Doctor Reacts To Extreme Medical Conditions

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  • Опубликовано: 27 май 2024
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    Body Bizarre is a TLC show with a name I'm not too wild about, but with stories that are nonetheless fascinating. Today we look at separating conjoined twins, a girl with ants crawling out of her ears, a man who nearly lost his hand in a factory accident, a family that all has 6 fingers, and more.
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Комментарии • 3,6 тыс.

  • @theeeveelutionist7245
    @theeeveelutionist7245 Год назад +14092

    The family with six fingers looks so wholesome. And they make the most out of their condition and see it as a positive thing.

    • @ngotemna8875
      @ngotemna8875 Год назад +254

      It's a cool case of sth being outside the norm without it being detrimental to the person so medical intervention isn't necessary

    • @marethyu_77gamer93
      @marethyu_77gamer93 Год назад +276

      The fact that it's a characteristic they share probably helps, because it's not a case of "Oh I have this condition that sets me apart and I'm the only one".

    • @Eagle-rv3iy
      @Eagle-rv3iy Год назад +61

      It would suck though to have to find hockey gloves for them

    • @stevefilms1997
      @stevefilms1997 Год назад +97

      @@Eagle-rv3iy it’s be a lot easier due to their numbers, get five sets of gloves, cut up the fifth set and add an extra finger to each of the other gloves

    • @KenseiAo
      @KenseiAo Год назад +49

      I haven’t gotten to that part of the video yet, but I think I’ve heard somewhere that having 5 fingers is a recessive trait to 6 fingers like blue eyes are to brown eyes. If true, it’s kinda weird most people don’t have 6 fingers

  • @HeyItsNovalee
    @HeyItsNovalee Год назад +9212

    Honestly hearing dr mike say “so he does have a normal life, maybe a unique life, but a normal life” really hit hard tbh. As someone with an invisible disability I often get stuck in thought cycles were I feel like I can never have a normal life. Hearing him acknowledge that you can have a normal life even if it’s different from other’s lives is so reassuring

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 Год назад +264

      People only SEEM "normal" until you actually get to know them. Almost everybody's an outlier of some kind somewhere... SO there really is NO SUCH THING as an "average person" or a truly "normal life"...
      Those are abstracts, statistically created constructs because when you delineate humans to numbers they WILL "average out" to something... mathematically. BUT as with many mathematical constructs, what works on paper doesn't actually exist in Real Life.
      SO you have about as normal a life as I (or anybody) does. There are things that you do routinely, many without thinking much or any at all about it... AND there are things that take up various degrees of your "thinking bandwidth" all the way to excruciatingly detailed and my favorite "damnably difficult". Everybody has those kinds of lists, too... some are longer than others and others are shorter...
      That's just life with "the human condition"... a wonderfully beautiful, red hot mess. ;o)

    • @Mushroom321-
      @Mushroom321- Год назад +18

      Yes!! 👏🏻👏🏻😊😊

    • @kelliewhyte_85
      @kelliewhyte_85 Год назад +59

      @@gnarthdarkanen7464 lol I get upset when people call me normal, normal is so boring.
      I don't think there is such a thing as normal when it comes to people, everyone is unique in their own way.

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 Год назад +25

      @@kelliewhyte_85 "Normal" is such a vanilla and uninteresting term, I find it difficult to even take it seriously enough to be offended...
      I don't run into it much, though. I AM those people your momma warned you about... and it's not long before anybody figures that out.
      I think it's another meaningless and weaselly "relative term", if I'm honest... Some are "more normal" maybe, being relatively closer to that mathematical curve construct, and others are "less normal" meaning further removed. That's all... ;o)

    • @callummclachlan4771
      @callummclachlan4771 Год назад +10

      Yep. Same situation. At times I do feel that. Then I remember that my life hasn't changed too much overall. I can still walk, cycle, drive etc.
      Only difference is taking medication, not being able to do repetitive motions or holding my muscles in the same position for an extended period of time. Maybe the odd day where I feel weak, but realistically everyone has those days.

  • @trolly4233
    @trolly4233 Год назад +1094

    Honestly the 6 finger thing seems quite advantageous especially in todays world of keyboards, phones, controllers etc. plus the fact that it’s a dominant trait makes me think that it may become more and more common

    • @noobeip2
      @noobeip2 Год назад +39

      I'm more submissive 💀😘

    • @Majorite
      @Majorite 11 месяцев назад +97

      ​@@noobeip2wtf?

    • @noobeip2
      @noobeip2 11 месяцев назад +54

      @@Majorite i frogot i made those comments

    • @mwayuko
      @mwayuko 11 месяцев назад +12

      can't say the same about six toes

    • @cerjmedia
      @cerjmedia 11 месяцев назад +20

      yeah except for most items were designed with 6 fingers in mind. Gloves for example wouldn't work, and holding certain items might not either but still, I would agree

  • @TheGuindo
    @TheGuindo 11 месяцев назад +310

    i find it fascinating that their 6th finger is also somewhat opposable - it can fold inward toward the palm just like the thumb does (though with a much lower range of motion than the thumb). that certainly would make it much easier to grip objects. definitely seems like an advantageous mutation.

  • @botflyguy7814
    @botflyguy7814 Год назад +4773

    I actually cried for the twin that lost his life. I can't stop thinking about how scared he must have been to be seperated and then he didn't make it. Rip little man.

    • @Reznic007
      @Reznic007 Год назад +447

      Same.. I’m a mother and just imagining having to go through making that decision and then losing a child.. I’m bawling… my heart goes out to the family.

    • @plazima
      @plazima Год назад +80

      Yeah it’s so sad 😭

    • @tawnyprovince-ward2353
      @tawnyprovince-ward2353 Год назад +221

      I don’t think I could’ve separated them because of the risk. Especially after 5 years.

    • @suzybates2473
      @suzybates2473 Год назад +107

      I agree. As a mother myself I would have just kept the boys as they were.

    • @canesugar911
      @canesugar911 Год назад +107

      @@suzybates2473 for who's benefit?

  • @topaznightengale1433
    @topaznightengale1433 Год назад +2652

    A dear friend of mine had conjoined twins. Both twins shared most organs. The doctors said we could separate them but only one can live or they can stay together but have a hard life or no life at all. The idea of picking only one to live was heart breaking. They thought about it for a long time. Sadly, before they could make a decision, both babies died. She wonders what life would have been like with both of them or even one of them if they had decided in time but ultimately she is happy in the idea that they came together and left together and she didn’t choose one over the other. She is so brave and I don’t know what I would have done if it were me. Congrats to the family in this video that has a beautiful son!

