My grandmother who worked with eye care at hospital always said to me to take care of my eyes - was right too. During the last christmas I got a sharp hazelnut shell in my right eye. It didn't get well and soon I also fell during a winter walk and got a fracture in my hand. So always listen to wise people.
As an X-ray tech for 25 years in a big-city ER I saw this several times. It is very hard to get an image of a fishbone because they have so little calcium they don't block the X-rays and leave a distinctive image on the film like a regular bone, but a good tech can fiddle with the machine to enhance the image. One woman had a bone right through her esophagus. She didn''t think it was anything important until she realized she couldn't swallow anything and had a lot of pain. It had caused a massive infection and was obstructing her breathing. A tricky surgery later she was out of danger but will always have a rough edge to her voice.
Indeed. This is just a case of sheer bad luck mixed with a small case of bad habits. When i was a kid i tended to rush my food a lot. But thankfully, since then i take my time.
Worst one is the gas station cheese one. Like the guy almost died, and compared to this one he didn't have an entire family of freaking doctors to save his life lol.
I’ve also tended to not chew my food very well. I remember eating a dinner with rice and carrots before getting way too drunk and smoking, I threw up, and there were full carrots. I’ve tried to be more careful since then. This convinced me though 😳
His dad is the classic “I know everything, if I haven’t seen it, it’s not possible, doctor.” I hate those types of doctors. It’s normally the doctor in the family of a patient with a difficulty to diagnose condition. You can’t tell them nothing. They could’ve got it in Thailand🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️.
He's not saying "I know everything, it's not possible because I haven't seen it" but he's saying "Though it is a possibility, the chances are very close to zero and we shouldn't following a lead which came from a series of MRI images when most of the tests suggests a possibility of colorectal cancer which also lines up with the fact that the probability of getting colorectal cancer is rising in young adults in asia. "
@@solortus lol hasty generalization. You mean SOME doctors. Ive rarely see doctors being harsh to nurses as both are just trying to do their duties harmoniously, in my country, mostly its to their fellows who would often make a basic mistake. But yeah, this doctor is hella stupid and arrogant but NOT ALL.
His father: "It's definitely not a bone, don't be ridiculous." *His son travels over three countries only to figure out it was a bone* His father: "Haha, whoopsie me! ..."
Foreign Doctor: Another arrogant American who won't accept a logical possibility, even with his own son. I'm American by the way, and that was the first thing I thought, when the father so firmly rejected that. And I hope someone told that doctor they were right, because if that happens again, the doc may doubt themselves, waste more time & resources, and risk losing the patient.
I am reminded of this: “If an elderly but distinguished scientist says that something is possible, he is almost certainly right; but if he says that it is impossible, he is very probably wrong.” Arthur C. Clarke Experience and intuition are all well and good, but data trumps everything.
the quote seems incorrect, but yeah... your takeaway is good and pretty obvious. the thing is that in the case of medicine, it's not feasible to follow up on every single possible lead in the order that they are brought up, so performing a risky/invasive surgery over something that is very unlikely is usually a bad idea when there are many other more possible leads pointing to more likely things.
I agree that it was a bit arrogant to call it “ridiculous,” but I also must agree with @Lee Butler that there must be a relatively high degree of certainty to do something as invasive as abdominal surgery, as it can often lead to more harm than help if the assumptions made from the leads turn out to be incorrect
Moral of the story: Don’t be dismissive of others opinions just because YOU haven’t experience something. His dad could’ve killed his son if the other team of doctors hadn’t found the bone as well.
As a young student nurse of many years ago, I struggled with chemistry class barely eeking by with a C that my instructor mercifully gave. I've watched about 15 of your videos so far and can understand your explanations of electrolytes/elements and how they can help the body but also how they can damage the body when we ingest non illicit OTC drugs or apply creams. I so wish you could teach chemistry to young nursing students! I've been a nurse for 30 years now and I feel very accomplished that I understand now!
@@Kevin-hx2ky Lol, calm down Chubbyemu adds details for entertainment purposes. There's no mention of that conversation ever happening on the report and both he and his father were both confident in the expertise of the Thailand hospital according to Dr Gharib who presented the case.. I mean if you actually follow the citations in the description that is.
Dad: "The chances of that happening are slim to none and...." Dad fell into a logical fallacy. While it is of very low probability that his son would randomly get a fish bone lodged in his body, the evidence on the scans showed a long, thin object. The probability of a long, thin foreign body being a fish bone is actually quite good. One must always be prepared to re-adjust the frame in response to new information when problem solving.
Specifically, his father could have realized that, being in Vietnam, PB was probably consuming more fish than usual, increasing the probability that a bone would pass into his body, neglected during chewing.
Dad committed the fallacy of isolated statistics. Of course deep perforations by fish bones are rare in the _general population_--fish that gets eaten (in US at least) is usually prepared industrially so the occurrence of pinbones in meals is low to begin with--and most people chew their damn food, detecting the occasional stray bone, further slimming down the occurrence of fish bones entering the GI tract. The scant bones that get swallowed usually pass through without incident. The very scant bones that don't pass through nicely usually don't end up in the spleen. But his son isn't the general population. His son is notorious for inhaling his food from childhood on, and ate large-boned fish at a corresponding time before the onset of his symptoms. Moreover, the symptoms make the other doctor suspect a fish bone perforation--not just any other doctor, but one whose career has been within a region where people eat way more fish than the US, and prepare it mainly at home or at small businesses. When you hear hoofbeats, and you're in the savannah... don't make a fool of yourself by parroting "think horses not zebras".
Not only that, there was a history of the son's behavior that reinforced this possibility. Why dad would ignore that is beyond me, but pisses me off a little.
It was a Thai doctor but seriously how can anyone tell that’s a fish bone? Looking at the scans I can only see like a dot, then comparing the picture of the fish bone taken out of him? Only explanation would be it was standing vertically but then still how can he tell? Absolutely amazing. I plan on going to med school for radiology but man I don’t know if I’ll ever be this good
@@zombieastronaut3567 They probably see it frequently. The southeast asian diet is pretty fish heavy. A lot of riverfish with pinbones similar to those found in salmon.
Because the story telling gives you feeling of lack of power. He tells about people eating poison and you are trying to scream to person doing it, DON'T DO IT" But you can't.
There's a saying we should all live by: *"Nature will castigate those who don't masticate."* - as mentioned by Horace Fletcher. While it's not a good idea to chew your food excessively as Fletcher's dietary plan suggested, the phrase still holds some merit in that you should always remember to actually chew the stuff you eat. Chew your food, people! And, make sure to love your Liver too - You can't Live-r without one!
These titles keep getting me more worried like hes gonna make a vid called “A man breathed oxygen, this is how he died a horribly painful and slow death”
First his neck snapped. Then his pancreas exploded. His liver cirrhozed and punctured his kidneys which developed abscesses as the result. The abscesses released a chemical known as PROTHROMBINOCYTOKINE STORM CAUSING GOLGI APPARATUS DISSOLVING PROTEIN P7 PLATELET FACTOR A1 STIMULATING HORMONE NECROTIZING FACTOR A31 which travelled to his lungs, where it caused a massive cytokine storm, which travelled down to his pelvic bones which snapped in a gruesome, blood curdling crunching motion making sounds like a bell pepper being bitten into, and thick blood from his mesenteric pelvic artery started gushing all over. Then all his organs fell out in one swoop out of the bottom of his pelvic girdle, while his knees buckled and his knee tendons snapped and whipped all around, throwing the bloody intestines all around the walls of his apartment. What could possibly go wrong, just from taking a breath of oxygen, right?
@@charlieangkor8649 you forgot he had hyperoxiemia Hyper- meaning high - oxi - meaning oxygen -emia meaning presence in blood He had high amount of oxygen present in blood
Weeelllll....that'd be called Hyperoxia / Oxygen Toxicity when you breath in oxygen more than the 21% that exists in our air concentration for an [extended] period of time. Apparently it leads to oxidative damage to cell membranes leading to such things as the collapse of the alveoli in the lungs. Can also cause general organ damage, seizures, and finally, death. So you're more or less on the money with the title.
Well, it is actually, possible because oxygen is an oxidizing agent, which means oxygen (O2) could cause damage to DNA causing a fatal cancer with a slow and painful death. And the most scary part is that is not even a joke, it really happens. That is why it is really important to consume antioxidant nutrients in order to avoid oxidative stress in the cells.
Actually corona means "crown", so coronemia should be "crown presence in blood". This is either a very inventive but stupid thief or a very unlucky king.
