Anaesthesiologist here. There's no real rivalry between us and the surgeons. Deep down they know we're better at medicine than they are, and we know we'd be mostly unemployed without them performing surgery :)
He just has to hang in there til Gil finishes med school. Unfortunately, Gil is only a first year and is currently struggling to remember his name if he also needs to be sanitizing his hands at the same time. It's gonna be a long few years, Phil. It's gonna be a long few years, Gil.
As a Nephro, I think this might be your most accurate sketch yet! Everything is spot-on, from extensive calculations we don't really use, our fussy distinction between dehydration/volume depletion, to laughing at others who give fluids to "see what happens". And of course, the ongoing feud with Cardiology. I feel like you're broadcasting my day! 😁
As a non-medical person, I appreciate your distinction. Quite frankly, I noticed putting salt back in my diet resolved a large portion of the high blood pressure attacking me.
So why *does* the nephrologist love salt? I would've assumed dehydration would make the kidneys work harder to concentrate urine - is it the other way around? They struggle to retain salt with too much water?
@@cranapple3367 well to be fair, we don't love salt. Actually, high sodium intake isn't great for your kidneys (or blood pressure). But we're the ones who get called for all the electrolyte (including sodium) lab abnormalities, which is when we start calculating things! 😁
@@ferretyluv in normal-person-speak, yes. But medically, there's a big difference between pure lack of water (dehydration) vs water *and* electrolyte loss together (volume depletion). In the first one your blood gets more concentrated, while with volume depletion you also lost salt (and other electrolytes) so your blood sodium concentration remains *normal*. (That's what Dr. G is pointing out with the normal sodium level of 140.) As much as we're joking about it here, the distinction is actually important because the treatment is different.
@@morganpresley496 with dehydration the sodium levels would be high (what is called hypertonicity) but with volume depletion your sodium levels will be normal.
To further illustrate what the difference might actually look like and why it matters, someone who has a normal amount of sodium in their blood, but hasn't consumed any water in two days, would have a super high ratio of sodium to water: dehydration. If someone with a normal amount of sodium in their blood had a traumatic injury and lost two pints of blood overall, the *ratio* of sodium to water would remain normal but the total fluid level would be severely low. These conditions can and will have many overlapping symptoms as well. The simple difference in treatment might be to give water for dehydration, and to add water+electrolytes(sodium) for the volume depletion (although if it really is high blood loss they might just need a transfusion outright, which is blood composed of water+electrolytes(sodium et al.)) Please correct me if I'm wrong on this. I guess you could also sweat out too much sodium compared to the water intake and get an imbalance, but I don't think that would ever be considered volume depletion if the overall amount of fluid was typical/normal.
@@morganpresley496 [In EMS, not a doctor] Among other things, blood contains a mixture of water + salt. The distinction is: is there a loss of water and salt together or only a loss of water. The kidneys normally squeeze all of the juicy goodness out of blood and then selectively re-absorb things in an attempt to maintain an ideal balance. Yes, this is very inefficient but has some benefits.This can also go wrong in many different ways, and that's before you get to other causes of fluid loss like bleeding. Volume depletion implies that both water and salt (and maybe other stuff) need to increased in the patient. Dehydration implies that only water needs to be added. For people with healthy kidneys and mild/moderate dehydration/volume depletion, both issues can be treated more-or-less the same: give the patient some basic IV fluids like Normal Saline (0.9 NaCL in water) and let the kidneys balance everything out. For severe issues, volume depletion might need blood products or more special IV fluids. For pure dehydration it can be more complicated. You can't safely large quantities of pure water into a person's veins because the change in tonicity can cause the blood cells to soak it up through osmosis, swell, and burst, causing even more problems. So you need to know what you are facing, but most patients also won't be in that situation so a lot of communication might be sloppy.
As a nurse of over 40 years hospital experience and 25 in Cath lab your depiction of different specialties is so spot on. In today’s world I appreciate every laugh I get. Thank you so much for your videos, especially the ones that so how heartless and removed insurance companies are.
Yes except for Psychiatry. Quite inaccurate, unfortunately :( I'm a psychiatrist. We prescribe MEDS! We don't do therapy ourselves, and no one wears corduroy, houndstooth etc. There's SO much fun in psychiatry, but this channel shows none of it :(((( e.g. Haldol used to be called Vitamin H, back in the old days, bc it was given to so many psychotic patients at a time when vitamin cures were the latest fad. Sure, someone said, you're right: vitamins will cure you, here, have some Vitamin H...but this was before my time. Here's a joke from my time: in Psychiatry, we take a careful history, get a lot of collateral, read all the previous admissions, come up with a careful differential diagnosis, then prescribe Olanzapine.
