Love the workup!! Hehe :D
I need to watch this show
I’ve never had a tick but my mother would always warn me of them and explained how to remove one if bitten. Same with leeches.
GREAT I HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT THAT
Fully shocked by the amount of people who have never had a tick, or only had one or two- I once walked through a tick nest and had 200+ on me at once
Omg
Most I’ve had was 16 at once
How didn't you die
Rather the continuing of the series
A tick was the first thing I thought of.
that's not how you remove a tick... you need to be light and gentle not to break the head :|
A close Friend Of Mine Almost Lost her Daughter To This. I think it was figured out from A Young doctor that Actually listened.
as soon as she said “plane ride home from australia” i knew it was a paralysis tick 💀
paralysis ticks only usually affect animals and they can be deadly if left to get their toxin enough
"Plane ride home from Australia" well there is a million possibilities now.
It’s so painfully obvious.
idk why but when he says OW it makes me laugh lol
That's what happened with my foot........about 6 and a half years ago.
When this kind of symptoms needs immediate attention.. Still d person in d front office standing still.. While v in our country rush to treat as soon as possible..!
I would have considered dangerously low Potassium. It can also manifest as rapid ascending paralysis. I'm suprised that they didn't throw that around at the beginning as well.
Her blood was normal, so they might have checked it already.
As a moth I can confirm
TICKS ARE CRAZY
lmao
I think the fact that they just came back from Australia should've explained everything.
Imagine traveling to Australia and NOT understanding that everything there wants to kill you and your children. Imagine being a doctor with a paralyzed patient who just came back from Australia and NOT googling common causes of paralysis in Australia.
Also,
"YoU'rE gOnNa PuT tHat DoWn HeR tHrOat?!"
Um... Should they not? Have you never watched a single medical show or taken a public school health or bio class? Bad acting? Bad writing?
First off it was accurate with the part when they put the piece down her throat even if you know what it is it’s hard to see someone you love like that especially a child children are usually full of life
Nah the mother's reaction is pretty accurate. I remember my mom crying her eyes out when my sister got stitches BEFORE they even started putting the stitches in. Mind you my sister wasn't crying and my mom is a nurse.
@@theyungdeity3914 What's second off?
lol
this is a show….. don’t take it too seriously now🤨.
They got this Idea from an old House episode lol
I've been watching too much Bondi Vet, I immediately thought "paralysis tick!"
This is sad
Why... is there a fire alarm tone for a code? They don't use the same annunciators as fire alarms.
I haven’t watched this serie except for this clips but I find MANY to be similar to House...
I have late stage Lyme Disease and it’s hell
She’s like. “Your gonna put that down her throat”? Yes, if you want her to be able to breathe, they have too. 🙄
The infectious disease doctor is hilarious
Of course australia
it's kinda funny i watch way to much bondi vet so when i seen this episode i immediately new it was a paralysis tick. lol
I’ve been bit a couple times by ticks and i have never gotten sick there just annoying to remove weird
I feel so bad
Wow that's interesting
OMG l’m Cry i’m so so so Said
Ticks are so common where I live, that would be the first thing ER doctors would look for.
This is why you check for ticks!
lol everybody who's ever watched bondi vet immediately knew what the issue was, when australia was mentioned
I know a mother will overreact and panic over their child, but I still get annoyed ''Doctors cant be wrong once and a while'' mentality.
This scene I see in her in another's movies
Poor Will😢 EVERYTHING BAD ALWAYS HAPPENS TO WILL. The producers must hate Nick Gehlfuss that they always want to hurt his character 😮
True on house