First Day of Interventional Radiology

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2024

Комментарии • 762

  • @moiragoree892
    @moiragoree892 Год назад +1560

    I am seeing the moment when interventional radiology drops the lead vest like Goku's weighted clothing and goes full radioactive super doctor

    • @DGlaucomflecken
      @DGlaucomflecken  Год назад +279

      😂😂😂

    • @michaelb1478
      @michaelb1478 Год назад +27

      Dang I just posted this. Didn’t see you beat me to it. 😂

    • @fcturner
      @fcturner Год назад +47

      Confirmed that Dr G knows DBZ! I can now safely go to sleep.

    • @Sydd787
      @Sydd787 Год назад +15

      KAAA... MEEEEE....
      HAAAAAAaarnessing the collective power of all the particle accelerators that are used to make the radionuclides...
      MEEEE...
      HAAAAAAAAAAA🤚:
      And the neurologist's sacred holier than thou neurotranmitters that diffuse faster than the average human get blown off from his synaptic clefts, and he instantly goes to being a normal person who does not have RBF. He has been defeated.

    • @QuickdrawMcGraw360
      @QuickdrawMcGraw360 10 месяцев назад +1

      Right?! As if Dr. G can't get any cooler!@@fcturner

  • @30FSch
    @30FSch Год назад +2599

    That “YES” without any hessitation at the idea of the neurologist getting wrecked was just gold

    • @kristinpraus1600
      @kristinpraus1600 Год назад +29

      That part gave me such joy!

    • @LavLightKnight
      @LavLightKnight Год назад +79

      The moment he he said neurologist I shouted yes. I have nothing to do with doctors and never seen one, I’m just really invested in the lore at this point

    • @miak4006
      @miak4006 Год назад +3

      ​@@LavLightKnight You've never seen a doctor in your life?

    • @LavLightKnight
      @LavLightKnight Год назад +13

      @@miak4006 Never seen a Neurologist

    • @Maco_7075
      @Maco_7075 Год назад +31

      As a neurologist, sometimes I wonder why people wants to kick our asses so much. We just like to deliver suffering and imposter syndrome wherever we go

  • @thatalienguy1472
    @thatalienguy1472 Год назад +2493

    I would say "poor Bill", but I suspect he graduated med school just fine, became an ophthalmologist, and then started doing comedy on youtube. Now Bill gets the last laugh.

    • @JuMiKu
      @JuMiKu Год назад +131

      He dropped out of it all, took a vow of silence, became a scribe and is secretly planning to- er I mean is the best help anyone could ever wish for.

    • @homerman76
      @homerman76 Год назад +35

      ​@@JuMiKu Did he change his name to Jonathan too, or did he just make a huge mistake in the process 🤔

    • @JuMiKu
      @JuMiKu Год назад +38

      @@homerman76 Well to be fair, if you were called Bill Bill wouldn't you get it changed as soon as you could?

    • @Lucasp110
      @Lucasp110 Год назад +26

      Well, doc's name is William Flannery so...

    • @KristenRowenPliske
      @KristenRowenPliske Год назад +18

      Bill is another nickname for William, just like Will….🤔

  • @DyingStarr
    @DyingStarr Год назад +3009

    Love your vids. If anyone cares, we don't usually wear head protection because the brain is fairly insensitive to radiation (though lead caps do exist). We should still wear eye protection to protect the lens of the eye, which is one of the most radiosensitive parts of the body.

    • @TheFaroe
      @TheFaroe Год назад +188

      Up you go. Always love the input of pros.

    • @Alexden96Channel
      @Alexden96Channel Год назад +270

      Ophthalmologist: * heavy breathing intensifies *

    • @rayzerot
      @rayzerot Год назад +105

      I'm not going to ask how we know the level of radiation sensitivity brains possess

    • @Zeixeed
      @Zeixeed Год назад +134

      ​​@@rayzerot probably because when a person is exposed to high doses of radiation they noticed that some organs are more likely to get cancer than others

    • @micheleparker3780
      @micheleparker3780 Год назад +21

      We ALL care...🙃

  • @lowtzechien5308
    @lowtzechien5308 Год назад +2706

    Interventional Radiologist wearing lead everywhere is the strongest person in the hospital, possibly on par or even stronger than Orthopedics. Cardiology, Vascular and Neurology stand no chance against him

    • @yellowpop406
      @yellowpop406 Год назад +326

      He's secretly wearing it so he can take off his lead during a fight like Rock Lee

    • @ChristinaVasilevski
      @ChristinaVasilevski Год назад +94

      Plus, he's got built in armor!

    • @lowtzechien5308
      @lowtzechien5308 Год назад +75

      I can already imagine Interventional Radiologist wearing the lead suit into the fighting ring and Cardiology, Vascular and Neurology protesting

    • @nellyb743
      @nellyb743 Год назад +74

      IR really pulling a Goku and training with weighted clothes 😂

    • @JamesThatcher
      @JamesThatcher Год назад +30

      Nope..
      Not Ortho... Never Ortho

  • @harnutvlad7662
    @harnutvlad7662 Год назад +3546

    Legend says interventional radiologists wear lead when they eat bananas

    • @gauravsinghrathore9485
      @gauravsinghrathore9485 Год назад +106

      banana a day keeps tge radiologist away

    • @NadirAgha
      @NadirAgha Год назад

      Come on. You must know, that external lead protection won't protect you from ingested radioactive potassium. Obviously, he covers banana with lead and then eats it

    • @lancerhalsey4816
      @lancerhalsey4816 Год назад +66

      Oh no internal exposure

    • @Jake-lo2uj
      @Jake-lo2uj Год назад

      Lead condoms for the banana

    • @kaushalsuvarna5156
      @kaushalsuvarna5156 Год назад +2

      😂

  • @yellowpop406
    @yellowpop406 Год назад +410

    The amount of excitement in that "yes" 100% confirms my suspicion that you've had a deeply traumatic experience with neurology

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Год назад +38

      Have you not seen the neurologist? He's almost as bad as the neurosurgeon

    • @fayedelacruz21
      @fayedelacruz21 Год назад +13

      I bet Bill would've wanted to watch too

    • @johannageisel5390
      @johannageisel5390 Год назад +17

      WHERE? IS? THE LESION???