So, Did Bill Bill complete his residency and now there is a new 'Phil' ?? 🤔 😂😂 Edit 1 : Thanks for the likes and comments. Yeah, saw the Video.. The last day of residency does become overwhelming,I can relate to that.. 😊😊😃 I'm just waiting to see Bill come back to the same Hospital as a Post Graduate or an attending doctor 😁😁😊😊
We once had a cardiologist who was married to the nephrologist. We always described the nephrologist as “spicy” as she was from South America and I’ll be damned if she didn’t always keep cardiology in check. It was fun watching her and her husband place subclavian lines for dialysis
Rooting Phil on you will makenit and be a rocking Dr Phil Phil! Also my pop just passed and I'm eternally grateful to the doctors, dialysis staff and every other medical and care staff that assisted, cared and gave him love and dignity until the last. You all are priceless!
Let`s see what Nephrology do when their dialysis patients start having chest pain and ST changes, not a single one of that obnoxious formulae will resolve the symptoms 🤔(cardiologist here, of course 🤣)
As resident Bill has completed his arduous journey, past the Moor of Neurology, and through the Internal Medicine Miasma Fields, now resident Phil must undergo the same rite of passage. In two years time, Phil, M.D’s successor, Will M.D. shall begin his own journey. We wish them all the best of luck, and the most potent of caffeine receptors.
…also ER. ER would use such ambiguous terms as well. “Yeah…got a guy, seems a little dehydrated, BUN and Cr are elevated, maybe an acute kidney injury. Tag you’re it!”
Help lol I'm halfway through the first part of nursing school and I'm starting to understand the jokes! 😅 As soon as he said "loss of total body water leading to hypertonicity" I involuntarily muttered "hypovolemic" 🤓
As a nurse turned dialysis patient, Nephro here always cracks me up! Especially as in our geographic area, most of the vascular surgeons manage any early cardiac and/or hematology problems.
The moment they started hissing my brain was already saying: “cardiology!” 😂😂 It’s really impressive how our ophthalmologist remembers stuff from different departments
When he asked who would us so plain and simple terminology do describe dehydration I thought it would be ortho bro, but then I saw that pure hatred and I knew it was cardiology ❤
The hypertensive bit should have tipped them off that it would be one of those. I'm surprised they don't hiss at the mention of Cardiology, much like Radiology hisses whenever someone requires them in a room with a window.
I think the greatest thing that this channel does is bringing out so so many people who are in the medical field. And somehow almost every single one of you agrees that he's getting everything dead nuts on.
I can't get enough of this rivalry. As a cardiovascular ICU nurse, I can say I've seen a lot of the two disciplines, and they always want different things. Have heard them argue before over whos orders are wrong and will hurt the patient
I am not in the medical field in any shape, way, form, or fashion and know pretty much nothing about medicine...and yet when nephrology asked "who could have done this" I literally screamed at my phone "CARDIOLOGY!!!" Then laughed hysterically when I was right and announced to my dog, whom I'd just woken, "I'm basically a doctor now."
Will, we NEED to see nephrology and cardiology as med students going through the same rotation, then as interns and residents at the same internal medicine program that creates the prequel and origin story to their love/hate/hate/hate relationship!!
OMG! Non medical person here. I love the complete nerd fest these skits can become. It gives me a different perspective (and a little insight) of what my Drs had to go through to get where they are. I really like reading the comments, too. Thanks!
I have actually had hypernatremia before I was really stressed a car had crashed into the place I was living almost hitting my son causing my body to panic and I was in the hospital for a few days my son slept through the whole thing he was not phased.
I was in the hospital a bit ago, where one of my issues was edma. I was given a lot of diuretics to help lower the fluids in my tissue. He had me keep track of the volume of my urine each day, so he could compute the weight of water I lost each day. I was also getting weighed each day. Oddly enough the amount of weight I lost almost exactly matched the weight I lost each day.
The rivalry between Nephrology and Cardiology is the best. I’m an anesthesiologist and the rivalry with Surgery doesn’t even come close.😂
Yeah some surgeons and anesthesiologist act like friends in the OT sometimes but they don't 😂
Surgeon here... I LOVE about 99% of the anesthesiologists I've worked with. Rivalry? Nope.