    • @leannepaxton5012
      @leannepaxton5012 Год назад +166

      That is so sad.
      But I don’t know how any mother or father could choose one of their babies to die and one to live and then be able to live with their decision for the rest of their lives.
      I can’t imagine a worse decision to have to make.
      I certainly wouldn’t want to make that decision.
      Perhaps if they had made the decision and they were separated, only for the one who was supposed to live, to get an infection like the twin in this video, and then unfortunately pass away. The parents would forever live with the guilt of, maybe if they had stayed conjoined, they both would be alive today, but we chose and now both are dead.
      That would be worse to live with in my mind.

    • @kidkidding7986
      @kidkidding7986 Год назад +124

      Oh my god I cannot even imagine... As an outsider it seems like a logical idea to choose one baby growing up healthy over two babies conjoined growing up in lifelong struggle. But as a mother it would be excruciating to even consider.. what a strong woman.

    • @happymicrobe8123
      @happymicrobe8123 Год назад +33

      How would a parent feel for the rest of their life when they make the decision to separate them for the sake of the life of their beloved babies and then one of them dies. Or when you decide against it and then both babies don't make it. That must be a hard situation to be in...

    • @xakirax_8864
      @xakirax_8864 Год назад +5

      Strong Lady

    • @miissfits498
      @miissfits498 Год назад +5

      Why does these strange abnormalities always. One from India, I know there 1.2 billion but China doesn't have that many abnormalities.

  • @chloeorr9880
    @chloeorr9880 Год назад +119

    I was born with a ectopic pancreas inside my stomach that they couldn’t figure out exactly what it was until I was five. At the time, there had only been 5 other reported cases. It prevented me from digesting any food without immediately throwing it up after. Luckily they were able to do a new experimental surgery and I just have a giant scar on my abdomen now. I’ve still dealt with gut issues since then but they didn’t think I was going to make it to adulthood so lol

    • @isakdin
      @isakdin 5 месяцев назад +4

      The fact u added lol at the end 😅

  • @bradleyborrowman2115
    @bradleyborrowman2115 3 месяца назад +55

    The bit about extremity crush injuries basically ending in amputation I’ve got a great example, I had probably the most minor crush injury ever, I dropped a deep freezer as I was bringing it in the front door, and it pinched the tip of the middle finger on my left hand right at the tip dead smack in the center of the nail bed. Somehow didn’t rip the nail off just turned everything under it to ground beef and almost took the whole tip of the finger off and left the nail behind without so much as a scratch 😂 the first thing the er folks told me is there was a good chance that half the first digit of that finger was probably going away and I wouldn’t have the nail anymore but they decided to try and fix it so they removed the nail and stitched up the nail bed and then actually stuck the detached nail back up under the cuticle and secured it with a stitch to promote good nail growth. These days the nail is a bit crooked and it has a gnarly scar but it’s got all feeling and circulation so I’m happy with it. It’s my special finger 😂

    • @greengrendel
      @greengrendel 2 месяца назад +3

      oh my god you can just move a nail bed? Now I'm just imagining people with transplanted nails growing in random places.

  • @Darkflowerchyld718
    @Darkflowerchyld718 Год назад +1828

    I had a bug in my ear. It's one of the most traumatic things that's ever happened to me and 20 years later I'm still absolutely terrified of most bugs. I can't imagine it happening over 1000 times. That poor girl. My heart absolutely breaks for her.

    • @riskoffailure8857
      @riskoffailure8857 Год назад +22

      i had a bug in my ear, it wasn’t that bad and i still love bugs. we’re you scared of them before that happened? i can’t imagine becoming scared of bugs just because of that

    • @Darkflowerchyld718
      @Darkflowerchyld718 Год назад +147

      @@riskoffailure8857 I mean I definitely wasn't a fan of them before but I wasn't as afraid. There's something about it scratching around in my ear until I killed it that was enough to put me off insects for the rest of my life.

    • @viviennart
      @viviennart Год назад +109

      @@riskoffailure8857 well a dog pushed me over when I was little and I was afraid of animals for a very long time, only grew out of it partially when I became an adult.
      These things can happen, anything can be a big enough trauma for your brain to develop a fear.

    • @mokaakashiya9318
      @mokaakashiya9318 Год назад +33

      Same! I now sleep with my blanket tightly wrapped around my head so nothing can crawl in there again.

    • @banji7612
      @banji7612 Год назад +26

      I'm 23 now and have been always absolutely terrified that it will be happen to me too. Just the thought of it makes me sick and panic. That's why I always sleep with my blanket tightly on my head

  • @spatel1015
    @spatel1015 Год назад +2848

    As a occupational therapist myself, I appreciate you bringing light to our profession. At times we are unsung heroes in the hospital and doctors. At time doctors just say patient seen working with PT.

    • @vickiwaatti1076
      @vickiwaatti1076 Год назад +28

      AS I am going through the stages of learning to walk again, after having a right below the knee amputee, I am just bragging about my PT person. They have been amazing and are my truly favorite people right now.

    • @lucianaaveni7860
      @lucianaaveni7860 Год назад +18

      I teach kinder and first grade and I get to experience first hand how occupational theraphy often helps my students. Keep up the good work!

    • @puggynugz922
      @puggynugz922 Год назад +10

      I worked in a clinic with PT, OT, and speech therapists. As someone who works with my hands, I found OT the most interesting.

    • @mbr7352
      @mbr7352 Год назад +8

      OT is so under appreciated and recognized 😞 I’m also an OT (acute care)

    • @rebeccat715
      @rebeccat715 Год назад +8

      I have dyspraxia (like dyslexia but with spatial reasoning skills rather than reading) and struggle with driving. Unfortunately, I live in a place that doesn't have good public transit. My doctor referred me to OT driving lessons, and it really helped! I'm still an anxious driver, but I'm at least functional. So grateful to my occupational therapist and that OT is a thing!

  • @buffycurtis9351
    @buffycurtis9351 Год назад +76

    My mother has been a nurse for 30ish years. I remember when she mentioned caring for someone who had a similar surgery as the hand guy. I remember thinking it was totally wild then. It’s definitely interesting to see these different kinds of approaches.