    • @Ljoyner97
      @Ljoyner97 Год назад +10

      Who doesn't have deep rooted neurology trauma? I'm a patient and would love to watch that fight. The interventional radiology part of my care team is awesome. Neurology? Not so much, especially since they won't cooperate with anyone else who does my care and are really rude/mean*.
      *obviously not all neurologists are mean, but my neurologist won't do anything about the problems I was sent for or testing solely because aparebtly being a victim of sexual assault apparently means I'm faking my ... genetic medical conditions.

    • @AutumnTehKitty
      @AutumnTehKitty Год назад +2

      ​@@Ljoyner97Wow, that's an amazingly unhelpful doctor. Best of luck, and I hope things get better.

  • @spearman792
    @spearman792 Год назад +210

    Sure IR has been recognized as its own primary medical specialty for over a decade, but only now that we've been included in the Glaucomflecken Universe does it feel truly official! And a suggestion for the costume: ditch the tinted sunglasses (we're not afraid of the light) and throw on some sporty lead glasses

    • @nickt513
      @nickt513 Год назад +11

      Maybe have the lead glasses under the tinted ones. A lot of the IR docs I work with (I’m a PA) still do diagnostics here and there.

    • @rlrvir
      @rlrvir Год назад +11

      Maybe wear a necklace of radiation badges

  • @sososhru4478
    @sososhru4478 Год назад +908

    New lore just dropped: The OB/GYN is the wifey of Inverventional Radiologist.

    • @lagomoof
      @lagomoof Год назад +186

      It's more likely that the doctors' wives all look suspiciously similar, the same way the doctors do. Ob/Gyn looks and her wife look like they could be sisters. It freaks people out.

    • @suryat5785
      @suryat5785 Год назад +171

      @@lagomoof the Glaucomfleckenverse suffers from Nurse Joy syndrome I see

    • @BlackCanary87
      @BlackCanary87 Год назад +75

      I hope the OBGYN also has a wife who looks just like her 😂

    • @dianna3157
      @dianna3157 Год назад +33

      I had to see if anyone else commented about that photo already. 😂 I'm looking forward to when ALL the doctors find out that they're married to the same OB/GYN. Me thinks she's going to have some 'splainin to do. LOL
      I ❤ Dr & Dr G/AKA Dr & Mrs Flanary. 😊

    • @kellyburds2991
      @kellyburds2991 Год назад +11

      ​@@BlackCanary87 I personally hope OB/GYN's wife looks like MDJ.

  • @Beckserella
    @Beckserella Год назад +249

    How can two towels look so much like the actual lead our interventional radiologists wear??? This is pure genius.

    • @tiobe73
      @tiobe73 Год назад +20

      thx for this comment, I didnt even notice that it was just towels... I thought Dr Glauc just "borrowed" a lead garb for the skit

    • @derkazar7145
      @derkazar7145 Год назад +32

      I think it's the wanky colors. They always look like they want to do some iradiating at a childrens birthday party.

  • @ShakeyBox
    @ShakeyBox Год назад +94

    I know so little about medicine, and yet there are still jokes in here for me.
    Thank you for your multi-layered comedy.

  • @katiem2347
    @katiem2347 Год назад +45

    Aww. I love that ending, where Interventional Radiology realized Med Student was feeling left and invited him to come along. It was a sweet ending.

  • @hotshamesatsuma7942
    @hotshamesatsuma7942 Год назад +299

    "you know i'm gonna be kicking the neurologists ass in a few minutes you wanna come watc-"
    " *YES* "

  • @dr.floridamanphd
    @dr.floridamanphd Год назад +51

    Dr Bill Bill! Glad to see him again! We need an update on Bill

    • @victorfcastro
      @victorfcastro Год назад +8

      bill looks sharper and less desperate. pray for this man

    • @_Ekaros
      @_Ekaros Год назад +1

      Alive, but still dead inside...

    • @dr.floridamanphd
      @dr.floridamanphd Год назад

      @@_Ekaros that’s the most accurate description of Dr Bill 😂

  • @adambaszak7560
    @adambaszak7560 Год назад +66

    In Glaucomflecken universe there were already doctors of various specialties, there were nurses and now I am asking on behalf of the paramedics community that they should also be included in this universe

    • @MariA-jh1tr
      @MariA-jh1tr Год назад +10

      As a CT Tech, on behalf of the rad tech community I feel we should be included as well 🎉

    • @micheleparker3780
      @micheleparker3780 Год назад +4

      They are; usually in connection with the ER docs...

    • @meganofsherwood3665
      @meganofsherwood3665 Год назад +10

      Crossover with Fire Department Chronicles, please!

    • @pointstill3755
      @pointstill3755 Год назад +3

      YES! Medics! And Fire Chronicles colab; PERFECT!
      ~medic 😊

    • @clarewhite3004
      @clarewhite3004 Год назад

      Respiratory respiratory respiratoryyy

  • @TheDarkPreacher65
    @TheDarkPreacher65 Год назад +291

    The Neurologist is gonna get a lesson from the Interventional Radiologist like Gaara when Rock Lee took off the weights. (Lead is heavy, kids.)

    • @RafaelMonteiroMaia
      @RafaelMonteiroMaia Год назад +12

      Yeah, but... Didn't Gaara still win that fight?