Anaesthesiologist here. There's no real rivalry between us and the surgeons. Deep down they know we're better at medicine than they are, and we know we'd be mostly unemployed without them performing surgery :)
...waiting for a surgeon to reply
@@mele4827 To whom?
the official chronicles of Phil the resident starts here 😂
history repeats itself XD
As every new med students and resident docs
He just has to hang in there til Gil finishes med school. Unfortunately, Gil is only a first year and is currently struggling to remember his name if he also needs to be sanitizing his hands at the same time. It's gonna be a long few years, Phil. It's gonna be a long few years, Gil.
Poor phill already sounds dead inside
And we love Phil and at the same time, feel concerned for Phil already 😂
As a Nephro, I think this might be your most accurate sketch yet! Everything is spot-on, from extensive calculations we don't really use, our fussy distinction between dehydration/volume depletion, to laughing at others who give fluids to "see what happens". And of course, the ongoing feud with Cardiology. I feel like you're broadcasting my day! 😁
As a non-medical person, I appreciate your distinction.
Quite frankly, I noticed putting salt back in my diet resolved a large portion of the high blood pressure attacking me.
So why *does* the nephrologist love salt? I would've assumed dehydration would make the kidneys work harder to concentrate urine - is it the other way around? They struggle to retain salt with too much water?
@@cranapple3367 well to be fair, we don't love salt. Actually, high sodium intake isn't great for your kidneys (or blood pressure). But we're the ones who get called for all the electrolyte (including sodium) lab abnormalities, which is when we start calculating things! 😁
Question: how else do you describe heat exhaustion due to lack of fluid intake? Wouldn’t “dehydration” be the best choice of words?
@@ferretyluv in normal-person-speak, yes. But medically, there's a big difference between pure lack of water (dehydration) vs water *and* electrolyte loss together (volume depletion). In the first one your blood gets more concentrated, while with volume depletion you also lost salt (and other electrolytes) so your blood sodium concentration remains *normal*. (That's what Dr. G is pointing out with the normal sodium level of 140.) As much as we're joking about it here, the distinction is actually important because the treatment is different.
Phil is going to get a-SALTED if he doesn’t pull his act together.
😂
Get out...
👌👌👌
As a patient of both a nephrologist and cardiologist I feel the pain of being in the middle.
Sorry about that. We do really try to get along. Mostly. 😉
Noted. Never say dehydration in front of a nephrophile unless the patient actually underwent the freezedrying process.
😂
Love it!
😂😂😂😂😂
The way he "drinks" salt and other guy is twisting container, damn
ITS THE HISSING FOR ME 😂😂😂
Like vampires who smelled a drop of blood
@@MaverickRiou I associated it more with snakes. A warning hiss to the cardiologist (which hr probably didn't hear) before the inevitable attack.
Like opossums.
I would propose a group of nephrologists be known as a compound. A compound of Nephrologists.
Alternatively, the collective noun for nephrologists could relate to the connective structures of the kidneys. Hence a “calyx of nephrologists”.
A glomerulus of nephrologists would be pleasing to my ear, even if it doesn't make sense.
@@iansilver4853 a capsule of nephrologists?
My fiance suggests a dehydration of nephrologists, or a hissing of nephrologists. :3
A volume... The opposite of depletion is excess but it sounds rude to suggest "a volume excess of nephrologists"!
If Nephrology could strangle Cardiology with the loop of Henley they would.
As a nephrologist I approve this message (dehydration vs volume depletion)! Such nuance is rarely come across upon especially in RUclips!
Kudos to those of you in your profession! It's because of you all that I'm still alive to do daily battle with my immune system.
What exactly is the difference? (non-medical person here lol)
@@morganpresley496 with dehydration the sodium levels would be high (what is called hypertonicity) but with volume depletion your sodium levels will be normal.
To further illustrate what the difference might actually look like and why it matters, someone who has a normal amount of sodium in their blood, but hasn't consumed any water in two days, would have a super high ratio of sodium to water: dehydration. If someone with a normal amount of sodium in their blood had a traumatic injury and lost two pints of blood overall, the *ratio* of sodium to water would remain normal but the total fluid level would be severely low. These conditions can and will have many overlapping symptoms as well. The simple difference in treatment might be to give water for dehydration, and to add water+electrolytes(sodium) for the volume depletion (although if it really is high blood loss they might just need a transfusion outright, which is blood composed of water+electrolytes(sodium et al.))