  • @crptpyr
    @crptpyr Год назад +54

    the family with polydactyly is really cool, polydactyly is a dominant gene (it was on the high school biology curriculum in the UK) so it totally makes sense. Awesome that it's something they can celebrate

  • @artchic528
    @artchic528 Год назад +2214

    The case you were talking about with the Siamese pair were brothers Eng and Cheng Bunker who were born conjoined at the sternum via a flexible band of tissue. At the time (early 1800’s) they were an extremely huge medical oddity and curiosity as they obviously survived their birth and infancy.
    As they grew older and news of their story spread, they were immigrated to the US and examined by numerous doctors from all over the world. As young adults they did the only job that physically unique individuals such as themselves could do at the time, and joined a traveling circus freak show. They actually earned a small fortune being billed as “The Amazing Siamese Twins”.
    Later, they retired from the circus and both got married to American women. To compensate for their unusual situation, they settled down on a pair of neighboring farms in the foothills of North Carolina, each owning one. They divided their time between the two farms so each could have time with their respective wives and kids. Sadly, as they grew older, they became increasingly frustrated at their conjoined lives. Specifically, Eng was frustrated with Chang and his health deteriorating and him drinking heavily. This led them to engange in huge physical fights with each other. Doctors at the time speculated they could probably be separated, but as it was never done before, and they had no way of knowing the level of organs and tissue shared between the two, they refused to operate.
    Eventually at the age of 62, after already suffering a stroke previously, Cheng died of a cerebral blood clot. Upon the death of his brother, Eng said he was going to die shortly after. Which he did from bleeding out into his dead brother. His life could have been saved, some speculate, had they known to tie a string at the point of connection between the two to prevent Eng’s blood from flowing into Cheng’s lifeless corpse.
    Upon their deaths, their bodies were sent to be autopsied, mostly out of sheer curiosity of their connection. It was determined that their connection was mostly cartilage and connective tissues with only a shared liver between them. Thus, they probably could of been successfully separated. Their preserved liver as well as a death cast of their conjoined torsos can be seen on display at the Mutter Museum to this day.

    • @stephsaguudefan1753
      @stephsaguudefan1753 Год назад +215

      Can you imagine marrying a conjoined twin? Sex would be beyond weird.

    • @socialistrepublicofvietnam1500
      @socialistrepublicofvietnam1500 Год назад +50

      Wait, physical fights?

    • @tajime8480
      @tajime8480 Год назад +150

      How terrible. Imagine having someone else share your body, who has an addiction. They didnt share a liver, but the mental strain and a half of yourself being physically weak mustve been a hurdle.

    • @artchic528
      @artchic528 Год назад +208

      @@tajime8480 Actually, the liver is the one organ they DID share…ironically.

    • @tajime8480
      @tajime8480 Год назад +45

      @@artchic528 😰 omg thats even worse

  • @PatrickHemmes
    @PatrickHemmes Год назад +1151

    12:59 "So he does have a normal live, maybe a unique life, but a normal one."
    As someone who has been an amputee since age 6, this sentence made me drop a tear :)

    • @cbryce9243
      @cbryce9243 Год назад +28

      It's a normal life for you, right?
      I look fine and can stand and walk a little, but I have an invisible disability and I use a wheelchair often, especially if it is hot. It's normal for me, but sometimes people look and act like they pitty me. What is our normal, freaks others out and they don't know how to act around us.

    • @immafox1496
      @immafox1496 Год назад +7

      @@cbryce9243 well I personally think it's just a difference from what maybe you're used to see. I'm sure if I got to know a person that has some differences well I would learn how to behave and it would be normal❤️

    • @jannamagpie8324
      @jannamagpie8324 Год назад +2

      My 6-year-old daughter has CP and I loved that take so much.

    • @oliverbanham510
      @oliverbanham510 Год назад +1

      What part of you was removed?

    • @PatrickHemmes
      @PatrickHemmes Год назад +3

      @@oliverbanham510 both my legs, above knee

  • @firebyrd437
    @firebyrd437 Год назад +20

    When my dad was 16, he worked in a papermill. This would have been 72 years ago. Machines often had no guards then, and the back of his hand was sliced off. He had his hand stiched inside a flap on his abdomen and a plaster cast on the whole arm to keep it immobile.
    My dad was a musician. He won the British championships when he was 13, this after a year in hospital from peritonitis that almost killed him. His hand was important to him. He played the French horn and later joined the army and went into the band. The back of his hand had a hairy square, the skin of the abdomen obviously was the same, and when playing in the band, he wore white gloves.
    20 years after he had this skin graft, a wire like thread started growing out of the middle of the hairy patch on the hand. It turns out it was a stitch that hadn't been taken out, but it left a hole in the hand that was quite noticeable. There's no doubt that if this hadn't worked out, he would have lost his hand, his fingers were a little stiff but with time they became less so, and not been able to continue his musical career as he signed on to an orchastra when he left the army.

    • @andrewfortmusic
      @andrewfortmusic Год назад +1

      That's incredible! I'm a musician as well, and the idea of a hand injury is one of my worst fears. Huge congratulations to your dad!

  • @LovelyLies16
    @LovelyLies16 Год назад +10

    As a 6-year-old girl, I had a fly go into my ear when I was sleeping. I remember my ear feeling "weird" and hearing it in my head. 😖My parents remember me complaining about my ear non-stop and thought I was having a tantrum. They used an otoscope to look, hoping it'd pacify me. They had an "Oh my god!" reaction before calmly saying we were going to the hospital. The doctors didn't help at first. They kept shoving tweezers in my ear to get it and I kept freaking out because it REALLY hurt as they shoved it in. And the tweezers just made the fly go deeper in my ear. (Yes, I felt every second of it.)
    I remember crying because of the tweezer pain and how scared I was because of the fly noises/movements I kept hearing/feeling.
    Eventually, the doctors put me under to calm me, and the fly went too far in for tweezers to get to. They got it out, but I have a phobia of flies and buzzing sounds. Even though I'm an adult, I pretty much have a panic attack every time I hear a buzzing sound or see a fly. And I sleep with my ears covered or plugged in. NEVER getting over THAT.

  • @feanenatreides
    @feanenatreides Год назад +917

    I had a polydactyl cat. They're actually sometimes called Hemingway cats because the famed author had one who...well, wasn't spayed. Since it's a dominant trait in cats there's a colony with lots of polydactyls on his former estate to this day. I can say from experience that for felines it grants an advantage in quickly nabbing food off of dinner plates.

    • @lilyhawthorne1196
      @lilyhawthorne1196 Год назад +24

      I had a guinea pig with a polydactyl toe. Because of how it formed it could swing around and occasionally it'd swing under his foot and he'd step on it, although it didn't seem to hurt him and he could walk around just fine.

    • @cheesemonkey98
      @cheesemonkey98 Год назад +9

      I've got a calico cat with polydactyly on all 4 of her toes and we also had a guinea pig with an extra toe on one of her feet

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад +6

      Gosh i am not the only cat 😮

    • @emcustard
      @emcustard Год назад +7

      I have a Hemingway with seven digits on her front paws, but her back paws are normal.