The viral presence in blood is called viremea but is normally not called specifically because for most viruses, if they are somewhere, they are probably in blood at some capacity.The important bit with coronaviruses specifically is actually presence (and damage) is lung alveori, especially with "the" coronavirus everyone is talking about (i.e. SARS-COV-2) because that is what causes deaths, the virus itself (in blood) is probably about as bad as any other "common cold".
@@kaluluchance6377 My thought exactly! touma said it all nonchalantly, as though everyone has gotten the bad habit of not chewing food. As it so happens, I'm all done with education. College graduate as well. No one ever encouraged me to not chew my food. If anything I was told the opposite.
once again, I am very happy for a good ending. I initially started watching for the "haha let's hear about people dying in extreme ways" factor, but over time, I've found myself rooting for the patients a lot more, avidly hoping for survival.
Lived in a small town. hospital wasted our time for two years then told us we have to move somewhere bigger with a better hospital so they could get my mom a diagnosis
@@cramuel256 He means that he loves the US in a lot of ways, but he has to admit it simply doesn't have the same medical professionalism as other countries. So the patient would be better treated elsewhere.
In the US, there is no national healthcare system or program. There are currently millions of Americans without health care coverage right now, which is ridiculous for a developed country with one of the world's leading economies.
@@awhopper3241 I certainly was not joking and whomever smugly suggested that all you have to do is have "a job that doesn't suck" is truly ignorant. We are all one health crisis away from poverty. Some people do not understand this but it's a simple fact. Some unforeseen and life altering tragic diagnosis like terminal cancer, multiple sclerosis, ALS...etc. can take away your health, your career, your savings, your assets, your home... even your children and you can be impoverished in a matter of months or years.
PB: (wakes up in a US hospital) PB: ohh... thank god... I'm saved... The Hospital: You're welcome..... NOW GIVE ME YO MONEY PB: huh? what? (sweats) The Hospital: ALL OF IT, GIMME. GIMME YO MONEY NOWWWW
Currently taking medical terminology as part of my major, and I really like listening to your videos while I’m cleaning or getting ready for work, it makes me feel like I’m studying a little bit lol. One more semester left, wish me luck !
2 big lessons here: - don't discharge patients prematurely. a lot of times, doctor thinks there is no problem but there is indeed a problem. they think they have a superior judgement over the patient but it's the patient who can feel the problem. - listen to others. his dad is a doctor but a stubborn one. when the thai doctor said it looks like a fish bone, he just doesn't trust them. he has the habit of swallowing things whole so it is possible.
Do you have any clue how much it costs on a daily basis to keep patients in the hospital, in any country? It's pretty expensive - I can tell you that. Doctors make judgments based on facts - not on intuition. Medicine is a science, you don't just intuitively diagnose or prescribe treatments.
@@floatingchimney Know what is more expensive? Not listening or testing or doing the science because it's expensive and telling someone in the middle of say, congestive heart failure to get a nasal spray when they say they can't breath...and sending them home. Or telling someone with COPD who may have quit smoking 25 years ago, but did smoke long term 'We'll keep an eye on it" when they are having extra problems and say they don't feel right...then having them collapse a bloody year later with stage four metastasized lung cancer. Just examples.
@@floatingchimney The profit motive of hospital boards procludes them from adequately assessing everyone. Doctors are often rushed by administrators in order to see more patients and make more money. Unless there are legal and economic consequences for corporations cutting those costs, they will sacrifice patient care everytime.
His dad is an american. It's ingrained in american culture to dismiss the opinions of people from other countries because "every country is inferior to america"
Son swallows fishbone despite mother's repeated warnings that he should chew his food more. Father says there's no way his son could've swallowed a fishbone because he's personally never seen it happen before. There's some interesting subtext here about parenting and the attention being paid to PB growing up. Also "never seen it in my practice before" vs "this has been documented for at least 100 years"
“A man ate mom”s spaghetti. This is what happened to his body” MM, a 30 year old man is presenting to the emergency room with sweaty palms, weak knees, and extremely heavy arms, along with vomiting and anxiety. All of these symptoms being hidden by his “calm and ready” demeanor.
This channel gives me an acute fear of living sometimes. Edit: woah, 1.5k! Never had that much before. Thanks everyone in acknowledging or agreeing with my ever growing fear of life itself!
The human body is really good at keeping itself alive through traumatic situations. It also really sucks at keeping itself alive in traumatic situations.
I kinda have the same problem maybe more like a eating disorder I feel like a dog who’s been starved and when i eat anything it’s the best thing I’ve ever had and I scarf it down. Once I threw up after eating ramen and it was like I just spilled a bowl the noodles were intact
Should have listened to the Thai doctor. They've probably seen it before. A similar thing happened to my dog. The vet caught it straight away. He said it's pretty rare in dogs, but he've seen it very often in pet cats.
Imagine being the dad like "naaah this totally reasonable concern isn't what's killing my child" and being completely fucking wrong in a very dangerous way
its a common bias to dismiss something unlikely, because the worst sh*t in life allways happens to somebody else rather than us. or those close to us. feels bad man :p
I was at home for 5 days with odd belly pains that exacerbated when i folded or unfolded my abdomen (sit, stand). My mom, a nurse, said its all good, it will pass. Turns out, i has acure appendicitis for 7 days before i went to my PCP and she rushed me to the ER for emergency surgery. It happens
Even MORE reasonable considering his well-known habit since childhood of not really chewing his food. PB's dad is a perfect example of the stereotypical "arrogant doctor".
I bet he didn't blame himself at all, and insisted he was right that it was extremely unlikely and that the Thai doctor "got lucky". But maybe I'm just being pessimistic.
"A man did the same exact thing you're doing right now. This is how he died the most excruciating death known to man." God damn man, these videos are scarier than any horror movie out there
@@Stonktradomus my point is, nobody would have expected something so common to lead into serious injury. Now that's terrifying, since doctors will assume other sources of infection rather than the bone.
Hopefully he did. Thai doctors are held to extremely high regards as most graduate and become professors and in Thai culture, being a doctor and professor is one of the most respected and prestigious titles that one could have.
I think this guy was pretty lucky to have so many friends, family, and doctors looking after him. Thank you to all those in the medical field, true superheros.
My Dad kind of inhaled his food at a high rate as a result of his childhood (from age 7 onwards) spent in boarding schools. If he didn’t eat quick enough than the food was taken away and he was at a disadvantage as a natural left hand user he had his left hand tied behind his back and just learned to shovel his food in as quick as possible. I’m sure things in boarding school are different now, for a start only very very few board as young as 7, the whole ‘you must not be left handed’ isn’t a thing anymore and children do not have food taken away if they take over 10 minutes to eat. Hearing about my Dads experiences away at school in the 1920s and 30s was kind of horrifying but to him it was just normal (although he never expected any of his kids to eat at super speed or be right handed regardless of preference) but given that my Dads story is similar to everyone we ever knew who boarded in that time through to decades later my Mum refused to send us kids to boarding school ever! Nice to have an episode that results in a full recovery rather than the more ominous ‘A’ recovery! Love this channel as always, some of my very favourite content!
@@MrTooEarnestOnline Probably a residential school for First Nation Americans. I have read a lot of cases about people who went to those schools. Many First Nations developed type 2 diabetes because they were fed trash, had to basically inhale foods or foods get taken away, and developed a huge appetite because they were hungry all the time.
@Oz Lang It is so backward punishing kids who are born with a natural handedness. I am lefthanded myself and proud of it. Lefthandedness, which I see as an uniqueness, is not a hindrance in any shape or form. While I write and hold a toothbrush with my left hand, I am able to use my right hand for other tasks. If a teacher dared lay a finger on my son or daughter for having something that is completely out of their control, I'd use my trusted lefthand to smack 'Teach' in their face. "Come and pick on someone your own size. Here, take this".........smack! Out of line teachers need to be put in their place.
Ash Lee I am in fact British and we are talking about British public school (which in the UK means private just to confuse). So that wonderful environment was where the wealthy and ‘posh’ sent their children!
Crazy. This happened to a great uncle of mine about 25 years ago. He kept getting this kind of infection. They would clear it up with antibiotics. They did all the scans etc but could see where the bacteria was coming from. He'd recover but then a week later he was back in the hospital. It spread and he eventually died. They did an autopsy and found a VERY TINY fishbone was sticking out of his intestines. It was so small that the scans didn't pick it up.
I'm fairly confident there was a video in which he didn't hold up the finger. That video just... didn't _feel_ right. Although now I can't recall which one it was.
I can’t imagine the guilt his father must have felt when they discovered the fish bone. Maybe it was a good humbling lesson for him. If that were my kid and I was a doc, I would forever be haunted....