Please correct me if I'm wrong on this. I guess you could also sweat out too much sodium compared to the water intake and get an imbalance, but I don't think that would ever be considered volume depletion if the overall amount of fluid was typical/normal.
@@morganpresley496 [In EMS, not a doctor] Among other things, blood contains a mixture of water + salt. The distinction is: is there a loss of water and salt together or only a loss of water. The kidneys normally squeeze all of the juicy goodness out of blood and then selectively re-absorb things in an attempt to maintain an ideal balance. Yes, this is very inefficient but has some benefits.This can also go wrong in many different ways, and that's before you get to other causes of fluid loss like bleeding.
Volume depletion implies that both water and salt (and maybe other stuff) need to increased in the patient. Dehydration implies that only water needs to be added.
For people with healthy kidneys and mild/moderate dehydration/volume depletion, both issues can be treated more-or-less the same: give the patient some basic IV fluids like Normal Saline (0.9 NaCL in water) and let the kidneys balance everything out. For severe issues, volume depletion might need blood products or more special IV fluids. For pure dehydration it can be more complicated. You can't safely large quantities of pure water into a person's veins because the change in tonicity can cause the blood cells to soak it up through osmosis, swell, and burst, causing even more problems. So you need to know what you are facing, but most patients also won't be in that situation so a lot of communication might be sloppy.
Props to Phil, he was pretty quick on the uptake. He realized he was a shell-dependant invertebrate, and the salt level was rising.
By uptake I hope you mean "resorption"
Nephrology: “Cardiology!”
Jerry Seinfeld: “Newman!”
😂😂😂
Timmy's dad "Dinkleburg!"
I watched Seinfeld for the first time a few weeks ago, and dang... sitcoms have improved A LOT since the olden days.
LOL
I swear the scowl gets more dramatic every time. 😂
@@whysocurious7366 Sacrilege! 😆
Phil has officially joined rounds and already looks miserable.
That's how you know the resident is in rounds. If they're happy, rounds hasn't started yet.
@@Joel-wx7zk rounds are easily the least fun part of the day
lol I know his first rotation and it’s going to be a doozy ! He won’t know what happen to him
As a nurse of over 40 years hospital experience and 25 in Cath lab your depiction of different specialties is so spot on. In today’s world I appreciate every laugh I get. Thank you so much for your videos, especially the ones that so how heartless and removed insurance companies are.
Yes except for Psychiatry. Quite inaccurate, unfortunately :( I'm a psychiatrist. We prescribe MEDS! We don't do therapy ourselves, and no one wears corduroy, houndstooth etc. There's SO much fun in psychiatry, but this channel shows none of it :((((
e.g. Haldol used to be called Vitamin H, back in the old days, bc it was given to so many psychotic patients at a time when vitamin cures were the latest fad. Sure, someone said, you're right: vitamins will cure you, here, have some Vitamin H...but this was before my time.
Here's a joke from my time: in Psychiatry, we take a careful history, get a lot of collateral, read all the previous admissions, come up with a careful differential diagnosis, then prescribe Olanzapine.
Remember, if kidneys could be trusted, we wouldn't need Nephrologists.
So we can’t trust the heart cuz we need cardiologists too?
@@joshiahphillips9219 Well I can't trust my heart and I need a cardiologist so yeah that logic holds up for me at least :')
If nephrologists can be trusted, we won’t have a spare kidney.
Psychologist: Never trust your brain.
@@joshiahphillips9219 Trick question, you shouldn't be trusting any of your organs.
So, Did Bill Bill complete his residency and now there is a new 'Phil' ?? 🤔 😂😂
Edit 1 : Thanks for the likes and comments. Yeah, saw the Video.. The last day of residency does become overwhelming,I can relate to that.. 😊😊😃
I'm just waiting to see Bill come back to the same Hospital as a Post Graduate or an attending doctor 😁😁😊😊
Yes, that is correct. It was also a cool video
Correct! You missed Bill's exit my friend. It was beautiful. Even neuro was nice lol
Yes, I can't remember the name of the video, but it was a few weeks ago. Really sweet, and the moment Bill finished, Phil was introduced.
YES!
The video is called "Bill Graduates Residency", it was posted a month ago.
poor phil, hes got a storm comin for him
I have watched too much Dr Glaucomflecken and uttered Cardiology at the end as well 🤣
Same!
Nephrology becomes more and more raptor-like the more these videos go on
"What do we use in nephrology?"