    • @samuellanghus1455
      @samuellanghus1455 Год назад

      @@RafaelMonteiroMaia Perhaps, but are you implying that the Neurologist keeps a vessel of an overprotective demon on standby that absolutely rips opponents a new one when he lets it loose?
      Of course not!

      _That’s Ophthalmology._

    • @sakurakiyori
      @sakurakiyori Год назад +11

      ​@@RafaelMonteiroMaiaDoes the Neurologist have a cranky tanuki made of just a ridiculous amount of chakra hanging out in his body?
      Because that's why Gaara won.

    • @cyanofelis
      @cyanofelis Год назад +5

      ​​@@sakurakiyoritanukis get their power from their big testicles, so maybe the neurologist has a hydrocoele or something.

    • @randoprior4130
      @randoprior4130 Год назад +1

      Why reference Naruto here instead of DBZ? Come on now.

  • @fademusic1980
    @fademusic1980 Год назад +134

    This is some of your best work doc! As a vascular scrub tech i honestly responded "been there done that" to "how do you feel about watching doctors squirt contrast while standing for hours on end"
    Also spot on about the lead and lack of brain protection. Sure hope i dont get brain cancer after all that fluoroscopy HO HO!

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад +16

      yeeeep, as a radiographer big fat same. I'm only there because legally someone who knows about radiation protction has to be. oh, and so the radiologist has someone to open his packs... as for the brain protection you'll be fine, the brain isn't very sensitive to radiation. The eyes though...

    • @Just1Nora
      @Just1Nora Год назад +2

      ​@@katierasburn9571 Okay, new fear unlocked! I've had as much radiation as probably three people due to my chronic illnesses.

    • @xxMurmaiderxx
      @xxMurmaiderxx Год назад +3

      If you look up a tissue weighting factor table, you'll see that the brain tissue is as sensitive as skin for long-term effects, which is as close to zero as you can get when it comes to radiation.

    • @fademusic1980
      @fademusic1980 Год назад +5

      @@katierasburn9571 my eyes are getting worse. damn it. I thought it was just my non dominant eye getting weaker but I will go get it checked out now

  • @dr.albekhan8640
    @dr.albekhan8640 Год назад +1410

    That radiologist was actually cool. I remember when I first got into a fluoroscopy room without lead. The radiologist shouted, "Stupid! Get out! 😡"
    I ran away 😅

    • @yonpark6245
      @yonpark6245 Год назад +137

      The fool who gowns up before putting on lead gets to buy bagels for the suite. This is the second law of Interventional Radiology. First law is DON'T LET GO OF THE WIRE.

    • @floatingblaze8405
      @floatingblaze8405 Год назад +34

      @@yonpark6245 I'm afraid to ask, but... what is the wire and what happens if you let go of it?

    • @yonpark6245
      @yonpark6245 Год назад +130

      @@floatingblaze8405 the wire is the basis for the Seldinger technique, where the wire is used to swap out the access needle, then progressively larger catheters and sheaths until you get to the width of catheter you need to do your procedure. If one lets go of the wire, one loses access, but worse, the wire travels to places like the pulmonary arteries or if one is super unlucky, to en end organ like a limb or brain. The wire has to be fished out. The wire-letter-goer will never see the inside of an IR suite again if not an attending already.

    • @stephenc4790
      @stephenc4790 Год назад +17

      This happened in regular fluoro, not IR fluoro. One of my classmates was messing around with the controls and accidentally blasted the RPA who was in the room doing something.

    • @hvymtal8566
      @hvymtal8566 Год назад +21

      Fortunately when I did my AEMT cath lab clinical one of the nurses made sure to give me the lay of the land and provide a loaner set of lead

  • @Tantejuju65
    @Tantejuju65 Год назад +68

    My late Mom was a nurse for over 45 yrs. Served stateside during WWII, spent her career in a local but forward thinking Catholic hospital. She would have ADORED YOU!!!

  • @Vanessa-ql8tc
    @Vanessa-ql8tc Год назад +36

    Turf wars are for real...a lot of departments have shirts with dept flair on them and it's like west side story around here

  • @javiercastro4561
    @javiercastro4561 Год назад +51

    As someone who works in Radiology, this is Fire!

  • @billmyke746
    @billmyke746 Год назад +55

    A Neurologist beat down, I would enjoy watching that as well.

  • @nickryckx7817
    @nickryckx7817 Год назад +42

    Medical physicist in radiology here. This struck home on so many levels. I had to share this one with my colleagues! 😂

  • @JimYeats
    @JimYeats Год назад +43

    I love being in the cafeteria when IR/radiology shows up. It’s like a gang of pale vampires. My next thought is that I won’t get any reads for another 30 minutes.

  • @anaygupta4312
    @anaygupta4312 Год назад +454

    Interventional radiologist is about to get first hand experience of neurologist's jiu-jitsu😇

    • @michaelkolesnik350
      @michaelkolesnik350 Год назад +54

      And one of the 20 ways he can kill someone with a reflex hammer

    • @danisrusski6297
      @danisrusski6297 Год назад +50

      You forget that interventional radiologist probably has lead bars inside the boxing gloves...

    • @DemonicNightmare
      @DemonicNightmare Год назад +21

      @@danisrusski6297 The gloves themselves are just lead-lined.

    • @danikahicks2210
      @danikahicks2210 Год назад +10

      Neurology is about to be Rock Lee'd by Interventional Radiology.

    • @danikahicks2210
      @danikahicks2210 Год назад +2

      Oops my bad. Ment to reply to the post above yours.

  • @choco_easty
    @choco_easty Год назад +34

    As a new IR graduate, I thank you for doing a skit about the field that I love!

