Unfortunately, even if that would be one of the best jokes in the series and genuinely genius for Ussop's lie to be true.... That was a fan translation thing, it wasn't in the original japanese or the official English translation, the fans who did the first version available on the internet added it for the lols.
If I'm not mistaken, Noland help to cure the tribe BEFORE cutting down the sacred trees. He cutted them down to stop the epidemic and to prevent new cases down the line because they were the source of the illness. Am I tripping?
Yeah the sickness didn't just affect people, it could affect plants and animals too. After the Shandians were cured Noland and his crew searched the whole island for anything else which was afflicted, and got rid of it to make sure there wasn't any way for the Shandians to be infected again after they left.
I feel like Tree Fever isn't a bacteria or virus but instead some kind of fungal infection, like a kind of mold. Makes sense to me how that would jump from tree to human, and it's shown as a green rash in the anime.
I thought it was interesting how the doctor noted that bonney didn’t have white lead, meaning she still diagnosed Bonney without fearing she would contract white lead, possibly due to corazon and law visiting so many doctors it became recognised that it isn’t a contagious disease
lol, It's definitely possible that Corazon and Law visiting so many doctors helped to raise awareness of the fact that white lead is not contagious. This would have been especially important in the early days of their journey, when they were still trying to figure out what was wrong with Law. It's also possible that the doctor in question was simply more knowledgeable about white lead than the other doctors that Corazon and Law had visited. This is especially likely given that he was able to diagnose Bonney's condition without even needing to examine her blood. Whatever the reason, it's clear that the doctor's willingness to treat Bonney without fear of contracting white lead is a sign of progress. It shows that people are starting to understand that white lead is not a contagious disease, and that those who are affected by it deserve to be treated with compassion and respect. I'm glad that you brought this up. It's an important detail that I hadn't thought about before. It gives me hope that the world of One Piece is slowly becoming a better place for those who are different.
@@nicorobin3691 what symptoms did she display? Because the specific reason why Law was turned away wasn't because Corazon said he might've had Amber lead. Law's skin was completely covered by it
I can't beleive you forgot about the most common disease of all of One Piece... The "I-can't-go-to-this-island-or-I'll-die" disease... God Usopp gets it a looooot and it even afflicted the king himself, Baggy. I'm shocked.
@@Aloyus_Knightkid, ngl, you're being a pint too edgy considering you're a one piece fan. Anyone can like anything ig, but chill tf out, laugh a bit. Go D. Usopp and Buggy D. Clown nothing short of kings, and I will not tolerate disrespect on their hallowed names...
corditis is a condition where cysts (of collecting water) appear in your throat usually this is due to years of smoking and acid reflux. It causes your vocal coards to feel very heavy and deepens your voice This is a very watered down explanation, you can find more by looking up the fullname Polypoid Corditis or the common name "Reinke’s edema"
My favourite is "I-can't-go-on-island-or-I-die"-disease. Two patients so far are Usopp who has been miraculously cured and Buggy when he was a chore boy on Oro Jackson.
Something interesting and very terrifying about scurvy is exactly what the opening of old wounds really means. Scar tissue is not a stable thing , its a constant process , during scurvy the process stops and the scar tissue starts to dissolve , ANY scar tissue , had a bad cut years ago ? Well it opens up again , had surgery on internal organs ? That opens up too , had your fingers/limbs sewn back on ? That opens aswell ! In specific cases scurvy can literally make you FALL APART
My take with amber lead is that the WG wanted to still use it even after knowing it was poisonous in a similar fashion to the possible inspiration for amber lead aka radium poisoning and for those who want to know just look for the case of the "Radium girls"
i think if we're looking to extant irl cases of mass poisoning with explicit sanctioning by authority, amber lead has more in common with the japanese chisso and niigata minamata diseases (methylmercury poisoning). what with the source of the toxic material being the economic windfall of the whole region/city, rather than a singular population, and with the characterisation of it *by* authority figures as a contagious disease in a concerted attempt to gaslight the afflicted. not to mention the symptoms!
I'll be the resident nerd emoji here, but wasn't the first disease showcased in one piece the almighty terrifying "anime mom disease" that ussop's mother suffered from ?
@@goby1764 I suppose in theory, but this one is at best a bit of a stretch since he showed no symptoms back then so we didn't actually see an ilness and at worst might not even be the case, since we don't know if oda planned Roger to be ill from the start, but retroactively yeah
Bad ass disease, when you have taken on and beaten all the dangers in the world the only thing left to kill you is some random madeup disease, which still needs the help of you giving up and being executed by huge spears to die from it.
Liked this video overall, but you got a number of things incorrect about Amber Lead Syndrome. For starters, it's not a "delayed poison", it's a toxicity that takes decades to build up. The original miner would come into contact with Amber Lead for decades, until eventually building up enough toxicity that it would be fatal. Since it was made into so many products, INCLUDING FOOD, the residents were ingesting Amber Lead after the mining began on a daily basis, but it would take many, many years for the ailment symptoms to surface. What's SPECIAL about Amber Lead (and unlike Asbestos, which it's partially based off of), is that the toxicity can be passed on from parent to child. Presumably, this is from the overall Amber Lead toxicity level of the blood, which gets passed on from mother to baby in-utero? However it works in the OP world, if you needed 70 years to accumulate enough Amber Lead in your system to expire from you, and you had a baby at 20, that baby would only need 50 years to accumulate enough to perish from Amber Lead toxicity. THAT'S the cause of the leapfrogging generational life expectancy. This is why everybody simultaneously started developing Amber Lead Syndrome and dying off at the same time; because they all had roughly equal build up of Amber Lead in their bodies. Which leads into the mistake about the WG "coverup". It's not that the WG thought it would be a good idea to lie that Amber Lead Syndrome was contagious. They didn't. It was POPULAR MISCONCEPTION that it was contagious, because everybody in Flevance all "caught" the condition at the same time. The generational toxicity build up nature of the condition wasn't understood by most laypersons, so they went with what they did understand that could explain a sudden outbreak of a deadly disease: contagion. The WG covered up the _toxicity_ of Amber Lead, as part of a deal with the royal family of Flevance. The royals wanted unhindered export of their natural resource, they prospered from it, and with that prosperity they could "pay off" the WG with their Heavenly Tributes, so both parties had incentive to keep its true nature hush hush. Once the outbreak began, the royal family (who probably avoided unnecessary exposure due to being in the know, and thus weren't in danger of developing the condition) were able to flee the kingdom, and the WG had no incentive to correct the misinformation, because the citizens of Flevance weren't going to survive much longer anyhow. So, in short, they DID NOT create the lie that it's contagious, popular misconception took care of that all by itself!
Reminds me of the Rumbar Pirates. They had something, my guess was it was the same as Nami's. Unlikely but it has one thing going for it, that when Dorry and Brogy were talking about how there was a crew in the past who had picked a direction and left. I'm not even sure if it lines up time wise, but it would be cool if it did
Law curing himself was shown in the anime I distinctly remember him coming out of the chest after a while, crying and then sitting there and starting to use the Ope Ope No MI to remove the amber lead from himself, it was only his arm that we saw him work on as the camera panned out and away but I remember that very clearly
I'm not a doctor, but I am a licensed industrial grade diver, and the more I think about it, the less sense it makes that Cricket had Diver's Disease. Cricket was not using breathing apparatus or extra air as we could see. He was free diving like a pearl diver. He would start with a fixed amount of air from the surface, and that air would compress in his lungs when going down to the depths with higher pressures. If you used scuba gear, your lungs would always fill up with the air compressed to the depth you are in, and going up too fast with that much air is what risks Diver's Disease. But if Cricket went up free diving, the air in his lungs would just expand back to the original volume at the surface. No harm from that. So unless he had a separate air tank he could breathe air from at the bottom while diving (DO NOT DO THIS! PEOPLE HAVE DIED DOING THAT!), it doesn't make sense.
@@maddson2088 Like this: You leave the air tank at the bottom where you dive. You start from the surface and go into the water without any scuba gear, you just hold your breath. In that held breath, you dive down to the air tank at the bottom, and when you are feeling like running out of air, you take a breath from the air tank. It would not be bad IF you keep diving and breathing with the air tank continuously until the end of your dive and you reach the surface. But if you take a breath from the tank at the bottom, hold it in and swim away from the tank, then you have lungs filled with compressed air at that depth. If you start going up WITHOUT breathing out simultaneously, the air will expand and pop your lungs like a balloon! This is more immediately dangerous and painful than Diver's Disease, because your lungs just popped, you have internal bleeding and gasses are blocking your blood flow. Not to mention the agonizing pain. The risk of drowning in that situation is immense! This is why a scuba diver NEVER holds their breath when diving. And people have tried free diving with a separate air tank at the bottom... They died. That's how.