    • @aldranzam3456
      @aldranzam3456 Год назад +3

      I love polydactyly. Probably my favorite mutation in any species. Every time I see a picture, whether it's a human or a pet, I get overcome with excitement, like seeing a baby bird for the first time. There's just something magical about it.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Год назад +878

    0:10 - Chapter 1 - Ant in ear
    1:50 - Chapter 2 - Polydactyly (multiple fingers)
    3:15 - Mid roll ads
    4:25 - Chapter 3 - Parasitic twin
    7:50 - Chapter 4 - Stomach pocket
    10:30 - Chapter 5 - Conjoined twins

  • @claycollins8973
    @claycollins8973 8 месяцев назад +18

    Love how real and positive you are, no cheesy sensationalism, just down to earth logic and positivity

  • @pcamilo3765
    @pcamilo3765 Год назад +11

    7:30 The stomach pocket guy is actually from Brazil, where I come from. This type of injury can be common because of the economic situation, that forces the vast majority of workers to work at factories with dangerous machines. But, this type of surgery is in fact very rare...

  • @SaokoPTCG
    @SaokoPTCG Год назад +902

    I don't know much about this stuff to be honest, but here we go. When I was 8, it was discovered I was born with an Enteric Duplication Cyst, or an EDC. It went completely undiscovered throughout many years of stomach pain and constant illness growing up, which didn't let me get a great education as I wasn't in school often but teachers would just assume I was trying to get out of school (which to be fair, a small part of me was cause I hated it). My colon went into volvulus which is what brought me to the hospital where it was finally noticed. I was in hospital for about a month or two, but came out and began physical and occupational therapy to recover the damage to my lower body that the surgeries caused. After being bed-bound for that time I'd lost the ability to walk and had pieces of wire into my stomach to make sure the scars wouldn't open or leak liquid. Of course, I can walk now all well and I've become very physically active. However, this lead to issues with my acid reflux and now I live with GERD & LPR, as well as Rhinitis cause apparently my script writers want me to be a villain. I basically live with an acidy cold nowadays, but I'm just glad to live at all. :')

    • @JessicaKissinger88
      @JessicaKissinger88 Год назад +56

      Thank you for sharing your story. Ngl tho, you saying “my script writers” made me laugh 😂

    • @stegpeng
      @stegpeng Год назад +9

      im glad you lived through that situation. best of luck to you and your life

    • @maanasayenamandra8895
      @maanasayenamandra8895 Год назад +8

      I'm so proud of you!

    • @pureicefire
      @pureicefire Год назад +9

      So glad to hear you made it through all of that. How frustrating and wild. I wish you all the best.

    • @ryderhumphrey1516
      @ryderhumphrey1516 Год назад +1

      Honestly how do you type that much 🤔

  • @shresthbaliyan4753
    @shresthbaliyan4753 Год назад +567

    I don't know why but the parasite twin thing was very shocking to me
    I literally never imagine anything like this happens

    • @Epsicronics
      @Epsicronics Год назад +51

      I know, i have seen the condition before but ive never seen one where the twin was so big, i guess thats why her case was so shocking?

    • @KyleFromVA
      @KyleFromVA Год назад +67

      I would be shocked to look down and see legs and arms dangling from my crotch. That is some straight up horror show stuff. Feel bad for her that’s got to be rough body image wise. Glad she got help

    • @AntediluvianRomance
      @AntediluvianRomance Год назад +44

      I read about a case like that when I was a kid. A lady had extra legs between hers, and it turned out that she had two uteruses and some of her children were actually her parasitic twin's.

    • @Am0ha
      @Am0ha Год назад +9

      @@KyleFromVA well if u were raised thinking it was normal u wouldn’t

    • @KyleFromVA
      @KyleFromVA Год назад +2

      @@Am0ha yea but I feel like if you were fairly observant person you’d catch on pretty quick that humans aren’t meant to have a swinging mass of appendages between their legs

  • @smithswlos
    @smithswlos 9 месяцев назад +6

    I just would like to point it out that the procedure that was carried out in Brazil was "free" (money came from tax).
    No Heath insurance, no insane amounts of money, no debt, just universal Healthcare.

  • @waveydaveyav8r442
    @waveydaveyav8r442 8 месяцев назад +5

    I like the no-nonsense factual explanations. What's more, I love the end where you straight up called the dude out, "So he DOES have a normal life. A unique life..." No sugar coating, just honest. Nice work! You've got my sub!

  • @jeanvignes
    @jeanvignes Год назад +171

    Fifty-five years ago, I went to school with a pair of conjoined identical twins who had the most remarkable link: they were born joined by sharing one of their toes! One small surgery, and they were free. Whew!

    • @LaurenOliviArt
      @LaurenOliviArt 2 месяца назад +2

      Wow!!

    • @_Chickin_
      @_Chickin_ 9 дней назад +1

      Wow that is so lucky but also inconvenient to be combined by one toe

  • @lotteb.8304
    @lotteb.8304 Год назад +188

    There was a boy at my school who lost a large part of one of his finger because he jumped of a fence whilst his ring was stuck on the fence. They were not able to put the piece it on again. He also had his hand in his stomach for weeks to let it heal. A lot of kids saw the part of the finger that got ripped off (including me) and everyone followed the 'no climbing on the fence-' rule after that

    • @zaftigone85
      @zaftigone85 Год назад +11

      This happened to a boy at my high school who jumped to touch the exit sign up in the top of a doorway and his ring snagged and pulled his finger off with the gravity of his body coming down!

    • @dark-shadow_
      @dark-shadow_ Год назад +2

      well... i am not complaining anymore that i only lost 1 cm of my ringfinger that was cut of by a door😅

    • @arcanevi4477
      @arcanevi4477 Год назад +2

      The same happened to me but i didn't lose the finger, I just got 1w stitches and it works normally, I was very lucky

  • @luigiff3431
    @luigiff3431 8 месяцев назад +4

    9:23 an uncle of mine who lives in canada had an accident and had his hand de-gloved and they used the same method to regrow flesh and nerves on his hand, afterwards he had cosmetic surgery to reshape his fingers, today he has a normal hand, albeit a bit thicker than normal, but it functions normally

  • @louiserodrigues2069
    @louiserodrigues2069 11 месяцев назад +3

    The da Silva family is brazilian, that's why they're so wholesome, cuz we are a wholesome people

  • @livewellwitheds6885
    @livewellwitheds6885 Год назад +262

    as somebody who has met many doctors with many harmful or inaccurate views about disability [because of my disability], I love the respect & empathy Dr. Mike has and how he sees the person first before the condition

  • @jodiealamode
    @jodiealamode Год назад +462

    I had two: there was a hole in my skull where my brain water was leaking out from (cranial CSF leak) and my entire stomach moved up above my diaphragm and was crushing my lungs (paraesophageal hernia). Both were freak one-off things that are now fixed and I feel great :D

    • @saragul09261
      @saragul09261 Год назад +36

      Glad that ur better now hopefully u don’t have any other health issues in the future! :)

    • @blaizegottman4139
      @blaizegottman4139 Год назад +8

      That's good

    • @colbietrimble
      @colbietrimble Год назад +4

      I’m so glad your better!