    • @farazalam538
      @farazalam538 Год назад +2

      As an IR aspirant, it actually sounded scary

    • @mysterytube6548
      @mysterytube6548 Год назад

      ​@@farazalam538yeah...do we get cancer soon 😢

  • @hyperflares2879
    @hyperflares2879 Год назад +12

    I remember my first contrast with radioactive agent.
    "Why aren't you wearing lead?"
    'because i'm the victim here.'
    "Good, you know your role."

  • @ItsJennNotJenny
    @ItsJennNotJenny Год назад +31

    Interventional radiologists are amazing! Mine took me seriously and found my may thurner syndrome after being dismissed so many times. I see her for my follow up after having a venogram done next week, I'm totally showing her this. 😂

  • @mariarafaelnevaliza4173
    @mariarafaelnevaliza4173 Год назад +67

    I absolutely don't understand a thing about this vid but I love that Bill is here❤❤

  • @jenamyallen
    @jenamyallen Год назад +14

    Your stories are way better than any ER or Grey's Anatomy. I love each and every one of your peoples.❤

  • @HappyCat3096
    @HappyCat3096 Год назад +18

    At my last surgery I was lying on the table in nothing but a hospital gown and my doctor said out loud "Is everybody wearing lead?" and I am thinking "Uh oh, I'm not wearing lead."

  • @TibkiT
    @TibkiT Год назад +25

    My one and only experience with an IR doc was almost entirely him saying "there's an extremely small chance the bolus'll dislodge and end up bouncing into your spinal cord and leave you paralyzed but really it's a super small chance it'll never happen", only to see an irl ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ face in response. I like this guy better. Love your videos!!

    • @taliag09
      @taliag09 Год назад +1

      Haha yeahhhh I have a Rad like that, he doesn't really smile though so he just scares people lol. We once did a thrombin injection (it causes a clot in a pseudoaneurysm) and he just calmly looks at the patient and goes, "ok, when I do this it might cause a blood clot to go down your leg and you'll need surgey to get it removed, but I've only seen it once in 20 years" but the way he said it was so foreboding you could tell the lady was terrified. Dude has no bedside manner lol

    • @barsxsalicia
      @barsxsalicia 8 месяцев назад

      @@taliag09many radiologists have no people skills.

  • @chua95
    @chua95 Год назад +21

    This is so on point. Great job dr. G! Please update on our "beloved" neurologist's condition post the turf war

  • @michaelsinaie7814
    @michaelsinaie7814 Год назад +17

    We need a part 2 of that endovascular showdown in the physician lounge

  • @poloortiz3864
    @poloortiz3864 Год назад +29

    Can you please do a "the radiologist visits rural medicine". The radiologist can then meet Texaco Mike and navigate through a low-tech farming community.

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад

      he probably knows about it already, someones gotta report those scans!

    • @xxMurmaiderxx
      @xxMurmaiderxx Год назад +7

      "Pull it up on PACS for me"
      "What is PACS? Here's our film library, we just hang it over a window when the sun hits it just right"
      "You don't have DR equipment?"
      "You mean that new age stuff? We bring the film to the local wally world to have it developed"

  • @natalietwattily9770
    @natalietwattily9770 Год назад +70

    Back in the 90s, my dentist would flop a lead shield on my chest telling me that I had to cover my heart for x-rays - after smacking my face on the bottom of a swimming pool age 12, I had several years of several x-rays a week having my mouth reconstructed in the most haphazard manner (I now have some permanent abscesses that make getting work done now heavy going as new dentists are terrified of disturbing them and unleashing the currently encapsulated infections).
    Needless to say, boom, thyroid cancer a few years later. Those x-rays don't fuck around!!
    I don't believe in suing the NHS because that takes money that could have been used to save lives, and the NHS did save mine by shucking my thyroid out like an oyster and feeding me radioactive iodine (then keeping me in isolation for a few days - best days of my life, so peaceful, no people except lovely nurses popping by to yeet food through my door whilst kitted out in lead suits, and the Christie Hospital's cheese and onion pie is out of this world), so I think we're even!
    I'm gagging for a Dr G Endocrinology, no matter where I go for hospital appointments, someone looks at my file and gets excited over my endocrinologist because apparently he's a total dude that challenges everyone to tennis matches, and I'd love to know if that's universal.

    • @xxMurmaiderxx
      @xxMurmaiderxx Год назад +5

      Dental xrays are extremely low dose and thyroid cancer takes over 10 years to develop from a radiation event, also contrary to what Dr. Oz told the world, the Thyroid is one of the least radiosensitive organs in the body. That was almost certainly a very tragic coincidence :(