@@nekoplanetary4244 It is best to be completely frank about the dangers of mismanagement in diving. Just like driving, the margin of error in such conditions is small and often fatal. Diving is both a relaxing and intensive activity. You NEED to be relaxed in mind and body to not waste energy and air when diving, but the constant movements in heavy gear under water can be intense and IS dangerous. You need to prepare properly, follow the practiced methods and know what you are doing. If not, you will get hurt or die. I love this sport ;)
Bonnie's disease reminded me of Xeroderma Pigmentosum which is a genetic disease characterised by sensitivity to the sun and UV light. People associate this to having vampire qualities which is rude.
Always with the need to be offended, ugh. It's an easy way to connect what you know and don't know, especially for children. And as long as it doesn't go from "oh that's like a vampire" to "haha, you're a vampire, die you monster", it's also not offensive at all. And least of all is it your job to be the deciding factor of it being rude. I'm sure some people living with that disease actually occasionally make a vampire joke with their friends because that's just human. You cope with shit and sometimes you make fun of dire situations. Don't take that away from people, just because you wanna stand on some moral pedestal you built for yourself.
@@dowfreak7"least of your job" And suppose it is your job to be rude? The one who got offended does then the goalline get pushed that they shouldnt be offended?
@@eavyeavy2864 The one who got offended isn't in the room, honey. And they're not even 100% offended. The only people actually offended are those trying to speak for a subset of complete strangers they know nothing about. You wanna know if something's offensive? Ask the person actually affected, not the mental image someone's projecting of the most fragile human being in existence, in order to act like they need to be defended. Also get your head out of your ass. "People being different than them", you're just trying to paint more scenarios in which I'm the evil xenophobic boobgieman, instead of actually engaging with real arguments. Kindly stop with the notification spam, shit's childish. You can feel attacked and offended, that's fine, just spare me the drivel.
The proper name of the Bends is Decompression Sickness (pretty straightforward, I know). It's also the name of a song by Mr Bungle and an album by Radiohead.
When you were talking about Boa it made me wonder why Kuma sent Luffy to Amazon Lilly. Both women who loved them ironically came down with a disease and were slaves to Celestial Dragons.
After my initial comment on the Bends, I decided to write up something about some of the diseases, their historical inspiration, and some of the cultural effects stuff like that had in the real world. I am in the medical field and my final research project revolved around a specific fungus, a yeast that can become pathogenic to humans. I write this so you can better appreciate Oda's research and his real-world inspirations. This is going to be a long comment, so if needed, I'll break it up into multiple segments and post the remainder in the comments under this first one. Scurvy: Both Tekking's explanation and how it is presented in one piece are correct, scurvy is the result of acute vitamin C deficiency. Interestingly, there are indications that some indigene populations worked out that eating certain things would help with the symptoms before European sailors and scholars did; for example, a crew of French sailors affected by scurvy went ashore on a Caribbean island and wrote down that the local population urged them to eat rhubarb, after which the crew recovered. Five-day disease: This one is inspired by several real-world diseases, each contracted via the bite of an arthropod (ticks are not insects but rather arachnids). The most direct comparison in terms of having a very distinct rash is lime disease, which can show very distinct concentric bruises at the site of the bite. It is quite prevalent in Europe and north America, and is transmitted by the bite of a tick. It is rarely fatal, but It can result in latent nerve damage, as well as affect the joints and heart. There are other diseases contracted via arthropods, i.e. specific kind(s) of brain inflammation (via ticks), the sleeping disease (via a specific fly endemic to certain regions in sub-Saharan Africa, the tsetse fly), potentially both Ebola and the Marburg virus. We don't know for sure. It is presumed that both of these have a reservoir host, meaning an organism that holds them when it isn't spreading person to person, that is an arthropod. Both of these virus are fantastically deadly and infectious, and can easily result in some of the symptoms Nami had- extreme, rapid onset of fever, with the potential of death days or mere hours after onset of symptoms. However those two also result in bleeding, and contact with this infected blood is how they are so infectious. Last but not least, Malaria, which resulted in mosquitos killing more humans than any other animal- including humans. Decompression sickness/The Bends/Diver's disease: see my other comment. It is the result of Nitrogen bubbles forming after rapidly ascending to lower pressure. In my other comment I also explained about Nitrogen narcosis, potential embolism, and techniques we developed to avoid diseases associated with diving. Tree fever: As far as I know, there are no non-opportunistic human-pathogenic diseases that cross over from plants. What I mean by that, is that while there are certain fungi and bacteria that can affect both living humans and plants, they are only able to under specific circumstances. Certain molds that usually break down dead biomass can, and in my work, I reviewed a case of a patient who had a blood stream infection by saccharomyces cervisae - brewer's yeast, the fungus used to brew beer. That is highly unusual, but it can happen. In general, could a disease like tree fever exist? yes, potentially. I doubt it could be a virus; those are too particular in regards to their host. There are plenty that are zoonotic, meaning they can infect both animals and human hosts, but I doubt that would bridge the gap between animals and plants. Fungi though? Potentially. There are already incredibly infectious (and lethal) fungal infections in nature. You might know about Cordyceps, the real-world ant-killing and mind-controlling fungus that inspired the fungal infection in the last of us. This specific fungus likely won't become a danger to humans, our physiology is too different from insects. But there is also white-nose disease, a deadly fungal infection that kills entire colonies of hibernating bats. It isn't completely clear if that disease is solely responsible for the mass death of bats in the northern hemisphere, or if there are other factors, but the bat population absolutely plummeted since that disease first showed up. It is unlikely that it could affect humans in the same way- we don't hibernate, and we are physically unable to reach population densities comparable to a colony of bats. But yes. A fungal pathogen like tree fever, affecting both humans and plants, could potentially exist. The blotches being green and irregularly shaped could indicate that it is a parasitoid lichen. Lichen are fungus that live in a symbiotic relationship with photosynthetic algae. Saphire scale: This one is fascinating, and I was surprised given that I actually haven't read the current chapter yet. There are diseases caused, or aggravated by sunlight. The most well known is perhaps porphyria, sometimes called vampire's disease. It's a congenital disease that results in your body being unable to break down Haem, the constituent compound of Haemoglobine and Myoglobine, the oxygen-binding structures of red blood cells and muscles. In contact with sunlight, this results in the leftover Haem becoming phototoxic - it changes its structure and physiological interaction with the body as a result of exposure to sunlight. There are other phototoxic chemicals, certain industrial pollutants, and also certain medications, which result in symptoms when exposed to the sun. Amber lead syndrome: This is a stand-in for a plethora of real-world industrial pollutants. Chronic lead poisoning, for example, results in a type of anemia, a lack of red blood cells. It can result in paleness and increased time for recapilarrisation- if you press a finger into the skin of an anemic person, the spot will be pale longer than with a healthy person. It was also first misunderstood. Lead cutlery and kitchenware were common. Of all things, the import of tomatoes to Europe, and the resulting more acidic dishes that dissolved some of the lead from the cutlery and then poisoned the person eating was what first showed us that long-term lead exposure is harmful. There are also many pollutants that can result in rashes or spots in the area of exposition, including, but not limited to caustic agents, certain metals, certain organic compounds, radioactive materials. Mercury poisoning and the resulting neurological effects were so prevalent in hat makers in England that they inspired Lewis Carrol's mad hatter in Alice in Wonderland. And last but not least, the treatment of the affected population is not without historic precedent. Our modern word quarantine is derived from the quaranta giorni - forty days. That is the period of time ships suspected of carrying the plague were isolated in Italian ports. More to the point, there are some indications, if not hard proof as far as I know, that in Naples, infected were the victims of deliberate arson. Lastly, unknown diseases: We still potentially have those today. in the 15th and 16th century, a disease called sweating sickness, the Sweats or English sweats broke out in England, in a series of isolated, but incredibly deadly epidemics. And to this day, we don't know what caused the Sweats, and whether whatever it was is now extinct. Not going to comment on diseases caused by devil fruits or specific bioweapons. But if any of you have questions, please feel free to ask.