@@wada-wada Ask any nurse: That's most Doctors. The SOLID vast majority by a long shot to some extent or another. As stated by my nursing director mother, if you spend your days being idolized as nearly all knowing, giving unquestioned orders to people that are followed exactly and having your word be law, even the nicest people will develop a complex. And not all doctors started out as nice people. Especially not in a profession with so much money involved.
@@wada-wada Narc as is narcissist? I don't know him but he's a doctor and has a RUclips channel where his face is front and center. That doesn't mean he's a bad person but I'm sure he has an ego, most youtube personalities do too
I love your videos. I was a medical student before I had my daughter and I watch your videos with here so she can learn medical terminology. Great videos. 👍💜💜
One time I was at an important dinner and I pierced a fish bone through the thin edge of my tongue. I didn't want to look or sound weird so I kept it there for a few minutes. Finally I realized I couldnt eat, speak with it so I got up to the washroom and pulled it out. Thankfully I didnt get this.
@@codenoob9325 indeed. Fish bones have been shown to be so deadly, that in some jurisdictions American police have been carrying them on shift and flicking them at black people.
When I went to China for the first time, I got a plate of fish. I wasn't used to bones being in fish, and this particular fish had a LOT of long, tiny bones that my friends said made it really difficult to eat. My first big bite was shocking, as my mouth was full of sharp bones. Fortunately, I didn't swallow any.
I don't understand why certain places don't remove the bones from fish. I can understand not beheading animals or removing fins, you just eat around that part if you don't want it but bones are almost impossible to avoid and way way way more difficult to remove once the fish is cooked. Not to mention I now have to sit there and dig my fingers into my hot food to pick out the bones because the chef was too lazy to grab a pair of chefs tweezers or just cut that section of the fish out? Fucking stupid.
@@GiraffeFlavored it’s probably a cultural thing. People grew up eating whole fish caught straight from the rivers nearby thus they are skilled at/expected to remove the bones. A lot of fish also contain so many bones that if you remove them they would look unpresentable on a plate. These fish tend to taste better too. But I agree, it is a pain in the ass to have a mouthful of spikes just from a tiny piece of fish.
@@GiraffeFlavored mostly cultural because fish are cooked and eaten whole there. Their fishes are tiny, full of tiny bones as well, unlike large and nice European and temperate climate fish. I think they didn’t have a lot of experience preparing the salmon. Based on the photo, it looks like basically a rib of the salmon. Usually you would pull them out with a tweezer, but they can miss one or two bones if they are not used to it. That’s a huge piece of bone as well. I thought that would have been extremely noticeable normally. The bones from river fish that are cooked whole are usually tiny, extremely brittle. If you don’t spit them out, simply chewing them up is possible consider how small they are. Not a salmon bone, however.
@@GiraffeFlavored I'm a Vietnamese person. When we prepare fish, we only remove the guts. We cook the fish as a whole, and then later we use chopsticks to get the flesh from the bones. This is due to most fish are small and don't have lots of meat on them, so we don't bother removing the bones before cooking, as the eaters can easily get the flesh by chopsticks.
@N1gerTV yes in europe healtcare is not payed by the individual but its payed by goverment thru tax so everybody is in on the bill and no one is left out of the medical care becaus they cant pay.
There's nothing wrong with doctors. One doctor made a mistake and now all of them have a problem? That's ridiculous. Do you make generalisations for race, sex, age? Are you qualified to rate the quality of doctors? Why did 54 people like this dumb comment ffs.
@@benbooth2783 "One" doctor... No fuckhead, there isn't a single competent doctor for miles and miles anywhere near me, despite there being at least 4 hospitals and 3 clinics. And yes, I'm in a position to judge them. Medical knowledge is not some cryptic forbidden knowledge that only the chosen few can learn. You need a degree to PRACTICE it, but anyone with an interest can LEARN it. I'll give you one of the MANY examples from my own life of the fact that doctors are often incompetent, and one from a friend of mine (who also can't find a competent doctor anywhere near her). I got bit by a rabid bat a few years back. A ton of bullshit went on because of incompetence, but my one example I'll give is that one of the doctors told me that I don't need the rabies vaccine because, and I quote "you look healthy to me, you're pink". If there's anything you should know about rabies, it's that the MOMENT you have ANY symptoms, you are unsaveable and going to die. As for my friend, she worked at a daycare, one of the kids gave her mumps. MANY different doctors told her she 'couldn't' have mumps because it 'doesn't exist anymore', until finally ONE not-incompetant doctor ACTUALLY tested her and told her, yes, she had mumps. I could go on for ages with myriad examples, all involving DIFFERENT doctors. Competent doctors are the EXCEPTION, not the rule. And clearly 54 other people who happened to read my comment, can't find any competent doctors either, further proving my point.
I’m so lucky to live in a place with good doctors ig. I do think most doctors are good, I just have no clue why you’ve been plagued with so many bad doctors lmao
@@UmatsuObossa I live in the UK and probably the doctors are better here. I guess we have to remember that these comments sections are international. It sucks that your local doctors are shitty. If your young, maybe you should try to become a doctor?
I have a bad habit of eating too quickly too. While I was living in Japan, I loved getting salmon. Tasted better for some reason. But the cuts I got at the supermarket always had way more bones than I experienced in America. I definitely got a fish bone caught right by my epiglottis, next to the back of my tongue. I had to pull it out with two fingers and it took all my concentration not to gag as I hit my epiglottis with my fingers. I'm glad it was somewhere easily reached and it didn't turn into what this guy had.
I remove the large ones, but I find it difficult to completely remove _all_ of the bones. If chewed, the the small ones will be pulverized by the teeth and esophagus muscles and also dissolved by saliva and/or stomach acid, no? I hope so. Or else I shall avoid eating fish.
Chubbyemu steps to the microphone "FP was a good person, passed away, and presented to the funerary chapel, where we are now. FP showed signs of hypoeulogy, hypo meaning low, eu meaning good, logy meaning discourse. Low presence of good discourse. Given its recent history of binging in my videos, there's a few clues on what's going on."
If you are giving your dog tinned or soft stuff...that is not what dogs are given teeth for...give him raw ribs, raw chicken legs...then you will see he has to break and grind the food...and will be far better than any other diet.
@@khalilhijazi4575 i ask myself that all the time, my room is just slowly becoming more full of monster cans due to my obsession with collecting the cans.
My mom almost died of klebsiella pneumoniae. The doctors missed it after repeated tests showing high WBC and being sick for 5 weeks. She went into septic shock. I found her unresponsive at home. Turns out she had an abscess on her liver. How it got there, no one knows, she doesn't drink alcohol, or do drugs and the doctors found no other diseases, she had no underlying medical conditions. I still wonder how it happened. Luckily she is alive and well.
underground leaks 101 you were so concerned with appearing clever (using a dead joke) that you didn't stop to think if what you were saying was relevant or funny. In other words: WOW kid you just got r/WOOOOOOSHED!!!! 😂😂👀 "Wooosh" means you didn't get the joke, as in the sound made when the joke "woooshes" over your head. I bet you're too stupid to get it, IDIOT!! 😤😤😂 His joke was so thoughtfully crafted and took him a total of like 3 minutes, you SHOULD be laughing. 🤬 What's that? His joke is bad? I think that's just because you failed. He outsmarted you, nitwit.🤭 In conclusion, I am posting this to the community known as "R/Wooooosh" to claim my internet points in your embarrassment 😏. Imbecile. The Germans refer to this action as "Schadenfreude," which means "harm-joy" 😬😲. WOW! 🤪 Another reference I had to explain to you. 🤦♂️🤭 I am going to cease this conversation for I do not converse with simple minded persons.😏😂
Subtitles on ✅
All references in description 😊
Ok
Thank yu
👍
I edited my comment for grammar and it removed your like😔, but nice video^-^
Chubbyemu you’re my dad
You know shit's about to go down when he says his condition was getting better but there's still 7 minutes left to the video
Then suddenly everythings 10x worse after that, its great but- not great at the same time. Im glad he recovered- jesus
@Jellyman lol true, Imagine the villain died a minute after the movie started
lmao
😂😂🤣😂🤣
Have you not heard of "flashback"?
This is his mom's "I told you so" ammo for the rest of her life.
My grandmother who worked with eye care at hospital always said to me to take care of my eyes - was right too. During the last christmas I got a sharp hazelnut shell in my right eye. It didn't get well and soon I also fell during a winter walk and got a fracture in my hand. So always listen to wise people.
Rest of his life more like. He's always gonna hear her voice in his head. :)
If she's like most moms she won't miss an opportunity to point that out lol
@a sunburn you make a good point
Never show her this
Pb, which in the periodic table, means lead. This is what happened to his chemistry grade.