    • @natalietwattily9770
      @natalietwattily9770 Год назад +6

      @@xxMurmaiderxx Actually, that still adds up - my dentist was *seriously* incompetent***, I mean we're talking usually a minimum of about 5 x-rays a week for several years, so probably hundreds of unprotected x-rays that were directed downwards from the front of the face (he'd mostly point the machine down at a sharp angle from the top of my right front tooth as that one had the most going on with it) on an adolescent thyroid, then when I found my cancer at age 35 (so 20 years after the most intensive of treatment was winding down), I was stuck with it for another year before I finally had it out because the GP I was with refused to examine the area.
      This was despite my clearly stating that I had a rock solid lump on the bottom left side of my thyroid that moved with my trachea when I swallowed and was slightly visible externally at that point (which should have set off alarm bells for even a newb GP) - she prodded my submandibular glands, declared there to be nothing there, then when I pointed out she'd examined nowhere near my thyroid said she'd refer me for a scan to "shut me up". She then put it down as being such a low priority that rather than the 2 weeks maximum that you're meant to be seen at hospital for lumps, it was a year before I got an ultrasound appointment, by which point it had grown big enough for people to keep saying "ew what's that?" to me in public. I do not like people. Luckily whilst I knew that it was most likely thyroid cancer, I also knew that it's usually a slow grower, so I was mostly just pissed off rather than frightened.
      When they took the first half of my thyroid, it came out as a follicular variant papillary thyroid carcinoma, T2 (28mm IIRC), partially encapsulated, both capsular and vascular invasion were apparently "extensive" (although I never got to see for myself, which was quite frustrating for me as I like to lay eyes on such things) and had a little friend in the form of a further 2mm tumour in the isthmus. When I had the second half removed after cancer has finally been confirmed, it turned out I had two further tumours of 4mm and 2mm squirrelled away in that side as well, so it was pretty well established, probably a minimum of about 7 or 8 years. I hate not having a thyroid because life after thyroidectomy sucks, but do love having a kick arse scar like the Kurgan from Highlander.
      ***(I'll try to keep it short to spare you the boredom of the entire shitshow that was my dentist's attempts at dentistry, but there was just SO MUCH wrong you wouldn't believe it - I was having that many dental appointments that my school kicked off at my parents about me missing school to allow the Ned Flanders looking arsehole to massacre my teeth, they threatened to involve the social on the grounds of truancy, it was quite the brouhaha! Said oral massacre included capping the broken ones with bits of melted plastic folded over the breaks rather than actual caps so it looked like I'd stuck Chiclets on my teeth ((which would last until I ate or my brother punched me in the face, both of which were an unavoidable and very regular part of life growing up, then immediately drop off and leave the unfilled root canal holes about to be mentioned open to getting food and plaque in them)) unnecessary root canals, teeth turning black like a geisha's due to said root canals and not being sealed, many, many infections, 🎼🎵🎶 several abscesses at the same tiiiiiiime🎶🎵🎼 ((I already have 3 leaking heart valves, so I'm certain that those infections are going to completely screw my heart one day)), then the eventual grinding the remainder of the teeth down to nubbins, which was when the years of ill-fitting crowns started. He'd be so heavy handed with the tooth moulds that he'd wobble them, causing the tooth impression to be twice as wide as the teeth really were, making them not only sharp at the back, uncomfortable, and impossible to keep clean, but also hella unstable as they weren't supported by anything else in the mouth. So, they'd fall out almost as regularly as the plastic would drop off, taking the posts out with them, and lead to yet more repeated visits for him to wick out general mouth gubbins, plus, often the pus from the permanent dental abscesses that he'd so kindly gifted me - yet again making several x-rays each visit to see if he'd done enough wicking, then I'd have to go back the next week to have the crowns popped off again and yet more wicking and x-raying... I believe he must have got his degree from a box of cornflakes, especially since he thought a lead thyroid shield had to go over your heart, which as you say that dental x-rays are quite weak and the heart, a muscle, that's much further away just doesn't make sense!! Imagine my surprise when I finally saw a different dentist who made me proper crowns that actually fit properly and didn't drop out at the drop of a hat - I could finally eat an apple that hadn't been diced (not sliced, it had to be diced to prevent any pressure going on the front teeth) and was told that there was no way my teeth should have been left in a state where they died and turned black, which is sad because they were one of the things I was horribly bullied about at school!!)

    • @jennysmeaton6911
      @jennysmeaton6911 Год назад +2

      So sorry to hear of your thyroid cancer. I too am a PTC survivor after thyroidectomy. And yes, life without a thyroid definitely sucks!! NEVER gonna get those thyroxine levels right! 🙄

    • @xxMurmaiderxx
      @xxMurmaiderxx Год назад +1

      @@natalietwattily9770 Oh okay gotcha. You said a few years so I assumed like 3-5 years. 20 years later could do it. 300-400 dental xrays could be equivalent to a single CT scan which could definitely be the source of cancer, especially after 20 years or so.

    • @natalietwattily9770
      @natalietwattily9770 Год назад +3

      @@jennysmeaton6911 @Jenny Smeaton hello fellow zipperneck!! Sorry that you also were affected, clearly, all the cool kids are developing it!!
      I read a few years back that as well as currently seeing a sharp uptick in cases, thyroid cancer has one of the highest survival rates (as you'll be familiar with!), BUT officially has the lowest quality of life for survivors, quite the juxtaposition! I know a lot of people with hypothyroidism, but even having a thyroid doing *something* (just not a lot of it) is better than nothing at all, you never realise just how much your thyroid does until it's gone.
      I have an identical twin sister, so I can look at her and get a decent idea of just how much the whole thing affected my appearance as she is in possession of one lovely, entire thyroid all of her own. I've tried to get her to share, but she wasn't having any of it. One thing that has really surprised me is I've easily got 3 times more grey hairs than my sister - although I suppose that my now much thinner, brittler hair might make the greys "pop" more because there's less for them to hide in! I'm also super jealous of her not thinning hair, not dry, itchy, and flakey skin, nails that don't flake off, abundance of energy, and lack of brain farts.
      You also end up having to learn how to be a better advocate for yourself and be stubborn with your GP, because for some reason, not only do they struggle to understand that you have to keep your TSH suppressed afterwards (so whilst your endocrinologist will be thrilled with a TSH of 0.1, your GP gets the bloods from the hospital sent through, kaks themselves, and immediately start trying to reduce your levothyroxine. They'll tell you that they're a doctor so know what it should be, and you can only sit there thinking "but you clearly don't!!" It's like Groundhog Day), isn't it?

  • @ckwkta88
    @ckwkta88 Год назад +16

    In my centre we do wear our lead caps and goggles too, there's a study on interventionists (radio, cardio) that showed if they did get a brain tumour - most of the time it's on the left. The radiation source is usually to our left for most procedures. Goggles is sort of compulsory as the lens are radiation sensitive, unless we wanna see our eye bros more often.