Something I forgot to add concerning Amber lead: plenty of real-world industrial pollutants accumulate in the body over time, with symptoms only after a long exposure. There is also a process called biomagnification, where organisms initially absorb a small amount of a toxin from their environment, pass that on to organisms that feed on them and so forth, resulting in a higher and higher exposure to the organisms at the top of that particular food web. A good example would be organic mercury compounds, and how they affect sharks, other greater predatory fish like tuna, and via them, humans. Mercury exposure from seafood will increasingly become a problem in the affected population. Another example of long delayed effects would be asbestos, which is a synthetic mineral fiber that mimics certain minerals, and was widely used in insulation and flame retardant materials. Until we realized that microscopic asbestos dust could not be broken down by the body, resulting in constant inflammation, and in turn, cancers of the affected tissues.
One thing people dont think about is, luffy has used up his life span a couple times. Still waiting for that to come into play. Wont be surprised is gear 5 uses up life span as well
Luffy will most likely get "sick" the same way that Roger did, he'll die with a smile on his face the same way, having thrown the biggest party in the world, having taken down the WG and Imu, the would will be at peace
"uses up lifespan" is just shortform for "bullshit anime power go". It's clearly not meant to actually be a part of the story, it's just used to make something seem more dangerous and to explain away the deus ex machina powerup. But I do think Oda will at least hint someway that Luffy won't live for long after the One Piece is found. If there's actual "old man Luffy tells his children a tale of his pirating days" moments, that'd completely sour the ending. Dude needs to either find the One Piece, have a celebration and then cut back to 10 years later where he's dead or he needs to die unexpectedly very soon after the treasure. REALLY doubt the latter will happen, though.
Two years in a nightmare hell and then dies to that. Oda does tragedy way too well... I do wonder if these unique diseases have something more to them, or if they just exist as they are.
25:50 Not necessarily. Law could easily perform the same surgery on someone else. Yes, the fruit is needed, but you don't need to consume it to be rid of the sickness yourself
Yeah, could have phrased that better. What I'm saying is that no cure for Amber Lead exists in terms of medicine. The only way to cure it is with surgery, but the surgery is impossible UNLESS you have magic devil fruit powers. So the Ope-Ope fruit is the only means to cure it.
The cause of scurvy is widely misrepresented. You never hear about how a diet high in carbohydrates increases the requirement of vitamin c, or that a lot of fresh food has ascorbic properties, even meat, especially organ meat. Sailors with scurvy had only access to old/rotten food, and stuff that lasted really long, which was usually hardtack biscuits, basically only carbohydrates with no nutrition.
I'm not a doctor, but I've always thought Whitebeard had cancer. He went to super long hair to bald man and we don't see the transition, but he has hair when he's healthy and is bald when he's sick. Also, the medicine he was always connected could easily been quimio. Nowadays, Oda creates his own diseases, but back then he used real life diseases like scurby, so...
Law Tekking is back! I don't think we've seen him since Law Week. 🤣 On another note, the disease aspect of One Piece is another wonderful, if horrifying, example of Oda's worldbuilding. Foreign diseases were a factor explorers had to deal with in the real world, so the way he has consistently incorporated this into the story with Nami, Roger, Law, Bonney, and many other characters helps reinforce the idea that this is a living, breathing planet, with real world issues to deal with beyond who's the strongest pirate.
Tree feaver connects a lot with Variola (the cow fever) that killed most of people that used to live in America thank God we have real life Nolands shishishi
Your explanation of the Bends was fair enough, and I actually never heard the alternative name for it, or that it was named after an archaic structure for underwater engineering. It is a bit more common to call it decompression sickness. To add some more detail, increased pressure enables your tissues and blood to absorb more nitrogen (which makes up around 80% of our atmosphere) than they usually could, and if you reduce the pressure too quickly, that nitrogen coalesces into bubbles. The worst effects of this are not from the bubbles themselves, but from their potential to cause embolisms- blockages of blood vessels. Embolisms in general can cause things like cardiac or cerebral infarction - heart attacks or strokes. I am not sure how common that is due to the nitrogen bubbles in the Bends though. But the disease is one of the reasons we came up with both alternative gas mixes for divers (containing reduced or no nitrogen) and saturation diving, where the diver or dive team is lowered inside a capsule that itself is pressurized to the ambient pressure of the work site, then decompressed over a period of several days. Nitrogen has another potentially lethal effect on divers: under certain conditions it can become narcotic, leading to diminished situational awareness, euphoria, and full-on hallucinations. Nitrogen narcosis is believed to be a contributing factor to the deaths of many amateur divers and a common staple in near-death experiences of divers.
The closest I think It would be from the real world to the one piece world regarding the tree fever, is the cordyceps infection, I know is not from a plant, but a fungus, but still affects animals (mostly insects) and is terrifying!!!
Honestly best part on oda making imaginary diseases is how it gives extra flair to the world of one piece and can also not be aged badly if he ever used a disease that can be cured a week after he drops the chapter I hate when stories hust make a week ago reference that ages it poorly.
Oda also dont want it to hit to close to home for his reader,tree feaver pretty much allegory for old world diseases(smallpox,cowpox,livestock virus and black plauge) reaching isolated community like new world and australia
geneticist here: diseases crossing the kingdoms of life are very rare, underresearched and kinda hot right now because until recently we thought it was a minor, minute thing that rarely happens because plants and animals are very different genetically (and viruses that infect them are usually highly specialised). turns out there are some bacteria and fungi that can and do cause infections in both, viruses however ... basically nah as far as we know, except one case of tobacco mosaic virus and insect providence virus infecting hela cells
I wonder what Yorki & the Rumbar Pirates disease they had to lose like half the crew, but that aside here are some non-canon diseases like: - Kureha had Mondolin which is a contagious febrile disease with its symptoms being fever, weakness, sweating, & flushing of the face - Olga had the South Blue Emperor Fever a lethal disease that exist 200 years ago which causes those infected with it to be bedridden, & while in the past it wasn’t curable now it is
I always interpreted that since the g going Merry and the Thousand Sunny and tangerine trees that scurvy was not a problem since they had ample supply of vitamin C
Way back then, around 2009ish, My close friend once skipping a school for a couple of days. The next day he anttended school again, his teacher ask him why he didnt went to school, and he with serious face said : i got a tree fever. The funny thing is, nobody questioning his answer. While he was dying inside from keeping himself to not bursting out laughing. 😂 In my country, it was translated as Woods Fever. Demam Hutan. Man, good old days before the net took over human brain was such a joyful place to life. 😂
Everybody's dancing around it but I'd honestly expect Tekking to be able to say this kind of thing confidently. I don't know if you guys are waiting for confirmation or what but the nature of saint Saturn's devil fruit is pretty obvious if you know yokai. A six legged oni with bull horns that kills with a gaze, it's a Gyuki, or ushi-oni, you know like the thing the eight-tailed beast in naruto is named after.
As a medical student here in the US that has been watching you since I was still just starting university, I feel oddly connected to this video. Great video tekking! Miss briar tho
Day 152 of asking for a discussion video on Vice Admiral Tsuru he did one for Garp and Sengoku let the Marine Trio finnaly be completed (Also are we just gonna ignore how good Tekking looks with a goatee and a mustache? Even if they are just drawn on)
Mentioning Brook’s fruit made me realize something. The Revive-Revive fruit used the power of the underworld to return the soul back to the living realm, and attach the soul back to its original shell. So that got me thinking, “what would happen if Brook found his body sooner?” Instead of a skeleton, he could’ve been an undead zombie. But what would’ve happen if he returned like the next day, the poison that killed him the first time would still be in his body, so wouldn’t he just die again. Like if Ace had the fruit, would he just pop back up off the ground just to die a few seconds later cause there’s a giant hole in his torso. Cause the fruit doesn’t heal the body at all, otherwise Brook would’ve regained his flesh. Either Ace just dies again a few moments later, or it just doesn’t afflict him at all and he has to go one living the rest of his new life with a burnt magma hole in his chest. Cause Brook can still eat, drink, breathe, and poop without having the organs to do so, meaning it might be possible.
You forgot "if I go to that island I'll die diesese". The diesese Buggy got just before Laughtale. So he, and Shanks never got to go because Shanks stayed behind with him.
0:00 *tekking sitting there in cosplay* Dunno why it made me laugh so hard, but it could have been that it took a few moments for my phone to start the video.
I remember I first got into One Piece when I was around 12 my dad would bring me the shonen jump magazines when I was stuck in the Hospital bored and just miserable, Luffy & the SH optimism and drive really helped me through some tough times Laws backstory hit me quite hard, when your a child dealing with the medical system sadly although over the top there are really some asshole doctors, Law hiding in the bodies reminds me of stories my grandmother told me about her family in the Holocaust having to hide in the pile of corpses, despite my hardships I’m still very lucky One piece has been so uplifting when I’m down and I can always come back to it when I need to love your content and enthusiasm, like law I’ve had to learn a lot because doctors can suck I can tell your very smart
I'm sitting here watching Adam savage's tested, lol he just ran his fingers thru his hair and made it look all crazy'😅 and I just realized he's a perfect live action dr.vega punk!