I love this community for quality jokes such as this.
This is a high-brow joke
@Discomfort Pb got lead poisoning just like JP.
An element bonded with another element, this is what happened to its electrons.
Did Ofqual’s algorithm get to it?
As an X-ray tech for 25 years in a big-city ER I saw this several times. It is very hard to get an image of a fishbone because they have so little calcium they don't block the X-rays and leave a distinctive image on the film like a regular bone, but a good tech can fiddle with the machine to enhance the image. One woman had a bone right through her esophagus. She didn''t think it was anything important until she realized she couldn't swallow anything and had a lot of pain. It had caused a massive infection and was obstructing her breathing. A tricky surgery later she was out of danger but will always have a rough edge to her voice.
I bet she sings a great rendition of _Bette Davis Eyes_ at karaoke night though!
interesting.
but why not use mri if they still cant see anything causing a problem.
surely an mri would show a fish bone much better than xray.
The ones where the person didn’t do something incredibly stupid are the most terrifying
Yeah, drinking a snow globe is one thing, but not chewing dinner properly is a whole other thing.
Most cases of injury from similar fishbones do not involve patients with a long history of not chewing food.
Like the guy who died from having his dog lick his leg.
Indeed. This is just a case of sheer bad luck mixed with a small case of bad habits. When i was a kid i tended to rush my food a lot. But thankfully, since then i take my time.
Worst one is the gas station cheese one. Like the guy almost died, and compared to this one he didn't have an entire family of freaking doctors to save his life lol.
A man watched ten of these in one day. This is what happened to his anxiety
It's over 9000!
Very true
yep i felt a headache and was scared to death
Exactly I'm scared to eat now
I binged watched these last night now im scared I might be breathing wrong
Me watching this while eating: *CHEWING INTENSIFIES*
This comment cured my sphenisciphobia.
😂 golden comment 👍
God yes, ALWAYS double chew fish becasuse in scared THIS will hapen
Smug chewing
I’ve also tended to not chew my food very well. I remember eating a dinner with rice and carrots before getting way too drunk and smoking, I threw up, and there were full carrots. I’ve tried to be more careful since then. This convinced me though 😳
His dad is the classic “I know everything, if I haven’t seen it, it’s not possible, doctor.” I hate those types of doctors. It’s normally the doctor in the family of a patient with a difficulty to diagnose condition. You can’t tell them nothing. They could’ve got it in Thailand🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️.
Thank you. Exactly what I thought too.
Most doctors are arrogant and it's been a consistent problem in group dynamics with nurses who often get berated by doctors especially surgeons.
He's not saying "I know everything, it's not possible because I haven't seen it" but he's saying "Though it is a possibility, the chances are very close to zero and we shouldn't following a lead which came from a series of MRI images when most of the tests suggests a possibility of colorectal cancer which also lines up with the fact that the probability of getting colorectal cancer is rising in young adults in asia. "
He should remembered that his son doesn't chew. Put two and two together, man!
@@solortus lol hasty generalization. You mean SOME doctors. Ive rarely see doctors being harsh to nurses as both are just trying to do their duties harmoniously, in my country, mostly its to their fellows who would often make a basic mistake. But yeah, this doctor is hella stupid and arrogant but NOT ALL.
A man subscribed to Chubbyemu. This is how he developed every phobia known to man.
LOL
😂😂 but what is your phobia???
Fishbonphobia
@@ane5342 everythingphobia.
@@madkirk7431 You mean omniphobia
Yeah this is what happens when you know too much
His father: "It's definitely not a bone, don't be ridiculous."
*His son travels over three countries only to figure out it was a bone*
His father: "Haha, whoopsie me! ..."
Haven't looked up the citation, but if I was the dad, I'd write up the case.
If the dad talked to the mom I bet she would say otherwise so quickly
It was a bone?
Oh thank God.
Time to go back to my horrible food practices
Foreign Doctor: Another arrogant American who won't accept a logical possibility, even with his own son.
I'm American by the way, and that was the first thing I thought, when the father so firmly rejected that. And I hope someone told that doctor they were right, because if that happens again, the doc may doubt themselves, waste more time & resources, and risk losing the patient.
Ahaha I was just testing your survival skills
I am reminded of this:
“If an elderly but distinguished scientist says that something is possible, he is almost certainly right; but if he says that it is impossible, he is very probably wrong.”
Arthur C. Clarke
Experience and intuition are all well and good, but data trumps everything.
Yes Trump does Trump everything
the quote seems incorrect, but yeah... your takeaway is good and pretty obvious. the thing is that in the case of medicine, it's not feasible to follow up on every single possible lead in the order that they are brought up, so performing a risky/invasive surgery over something that is very unlikely is usually a bad idea when there are many other more possible leads pointing to more likely things.
I always thought that was from Asimov.
Data is experience.... that is the whole basis of empiricism...
I agree that it was a bit arrogant to call it “ridiculous,” but I also must agree with @Lee Butler that there must be a relatively high degree of certainty to do something as invasive as abdominal surgery, as it can often lead to more harm than help if the assumptions made from the leads turn out to be incorrect
I’ve accidentally swallowed very fine fish bone twice in my life. I’ve always thought it would be dissolved by stomach acid. Now… I have a new fear 😧
Me too
A man lived. This is what happened to his life.
A terrible fate for anyone, a fate worse than death itself.
Phfffft 😋
Sounds like a great book
True
Dread
Moral of the story: Don’t be dismissive of others opinions just because YOU haven’t experience something.
His dad could’ve killed his son if the other team of doctors hadn’t found the bone as well.
Yeah... and his dad, besides that, didn't even teach him to chew the fucking food LOL
Haven’t watched the whole video yet and this comment seems so wild out of context
Nah moral of the story is don't eat fish
Racism is a he'll of a thing.
@Luna EB I'm about to make a protein shake... I think I'll chew a few times... just to be sure.
A boy stood up quickly. This is what happened to his circulatory system.
Are you calling me out?
u never know
Orthostatic hypotension
This one is an actual episode
To his brain*
As a young student nurse of many years ago, I struggled with chemistry class barely eeking by with a C that my instructor mercifully gave. I've watched about 15 of your videos so far and can understand your explanations of electrolytes/elements and how they can help the body but also how they can damage the body when we ingest non illicit OTC drugs or apply creams. I so wish you could teach chemistry to young nursing students! I've been a nurse for 30 years now and I feel very accomplished that I understand now!
Hopefully his dad's ego was knocked down a few rungs for dismissing the actual cause because "he never saw it in practice".
I was looking for this ^ !!!
Underrated comment
For real. His arrogance almost killed his son
Not that unusual, sadly. :( Some people think that if they've never seen it themselves, it can't happen.
Damned Amerikans
This is yet another case of SEAsians giving the slap down to them.
@@Kevin-hx2ky Lol, calm down Chubbyemu adds details for entertainment purposes.
There's no mention of that conversation ever happening on the report and both he and his father were both confident in the expertise of the Thailand hospital
according to Dr Gharib who presented the case..
I mean if you actually follow the citations in the description that is.
Chubbyemu: emia
Me: presence in blood
same heeere 🤣
SHIIIIIRT!
Looks like you have Chybbyemuemia - high presence of Chubbyemu in blood.
@@chickenlover657 hyperchubbyemia
@@unknown-rq9ce Yeah, hyperchubbyemuemia. Betcha I could convince half of facebook such disease actually exists, lol
Remember kids, chew your food well and never drink a lava lamp.
or a snowglobe
Or a fishbone
or a liter of soy sauce
Only glue
Or gas station sushi
"Ive never seen it myself, therefore it's impossible"
I mean, I've never personally witnessed a plane crash. Still happens.
You sure? How can you be real of your eyes aren't real?
Not true, the government puts plane crashes in movies to make you think they are real😭
Dad: "The chances of that happening are slim to none and...." Dad fell into a logical fallacy. While it is of very low probability that his son would randomly get a fish bone lodged in his body, the evidence on the scans showed a long, thin object. The probability of a long, thin foreign body being a fish bone is actually quite good. One must always be prepared to re-adjust the frame in response to new information when problem solving.
Specifically, his father could have realized that, being in Vietnam, PB was probably consuming more fish than usual, increasing the probability that a bone would pass into his body, neglected during chewing.
Smart comment.
@@pwhqngl0evzeg7z37 correction : neglected during NOT CHEWING
Dad committed the fallacy of isolated statistics. Of course deep perforations by fish bones are rare in the _general population_--fish that gets eaten (in US at least) is usually prepared industrially so the occurrence of pinbones in meals is low to begin with--and most people chew their damn food, detecting the occasional stray bone, further slimming down the occurrence of fish bones entering the GI tract. The scant bones that get swallowed usually pass through without incident. The very scant bones that don't pass through nicely usually don't end up in the spleen.