    • @nrvyash
      @nrvyash Год назад +4

      Man u r really lucky. Wish u wont have any more problems in the future

    • @nobodyscomment929
      @nobodyscomment929 Год назад +36

      As a biomedical engineer with a specialization in tissue engineering, I will now refer to cerebrospinal fluid as brain water for the rest of my career.

  • @vincent8286
    @vincent8286 10 месяцев назад +11

    10:05 his hand looks like a mitten.

  • @kenreynolds1000
    @kenreynolds1000 Год назад +4

    Worked with a guy who had his hand reattached back in the 70's after using belly attachment to keep it alive (1st in US if I recall). Lots of reconstruction from the press-crushed bones and long term issues from some of the meds they used back then. Cut right through a tattoo that didn't quite line up after.

  • @SaikaraXeno
    @SaikaraXeno Год назад +248

    The last store honestly makes me happy, sure there was a death in the family and my heart goes out to the family. However, seeing that kid move around so much and have fun is heart warming

  • @KristenHarmala
    @KristenHarmala Год назад +176

    RIP Artur. I'm happy to see that the surviving twin, Heitor is well and is having like Doctor Mike said, a unique but normal life.

  • @Waterfairy4life156
    @Waterfairy4life156 Год назад +7

    11:25 I’m thinking about the poor mom when she gave birth

  • @Skulley_M
    @Skulley_M 11 месяцев назад +4

    I had a cockroach problem when I was a kid and everything he said about bugs in the ears was so true. It nearly drove me mad with not only the pain but the noise, best way to get them out btw is drowning them with water or saline solution and carefully pulling them out with tweezers

  • @TheREALHugo4
    @TheREALHugo4 Год назад +232

    Stomach pocket?
    This is really the first time i've seen such a case like this one. It's extremely rare to find things like these.

    • @blaizegottman4139
      @blaizegottman4139 Год назад

      Sure must be

    • @nailsofinterest
      @nailsofinterest Год назад +3

      Yeah I've seen another medical show where it was another damaged hand. They too put it into the abdomen for a while.

    • @Aurora3242
      @Aurora3242 Год назад +1

      They did something like that for my BIL, he now has use of a severe crush injury!

    • @ceeceepg
      @ceeceepg Год назад +3

      Yes. I could see why many surgeons would be uncomfortable using this technique. It seems like there would be risks with the possibility of infection and the many surgeries required. For many the possibility to save the hand might not outweigh these risks.

    • @robinhumburg1400
      @robinhumburg1400 Год назад +6

      The attaching the hand to the inside of the abdomen is a procedure my husband had at Vanderbilt more than 30 years ago after his hand was crushed in a corn picker implement. His middle finger and the back of his hand were completely gone, every bone was shattered in what remained. He let them do experimental procedures to try and save it and he regained 70% use of the hand. A lot of what they know about procedures to save a crushed hand came from that experiment.

  • @SirFoxbutt
    @SirFoxbutt Год назад +121

    Honestly, having an entire family line with 6 fingers seems really cool, it's something very unique and harmless that I think a family could be proud of, as they seem to be.

    • @massivecowbreakout7555
      @massivecowbreakout7555 9 месяцев назад +1

      The clip of one trying to play piano shows that probably won't be an option

    • @MirrimBlackfox
      @MirrimBlackfox 8 месяцев назад

      @@massivecowbreakout7555 The family has many gifted musicians, none of them seem to have a problem playing musical instruments.

  • @deBrawnyo
    @deBrawnyo 8 месяцев назад +6

    I have polydactyly on my left hand but its completely unfunctional. Really wish I could have a functional extra finger, imagine how cool that would have been

    • @Anelemahlatsi
      @Anelemahlatsi 8 месяцев назад

      Can you get it removed and would you?

    • @deBrawnyo
      @deBrawnyo 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Anelemahlatsi it was under consideration for some time, especially when I was around 18 as I was considering enlisting in the army and in my country you can't qualify for it if you have polydactyly but ultimately I decided to pursue the medical field instead. I honestly like it now, it's a good conversation starter for people and my mom always said it was a lucky charm and I have started to see it as such to be honest.

    • @Anelemahlatsi
      @Anelemahlatsi 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@deBrawnyo well that's cool hey I'd keep mone if i had one too😹, good luck in getting into the army;)

  • @PmaeB
    @PmaeB 8 месяцев назад +2

    When I was in kindergarten my best friend had a condition with her hand, everyone thought it had been very cool! On one of her hands she didn’t have any fingers, just a thumb. Sometimes when we partnered up I’d grab that hand and we both would start giggling, what a memorable year. Sadly I changed schools so I’m no longer friends with her, she was so sweet.

  • @meganhash7840
    @meganhash7840 Год назад +272

    Normally videos with this topic can feel exploitative or mean spirited, but Doctor Mike always treats people with the respect they deserve

  • @GingerThereforeNoSoul
    @GingerThereforeNoSoul Год назад +99

    Those stories of one or both conjoined twins dying after separation break my heart. You know it was far from an easy decision. They did what they thought would be the absolute best for their children, and unfortunately, complications arise.

  • @pr0xZen
    @pr0xZen 11 месяцев назад +1

    Our kindergarten is located on the edge of dense woodlands, so the kids are mostly outside all year around. But there's tons of bugs in addition to all the other weird stuff little kids manage to stuff inside their own or another kid's ears. So we paid like 20 bucks on ebay, and got this thin pen-like borescope thing. The outer inch or so is probably only 3-4 mm diameter, and houses a 720p 20-30 fps camera in the center, with a ring of led lights around it. There's barely any percievable latency on the video feed, it's wireless and connects to your phone over wifi. There's an app for easy adjustments, taking photos and videos with it, extracting single images/frames from the video feed etc. There's 2 little attachments for it. The mounting end is rigid plastic so they sit secure around the end of the camera stick, but the end is soft and widely rounded. One of them is kinda like a little spoon, and the other is kinda like tweezers.
    Using this thing we've been able to "investigate" and extract all kinds of little beads, berries, small stones, and bugs - relieving their discomfort right then and there.
    There's this old and odd fixture thing on the wall, where we've figured out a way where the kids can rest their chin on one side while leaning the side of their head on another side. Using this, if the kid jerks or moves, they can only move _away_ from the camera stick so it retracts out of their ear, never towards it.
    Sometimes whatever is inside and/or going on in there is beyond us to feel safe dealing with, and they have to see a nurse/medic, doctor or specialist. Sometimes we may be able to sort it out, but need a bit of professional guidance over the phone to do so. In both tyoes of situation, us being able to share pictures and even a live video stream with them has been tremendously valuable.
    Best 20 bucks we ever spent.