I worked for several years as a lead behavioral health technician at a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center. While working there me and my best friend/co-worker decided it would be absolutely hysterical to convince the rest of the staff and all the clients that scurvy was running rampant on the East Coast (USA). Mind you, all the clients were not allowed to have their phones until outpatient so there was absolutely no way for them to check¹. Me and my buddy were successful for about a week before the staff started calling BS on us. They were telling family members about it and being told we were lying. Good times and so worth it 😂 1. This rule was changed several years later to allow them their phones at the housing portion of the rehab just not while in group. Not like that matters here, but people will find a reason to start a fight over ANYTHING nowadays.
That's incredibly fucked up. You may have had a laugh but you were working with some really delicate patients and you caused them some unwarranted stress for your own entertainment?! What was a joke to you was a concern to someone going through hell. You should be fired for playing a "prank" on your patients. What the fuck is wrong with you
For those who do know what I'm talking about: Law is voiced by Matthew Mercer the DM for Critical Role(CR), Ace is Travis Willingham a player for CR, and Hawkins is voiced by Talisen Jaffie also a player for CR
Ussops and Zorros mother and Senior Pinks wife had unknown diseases as well (anime mom disease) and im not shure if sanjis mother was sick before she drank the poison.
I was just thinkin earlier that itd be a little since we got a Tekking video about a random topic. Of course i enjoy the content about current OP evens.. but i enjoy Tekking mostly for his random enthusiastic rants
Correction: Hancock and Luffy were married at Marineford, in quite possibly the most overlooked marriage in anime history. It all happened in Hancock's head but that doesn't mean it wasn't real.
“What’s up guys, welcome to my channel! Today we’re gonna be doing a sickass tier list of all the most terminal diseases! Be sure to like, comment, and SMASH that subscribe button!”
Funny thing is most free divers don’t get the bends. There are some cases and he might actually have this version. Some free divers that dive for long periods of time throughout the day in the water without regular breaks on the surface can get it. So Cricket could have had the bends.
You were right about how limes were used to cure scurvy, which was discovered by english sailors & the reason why you yanks call us brits limeys. HOWEVER, what you failed to mention is that english sailors were also the ones to discover that lemons were twice as effective as limes. (yanks should be calling brits lemonys because of that) Its a pity that back then no one ever thought of mixing lemon juice & lime juice together as a cure for scurvy since they both work individually so therefore, the best cure should be using both together.
And something I noticed while reading the chapter. Is that the little piece of diamond scale that is on her skin is also Is where that little golden mark is
If doc Q's fruit works fast enough I could see the feminizing disease being used to throw someone off balance in combat. Imagine Zoro swinging a sword and suddenly his physique turns into that of Nami. He would definitely be off balance from that.
Not sure if it has an actual name but dying from a broken heart is real. Happens to humans and animals. When my father in law got terminally ill, his dog’s health started to decline. His dog passed away about 2 weeks after he passed. The vet stated she passed from a broken heart cause her owner passed away.
One of the things that I like about One Piece is that these diseases really are no joke. In most series the characters just find a cure and that's it but in OP that's not always the case. Only reason Law was able to survive and maybe Bonney too is because of DF abilities
It's one of the changes that actually made sense. Like it's honestly interesting watching the 4kids dub just to see how they have to completely alter the writing to explain gaps in the story arcs.
@@Tekking101 Would've loved for them to reach Thriller Bark, to be honest! Imagining them trying to justify Oimo and Kashi in Enies Lobby and Laboon in TB is really fun. At least they chose to end with the whole crew dying horribly as a galleon dropped on their heads, so if FUNimation didn't pick it up, there was an ending to the story :P
@@donnieconyers2829 One version of the anime, the one that needed to end, ended like that. The rest should not end at all ¬¬ Also, you meant "have", not "of", since "should of" has no actual meaning
I was almost traumatized by the existence of the bends as a child; it was in the old, 80s GI Joe. The characters came up in a diving bell type apparatus too fast, and they all, heroes and villains, just...collapsed, crying out in pain. The explanation was vague at best, in show, but I will always remember seeing them drop, moaning and clutching at their bodies.
Sapphire decease seems like a STD she got from the celestial dragon and passed on to Bonney. That’s why the CD use space suites to keep the suns ray from turning them onto stone.
Honestly im somewhat impressed that One piece would list out so many fantasy diseases, instead of the typical they died of a "fatal illness" now im curious if we may find out what Roger was suffering from.
Makes me wonder if Roger and Whitebeard had a haki based illness? It would explain why Whitebeard couldn't use conqueror's and why the disease is so unknown. Since haki is a person's spiritual energy no one would assume that it could harm you if used too much (or you have too much haki or something).
Hello Law Tekking, say hi to normal Tekking, William Tekking, Kai Tekking and etc. I was wondering where did you get the Law Chopper plushie? I have seen them on tiktok and I want the Sabo Chopper one aka Chapo. The Law Chopper is officially called Trafalgar D. Lawpper btw
You forgot the “if you go to that island you will die disease” that buggy got before Roger left for Laugh Tale
Unfortunately, even if that would be one of the best jokes in the series and genuinely genius for Ussop's lie to be true....
That was a fan translation thing, it wasn't in the original japanese or the official English translation, the fans who did the first version available on the internet added it for the lols.
@@phelps6205 yeah I more so hoped he’d mention it as a joke anyway 😅
Toki got it too
@@redwarrior118 As of OP Odyssey, he also has 'Can't meet strong, dangerous people' disease.
If I'm not mistaken, Noland help to cure the tribe BEFORE cutting down the sacred trees.
He cutted them down to stop the epidemic and to prevent new cases down the line because they were the source of the illness.
Am I tripping?
Yup, was about to say this
Yeah the sickness didn't just affect people, it could affect plants and animals too. After the Shandians were cured Noland and his crew searched the whole island for anything else which was afflicted, and got rid of it to make sure there wasn't any way for the Shandians to be infected again after they left.
I feel like Tree Fever isn't a bacteria or virus but instead some kind of fungal infection, like a kind of mold. Makes sense to me how that would jump from tree to human, and it's shown as a green rash in the anime.
I thought it was interesting how the doctor noted that bonney didn’t have white lead, meaning she still diagnosed Bonney without fearing she would contract white lead, possibly due to corazon and law visiting so many doctors it became recognised that it isn’t a contagious disease
lol, It's definitely possible that Corazon and Law visiting so many doctors helped to raise awareness of the fact that white lead is not contagious. This would have been especially important in the early days of their journey, when they were still trying to figure out what was wrong with Law.
It's also possible that the doctor in question was simply more knowledgeable about white lead than the other doctors that Corazon and Law had visited. This is especially likely given that he was able to diagnose Bonney's condition without even needing to examine her blood.
Whatever the reason, it's clear that the doctor's willingness to treat Bonney without fear of contracting white lead is a sign of progress. It shows that people are starting to understand that white lead is not a contagious disease, and that those who are affected by it deserve to be treated with compassion and respect.
I'm glad that you brought this up. It's an important detail that I hadn't thought about before. It gives me hope that the world of One Piece is slowly becoming a better place for those who are different.
Bonney did not show symptoms of amber lead
@@chance4827You should eat the Reading Comprehension Reading Comprehension No Mi
@@nicorobin3691 what symptoms did she display? Because the specific reason why Law was turned away wasn't because Corazon said he might've had Amber lead. Law's skin was completely covered by it
I can't beleive you forgot about the most common disease of all of One Piece... The "I-can't-go-to-this-island-or-I'll-die" disease... God Usopp gets it a looooot and it even afflicted the king himself, Baggy.
I'm shocked.
Sadly Buggy being affected by it was only a thing in an early fan translation where the translators put it in there for the lols
Usopp ISN'T A GOD & EVERYONE NEEDS TO SHUT UP ABOUT THAT! Same goes for buggy being a messiah too.
@@Aloyus_Knight well I'm just reading his wanted poster... Sorry.
@@Aloyus_Knightkid, ngl, you're being a pint too edgy considering you're a one piece fan. Anyone can like anything ig, but chill tf out, laugh a bit. Go D. Usopp and Buggy D. Clown nothing short of kings, and I will not tolerate disrespect on their hallowed names...
Amber Lead's delayed effect is based off the genetics phenomenon "anticipation". Real life examples include Huntington disease and myotonic dystrophy
Oh shit I knew about Huntington but I didn't know that this happened as well
corditis is a condition where cysts (of collecting water) appear in your throat usually this is due to years of smoking and acid reflux.