But his son isn't the general population. His son is notorious for inhaling his food from childhood on, and ate large-boned fish at a corresponding time before the onset of his symptoms. Moreover, the symptoms make the other doctor suspect a fish bone perforation--not just any other doctor, but one whose career has been within a region where people eat way more fish than the US, and prepare it mainly at home or at small businesses.
When you hear hoofbeats, and you're in the savannah... don't make a fool of yourself by parroting "think horses not zebras".
Not only that, there was a history of the son's behavior that reinforced this possibility. Why dad would ignore that is beyond me, but pisses me off a little.
A boy didn't listen to his mom. This is what happened to him decades later.
Lolz
Mom: FETUS DELETUS
Man doesn’t chew chicken soup. Fish bone nearly kills him. 🤔
@@qwave1322 so the chickens are considered fishes?
Moe Aj apparently! I’m sure he said they didn’t chew their chicken soup and swallowed a fish bone (title of video). 😳
The Vietnam doctor is absolutely amazing. He didn't just say there was something there, he correctly identified it as a fish bone.
Good for him that he went to a good public hospital because some are literally trash
@@GTAandApplechannel There's a difference between trying to be the best in your field and trying to simply be in your field.
@@InfamoussDBZ ok
It was a Thai doctor but seriously how can anyone tell that’s a fish bone? Looking at the scans I can only see like a dot, then comparing the picture of the fish bone taken out of him? Only explanation would be it was standing vertically but then still how can he tell? Absolutely amazing. I plan on going to med school for radiology but man I don’t know if I’ll ever be this good
@@zombieastronaut3567
They probably see it frequently. The southeast asian diet is pretty fish heavy. A lot of riverfish with pinbones similar to those found in salmon.
When he says ,”and made a full recovery “,my hearts drops and I’m happy they survived.
the way chubbyemu narrates these stories is like a dramatic reading of a horror/murder/mystery/noir novel. im always on the edge of my seat!
*pauses, holds up a finger*
" p r e s e n t i n g to the emergency room"
He is the medical Chris Hansen
Because the story telling gives you feeling of lack of power.
He tells about people eating poison and you are trying to scream to person doing it, DON'T DO IT" But you can't.
@@jarskil8862 Well put
😂💯
“A liver swallowed a man. This is what happened to his fishbone”
Lmoa
OLO
sekil erom evresed sihT
I didnt know a liver could shape shift such big mouth
@Benson ?erus uoy erA
There's a saying we should all live by: *"Nature will castigate those who don't masticate."* - as mentioned by Horace Fletcher. While it's not a good idea to chew your food excessively as Fletcher's dietary plan suggested, the phrase still holds some merit in that you should always remember to actually chew the stuff you eat.
Chew your food, people! And, make sure to love your Liver too - You can't Live-r without one!
Oh yeah, I try to masticate every day
I masticate several times a day, sometimes for hours at a time.
... Wait, I might be thinking of something else...
@@blackmesa232323 lmaooo
Please be my dad I want every parent to teach me like that..
I love Liverpool
These titles keep getting me more worried like hes gonna make a vid called “A man breathed oxygen, this is how he died a horribly painful and slow death”
First his neck snapped. Then his pancreas exploded. His liver cirrhozed and punctured his kidneys which developed abscesses as the result. The abscesses released a chemical known as PROTHROMBINOCYTOKINE STORM CAUSING GOLGI APPARATUS DISSOLVING PROTEIN P7 PLATELET FACTOR A1 STIMULATING HORMONE NECROTIZING FACTOR A31 which travelled to his lungs, where it caused a massive cytokine storm, which travelled down to his pelvic bones which snapped in a gruesome, blood curdling crunching motion making sounds like a bell pepper being bitten into, and thick blood from his mesenteric pelvic artery started gushing all over. Then all his organs fell out in one swoop out of the bottom of his pelvic girdle, while his knees buckled and his knee tendons snapped and whipped all around, throwing the bloody intestines all around the walls of his apartment. What could possibly go wrong, just from taking a breath of oxygen, right?
"Horribly painful and slow death"? Sound like life.
@@charlieangkor8649 you forgot he had hyperoxiemia
Hyper- meaning high
- oxi - meaning oxygen
-emia meaning presence in blood
He had high amount of oxygen present in blood
Weeelllll....that'd be called Hyperoxia / Oxygen Toxicity when you breath in oxygen more than the 21% that exists in our air concentration for an [extended] period of time. Apparently it leads to oxidative damage to cell membranes leading to such things as the collapse of the alveoli in the lungs. Can also cause general organ damage, seizures, and finally, death. So you're more or less on the money with the title.
Well, it is actually, possible because oxygen is an oxidizing agent, which means oxygen (O2) could cause damage to DNA causing a fatal cancer with a slow and painful death.
And the most scary part is that is not even a joke, it really happens. That is why it is really important to consume antioxidant nutrients in order to avoid oxidative stress in the cells.
A man took a breath. This is what happened to his lungs.
His lungs is about to collapse because he has coronaemia.Corona meaning corona,emia meaning precense in blood.Corona precense in blood
@@fayhay8011 u made my day xD
@@fayhay8011 "Corona meaning corona" omg fr thanks for this bc i was having a hard time figuring out what corona meant💀
Actually corona means "crown", so coronemia should be "crown presence in blood". This is either a very inventive but stupid thief or a very unlucky king.
The viral presence in blood is called viremea but is normally not called specifically because for most viruses, if they are somewhere, they are probably in blood at some capacity.The important bit with coronaviruses specifically is actually presence (and damage) is lung alveori, especially with "the" coronavirus everyone is talking about (i.e. SARS-COV-2) because that is what causes deaths, the virus itself (in blood) is probably about as bad as any other "common cold".
PB breathed. This is what happened to his lungs.
_I swear to god, you're gonna make me a hypochondriac_
Ruoping Li 😷
I already am one idk why I watch this shit
His lungs were inflated. Filled with a reactive gas. everyone who breathed that gas died at some point.
@@harukik2634 and every one who doesnt breath this gas dies in about 3 minutes,this gas is inescapable we will all die
nice kayo pfp
The entire time I just thought who tf doesn’t chew their food
Same here! 😂
@touma how can you enjoy food if you don't chew on it?
@touma that doesn't answer the question at all which was a very good question indeed.
Also HOW did school teach you that?????? Like what????
@@kaluluchance6377 My thought exactly!
touma said it all nonchalantly, as though everyone has gotten the bad habit of not chewing food.
As it so happens, I'm all done with education. College graduate as well. No one ever encouraged me to not chew my food. If anything I was told the opposite.
Kalulu Chance I bet it was the 10 minutes lunch break.
once again, I am very happy for a good ending. I initially started watching for the "haha let's hear about people dying in extreme ways" factor, but over time, I've found myself rooting for the patients a lot more, avidly hoping for survival.
Shout out to “Gas station sushi,” this is Revenge of the Salmon Pt. 2.
Real dark :)
Lol
Vengeful salmon ghosts
Bruh salmon really hate human eh
Why does this comment have 666 likes right now
"I love my country, but I think its time for you to leave." That's a good doctor.
Or a smart racist xD
At least the doctor realized the American Healthcare system is so broken that even diagnosis is worse.
Lived in a small town. hospital wasted our time for two years then told us we have to move somewhere bigger with a better hospital so they could get my mom a diagnosis
I'm extremely stupid, what does this statement imply, I'm honestly confused
@@cramuel256 He means that he loves the US in a lot of ways, but he has to admit it simply doesn't have the same medical professionalism as other countries. So the patient would be better treated elsewhere.
> "i've never seen that, it can't possibly be that"
> is exactly that
lmfao
2020
surprised pikachu
Bet he felt stupid after that
"House" in a nutshell
cursed profile picture
“but, something’s wrong.” i LOVE these twists, legit favorite part of every video, apart from the iconic “presenting to the emergency room.”
I really envy PB's medical insurance.
Is this a joke that I'm not American enough to understand
@@awhopper3241 all it takes is to have a job that's not pathetic
In the US, there is no national healthcare system or program. There are currently millions of Americans without health care coverage right now, which is ridiculous for a developed country with one of the world's leading economies.
@@awhopper3241 I certainly was not joking and whomever smugly suggested that all you have to do is have "a job that doesn't suck" is truly ignorant. We are all one health crisis away from poverty. Some people do not understand this but it's a simple fact. Some unforeseen and life altering tragic diagnosis like terminal cancer, multiple sclerosis, ALS...etc. can take away your health, your career, your savings, your assets, your home... even your children and you can be impoverished in a matter of months or years.