  • @weeklyfont
    @weeklyfont Год назад +18

    lost it at the vacation photo

  • @ethanwinckler7301
    @ethanwinckler7301 Год назад +9

    I worked with an interventional radiologist as an MA for a year and a half before getting into medical school. This had me dying of laughter!

  • @armynurseshark
    @armynurseshark Год назад +11

    My husband’s IR was just like this! He also said that he loved motorcyclists because they helped keep him in business. Yep.

  • @ToastyMozart
    @ToastyMozart Год назад +11

    The Neurologist thought he could take him, but little did he realize the Radiologist's boxing gloves also had lead in them.

  • @temi8087
    @temi8087 Год назад +25

    "I'm gonna be kicking the neurologist's ass in a few minutes, you wanna come watch?"
    *YES, YES, A THOUSAND TIMES, YES*

  • @tomboolla
    @tomboolla Год назад +28

    Our Vascular Surgeons actually wear leaded Hats to protect against Radiation when they perform PTA/ITA.

  • @KittenTheB
    @KittenTheB Год назад +101

    These guys are freaking awesome ❤
    My interventional radiologist embolized an AVM up to 95% (that glue tastes NASTY!!!!!!! OH MY GOOD I CAN'T BELIEVE I COULD TASTE IT🤢)
    So I mean .... Still had to have the brain surgery. BUT... they let me pick the music we listened to while they did angiograms with contrast dye to check in it
    BTW all you doctors out there: yeah.... Yeah it makes you feel like two faced from Batman when you shoot it into someone's brain 😐 please be kind and offer to put them fully out.
    otherwise? I loved mine. Coolest dude, he even saw me getting wheeled back for the brain surgery and wished me luck and spoke with me. That made me feel special considering it was a really big hospital and I know he sees thousands of patients a year ♥️♥️♥️♥️

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад +9

      they don't generally put people to sleep for intervention because its not necessary, it can be done sedated which is much safer, comes with far less complications and has a smaller recovery time. So better for patients in the long run even if it is uncomfortable

    • @KittenTheB
      @KittenTheB Год назад +4

      @@katierasburn9571 I don't know, I requested it off my doctor's and they obliged. Then again I swear to God my head got scanned six ways from Sunday ☠️

    • @clarewhite3004
      @clarewhite3004 Год назад +1

      General anesthesia is super risky and you have a much higher chance of waking up with a tube down your throat. I'm the person who pulls it out. ;)

    • @KittenTheB
      @KittenTheB Год назад +1

      @@clarewhite3004 I would take that to the feeling of half my face on fire 😐
      It was the strangest, weirdest medical thing I've ever felt lol

    • @livewellwitheds6885
      @livewellwitheds6885 Год назад +1

      picking the music is the best part :)

  • @treescompany3462
    @treescompany3462 Год назад +12

    This video epitomizes why you should always watch until the end

  • @Hadar1991
    @Hadar1991 Год назад +21

    I just had an idea for a sketch "First Day of Clinical Genetics" where the usual roles are flipped: Clinical Geneticist is extremely eager to teach the Med Student things Med Student would rather not have learn nor ever thing about. :D Also he could be extremely eager to give consults nobody want to listen to. :D

    • @fabricdragon
      @fabricdragon Год назад +2

      this... seems very likely given the geneticists i know.
      also the sheer number of med students finding out that life is not as simple as XX and XY... (the reason they stopped having students test their own DNA in class: too many people freaking out that they didnt have the XY with the sry on the Y active or what not...)

    • @Hadar1991
      @Hadar1991 Год назад

      @@fabricdragon I am not a medical practitioner, I am just a sickly mathematician and I follow Dr. Glaucomflecken content because I found it funny. I just connected the dots because I recalled the previous sketch with Clinical Geneticist.
      As far I know it, it is rare, but yeah it could be quite spooky and embarrassing to find out in class that you are not XY but XX with SRY attached to some other gene or you are not XX but XY with damaged SRY (especially went you don't feel "gender fluid" at all).

  • @topcca
    @topcca Год назад +4

    0:06 - because it's an US guided procedure :P :))
    0:15 - and lead glasses, since the annual eye lens dose limit was lowered from 150 mSv/year to 20 mSv/year in order to reduce the risk of X-ray-induced lens opacity in medical staff ;))
    0:23 - and additional shoulder protection, mounted to the side of the shoulder, which faces the x-ray tube :P

  • @jacobhill3842
    @jacobhill3842 Год назад +9

    Love this channel can't wait to see our media student be introduced to more doctors. Wonder what the trauma surgery rotation will be like.

  • @avidkeo
    @avidkeo Год назад +6

    Im a radiographer, and I completely agree. love it

  • @mikebarushok5361
    @mikebarushok5361 Год назад +8

    My adult stepdaughter is experiencing the turf war between neurology, radiology, vascular surgeon, and cardiology because of an aneurysm or dissection of a vertebral artery. Plus the added bonus of the typical insurance coverage nightmare. Recently had to travel 200 miles for an intrusive angiogram and I haven't heard what, if any, determination may have been reached.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon 5 месяцев назад

      How did things turn out?

  • @crimansizers5840
    @crimansizers5840 Год назад +6

    The Neurologist, armed with dual reflex hammers: “ finally, a worthy opponent. Our battle will be legendary!”

  • @SlavicCelery
    @SlavicCelery Год назад +8

    A minor detail not captured in the video - those aren't boxing gloves. Those are actually the lead gauntlets that could easily put someone in snoozetown. It was/is a favorite of pinkerton detectives, and IR specialists.

  • @lindaarmstrongjackman9788
    @lindaarmstrongjackman9788 Год назад +2

    I worked in interventional Radiology and I loved it. I still miss it.