It causes your vocal coards to feel very heavy and deepens your voice
This is a very watered down explanation, you can find more by looking up the fullname Polypoid Corditis or the common name "Reinke’s edema"
My favourite is "I-can't-go-on-island-or-I-die"-disease. Two patients so far are Usopp who has been miraculously cured and Buggy when he was a chore boy on Oro Jackson.
or crying like a little bitch over a ship disease.
You could Technically say usop's mom was the First disease we saw it it just wasn't named
You didn't mention Yorki's disease. Although it is unknown! Also, Buggy's disease before Laugh Tale! "I can't go to that island disease"
Something interesting and very terrifying about scurvy is exactly what the opening of old wounds really means.
Scar tissue is not a stable thing , its a constant process , during scurvy the process stops and the scar tissue starts to dissolve , ANY scar tissue , had a bad cut years ago ? Well it opens up again , had surgery on internal organs ? That opens up too , had your fingers/limbs sewn back on ? That opens aswell ! In specific cases scurvy can literally make you FALL APART
My take with amber lead is that the WG wanted to still use it even after knowing it was poisonous in a similar fashion to the possible inspiration for amber lead aka radium poisoning and for those who want to know just look for the case of the "Radium girls"
i think if we're looking to extant irl cases of mass poisoning with explicit sanctioning by authority, amber lead has more in common with the japanese chisso and niigata minamata diseases (methylmercury poisoning). what with the source of the toxic material being the economic windfall of the whole region/city, rather than a singular population, and with the characterisation of it *by* authority figures as a contagious disease in a concerted attempt to gaslight the afflicted. not to mention the symptoms!
I'll be the resident nerd emoji here, but wasn't the first disease showcased in one piece the almighty terrifying "anime mom disease" that ussop's mother suffered from ?
Wouldn't it technically be roger?
@@goby1764 I suppose in theory, but this one is at best a bit of a stretch since he showed no symptoms back then so we didn't actually see an ilness and at worst might not even be the case, since we don't know if oda planned Roger to be ill from the start, but retroactively yeah
Yeah but it was never named, this is about the known aka named illnesses (besides the disease about the pirates brooks crew got)
Bad ass disease, when you have taken on and beaten all the dangers in the world the only thing left to kill you is some random madeup disease, which still needs the help of you giving up and being executed by huge spears to die from it.
@@MarukaiXMeh named or not that's still the first illness shown.
Liked this video overall, but you got a number of things incorrect about Amber Lead Syndrome.
For starters, it's not a "delayed poison", it's a toxicity that takes decades to build up. The original miner would come into contact with Amber Lead for decades, until eventually building up enough toxicity that it would be fatal. Since it was made into so many products, INCLUDING FOOD, the residents were ingesting Amber Lead after the mining began on a daily basis, but it would take many, many years for the ailment symptoms to surface. What's SPECIAL about Amber Lead (and unlike Asbestos, which it's partially based off of), is that the toxicity can be passed on from parent to child. Presumably, this is from the overall Amber Lead toxicity level of the blood, which gets passed on from mother to baby in-utero? However it works in the OP world, if you needed 70 years to accumulate enough Amber Lead in your system to expire from you, and you had a baby at 20, that baby would only need 50 years to accumulate enough to perish from Amber Lead toxicity. THAT'S the cause of the leapfrogging generational life expectancy. This is why everybody simultaneously started developing Amber Lead Syndrome and dying off at the same time; because they all had roughly equal build up of Amber Lead in their bodies.
Which leads into the mistake about the WG "coverup". It's not that the WG thought it would be a good idea to lie that Amber Lead Syndrome was contagious. They didn't. It was POPULAR MISCONCEPTION that it was contagious, because everybody in Flevance all "caught" the condition at the same time. The generational toxicity build up nature of the condition wasn't understood by most laypersons, so they went with what they did understand that could explain a sudden outbreak of a deadly disease: contagion. The WG covered up the _toxicity_ of Amber Lead, as part of a deal with the royal family of Flevance. The royals wanted unhindered export of their natural resource, they prospered from it, and with that prosperity they could "pay off" the WG with their Heavenly Tributes, so both parties had incentive to keep its true nature hush hush. Once the outbreak began, the royal family (who probably avoided unnecessary exposure due to being in the know, and thus weren't in danger of developing the condition) were able to flee the kingdom, and the WG had no incentive to correct the misinformation, because the citizens of Flevance weren't going to survive much longer anyhow. So, in short, they DID NOT create the lie that it's contagious, popular misconception took care of that all by itself!
Reminds me of the Rumbar Pirates. They had something, my guess was it was the same as Nami's. Unlikely but it has one thing going for it, that when Dorry and Brogy were talking about how there was a crew in the past who had picked a direction and left. I'm not even sure if it lines up time wise, but it would be cool if it did
Fun fact, Kestia is based on the real world disease named Rickettsia wich is also transmitterd by ticks.
Law curing himself was shown in the anime I distinctly remember him coming out of the chest after a while, crying and then sitting there and starting to use the Ope Ope No MI to remove the amber lead from himself, it was only his arm that we saw him work on as the camera panned out and away but I remember that very clearly
What episode? Because I’m pretty sure we don’t see it in the anime and like Tekking said, it’s only shown in detail in his light novel
what about the Disease Buggy got when they reached Laughtale? The one that kept Buggy and Shanks from going to the island.
Problem is we know even less about it. Like for all we know it was a fever or an extreme cold.
I'm not a doctor, but I am a licensed industrial grade diver, and the more I think about it, the less sense it makes that Cricket had Diver's Disease. Cricket was not using breathing apparatus or extra air as we could see. He was free diving like a pearl diver. He would start with a fixed amount of air from the surface, and that air would compress in his lungs when going down to the depths with higher pressures. If you used scuba gear, your lungs would always fill up with the air compressed to the depth you are in, and going up too fast with that much air is what risks Diver's Disease. But if Cricket went up free diving, the air in his lungs would just expand back to the original volume at the surface. No harm from that. So unless he had a separate air tank he could breathe air from at the bottom while diving (DO NOT DO THIS! PEOPLE HAVE DIED DOING THAT!), it doesn't make sense.
Why would u die from having a separate air tank at the bottom to mimic free driving?
@@maddson2088 Like this: You leave the air tank at the bottom where you dive. You start from the surface and go into the water without any scuba gear, you just hold your breath. In that held breath, you dive down to the air tank at the bottom, and when you are feeling like running out of air, you take a breath from the air tank. It would not be bad IF you keep diving and breathing with the air tank continuously until the end of your dive and you reach the surface. But if you take a breath from the tank at the bottom, hold it in and swim away from the tank, then you have lungs filled with compressed air at that depth. If you start going up WITHOUT breathing out simultaneously, the air will expand and pop your lungs like a balloon! This is more immediately dangerous and painful than Diver's Disease, because your lungs just popped, you have internal bleeding and gasses are blocking your blood flow. Not to mention the agonizing pain. The risk of drowning in that situation is immense! This is why a scuba diver NEVER holds their breath when diving. And people have tried free diving with a separate air tank at the bottom... They died.
That's how.
@@madskristiansen Jesus.... I'm in pain just reading this comment.
@@nekoplanetary4244 It is best to be completely frank about the dangers of mismanagement in diving. Just like driving, the margin of error in such conditions is small and often fatal. Diving is both a relaxing and intensive activity. You NEED to be relaxed in mind and body to not waste energy and air when diving, but the constant movements in heavy gear under water can be intense and IS dangerous. You need to prepare properly, follow the practiced methods and know what you are doing. If not, you will get hurt or die.
I love this sport ;)
I'm not a professional diver or a DR. But I thought divers disease/the bends were caused by nitrogen levels not oxygen.
Bonnie's disease reminded me of Xeroderma Pigmentosum which is a genetic disease characterised by sensitivity to the sun and UV light. People associate this to having vampire qualities which is rude.
Always with the need to be offended, ugh. It's an easy way to connect what you know and don't know, especially for children. And as long as it doesn't go from "oh that's like a vampire" to "haha, you're a vampire, die you monster", it's also not offensive at all. And least of all is it your job to be the deciding factor of it being rude.
I'm sure some people living with that disease actually occasionally make a vampire joke with their friends because that's just human. You cope with shit and sometimes you make fun of dire situations. Don't take that away from people, just because you wanna stand on some moral pedestal you built for yourself.
@@dowfreak7so happy you do the same thing:)
@@dowfreak7"least of your job"
And suppose it is your job to be rude? The one who got offended does then the goalline get pushed that they shouldnt be offended?