Ik I'm literally American just playing but yes I know other countries get free care
An American got sick in a foreign country and was brought back to the US.
This is what happened to his finances.
PB: (wakes up in a US hospital)
PB: ohh... thank god... I'm saved...
The Hospital: You're welcome..... NOW GIVE ME YO MONEY
PB: huh? what? (sweats)
The Hospital: ALL OF IT, GIMME. GIMME YO MONEY NOWWWW
i think he's quite wealthy, considering he's a professor and his dad is a doctor
@@edamame1879 facts
The bills were on my mind the whole time. 💸💸💸💸
Amy Trigoura soon as I heard helicopter ride I nearly fainted
A man confused Probability with Possibility, this is what happened to his son.
underrated comment...
@@the-real-sachin true
Gold
Noice
son is born
Currently taking medical terminology as part of my major, and I really like listening to your videos while I’m cleaning or getting ready for work, it makes me feel like I’m studying a little bit lol. One more semester left, wish me luck !
2 big lessons here:
- don't discharge patients prematurely. a lot of times, doctor thinks there is no problem but there is indeed a problem. they think they have a superior judgement over the patient but it's the patient who can feel the problem.
- listen to others. his dad is a doctor but a stubborn one. when the thai doctor said it looks like a fish bone, he just doesn't trust them. he has the habit of swallowing things whole so it is possible.
Do you have any clue how much it costs on a daily basis to keep patients in the hospital, in any country?
It's pretty expensive - I can tell you that.
Doctors make judgments based on facts - not on intuition. Medicine is a science, you don't just intuitively diagnose or prescribe treatments.
@@floatingchimney pretty much the same as saying saving lives is a business not a right don't you think?
@@floatingchimney Know what is more expensive? Not listening or testing or doing the science because it's expensive and telling someone in the middle of say, congestive heart failure to get a nasal spray when they say they can't breath...and sending them home. Or telling someone with COPD who may have quit smoking 25 years ago, but did smoke long term 'We'll keep an eye on it" when they are having extra problems and say they don't feel right...then having them collapse a bloody year later with stage four metastasized lung cancer. Just examples.
@@floatingchimney The profit motive of hospital boards procludes them from adequately assessing everyone. Doctors are often rushed by administrators in order to see more patients and make more money. Unless there are legal and economic consequences for corporations cutting those costs, they will sacrifice patient care everytime.
His dad is an american. It's ingrained in american culture to dismiss the opinions of people from other countries because "every country is inferior to america"
Son swallows fishbone despite mother's repeated warnings that he should chew his food more. Father says there's no way his son could've swallowed a fishbone because he's personally never seen it happen before. There's some interesting subtext here about parenting and the attention being paid to PB growing up.
Also "never seen it in my practice before" vs "this has been documented for at least 100 years"
A man ate his mom's spaghetti. This is what happened to his palms.
🤣😥🤣😨
this is MM presenting to the emergency room with abnormally heavy arms and an inability to stand
Omnical love it
“A man ate mom”s spaghetti. This is what happened to his body”
MM, a 30 year old man is presenting to the emergency room with sweaty palms, weak knees, and extremely heavy arms, along with vomiting and anxiety. All of these symptoms being hidden by his “calm and ready” demeanor.
Marshalemia- spaghetti presence on sweater
Thanks for the captions 🙏
This channel gives me an acute fear of living sometimes.
Edit: woah, 1.5k! Never had that much before. Thanks everyone in acknowledging or agreeing with my ever growing fear of life itself!
Im shaking
The human body is really good at keeping itself alive through traumatic situations. It also really sucks at keeping itself alive in traumatic situations.
Fear-emia
@@SergeantSpandex fear, meaning fear, and emia, meaning presence in blood. fear presence in blood.
It gives me a fear of suddenly dying because of normal activity I do everyday
Like *eating*
PB: doesn’t like to chew his food
Me: that’s a whole new level of laziness
Does the dude have teeth?
@@Elleoaqua nah he doesn’t even have a mouth
I mean, it could be something akin to a sensory disorder
I kinda have the same problem maybe more like a eating disorder I feel like a dog who’s been starved and when i eat anything it’s the best thing I’ve ever had and I scarf it down. Once I threw up after eating ramen and it was like I just spilled a bowl the noodles were intact
@@Getmynameoff Have you tried checking in with a doctor? That’s genuinely concerning.
This guy could make me scared of air.
Air can kill you, as well as a lack of it. Please take your air in with moderation.
A man breathed air. This is what happened to his lungs.
@@alexanderthomas2660 HJ presents in the emergency room
With appropriate breathing, oxygen in his lungs and beating heart
@@EvilMeganium But In further inspection it seems he had Overoxygenemia. This causes the Blood cells to burst.
@@ameliatownsend5966 after a few days he feels sick and started to cough he breath air for the second time and he falls down unconscious
Should have listened to the Thai doctor. They've probably seen it before. A similar thing happened to my dog. The vet caught it straight away. He said it's pretty rare in dogs, but he've seen it very often in pet cats.
Imagine being the dad like "naaah this totally reasonable concern isn't what's killing my child" and being completely fucking wrong in a very dangerous way
its a common bias to dismiss something unlikely, because the worst sh*t in life allways happens to somebody else rather than us. or those close to us. feels bad man :p
I was at home for 5 days with odd belly pains that exacerbated when i folded or unfolded my abdomen (sit, stand). My mom, a nurse, said its all good, it will pass. Turns out, i has acure appendicitis for 7 days before i went to my PCP and she rushed me to the ER for emergency surgery. It happens
Even MORE reasonable considering his well-known habit since childhood of not really chewing his food. PB's dad is a perfect example of the stereotypical "arrogant doctor".
I bet he didn't blame himself at all, and insisted he was right that it was extremely unlikely and that the Thai doctor "got lucky". But maybe I'm just being pessimistic.
Happened to me, I had intussusception and my dad passed it off as a cold. My mom forced me into going and I was admitted for a few days
"A man did the same exact thing you're doing right now. This is how he died the most excruciating death known to man."
God damn man, these videos are scarier than any horror movie out there
Hahaha always
The point is, swallowing bones is such a common thing who would have guessed it's the bone, it's so terrifying
A man took the Lord's name in vain. Here is how his unforgivable sin was never forgiven.
@@wincentivan2684, you made no sense.
@@Stonktradomus my point is, nobody would have expected something so common to lead into serious injury. Now that's terrifying, since doctors will assume other sources of infection rather than the bone.
I hope PB's dad apologized to that Thai doctor. But I bet he didn't.
Lmao yeah
His son too
Hopefully he did. Thai doctors are held to extremely high regards as most graduate and become professors and in Thai culture, being a doctor and professor is one of the most respected and prestigious titles that one could have.
This is what you spend your time thinking about? Psh, unreal.
A guy named something This what you spend your time commenting? Psh, unreal
Brilliant as always, Dr Bernard: Fast-paced, engaging, highly informative. Thx so much!
-Emia means presence in blood!💖
PB is a delicious paste, presenting to my face between two slices of bread.
Underrated comment
What's a PB in your case though? I can't decode de message
Rosso Brink peanut butter. Peanut butter.
Did you eat straight up PB and put two slices of bread between your face?
jk
BEGONE KNEECAPS your username is amazing and I’m subscribing to you.
I think this guy was pretty lucky to have so many friends, family, and doctors looking after him. Thank you to all those in the medical field, true superheros.
.. he had money. Lots of money to be flown around 3 different countries
A man breathed air for his his whole life, this is how he died 90 years later.
My Dad kind of inhaled his food at a high rate as a result of his childhood (from age 7 onwards) spent in boarding schools. If he didn’t eat quick enough than the food was taken away and he was at a disadvantage as a natural left hand user he had his left hand tied behind his back and just learned to shovel his food in as quick as possible.
I’m sure things in boarding school are different now, for a start only very very few board as young as 7, the whole ‘you must not be left handed’ isn’t a thing anymore and children do not have food taken away if they take over 10 minutes to eat. Hearing about my Dads experiences away at school in the 1920s and 30s was kind of horrifying but to him it was just normal (although he never expected any of his kids to eat at super speed or be right handed regardless of preference) but given that my Dads story is similar to everyone we ever knew who boarded in that time through to decades later my Mum refused to send us kids to boarding school ever!
Nice to have an episode that results in a full recovery rather than the more ominous ‘A’ recovery! Love this channel as always, some of my very favourite content!
What school did he go to?