  • @_apehuman
    @_apehuman Год назад +53

    7:55
    My uncle had to undergo a surgery like this after his hand went through a rice grain separator. Doctors were able to reconstruct an arm like structure because two of his fingers were functional.He is doing fine now and can do most of the daily tasks.

    • @greengrendel
      @greengrendel 2 месяца назад

      what, like mr Spock's ears?

    • @pandapower5902
      @pandapower5902 2 месяца назад

      He had his hand in his stomach?

  • @bobd2659
    @bobd2659 Год назад +111

    The parasitic twin case really makes a good argument for 'body duplication practice surgical devices'. A replica of the patient internally and externally, as complete as possible to practice something this complex. Basically a one-off 3D model made from all scans/x-rays... It's some really cool tech.

  • @herbalgames9613
    @herbalgames9613 12 дней назад

    I like how he talks so calmly about having seen bugs in people's ears and how if you have one in your ear you can hear them. If a doctor told me, I had a bug in my ear they would need to sedate me or restrain me because I would freak out.

  • @thulema
    @thulema Год назад +4

    My mom was an ER RN who did triage and she described the patients with their hand over their ear, a look of horror and no visible bleeding. "Oh", she thought, "another victim of cockroach in the ear".

  • @reid3031
    @reid3031 Год назад +450

    I am trying to imagine finding out at the age of 11 that you are literally the only person in the country with extra legs
    Just imagine what a bizarre day that would be for the poor girl

    • @werbeagent6003
      @werbeagent6003 Год назад +103

      But honestly that's her parents' fault. You can tell your child that this trait is something unique, without making her feel like an outsider. It's just a very important information.

    • @rickwrites2612
      @rickwrites2612 Год назад +47

      ​​@@werbeagent6003 yes, I wonder if it's because of the location at the front of her pelvis that they didnt? Or just cultural norm to not discuss medical anomalies?

    • @Peatingtune
      @Peatingtune Год назад +26

      Those parents suck for letting her find out the hard way that she isn't, in fact, "normal." I hope it at least happened when she saw her classmates changing etc. and realized they didn't look like her, instead of those classmates seeing *her,* which, knowing how nasty 11 year-olds can be after years of teaching them, would have made it a very "hard way" indeed.

    • @lilyhawthorne1196
      @lilyhawthorne1196 Год назад +5

      ​@@rickwrites2612 I know in some cultures at least its a lot more accepted to just hide or not talk about certain hardships, family issues or just in general anything abnormal about them/their family.

    • @skullmax3595
      @skullmax3595 Год назад

      Jojos bizarre adventure

  • @KawaiiCat2
    @KawaiiCat2 Год назад +71

    When I was in first grade, there was a girl in my class who had six fingers I remember during recesses one time, everyone got around her and started laughing at her. I still feel sad how everyone treated her.

    • @lynnebucher6537
      @lynnebucher6537 8 месяцев назад +6

      I went to elementary school with a girl whose mom must have taken thalidomide. She had really abnormally short arms. Kids picked on her and I hated that. Susie seemed like a nice person. I've forgotten the names of almost everyone else but her.

  • @Grace-yz7tk
    @Grace-yz7tk 2 месяца назад +1

    The six finger family is actually very cool, it must be very easy to carry lots of things, it mist be very handy

  • @kericorley9387
    @kericorley9387 11 дней назад

    In 1970 our neighbor caught his hand in a printing press, ripping off his entire palm down to the tendon and bone. The surgeons attached his hand to his upper arm to grow a new palm with skin. When they removed his hand from his arm, it had freckles and red hairs on the new palm. I was six at the time. I remember all the photos too.

  • @lucyssilverlining5396
    @lucyssilverlining5396 Год назад +83

    I'm always impressed with how professional you are. You never look shocked or disgusted by any medical condition you see. Thank you for teaching us

  • @samar.k4822
    @samar.k4822 Год назад +792

    Isn't it crazy how dr mike makes everything so interesting 😅

    • @blaizegottman4139
      @blaizegottman4139 Год назад +3

      Yep

    • @sebbe_plays
      @sebbe_plays Год назад +1

      Suuuu

    • @tammymcinerney7153
      @tammymcinerney7153 Год назад +5

      He’s a doctor, of course it’s interesting 😂

    • @gayleklein7243
      @gayleklein7243 Год назад +7

      Kind of surprising he didn't mention the folded man from China. Fascinating case with extremely complex surgeries.

    • @nailsofinterest
      @nailsofinterest Год назад +2

      ​@gayleklein7243 give him the name of the show it was on. He'd probably do a reaction video!
      He's reacting to an episode of "Body Bizzare".

  • @yourmama9809
    @yourmama9809 Год назад +15

    So my mom (love you!) was diagnosed with a disease (or at least they thought) with a name I could never pronounce. (Feet started swelling and it got pretty gruesome) turns out it was just a severe allergic reaction to alcohol which she has never dealt with before until after covid. PS: she is better than ever and is in great condition

  • @anna9072
    @anna9072 3 месяца назад +1

    I once had an ant get into my ear while I was sleeping, and woke up to it pattering around on my eardrum. Dr Mike is right, it’s enough to drive you mad.

  • @purplehorseneigh
    @purplehorseneigh Год назад +58

    "The pair had to be separated as Heitor's bodyweight was pressing on Artur's spine causing him frequent pain and pressure on his internal organs."
    Found this in a news article, for those wondering why it was worth separating the two at all. Artur, the one who did not survive, have a life that was still going to be at risk even if they stayed conjoined.

    • @cbryce9243
      @cbryce9243 Год назад +7

      Thanks for looking it up. I was wondering why they separated them.

    • @TheLirJEt86
      @TheLirJEt86 Год назад +2

      Heitor was the one that didn’t have a kidney or intestines? Seemed like he would’ve had the harder surgery. Maybe I misunderstood. Crazy how life works

  • @crackerjack010101
    @crackerjack010101 Год назад +21

    As an OR nurse from a level 1 trauma facility in Texas, I’ve done many a surgery where the hand is implanted into the abdomen, it is very common. It’s about the vascular structures and sufficient skin to cover the digits/hand. Very common.

  • @Chow_min
    @Chow_min 11 месяцев назад

    Wow. What unusual cases! It’s astounding to see how many different conditions and medical issues there is.

  • @TheTF2Pianist
    @TheTF2Pianist Год назад +19

    12:06
    We all felt that, Mike. It's really sad and emotional when it's a child suffering from these deformations. I know we all felt that feeling with him.