@@dowfreak7The same people quoting this are the same one continue being offensive to people who are different than them
@@eavyeavy2864 The one who got offended isn't in the room, honey. And they're not even 100% offended. The only people actually offended are those trying to speak for a subset of complete strangers they know nothing about.
You wanna know if something's offensive? Ask the person actually affected, not the mental image someone's projecting of the most fragile human being in existence, in order to act like they need to be defended.
Also get your head out of your ass. "People being different than them", you're just trying to paint more scenarios in which I'm the evil xenophobic boobgieman, instead of actually engaging with real arguments.
Kindly stop with the notification spam, shit's childish. You can feel attacked and offended, that's fine, just spare me the drivel.
The proper name of the Bends is Decompression Sickness (pretty straightforward, I know). It's also the name of a song by Mr Bungle and an album by Radiohead.
When you were talking about Boa it made me wonder why Kuma sent Luffy to Amazon Lilly. Both women who loved them ironically came down with a disease and were slaves to Celestial Dragons.
No one knew Boa loved Luffy
@@zagzig3734 and when Kuma sent Luffy to Amazon Lily, Boa hasn’t even met Luffy yet.
What about the sickness that killed Usopp's mother?
5:34 - STINGY DINGY BUG!
I will never not laugh at that in the 4Kids dub.
After my initial comment on the Bends, I decided to write up something about some of the diseases, their historical inspiration, and some of the cultural effects stuff like that had in the real world. I am in the medical field and my final research project revolved around a specific fungus, a yeast that can become pathogenic to humans. I write this so you can better appreciate Oda's research and his real-world inspirations.
This is going to be a long comment, so if needed, I'll break it up into multiple segments and post the remainder in the comments under this first one.
Scurvy: Both Tekking's explanation and how it is presented in one piece are correct, scurvy is the result of acute vitamin C deficiency. Interestingly, there are indications that some indigene populations worked out that eating certain things would help with the symptoms before European sailors and scholars did; for example, a crew of French sailors affected by scurvy went ashore on a Caribbean island and wrote down that the local population urged them to eat rhubarb, after which the crew recovered.
Five-day disease: This one is inspired by several real-world diseases, each contracted via the bite of an arthropod (ticks are not insects but rather arachnids). The most direct comparison in terms of having a very distinct rash is lime disease, which can show very distinct concentric bruises at the site of the bite. It is quite prevalent in Europe and north America, and is transmitted by the bite of a tick. It is rarely fatal, but It can result in latent nerve damage, as well as affect the joints and heart. There are other diseases contracted via arthropods, i.e. specific kind(s) of brain inflammation (via ticks), the sleeping disease (via a specific fly endemic to certain regions in sub-Saharan Africa, the tsetse fly), potentially both Ebola and the Marburg virus. We don't know for sure. It is presumed that both of these have a reservoir host, meaning an organism that holds them when it isn't spreading person to person, that is an arthropod. Both of these virus are fantastically deadly and infectious, and can easily result in some of the symptoms Nami had- extreme, rapid onset of fever, with the potential of death days or mere hours after onset of symptoms. However those two also result in bleeding, and contact with this infected blood is how they are so infectious. Last but not least, Malaria, which resulted in mosquitos killing more humans than any other animal- including humans.
Decompression sickness/The Bends/Diver's disease: see my other comment. It is the result of Nitrogen bubbles forming after rapidly ascending to lower pressure. In my other comment I also explained about Nitrogen narcosis, potential embolism, and techniques we developed to avoid diseases associated with diving.
Tree fever: As far as I know, there are no non-opportunistic human-pathogenic diseases that cross over from plants. What I mean by that, is that while there are certain fungi and bacteria that can affect both living humans and plants, they are only able to under specific circumstances. Certain molds that usually break down dead biomass can, and in my work, I reviewed a case of a patient who had a blood stream infection by saccharomyces cervisae - brewer's yeast, the fungus used to brew beer. That is highly unusual, but it can happen. In general, could a disease like tree fever exist? yes, potentially. I doubt it could be a virus; those are too particular in regards to their host. There are plenty that are zoonotic, meaning they can infect both animals and human hosts, but I doubt that would bridge the gap between animals and plants. Fungi though? Potentially. There are already incredibly infectious (and lethal) fungal infections in nature. You might know about Cordyceps, the real-world ant-killing and mind-controlling fungus that inspired the fungal infection in the last of us. This specific fungus likely won't become a danger to humans, our physiology is too different from insects. But there is also white-nose disease, a deadly fungal infection that kills entire colonies of hibernating bats. It isn't completely clear if that disease is solely responsible for the mass death of bats in the northern hemisphere, or if there are other factors, but the bat population absolutely plummeted since that disease first showed up. It is unlikely that it could affect humans in the same way- we don't hibernate, and we are physically unable to reach population densities comparable to a colony of bats. But yes. A fungal pathogen like tree fever, affecting both humans and plants, could potentially exist. The blotches being green and irregularly shaped could indicate that it is a parasitoid lichen. Lichen are fungus that live in a symbiotic relationship with photosynthetic algae.
Saphire scale: This one is fascinating, and I was surprised given that I actually haven't read the current chapter yet. There are diseases caused, or aggravated by sunlight. The most well known is perhaps porphyria, sometimes called vampire's disease. It's a congenital disease that results in your body being unable to break down Haem, the constituent compound of Haemoglobine and Myoglobine, the oxygen-binding structures of red blood cells and muscles. In contact with sunlight, this results in the leftover Haem becoming phototoxic - it changes its structure and physiological interaction with the body as a result of exposure to sunlight. There are other phototoxic chemicals, certain industrial pollutants, and also certain medications, which result in symptoms when exposed to the sun.
Amber lead syndrome: This is a stand-in for a plethora of real-world industrial pollutants. Chronic lead poisoning, for example, results in a type of anemia, a lack of red blood cells. It can result in paleness and increased time for recapilarrisation- if you press a finger into the skin of an anemic person, the spot will be pale longer than with a healthy person. It was also first misunderstood. Lead cutlery and kitchenware were common. Of all things, the import of tomatoes to Europe, and the resulting more acidic dishes that dissolved some of the lead from the cutlery and then poisoned the person eating was what first showed us that long-term lead exposure is harmful. There are also many pollutants that can result in rashes or spots in the area of exposition, including, but not limited to caustic agents, certain metals, certain organic compounds, radioactive materials. Mercury poisoning and the resulting neurological effects were so prevalent in hat makers in England that they inspired Lewis Carrol's mad hatter in Alice in Wonderland. And last but not least, the treatment of the affected population is not without historic precedent. Our modern word quarantine is derived from the quaranta giorni - forty days. That is the period of time ships suspected of carrying the plague were isolated in Italian ports. More to the point, there are some indications, if not hard proof as far as I know, that in Naples, infected were the victims of deliberate arson.
Lastly, unknown diseases: We still potentially have those today. in the 15th and 16th century, a disease called sweating sickness, the Sweats or English sweats broke out in England, in a series of isolated, but incredibly deadly epidemics. And to this day, we don't know what caused the Sweats, and whether whatever it was is now extinct.
Not going to comment on diseases caused by devil fruits or specific bioweapons. But if any of you have questions, please feel free to ask.
Something I forgot to add concerning Amber lead: plenty of real-world industrial pollutants accumulate in the body over time, with symptoms only after a long exposure. There is also a process called biomagnification, where organisms initially absorb a small amount of a toxin from their environment, pass that on to organisms that feed on them and so forth, resulting in a higher and higher exposure to the organisms at the top of that particular food web. A good example would be organic mercury compounds, and how they affect sharks, other greater predatory fish like tuna, and via them, humans. Mercury exposure from seafood will increasingly become a problem in the affected population. Another example of long delayed effects would be asbestos, which is a synthetic mineral fiber that mimics certain minerals, and was widely used in insulation and flame retardant materials. Until we realized that microscopic asbestos dust could not be broken down by the body, resulting in constant inflammation, and in turn, cancers of the affected tissues.
Thank you a lot for the long comment :)
As a med student, Sapphire disease really reminded me of Xeroderma Pigmentosum
you are right @@snowcold5932 I haven't thought about Xeroderma Pigmentosum but yes, that one also fits.
damn last one is straight from some bio thriller movie
One thing people dont think about is, luffy has used up his life span a couple times. Still waiting for that to come into play. Wont be surprised is gear 5 uses up life span as well
I would be incredibly surprised if luffy was still alive after finding the one piece
Well I don't see G5 draining his lifespan since it is just a part of the DF unlike G2 which he made
Luffy will most likely get "sick" the same way that Roger did, he'll die with a smile on his face the same way, having thrown the biggest party in the world, having taken down the WG and Imu, the would will be at peace
"uses up lifespan" is just shortform for "bullshit anime power go".