@@MrTooEarnestOnline Probably a residential school for First Nation Americans. I have read a lot of cases about people who went to those schools. Many First Nations developed type 2 diabetes because they were fed trash, had to basically inhale foods or foods get taken away, and developed a huge appetite because they were hungry all the time.
@Oz Lang Canadians also have First Nation people and residential schools, and they use mum.
@Oz Lang It is so backward punishing kids who are born with a natural handedness. I am lefthanded myself and proud of it. Lefthandedness, which I see as an uniqueness, is not a hindrance in any shape or form. While I write and hold a toothbrush with my left hand, I am able to use my right hand for other tasks. If a teacher dared lay a finger on my son or daughter for having something that is completely out of their control, I'd use my trusted lefthand to smack 'Teach' in their face. "Come and pick on someone your own size. Here, take this".........smack! Out of line teachers need to be put in their place.
Ash Lee I am in fact British and we are talking about British public school (which in the UK means private just to confuse). So that wonderful environment was where the wealthy and ‘posh’ sent their children!
Crazy. This happened to a great uncle of mine about 25 years ago. He kept getting this kind of infection. They would clear it up with antibiotics. They did all the scans etc but could see where the bacteria was coming from. He'd recover but then a week later he was back in the hospital. It spread and he eventually died.
They did an autopsy and found a VERY TINY fishbone was sticking out of his intestines. It was so small that the scans didn't pick it up.
*depression*
cool, i just swallowed a tiny fish bone ;-;
@@wretched560 dont worry death is once in a lifetime. Embrace it
@@wretched560 so you have chosen death 💀
@@wretched560 same..u good now?
“Everything he needed to do for his health, he did.” Except chew his food.
Got him there.
Yeah thats a pretty basic thing
Going to binge on Chubby while I’m recovering from getting my shoulder fixed. Love you Chubby! 💕
"Everything seemed to be going well"
Video not even halfway end
Me: Definitely not going well at all
Just like an episode of house XD
Text: Presenting to the emergency room...
Chubbyemu: ☝️😤
I'm fairly confident there was a video in which he didn't hold up the finger. That video just... didn't _feel_ right. Although now I can't recall which one it was.
@@ads1035 A RUclipsr couldn't recall a video. This is what happened to their brain
And I thought only myself noticed that
i like to raise my finger and say the line with him lmfao
Every. Time.
I can’t imagine the guilt his father must have felt when they discovered the fish bone.
Maybe it was a good humbling lesson for him. If that were my kid and I was a doc, I would forever be haunted....
I have a wild guess and I think his father is a narcissistic doctor
so I don't think he'll feel guilty at all
@@wada-wada Ask any nurse: That's most Doctors. The SOLID vast majority by a long shot to some extent or another. As stated by my nursing director mother, if you spend your days being idolized as nearly all knowing, giving unquestioned orders to people that are followed exactly and having your word be law, even the nicest people will develop a complex. And not all doctors started out as nice people. Especially not in a profession with so much money involved.
@@GiraffeFlavored do you think if chubbyemu can be a narc?
@@wada-wada Narc as is narcissist? I don't know him but he's a doctor and has a RUclips channel where his face is front and center. That doesn't mean he's a bad person but I'm sure he has an ego, most youtube personalities do too
@@GiraffeFlavored huh?
I'm pretty sure everyone has a ego. Its literally the centre of your personality.
I love your videos. I was a medical student before I had my daughter and I watch your videos with here so she can learn medical terminology. Great videos. 👍💜💜
My biggest fear: being on this channel.
Yeah well the one day I decide to have salmon, he puts out this video
G.Y. was a commenter on RUclips. This is what happened to his replies.
One time I was at an important dinner and I pierced a fish bone through the thin edge of my tongue. I didn't want to look or sound weird so I kept it there for a few minutes. Finally I realized I couldnt eat, speak with it so I got up to the washroom and pulled it out. Thankfully I didnt get this.
You got a free tongue piercing
You're lucky it didn't kill you.
@@codenoob9325 indeed. Fish bones have been shown to be so deadly, that in some jurisdictions American police have been carrying them on shift and flicking them at black people.
@@Naptosis bruh imagine being a leftsit sheep
@@medicalaid4402 bruh imagine bringing politics into this shit
A Man Swallowed Liver Without Chewing Enough, This is What Happen to His Dinner.
I always search the comments for these 😂😭👌
A Liver Chewed A Man Without Happening Enough, This is what Swallowed his Dinner
His dinner got a nice green sauce put on it.
Francisco Martinolich A Dinner Chewed his Liver without Swallowing Enough, This is What Happened to his Man.
he choked on it
When I went to China for the first time, I got a plate of fish. I wasn't used to bones being in fish, and this particular fish had a LOT of long, tiny bones that my friends said made it really difficult to eat. My first big bite was shocking, as my mouth was full of sharp bones. Fortunately, I didn't swallow any.
I don't understand why certain places don't remove the bones from fish. I can understand not beheading animals or removing fins, you just eat around that part if you don't want it but bones are almost impossible to avoid and way way way more difficult to remove once the fish is cooked. Not to mention I now have to sit there and dig my fingers into my hot food to pick out the bones because the chef was too lazy to grab a pair of chefs tweezers or just cut that section of the fish out? Fucking stupid.
@@GiraffeFlavored it’s probably a cultural thing. People grew up eating whole fish caught straight from the rivers nearby thus they are skilled at/expected to remove the bones. A lot of fish also contain so many bones that if you remove them they would look unpresentable on a plate. These fish tend to taste better too. But I agree, it is a pain in the ass to have a mouthful of spikes just from a tiny piece of fish.
@@GiraffeFlavored mostly cultural because fish are cooked and eaten whole there. Their fishes are tiny, full of tiny bones as well, unlike large and nice European and temperate climate fish. I think they didn’t have a lot of experience preparing the salmon. Based on the photo, it looks like basically a rib of the salmon. Usually you would pull them out with a tweezer, but they can miss one or two bones if they are not used to it. That’s a huge piece of bone as well. I thought that would have been extremely noticeable normally. The bones from river fish that are cooked whole are usually tiny, extremely brittle. If you don’t spit them out, simply chewing them up is possible consider how small they are. Not a salmon bone, however.
@@GiraffeFlavored I'm a Vietnamese person. When we prepare fish, we only remove the guts. We cook the fish as a whole, and then later we use chopsticks to get the flesh from the bones. This is due to most fish are small and don't have lots of meat on them, so we don't bother removing the bones before cooking, as the eaters can easily get the flesh by chopsticks.
@@GiraffeFlavored Americans be like:
Cant begin to imagine how much that would have cost in medical bills.
Probably would've worth a mansion in Vietnam, just because a grown man didn't chew his food right.
In Europe, it would be exactly $0.00.
@@tibor29 For him. For the European tax payers it would have been a small mansion in Vietnam.
@N1gerTV yes in europe healtcare is not payed by the individual but its payed by goverment thru tax so everybody is in on the bill and no one is left out of the medical care becaus they cant pay.
Remember your European health care is paid by your taxes
Glad I got recommended this right after choking down a bone shard by accident.
Google must have detected it
@@lyrimetacurl0 just like it detects everything
@@GothicCorvid indeed, can't trust it
@@kenl.3298 literally. i said one word (one ive never looked up before) and a small while later it popped up everywhere.
@@GothicCorvid your fbi got yo back lol
A man has fallen into the river in lego city. This is how they made the rescue helicopter.
That meme is INCREDIBLY dead. Don't use it
I don't care if the meme's dead I enjoyed it
@@jolypopp7288 Are you a literal child?
@@kelnhide no according to S W i am a long time meme expert and meme police man
@@allays4559 yeah well them's some boring ass thoughts
Good ol' dad, denying his son's problem and not teaching him to chew his food
Me who just accidentally swallowed a fish bone and watching this in dinner:
**Intense sweating**
Same
Lmao I can imagine the terror
RUN TO ER, STAT,
same here 😑
Chew your food!
Chubb: His name was PB
Me: P E A N U T B U T T E R
"It was definitely NOT peanut butter jelly time!"
Mte
if this guy is pb where is j? we need to find out
Exotic butters
His brothers name was PB2
The patient's dad is exactly what's wrong with doctors these days. "That's unusual, so I've decided it's impossible"
There's nothing wrong with doctors. One doctor made a mistake and now all of them have a problem? That's ridiculous.
Do you make generalisations for race, sex, age?
Are you qualified to rate the quality of doctors?
Why did 54 people like this dumb comment ffs.
@@benbooth2783 "One" doctor... No fuckhead, there isn't a single competent doctor for miles and miles anywhere near me, despite there being at least 4 hospitals and 3 clinics. And yes, I'm in a position to judge them. Medical knowledge is not some cryptic forbidden knowledge that only the chosen few can learn. You need a degree to PRACTICE it, but anyone with an interest can LEARN it.