  • @Hilly_LittleFeatheryCorner
    @Hilly_LittleFeatheryCorner Год назад +8

    "I'm gonna kick the neurologist's ass-"
    "YES"

  • @indranihightower9588
    @indranihightower9588 Год назад +2

    You have inspired me to start a RUclips channel. I am interested in being a Comedian Neurologist; except I am not that funny. Maybe I should just be an Informative Neurologist. However, I did write, produce, act, sing and dance in a movie called A Gypsy's Tale once. I am now determined to help remove some anti-Neurologist bias.😊 What you have done, Dr. Glaucomflecken, is amazing and visionary, thank you for bringing you to the world, thank you for existing, and not dying, thank you, amazing wife for saving him. Thank you for showing the world what we physicians had to go through, what it's like in the medical field, so that people can see that we are real people, too, and that at times we are at the mercy of a healthcare system that does not sometimes support the best interests of our patients. I hate prior authorizations. We have had to do prior authorizations for the medication Sinemet! Also, over 100 MRIs we ordered are rejected in a week, due to some silly chart documentation rules that seem to change for each different insurance every 3 months. Some MRIs are denied in patients who have existing brain tumors as well. Doctors deserve some compassion. We are not cold automatons, but we have personalities, emotions, and passion, too. Like our patients, we are people with the same basic human needs. I would call your process the "The Humanization of Physicians." It is the start of a revolutionary movement...

  • @carolc6364
    @carolc6364 Год назад +6

    Love the last word, “YES”

  • @jesuistahmid
    @jesuistahmid Год назад +18

    I'm in vascular. I swear there are days I've spent 12 hrs straight in lead...totally understand 😂😂

    • @farazalam538
      @farazalam538 Год назад

      Don't you have concerns about exposure to radiation if you've been in lead so long?

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon 5 месяцев назад

      10 was my max.

  • @lordkentar
    @lordkentar Год назад +14

    I feel like the lead glasses for cataract protection was easy pickings and missed.

  • @Ankus
    @Ankus Год назад +18

    Also, not wearing their dosimeters because they know it will go over the limit anyways.

    • @fabricdragon
      @fabricdragon Год назад

      so much this

    • @fatherfletch
      @fatherfletch Год назад +1

      So true. How did I get back dosimeters for interventional radiologists every month with doses lower than the MRI techs?

  • @julesjma
    @julesjma Год назад +3

    As a former ICU nurse, where do i get a ticket to watch neurologists getting their asses kicked? I'll pay double.

  • @TestDriveRacing
    @TestDriveRacing Год назад +3

    As an IR doc, the paracentesis part was spot on... I *love* being called back in the middle of the night for a "STAT" paracentesis... If there's REALLY so much fluid that it can't wait, you hardly need ultrasound at all.
    The first thing I train any medical student or resident on the IR rotation with me is how to do a paracentesis, ESPECIALLY the ER residents. Once they know that I know that they know how to do it, they stop calling.
    Now don't get me started on the neurologists who can't do LP's and send them all to IR...

    • @taliag09
      @taliag09 Год назад

      I work in ultrasound and the number of paras we do is insane. Some people's bellies are so huge you could just jam a yueh in there and start draining.... My favorites are patients that miss their outpatient appointments and then come into the ER the next day for their dialysis and para 🙃 looking at you, Jen....

  • @wsue1038
    @wsue1038 Год назад +3

    Being of the radiology field… LOL. Loved the picture of your anniversary!

  • @sierrasky2491
    @sierrasky2491 Год назад

    So glad to see you're still posting these I just love your videos!

  • @mbeally
    @mbeally Год назад +3

    “Only when I remember you exist.” Truer words were never spoken. 😂❤

  • @anthonyquagliano8717
    @anthonyquagliano8717 Год назад +7

    The “yes” was just -chefs kiss- 😂😂

  • @AndreaHernandez-zt6cx
    @AndreaHernandez-zt6cx Год назад +5

    You want to come watch? YES. (Says all health care workers on settling an argument of this proportion).

  • @BananaSplitBrain
    @BananaSplitBrain Год назад +4

    I love it. You can't have enough lead on your body!

  • @orderfirst8907
    @orderfirst8907 Год назад +1

    Last Monday I learmed that Ophthalmologists also do testing that is part of interventional radiology. I had the testing done for diabetic bilateral retinopathy.

  • @lukesmith5018
    @lukesmith5018 Год назад +7

    In the UK we mostly only use the word "catheter" for urinary catheters, so that question hit a bit differently 😅

    • @xxMurmaiderxx
      @xxMurmaiderxx Год назад

      In the US, the angio lab is called the cath lab AKA catheterization lab. So it's used a lot in that setting. Though in general xray/ct usually a catheter is a urinary catheter or IV catheter, haha.
      EDIT: I just googled it, I guess the UK also calls it a cath lab

  • @woodysmith2681
    @woodysmith2681 Год назад +9

    I'd be scared of the Battle Royale. Neurology would know the joint locks and nerve strikes. Cardiology would know the Five Point Palm Exploding Heart technique if anyone does. Someone who professionally wears full lead-plating 24/7 would be stronger than anyone else. And General Surgery, if there was ever someone able to accept and fight through intense, searing pain, it's a surgeon.

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Год назад +3

      Ortho is basically doing Krav Maga with people's bones on the daily. It's a toss up between them and emergency medicine who wins fitness

  • @r.l.7319
    @r.l.7319 Год назад +13

    I my hospital the main turf war seemed to happen between Neurosurgery and Interventional Neuroradiology. Neuroradiology coiling up all those aneurysms made Neurosurgery seriously upset and fear for their job. 😂

    • @katierasburn9571
      @katierasburn9571 Год назад

      neurorads don't mess around, in and out before you can say stroke!

    • @zippity61
      @zippity61 Год назад

      Most of our INRs are neurosurgeons!