It's clearly not meant to actually be a part of the story, it's just used to make something seem more dangerous and to explain away the deus ex machina powerup.
But I do think Oda will at least hint someway that Luffy won't live for long after the One Piece is found. If there's actual "old man Luffy tells his children a tale of his pirating days" moments, that'd completely sour the ending.
Dude needs to either find the One Piece, have a celebration and then cut back to 10 years later where he's dead or he needs to die unexpectedly very soon after the treasure. REALLY doubt the latter will happen, though.
Isn't lifespan just a translation problem? Stamina is probably a better word to use
Two years in a nightmare hell and then dies to that. Oda does tragedy way too well...
I do wonder if these unique diseases have something more to them, or if they just exist as they are.
25:50 Not necessarily. Law could easily perform the same surgery on someone else. Yes, the fruit is needed, but you don't need to consume it to be rid of the sickness yourself
Yeah, could have phrased that better. What I'm saying is that no cure for Amber Lead exists in terms of medicine. The only way to cure it is with surgery, but the surgery is impossible UNLESS you have magic devil fruit powers. So the Ope-Ope fruit is the only means to cure it.
@@Tekking101 Yeah, thought you were going that way, specially when you revisited the topic a bit later, but as too sleepy to edit xD
The cause of scurvy is widely misrepresented. You never hear about how a diet high in carbohydrates increases the requirement of vitamin c, or that a lot of fresh food has ascorbic properties, even meat, especially organ meat. Sailors with scurvy had only access to old/rotten food, and stuff that lasted really long, which was usually hardtack biscuits, basically only carbohydrates with no nutrition.
I'm not a doctor, but I've always thought Whitebeard had cancer. He went to super long hair to bald man and we don't see the transition, but he has hair when he's healthy and is bald when he's sick. Also, the medicine he was always connected could easily been quimio. Nowadays, Oda creates his own diseases, but back then he used real life diseases like scurby, so...
He has a moustache, it is not cancer.
@@Moody.Smiruai what
Law Tekking is back! I don't think we've seen him since Law Week. 🤣
On another note, the disease aspect of One Piece is another wonderful, if horrifying, example of Oda's worldbuilding.
Foreign diseases were a factor explorers had to deal with in the real world, so the way he has consistently incorporated this into the story with Nami, Roger, Law, Bonney, and many other characters helps reinforce the idea that this is a living, breathing planet, with real world issues to deal with beyond who's the strongest pirate.
Let's not forget about, "I'll Die If I Step Foot On That Island" Disease. Terminal illness.
You forgot about the disease buggy got that prevented him from reaching the one piece with the rest of Rogers crew
Tree feaver connects a lot with Variola (the cow fever) that killed most of people that used to live in America thank God we have real life Nolands shishishi
Buggy’s Island Visitation Disease
We should get an update on the rules of the government and marine. Boy this series of chapters gave us a lot to work with
Your explanation of the Bends was fair enough, and I actually never heard the alternative name for it, or that it was named after an archaic structure for underwater engineering. It is a bit more common to call it decompression sickness. To add some more detail, increased pressure enables your tissues and blood to absorb more nitrogen (which makes up around 80% of our atmosphere) than they usually could, and if you reduce the pressure too quickly, that nitrogen coalesces into bubbles. The worst effects of this are not from the bubbles themselves, but from their potential to cause embolisms- blockages of blood vessels. Embolisms in general can cause things like cardiac or cerebral infarction - heart attacks or strokes. I am not sure how common that is due to the nitrogen bubbles in the Bends though.
But the disease is one of the reasons we came up with both alternative gas mixes for divers (containing reduced or no nitrogen) and saturation diving, where the diver or dive team is lowered inside a capsule that itself is pressurized to the ambient pressure of the work site, then decompressed over a period of several days.
Nitrogen has another potentially lethal effect on divers: under certain conditions it can become narcotic, leading to diminished situational awareness, euphoria, and full-on hallucinations. Nitrogen narcosis is believed to be a contributing factor to the deaths of many amateur divers and a common staple in near-death experiences of divers.
Chopper really has his work cut out for him, huh?
We don't get enough of him working towards his dream, I feel.
The closest I think It would be from the real world to the one piece world regarding the tree fever, is the cordyceps infection, I know is not from a plant, but a fungus, but still affects animals (mostly insects) and is terrifying!!!
It's also what "The Last Of Us" based it's zombies on
Thank you for the video! I always enjoy watching your videos! Yay! Law Tekking is back! I also love your Bepo plush! He is so cute!
Not a doctor but I've heard it called "the bends" before.
I'd love to see a one shot Matt dressed as law bonus points If we can get travis and talison as ace and Hawkins too
Honestly best part on oda making imaginary diseases is how it gives extra flair to the world of one piece and can also not be aged badly if he ever used a disease that can be cured a week after he drops the chapter
I hate when stories hust make a week ago reference that ages it poorly.
When is the last time we ever cured a irl disease?
@@BosheitV not as long as you think. I saw a whole documentary about it a few years ago but forget what it was
You could probably search it up and see
Oda also dont want it to hit to close to home for his reader,tree feaver pretty much allegory for old world diseases(smallpox,cowpox,livestock virus and black plauge) reaching isolated community like new world and australia
geneticist here: diseases crossing the kingdoms of life are very rare, underresearched and kinda hot right now because until recently we thought it was a minor, minute thing that rarely happens because plants and animals are very different genetically (and viruses that infect them are usually highly specialised). turns out there are some bacteria and fungi that can and do cause infections in both, viruses however ... basically nah as far as we know, except one case of tobacco mosaic virus and insect providence virus infecting hela cells
It's been a very long time since we've seen you dressed up in the Law it's like a breath of fresh air.
White beard had the badass mustache disease that was transmitted by Roger when he passed on the haki of his mustache
Anyone else get reminded of Black Lung for Coal miners when Amber Lead Syndrome was brought up?
I wonder what Yorki & the Rumbar Pirates disease they had to lose like half the crew, but that aside here are some non-canon diseases like:
- Kureha had Mondolin which is a contagious febrile disease with its symptoms being fever, weakness, sweating, & flushing of the face
- Olga had the South Blue Emperor Fever a lethal disease that exist 200 years ago which causes those infected with it to be bedridden, & while in the past it wasn’t curable now it is
I always interpreted that since the g
going Merry and the Thousand Sunny and tangerine trees that scurvy was not a problem since they had ample supply of vitamin C
Tekking miss the "i cant go to that land or i will die" sickness😂
Way back then, around 2009ish, My close friend once skipping a school for a couple of days. The next day he anttended school again, his teacher ask him why he didnt went to school, and he with serious face said : i got a tree fever.
The funny thing is, nobody questioning his answer. While he was dying inside from keeping himself to not bursting out laughing. 😂
In my country, it was translated as Woods Fever. Demam Hutan.
Man, good old days before the net took over human brain was such a joyful place to life. 😂
Everybody's dancing around it but I'd honestly expect Tekking to be able to say this kind of thing confidently. I don't know if you guys are waiting for confirmation or what but the nature of saint Saturn's devil fruit is pretty obvious if you know yokai.
A six legged oni with bull horns that kills with a gaze, it's a Gyuki, or ushi-oni, you know like the thing the eight-tailed beast in naruto is named after.
As a medical student here in the US that has been watching you since I was still just starting university, I feel oddly connected to this video.
Great video tekking!
Miss briar tho
Day 152 of asking for a discussion video on Vice Admiral Tsuru he did one for Garp and Sengoku let the Marine Trio finnaly be completed
(Also are we just gonna ignore how good Tekking looks with a goatee and a mustache? Even if they are just drawn on)
Mentioning Brook’s fruit made me realize something. The Revive-Revive fruit used the power of the underworld to return the soul back to the living realm, and attach the soul back to its original shell.
So that got me thinking, “what would happen if Brook found his body sooner?” Instead of a skeleton, he could’ve been an undead zombie. But what would’ve happen if he returned like the next day, the poison that killed him the first time would still be in his body, so wouldn’t he just die again.
Like if Ace had the fruit, would he just pop back up off the ground just to die a few seconds later cause there’s a giant hole in his torso. Cause the fruit doesn’t heal the body at all, otherwise Brook would’ve regained his flesh. Either Ace just dies again a few moments later, or it just doesn’t afflict him at all and he has to go one living the rest of his new life with a burnt magma hole in his chest. Cause Brook can still eat, drink, breathe, and poop without having the organs to do so, meaning it might be possible.