  • @i_drew
    @i_drew Год назад +45

    Wow doc, I'm from ethiopia,addis ababa and I really liked your explanation of the case. And this surprised me,ive never heard a case like this. That is why I like to watch your videos they are educating and inspiring.thanks for all your hard work.

    • @swored.
      @swored. Год назад

      Me 2

    • @i_drew
      @i_drew Год назад

      You're from ethiopia🤗🤗🤗🤗

  • @misfitm1457
    @misfitm1457 2 месяца назад +2

    Wish Dr Mike were my Dr, omg, so much compassion and care for people. Having a personality disorder and not always being assertive, I get a lot of bs from Dr's

    • @carolbelyeu8748
      @carolbelyeu8748 Месяц назад

      I have a Dr. like that! I drive an hour and half to see him as I relocated. I have been seeing him for almost 10 years. Being in healthcare, a great primary Dr. is priceless!

  • @ProofThatINeverTouchedMyBalls
    @ProofThatINeverTouchedMyBalls 9 месяцев назад +2

    May the last kid never forget his long lost brother. RIP.

  • @PinkyPurpleGalaxy
    @PinkyPurpleGalaxy Год назад +53

    Wow the parasitic limb surgery one is amazing, glad she had a successful recovery

    • @cdes1776
      @cdes1776 Год назад

      I wonder how she feels now with the extra weight removal? And if she felt any emotional repercussions with the loss?

  • @sgtsongbird
    @sgtsongbird Год назад +48

    Your positive outlook and your unwavering support for people going through medical crises are some of the most amazing qualities I've ever seen in a person. God bless you, Doctor Mike!

  • @shaedlaer
    @shaedlaer Год назад

    As for the hand injury - a wound causing a scalping injury - removing most of skin and possibly other soft tissues of hand can require treatment like shown in the video - to let the wound heal, granulate and for soft tissues to attach to the hand that can later be used for reconstruction of a functioning hand. Sometimes it can be the only way to avoid amputation.

  • @nikkivalenzuela7832
    @nikkivalenzuela7832 Год назад +1

    Thank you for sharing these AMAZING videos & for explaining these conditions. 👍🏻👊🏻
    💜

  • @SkepticalTeacher
    @SkepticalTeacher Год назад +52

    Lovely to read the comments from people who have/have had serious issues but have recovered...Good luck to all of you! ❤️

  • @Rubygal
    @Rubygal Год назад +14

    My brother is special too! So he got a tonsilectomy when I was about 9-10 years old, but he had an extremely large blood vessel right in that area. The surgery itself and the following day and a half went fine but, he ended up in the ER the night after due to blood loss and lost about 3 LITERS of blood. The anastesiologist came to talk to my mom after the ER surgery and apperantly that's a really big deal from what I've heard. He was kept in the hospital for another day or two after that for observation. He's doing good now and actually better than he had been before, he's got about 2-3 other things along with that. He is our family's messed up medical mystery miracle!

  • @kimmcquaid8189
    @kimmcquaid8189 10 месяцев назад +1

    It's really awesome that the family with polydactyly have raised the kids who don't feel different

  • @PurpleAmharicCoffee
    @PurpleAmharicCoffee Месяц назад +1

    Glad to hear Workitu made it through.
    Her name literally means gold (or the gold, to be more specific.)

  • @celldweller1982
    @celldweller1982 Год назад +9

    9:22 Before I was born, my uncle had this happen to him, he worked for International paper, and his fingers were cut off at the knuckles, they did the same thing to have them heal.

  • @nagigachamania6936
    @nagigachamania6936 Год назад +89

    As a Brazilian I've seen all those cases on either tv or internet, and it's good to see that other people get to know that our medicine is getting better and better

    • @jannamagpie8324
      @jannamagpie8324 Год назад +4

      I was really impressed with the medical technology Brasil must have to be able to do these things. I’d never heard of that hand thing.

    • @nagigachamania6936
      @nagigachamania6936 Год назад +12

      @@jannamagpie8324 Here in Brazil we constantly talk about "winging it" and finding uncommon ways to deal with problems. So of course the doctors would find a way

    • @anaditullio
      @anaditullio Год назад +12

      E viva o nosso SUS! ❤

    • @nagigachamania6936
      @nagigachamania6936 Год назад +4

      @@anaditullio sim!

    • @Judgement_Kazzy
      @Judgement_Kazzy 10 месяцев назад +2

      Brazilian medicine adapts rapidly because you guys keep hurting yourselves double-jumping.

  • @helena_grace5
    @helena_grace5 Год назад

    Hey you mentioned CURE hospitals 🙌🙏 LOVE LOVE LOVE that organization blessing so many children❤️

  • @ViperBiotch
    @ViperBiotch 4 месяца назад

    Thank you for breaking dwn videos like this for not only are you giving us a professional opinion, ur taking an interest in doing so while breaking dwn certain video's & shows which I appreciate & am grateful for.❤😊

    • @mz.fabulous17
      @mz.fabulous17 Месяц назад

      In my opinion, his talking was a bit excessive.

  • @JNL76
    @JNL76 Год назад +20

    the story of the man with the crushed hand reminded me of my grandfather. He worked at a Ford factory and his hands where partly crushed in a machine there, leaving him with only a few fingers left. As kids we loved how creepy they looked and he always joked with us abour them. But now as an adult, I often think how difficult it must have been for him to lose them.

  • @cherylhoggins1925
    @cherylhoggins1925 Год назад +46

    So, I have a medical condition that isn't extreme but it's incredibly rare (read newly discovered and therefore likely, underdiagnosed) called LPAC Syndrome. It was discovered in France and is a genetic condition where your body doesn't create enough of the enzyme needed to break down cholesterol leading to a build-up of "calcules" (Like stones) in the liver and gall bladder. It can't be seen on a regular Echography (ultrasound) but needs to be looked for by someone specifically trained for it. The reason I mention it is because I am 41 now and have led my whole life in pain, and discomfort and passed from one doctor to the next for all kinds of digestive complaints which led to some pretty intense anxiety. Someone else could be saved from the frustration and pain by learning that this condition exists and being treated for it.
    It's not curable but it can be managed. Anyway... a great video and thanks! :)

  • @CerinAmroth
    @CerinAmroth Год назад +1

    The Heitor and Arthur case. It was a national commotion when they when into the separation surgery

  • @benjaminworkman9648
    @benjaminworkman9648 2 месяца назад

    Doctor Mike is so down to earth which makes his videos just that much better!

  • @gamermike24
    @gamermike24 Год назад +16

    The 6 fingers family has me jealous 😅
    As a gamer, an extra finger would help me cover more buttons, but it's wholesome that they treat it as a gift of sorts. It just looks like they're growing an extra hand out of their hands, except for the piano part... I already have arachnophobia

  • @rigelv5018
    @rigelv5018 Год назад +25

    The way Dr. Mike is explaining complex cases like these in layman's terms is so cool, even therapeutic for me. I could just listen to medical topics for days if Dr. Mike's the one talking about them.