  • @failte9910
    @failte9910 Год назад +5

    Been watching this channel for so long that I find myself picturing each character as I review Epic documentation from the various specialties while I code. No longer picture the actual doctors, just Dr G’s characters. 🙂

  • @duboc42
    @duboc42 Год назад +6

    middle fight he removes the lead vests, and shows his true power

  • @infernox1099
    @infernox1099 Год назад +6

    I'd watch an impromptu fight any day of the week, so being offered to watch a man covered in lead beat up neurology is a fight I'd see any day.

  • @leeannefriend2620
    @leeannefriend2620 Год назад +3

    I work in IR. This isn't a joke. Especially doing endovascular work! I've lost count of the para/thoras we've already done today! But it's a great department to work in.

  • @Thatsprettiemuchit
    @Thatsprettiemuchit Год назад +12

    Omg IR!! I have an extremely rare benign spine tumor and my hero, an IR, agreed to the treatment protocol I wanted (also the one supported by research) and he’s the only one of many doctors I’ve had for this condition that is both single and kind of cute, and I remember my first procedure I saw him and all the nurses and techs dressed up in their little lead outfits and I thought… how charming 😍 what if one day my soulmate is an interventional radiologist in lead armor 🥰🙏😂 and then the versed hit

    • @farazalam538
      @farazalam538 Год назад +2

      I'm having second thoughts... Radiation exposure daily for long hours

  • @annaliseketz1984
    @annaliseketz1984 Год назад +5

    OOOO I’m so ready for this fight arc!!

  • @dimkk605
    @dimkk605 Год назад

    "YES" at the end was the perfect way to end this video!
    I enjoyed this through the end! Perfect! Awesome!

  • @theviking1359
    @theviking1359 Год назад +1

    We need to see this fight. I have no idea how you would do it, but we need to see this fight.

  • @catlady6210
    @catlady6210 Год назад +18

    They’re gonna need a lead helmet sooner or later

    • @RadTechFred
      @RadTechFred Год назад +3

      They do exist! They're lead caps and are called "No brainer".

  • @sanachanto
    @sanachanto Год назад +5

    Aww, Interventional Radiology is married to OB-GYN. They look so happy on their beautiful Paris honeymoon ❤

  • @kwagigi
    @kwagigi Год назад +1

    As someone who is literally supporting people getting their certification for DR/IR as I type, this was refreshingly relevant content.

  • @ffwast
    @ffwast Год назад +2

    Carrying all that lead weight if he takes it off he'll gain enough strength for a full-blown anime power transformation. But then he wouldn't be protected from radiation.

  • @2-minutephysiatry506
    @2-minutephysiatry506 Год назад +2

    The ending was superb !!
    Please do a skit on Physiatry.

    • @Joy21090
      @Joy21090 Год назад

      Yes! I love my physiatrist to pieces! I want to introduce him to the Glaukomverse.

  • @saphiriathebluedragonknight375
    @saphiriathebluedragonknight375 Год назад +1

    I never knew interventional radiology existed until last year. They put in a temp cath for dialysis like they were changing a tire. Took like half an hour. Kept me calm the entire time.

  • @bcsmedconsults29
    @bcsmedconsults29 Год назад +4

    Here's the thing. Not long ago, we (docs as residents) used to do paracentesis, thoracentesis, spinal taps, bone marrow biopsies and central line placement on our own as Internal Medicine residents. Little to no supervision if you were proficient and had the courage. Interventional Radiologists are partly (partly***) a by-product of litigation fear. The other part is they make a crap ton of money for doing large volumes of the aforementioned procedures.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon 5 месяцев назад +1

      Did hundreds and no problems. Never used US...totally unnecessary, if you really know the anatomy.

  • @jediavatar
    @jediavatar Год назад +2

    I chuckled throughout, but the big laugh came at the very last. Sneaky, Doctor! 😂

  • @charcoalhomie8682
    @charcoalhomie8682 Год назад +1

    I never knew how accurate these were until one was made about the thing I know

  • @AgentAlexPBT
    @AgentAlexPBT Год назад +1

    This was SO funny. Had me laughing at 2:00AM. Best one yet Dr. Glauck.

  • @lmboh8585
    @lmboh8585 Год назад +1

    We ALL want to come watch.

  • @fish_whiskers
    @fish_whiskers Год назад +7

    2:11 ...but doesn't he know how many ways neuro can kill him with a reflex hammer?

  • @hiltonian_1260
    @hiltonian_1260 Год назад +5

    Next video the radiologist is going to look like the Mandalorian.

    • @masterofdesaster8
      @masterofdesaster8 Год назад +1

      And if you build an air filter into the helmet he's already prepared for the next pandemic...

  • @MsSHINeeTVXQSuju
    @MsSHINeeTVXQSuju Год назад +1

    “The skull provides adequate protection” COPIUM IF I’VE EVER HEARD ANY 😂😂😂

  • @isaacthek
    @isaacthek Год назад +2

    Once he takes off that lead vest he's a beast...

  • @ianpratt9840
    @ianpratt9840 Год назад +1

    One of my favorite electives my MS4 year. Learned a lot about radiologic anatomy, and home by noon! LOL

  • @laras678
    @laras678 Год назад +3

    This just kept getting funnier. "What is happening?"

  • @mattriley2532
    @mattriley2532 Год назад +1

    Omg please make a vid for that fight 😂 I want to see who would win that thunderdome match!

  • @archimedesscrew3710
    @archimedesscrew3710 Год назад +1

    Yes!
    Don't you want think about?
    No, bring it on!

  • @rowennaclark6175
    @rowennaclark6175 Год назад +1

    As a regular IR patient I knew that that costume before I even saw the title 😂

  • @alitaniak7404
    @alitaniak7404 Год назад +4

    Kick his ass, IR!! Neurology could use the humbling.