I'll give you one of the MANY examples from my own life of the fact that doctors are often incompetent, and one from a friend of mine (who also can't find a competent doctor anywhere near her).
I got bit by a rabid bat a few years back. A ton of bullshit went on because of incompetence, but my one example I'll give is that one of the doctors told me that I don't need the rabies vaccine because, and I quote "you look healthy to me, you're pink". If there's anything you should know about rabies, it's that the MOMENT you have ANY symptoms, you are unsaveable and going to die.
As for my friend, she worked at a daycare, one of the kids gave her mumps. MANY different doctors told her she 'couldn't' have mumps because it 'doesn't exist anymore', until finally ONE not-incompetant doctor ACTUALLY tested her and told her, yes, she had mumps.
I could go on for ages with myriad examples, all involving DIFFERENT doctors.
Competent doctors are the EXCEPTION, not the rule. And clearly 54 other people who happened to read my comment, can't find any competent doctors either, further proving my point.
Dude where the frick do you live that sounds like hell
I’m so lucky to live in a place with good doctors ig. I do think most doctors are good, I just have no clue why you’ve been plagued with so many bad doctors lmao
@@UmatsuObossa I live in the UK and probably the doctors are better here. I guess we have to remember that these comments sections are international.
It sucks that your local doctors are shitty. If your young, maybe you should try to become a doctor?
Why do I get the distinct feeling that the Vietnamese doctor who had correctly diagnosed the issue never got an apology from PB's know-it-all dad?
I have a bad habit of eating too quickly too. While I was living in Japan, I loved getting salmon. Tasted better for some reason. But the cuts I got at the supermarket always had way more bones than I experienced in America. I definitely got a fish bone caught right by my epiglottis, next to the back of my tongue. I had to pull it out with two fingers and it took all my concentration not to gag as I hit my epiglottis with my fingers. I'm glad it was somewhere easily reached and it didn't turn into what this guy had.
omg same !! i had to pull it out from my throat :< thank God we're okay !! :)
Japanese Pro tip: eat fish with rice. It helps ensure the small bones go down the throat safely and get digested
@@MadPutz I was eating like over a cup of rice for dinner daily at the time. IT COULDN'T SAVE ME
Dad when the doctors surprisingly took a fish bone out of his liver: 😬
pancreas
Man blinked. This is how he got stage 3 cancer and hepatitis A.
I actually thought it was food borne hepatitis at first, since he ate and then had liver issues.
And AIDS
@@perkyelixir2254 and Corona
He would have 91TEARS left to cry
3-Country Medical Case. Outcome positive. Chew your food well! Simple but sound advice. Fascinating, entertaining & informative as always.
I'll show this to my family next time they make fun of me for never eating whole fish bc I'm scared of the bones
ikr
lmao same
chew slowly and carefully and you’ll be fine
Everytime i eat fish i have to go and inspect every single place of the fish just to see if there's any bone there
I remove the large ones, but I find it difficult to completely remove _all_ of the bones. If chewed, the the small ones will be pulverized by the teeth and esophagus muscles and also dissolved by saliva and/or stomach acid, no? I hope so. Or else I shall avoid eating fish.
instead of a eullogy i want this man narrarate the autopsy at my feuneral
Damn that must one metal funeral
Chubbyemu is going to be like "lol this dude stub his toe, this is what happened to his colon"
That would make for a very interesting funeral, more so than many.
Chubbyemu steps to the microphone
"FP was a good person, passed away, and presented to the funerary chapel, where we are now.
FP showed signs of hypoeulogy, hypo meaning low, eu meaning good, logy meaning discourse. Low presence of good discourse.
Given its recent history of binging in my videos, there's a few clues on what's going on."
A man sat his ass down.
This is what happened to his neural system
(Castle Bravo clip plays with full ear breaking sound)
That could be diabetes
*nervous system
@@polo9135 It's nervous system. Google it.
I dont understand why my dog has teeth other than to try to murder me. when I give him food, in a matter of seconds, hes already digesting it.
The Godly Potato Some cats do the same
Same here, my dog will chew on a bone 3 times then swallow it. Like wtf dude
Dogs dont have teeth for mastication. Compare the shape of their teeth to human teeth.
If you are giving your dog tinned or soft stuff...that is not what dogs are given teeth for...give him raw ribs, raw chicken legs...then you will see he has to break and grind the food...and will be far better than any other diet.
its because dogs don't use their teeth for chewing abd breking up food. they use it to kill and to rip raw flesh off prey, which they then eat raw
This is some House level back and forth.
Reminded me of the episode of the guy who was going through serious troubles only to find out he swallowed a toothpick :D
@@Cplblue exactly that episode , and the father was like "i always swallow the sandwitches with the toothpick" i was: what the helll ???
missed the opportunity to call the patient "kirby" kb
Yes, but instead his name is Peanut Butter!
That Fish came REAL CLOSE to it's Ultimate Revenge! Fishess last thoughts: Eat Me will you?! Well I'll see you in HELL soon Buddy Boy!
"Peanut Butter" is being admitted to the ER
Phish bone
Lead
Peanut Butter?
Is this part of a smear campaign against the patient?
Don't give young children peanut butter buddy, it highly allergenic good
It is discovered to be crunchy.
Literally every chubbyemu video ever:
"A man breathed, this how he died"
More like "a man fucked up in a minor way, this is how they disintegrated"
a man had an opinion, this is how he fucking evaporated
“It’s just not likely to you’re going to go a big zit on your liver” thank you Mr.Emu
*Dr.Emu, be respectful
English go STONKS
By far one of the most interesting uploads from Dr. Bernard
A man ate 3 gummy vitamins, this is how he ascended.
Normal people: I should chew my food better
Paranoid people: I'm never eating fish again
Me: *I'm not eating*
All i do is drink monster or milk 😔 i never eat- i, pls this calls me out lowkey
@@GothicCorvid how are you not dead
.-. You should eat..
@@khalilhijazi4575 i ask myself that all the time, my room is just slowly becoming more full of monster cans due to my obsession with collecting the cans.
@@GothicCorvid I was like that with red bull. it started with monsters though. hard to break the habit
This reminds me of a Dutch children's song "Advocaatje ging op reis". At the end of the song, Advocaatje dies from swallowing a fish bone.
Ayy.. Ben je van Nederland?
Good lord
Wow
I remember that song.. the ending always made me uncomfortable
yeah but in the song he actually dies because he chokes on it
Lovely. I have a fever, made chicken noodle soup and have a cracked tooth. This is the video I picked to watch while eating.
Credit to that Thai doctor trusting the gut and not holding back
-emia, meaning presence in blood
-Megaly, meaning Bigly
How did u know?
I have Remia, meaning a brand of mayonnaise. I hope the mayo is not in my blood.
why hello monaca funny seeing you here lololol
My mom almost died of klebsiella pneumoniae. The doctors missed it after repeated tests showing high WBC and being sick for 5 weeks. She went into septic shock. I found her unresponsive at home. Turns out she had an abscess on her liver. How it got there, no one knows, she doesn't drink alcohol, or do drugs and the doctors found no other diseases, she had no underlying medical conditions. I still wonder how it happened. Luckily she is alive and well.
That’s so scary!! I’m glad she’s ok!
That fish legit said I’ve got a bone to pick with you to PB 😂😂😂😭😭😭
lol im sitting here literally smh. allll this just because he didnt chew his food enough. my bro eats like a duck so i might show him this.
😂😂
I hope he's quacking in fear
@@faizalf119 Oh my 😂
@underground leaks 101 you have the chance to delete your comment before anyone sees it, do it
underground leaks 101 you were so concerned with appearing clever (using a dead joke) that you didn't stop to think if what you were saying was relevant or funny.
In other words:
WOW kid you just got r/WOOOOOOSHED!!!! 😂😂👀
"Wooosh" means you didn't get the joke, as in the sound made when the joke "woooshes" over your head. I bet you're too stupid to get it, IDIOT!! 😤😤😂
His joke was so thoughtfully crafted and took him a total of like 3 minutes, you SHOULD be laughing. 🤬 What's that? His joke is bad? I think that's just because you failed. He outsmarted you, nitwit.🤭
In conclusion, I am posting this to the community known as "R/Wooooosh" to claim my internet points in your embarrassment 😏. Imbecile. The Germans refer to this action as "Schadenfreude," which means "harm-joy" 😬😲. WOW! 🤪 Another reference I had to explain to you. 🤦♂️🤭 I am going to cease this conversation for I do not converse with simple minded persons.😏😂