Considering Brook is still fine despite being a literal skeleton, a hole in the chest probably wouldn't be that much of a problem.
You forgot "if I go to that island I'll die diesese". The diesese Buggy got just before Laughtale. So he, and Shanks never got to go because Shanks stayed behind with him.
0:00
*tekking sitting there in cosplay*
Dunno why it made me laugh so hard, but it could have been that it took a few moments for my phone to start the video.
just watched a video about asbestos and it's consequences, amber lead is basically that seems like a parallel inside Oda was doing.
I absolutely fucking LOVE how Tekking pronounces Italian like French
"I think it's Cassòn"
Matt I can honestly say you're my favourite RUclipsr, truly
I remember I first got into One Piece when I was around 12 my dad would bring me the shonen jump magazines when I was stuck in the Hospital bored and just miserable, Luffy & the SH optimism and drive really helped me through some tough times
Laws backstory hit me quite hard, when your a child dealing with the medical system sadly although over the top there are really some asshole doctors, Law hiding in the bodies reminds me of stories my grandmother told me about her family in the Holocaust having to hide in the pile of corpses, despite my hardships I’m still very lucky
One piece has been so uplifting when I’m down and I can always come back to it when I need to love your content and enthusiasm, like law I’ve had to learn a lot because doctors can suck I can tell your very smart
I'm sitting here watching Adam savage's tested, lol he just ran his fingers thru his hair and made it look all crazy'😅 and I just realized he's a perfect live action dr.vega punk!
What about the "I'll die if I go to that island" sickness that buggy and usopp got
I worked for several years as a lead behavioral health technician at a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center. While working there me and my best friend/co-worker decided it would be absolutely hysterical to convince the rest of the staff and all the clients that scurvy was running rampant on the East Coast (USA). Mind you, all the clients were not allowed to have their phones until outpatient so there was absolutely no way for them to check¹. Me and my buddy were successful for about a week before the staff started calling BS on us. They were telling family members about it and being told we were lying. Good times and so worth it 😂
1. This rule was changed several years later to allow them their phones at the housing portion of the rehab just not while in group. Not like that matters here, but people will find a reason to start a fight over ANYTHING nowadays.
I will start a fight just for you assuming I would start a fight.
That's incredibly fucked up. You may have had a laugh but you were working with some really delicate patients and you caused them some unwarranted stress for your own entertainment?! What was a joke to you was a concern to someone going through hell. You should be fired for playing a "prank" on your patients. What the fuck is wrong with you
In Indonesia 5 day Fever from mosquito bite is truly exist. Not exact 5 day but around 5 or 10 days
Tekking said Scurvy normally 3 times
I love that Law, Ace, and Hawkins play dnd together 😂
For those who do know what I'm talking about: Law is voiced by Matthew Mercer the DM for Critical Role(CR), Ace is Travis Willingham a player for CR, and Hawkins is voiced by Talisen Jaffie also a player for CR
Ussops and Zorros mother and Senior Pinks wife had unknown diseases as well (anime mom disease) and im not shure if sanjis mother was sick before she drank the poison.
The new island disease. Buggy got it, and did not go to Laughtale. + Usopp has it often!
I was just thinkin earlier that itd be a little since we got a Tekking video about a random topic. Of course i enjoy the content about current OP evens.. but i enjoy Tekking mostly for his random enthusiastic rants
Holy shit this was quick, you were just talking about it on the live stream.
Correction: Hancock and Luffy were married at Marineford, in quite possibly the most overlooked marriage in anime history. It all happened in Hancock's head but that doesn't mean it wasn't real.
I will bite
That was 1 sided, not both
Man that was a fast upload keep up the great work
Tekking never runs out of ideas 😂
Oda make chopper's dream more harder to Achieve....
Tekking, will you do a new video about the Paw-Paw Fruit, now that it's fruit's been shown and its ability is more explored?
I’m pretty sure it will drop soon
“What’s up guys, welcome to my channel! Today we’re gonna be doing a sickass tier list of all the most terminal diseases! Be sure to like, comment, and SMASH that subscribe button!”
Funny thing is most free divers don’t get the bends.
There are some cases and he might actually have this version. Some free divers that dive for long periods of time throughout the day in the water without regular breaks on the surface can get it. So Cricket could have had the bends.
Cricket definitely dives for long periods of time throughout the day in the water without regular breaks on the surface, so yeah
0:24 Ganondorf is Law? Hm. Never knew that.
You were right about how limes were used to cure scurvy, which was discovered by english sailors & the reason why you yanks call us brits limeys. HOWEVER, what you failed to mention is that english sailors were also the ones to discover that lemons were twice as effective as limes. (yanks should be calling brits lemonys because of that) Its a pity that back then no one ever thought of mixing lemon juice & lime juice together as a cure for scurvy since they both work individually so therefore, the best cure should be using both together.
And something I noticed while reading the chapter. Is that the little piece of diamond scale that is on her skin is also Is where that little golden mark is
Oda: “Wake up babe, We got a new One Piece disease drop”
TheFans: “Yes sir 😵💫”
"ALL diseases explained"
Oda: "uhm actually here's sapphire scales"
Sweet thanks!
This man's love for the series is like no other !! Man you're the best
May the force continue to guide us all! Cheers!
If doc Q's fruit works fast enough I could see the feminizing disease being used to throw someone off balance in combat.
Imagine Zoro swinging a sword and suddenly his physique turns into that of Nami. He would definitely be off balance from that.
Not sure if it has an actual name but dying from a broken heart is real. Happens to humans and animals. When my father in law got terminally ill, his dog’s health started to decline. His dog passed away about 2 weeks after he passed. The vet stated she passed from a broken heart cause her owner passed away.
One of the things that I like about One Piece is that these diseases really are no joke. In most series the characters just find a cure and that's it but in OP that's not always the case. Only reason Law was able to survive and maybe Bonney too is because of DF abilities
I love that 4Kids needed to come up with something as "Grand Line Fever" (so creative, btw) just because they completely skipped Little Garden
It's one of the changes that actually made sense. Like it's honestly interesting watching the 4kids dub just to see how they have to completely alter the writing to explain gaps in the story arcs.
@@Tekking101 Would've loved for them to reach Thriller Bark, to be honest! Imagining them trying to justify Oimo and Kashi in Enies Lobby and Laboon in TB is really fun. At least they chose to end with the whole crew dying horribly as a galleon dropped on their heads, so if FUNimation didn't pick it up, there was an ending to the story :P
@@AnyMEmdq that's how the one piece manga and anime should of ended.
@@donnieconyers2829 One version of the anime, the one that needed to end, ended like that. The rest should not end at all ¬¬
Also, you meant "have", not "of", since "should of" has no actual meaning
@@AnyMEmdq nah one piece should of ended there because that's when everything becomes retarded inbreded bs.
I was almost traumatized by the existence of the bends as a child; it was in the old, 80s GI Joe. The characters came up in a diving bell type apparatus too fast, and they all, heroes and villains, just...collapsed, crying out in pain. The explanation was vague at best, in show, but I will always remember seeing them drop, moaning and clutching at their bodies.
Sapphire decease seems like a STD she got from the celestial dragon and passed on to Bonney. That’s why the CD use space suites to keep the suns ray from turning them onto stone.
Law's voice in the funimation dub is my favorite part of the Dub
15:07
Oh Yorkie! We share the same laugh!
Your videos are always entertaining as hell, glad I found your channel.
My favorite character bro his backstory is the saddest too like the plague but worst
What about usopps chronic "I-can't-go-to-that-island" disease?
Honestly im somewhat impressed that One piece would list out so many fantasy diseases, instead of the typical they died of a "fatal illness" now im curious if we may find out what Roger was suffering from.
they died from down d stairs
@@vipvip-tf9rwok seriously was that a mistranslation, 4kids or the real thing?
@@poenpotzu2865 I meant if oda wanted to off someone without plot device he would use stairs
Makes me wonder if Roger and Whitebeard had a haki based illness? It would explain why Whitebeard couldn't use conqueror's and why the disease is so unknown. Since haki is a person's spiritual energy no one would assume that it could harm you if used too much (or you have too much haki or something).
Hello Law Tekking, say hi to normal Tekking, William Tekking, Kai Tekking and etc. I was wondering where did you get the Law Chopper plushie? I have seen them on tiktok and I want the Sabo Chopper one aka Chapo. The Law Chopper is officially called Trafalgar D. Lawpper btw
When will the best and worst arcs video be released?