    • @sofie..dancerxgymnast
      @sofie..dancerxgymnast Год назад

      most people just go on and on and on about stuff that people wont understajnd. he does an amazing job of making it so that people want to listen to him talk, and talking about things in a way that is soothing and interesting. truly a special person.

  • @Timesend
    @Timesend 10 месяцев назад +3

    9:46 this is absolutely madness

  • @alden1132
    @alden1132 Месяц назад +1

    That kid with polydactyly should be playing piano at a prestigious musical academy...

  • @fnuemran4497
    @fnuemran4497 Год назад +19

    1:25 1000 ants has been removed thats crazy😲

  • @ellie8461
    @ellie8461 Год назад +11

    8:00 one of my cousins recently had an accident exactly like this but at a packaging factory. They sewed his hand into his stomach for a few days/weeks while it healed a bit because it was so mangled. He was more than relieved to finally undergo his first surgery and not have his hand stuck to his stomach 😅 his mom said he sat for hours with his hands up in the air just because he could.

  • @peggyschambow2603
    @peggyschambow2603 Год назад

    Stomach Pocket: I was in a car accident where my hand was crushed, and the skin and tissue covering my hand was torn off, leaving tendons and bones exposed. I had a pedicle skin graft for 22 days. This surgery was performed after plates and screws were used to piece my broken bones together. 24 years later I still have the use of my hand and arm. I can’t imagine what this man is going through!

  • @sherylsardido6040
    @sherylsardido6040 2 месяца назад +1

    That guy with a stomach pocket is the real life steve inventory space💀

  • @ameliakkkk
    @ameliakkkk Год назад +36

    It must be a great and scary challenge for medical professionals to see such unique cases and conditions they have never worked with, and still decide to treat them. Much respect to the brave doctors and nurses !

  • @titansaint
    @titansaint Год назад +13

    6:11 i used to make those exact blankets all the time! i'd spend time in the hospital making some and send them out to all sorts of places, including Ethiopia. a friend even made one for me and surprised me with it before i had my gallbladder removed. it makes me tear up seeing that they are used and loved.

  • @putthefuinfun1947
    @putthefuinfun1947 Месяц назад +1

    I've had a pt that lost his hand to the wrist in a meat grinder, and we created an anastamosis from his wrist to his abdomen so his arm was sutured in place x 2 weeks to create new skin to use as a flao to cover the exposed carpals/muscles.

  • @yeti4269
    @yeti4269 Год назад +2

    8:22 I have my own story where they gave me the choice to either chop off the tip of my finger, or get a cadaver put in to heal it. I went with the latter lol

  • @brooksbrooks545
    @brooksbrooks545 4 месяца назад

    I'm a new subscriber I love your video's sometimes I don't come to watch for the information (all Though it's helpful) I come for the funny and lovable content you make. Also a Happy new year

  • @BunnyNorris
    @BunnyNorris Год назад +78

    Poor Dr. Mike looks so exhausted in this video. Thanks for toughing it out to bring us these amazing medical cases.

  • @chielvandenberg8190
    @chielvandenberg8190 Год назад +53

    2:25 the gene for 6 fingers IS actually dominant, it’s just really really rare

    • @caarlosss_-8836
      @caarlosss_-8836 Год назад +19

      @@caitlyncarvalho7637 Dominant means that it will always be the phenotype when paired with another recessive, or another dominant allele. Dominant traits can be rare because they may not show up as often in the gene pool as recessive traits, whether it be due to natural selection, or just in the way humans evolved.

    • @ngotemna8875
      @ngotemna8875 Год назад +7

      ​@@caarlosss_-8836 Plus dominant traits do not necessarily get passed down to the next generation if the mutation is only found on one of the two alleles. (you get one set from your mum and one from your dad, so chances are that the mutated allele isn't given to you)
      Or if it's specific to the X or Y chromosome
      (if it's only found on the Y chromosome for example, then women in the family won't ever get it)

    • @cassandrabelyeu2419
      @cassandrabelyeu2419 Год назад +3

      @@caitlyncarvalho7637 Dominant means that you have two copies of the gene for this trait, and only one gene is used.
      For example, if you have one gene for blue eyes and one gene for brown eyes, your eyes will be brown because the brown gene is dominant over the blue eye gene, but your children could get a blue-eyed gene from you.
      Similarly, if you have a gene for five fingers per hand, and a gene for six, you will have six fingers.
      The gene for six fingers is dominant over the gene for five fingers, so it wins.

    • @sleepyninjarin7971
      @sleepyninjarin7971 Год назад

      @@ngotemna8875 Caarloss understands genetics already...

    • @MinnieMouse8270262
      @MinnieMouse8270262 Год назад

      @@cassandrabelyeu2419 that’s not accurate you can have two copies of the dominant allele. In the case of brown vs blue or green eyes it’s because the brown allele is coding for a higher production of melanin, so it overrides the blue allele (blue eyes look blue because they have less melanin).

  • @ravengreen3687
    @ravengreen3687 Год назад +1

    I love the attitude, Doc! "Maybe uniquie, but a normal life!" ❤

  • @POLmusic173
    @POLmusic173 Год назад +1

    man, dr mike never stops making videos on stuff i never knew existed.

  • @lunasquib
    @lunasquib Год назад +11

    2:51 petting with 6 fingers would be so good for dogs

  • @kyrauniversal
    @kyrauniversal Год назад +51

    If I were in the conjoined twins situation, and my twin died. I don't think I could forgive whoever chose to do it, even if it was me. That boy is strong through each struggle he goes through. He lost his other half, yet he is trying to be himself.

    • @oceaneo4603
      @oceaneo4603 Год назад +4

      No adults have a cristal bowl. Life would be too easy that way. 🤷

  • @MissyMagoo87
    @MissyMagoo87 2 месяца назад

    My dad was one of the first handful of people to have his hand sewn into his abdomen in the 80s in Canada. His right hand was burnt so severely, his fingers split apart, and you could see bone. He's had a functional hand, though, and went on to become a millwright then an electrician. He retired last year.

  • @OneTrueScotsman
    @OneTrueScotsman Год назад

    The last case broke my heart. Poor boy who died. Poor brother who lost his twin. Nature can sometimes be so cruel.

  • @RinChan82
    @RinChan82 Год назад +9

    0:58 The tiniest little gnat crawled into my ear when I was camping and it was scuttling around on my eardrum. Sounded like something huge was in my ear (I had no idea it was tiny until it came out). I was an absolute mess. I literally thought it would drive me insane. Can't imagine what ants would sound and feel like in there!