"Brains"
Neurologist: "No you don't"
I was waiting was "Cardiology" and was not disappointed!
As soon as he hesitated I said “cardiology!” out loud 😂
We once had a cardiologist who was married to the nephrologist. We always described the nephrologist as “spicy” as she was from South America and I’ll be damned if she didn’t always keep cardiology in check. It was fun watching her and her husband place subclavian lines for dialysis
The hiss before the cardiology reveal was like a room full of possums.
Rooting Phil on you will makenit and be a rocking Dr Phil Phil!
Also my pop just passed and I'm eternally grateful to the doctors, dialysis staff and every other medical and care staff that assisted, cared and gave him love and dignity until the last.
You all are priceless!
Let`s see what Nephrology do when their dialysis patients start having chest pain and ST changes, not a single one of that obnoxious formulae will resolve the symptoms 🤔(cardiologist here, of course 🤣)
Can all be blamed on hyperkalemia or Hypocalcemia due to renal failure
No need to involve you guys
Yeah, yeah. But they're probably on dialysis anyway because of all your contrast, Entresto, Aldactone, and three diuretics. 😛
Hey now, just because most of us have two kidneys, doesn't mean they all necessarily work!
*radtech sitting back with unsalted popcorn*
Gentlemen, gentleladies, please go on
*(psychiatrist hiding in the closet with all his lithium prescriptions)*
As resident Bill has completed his arduous journey, past the Moor of Neurology, and through the Internal Medicine Miasma Fields, now resident Phil must undergo the same rite of passage. In two years time, Phil, M.D’s successor, Will M.D. shall begin his own journey. We wish them all the best of luck, and the most potent of caffeine receptors.
"Your grades are like every nephritis in that dialysis unit - failing"
Relatable Dr. Glauc. Relatable.
Nephron* ....(sorry medical student here ), however what doctor G in the video was every kidney 😅
Yeah I misquoted mb fr
…also ER. ER would use such ambiguous terms as well.
“Yeah…got a guy, seems a little dehydrated, BUN and Cr are elevated, maybe an acute kidney injury. Tag you’re it!”
"Send the patient to do a CT scan, abdomen C- C+, r/o abdominal pain"
And they try to admit them and internal medicine is like 😑😑😑😑😑😑😑😑😑😑
i lost it when he drank the salt
My fave Nephro video is where he helps Ortho order medicine. It was just shot and acted so brilliantly. Nephro's the best😂
Help lol I'm halfway through the first part of nursing school and I'm starting to understand the jokes! 😅
As soon as he said "loss of total body water leading to hypertonicity" I involuntarily muttered "hypovolemic" 🤓
As a nurse turned dialysis patient, Nephro here always cracks me up! Especially as in our geographic area, most of the vascular surgeons manage any early cardiac and/or hematology problems.
We never heard from Phil after this. Rumour has it he became a holistic shaman in Borneo.😂
😂
I’d have laughed, but my throat is dry.
Are you volume depleted?
The moment they started hissing my brain was already saying: “cardiology!” 😂😂
It’s really impressive how our ophthalmologist remembers stuff from different departments
When you ain't no doctor but know the answer!!!😂😂😂 this guy is gold.
“Sometimes nothing” 🤣
It's like the Hatfields and the McCoys fighting in present day, it'll never end
"What, no, I didn't say the wrong thing; cardiology did."
Poor Phil, hopefully the surgeons started a new swear jar for his salary 😂
I know how the ending will be when Phil mentioned "reading the order" 😆
I love these videos. Please never stop.
Godspeed, Phil. You’re gonna need it!
When he asked who would us so plain and simple terminology do describe dehydration I thought it would be ortho bro, but then I saw that pure hatred and I knew it was cardiology ❤
I thought it might Bill. But that lucky man is off on new adventures. Poor Phil is just starting.
Nah, based on these videos, ortho bro would just write "patient is thirsty bro". Should there be a comma there? Wouldn't you like to know?
Wouldn't ortho trying to get out of charting in the first place?
@@aml7481 oh, right XDDD
@@researchotaku XDDDDD
The hypertensive bit should have tipped them off that it would be one of those. I'm surprised they don't hiss at the mention of Cardiology, much like Radiology hisses whenever someone requires them in a room with a window.
Omg you did my volume depletion vs dehydration joke!!!! I love this 😂😂😂
That was the most dramatic « Cardiology » I’ve ever seen !
I love how nephrology turns into a velociraptor every time cardiology comes up
The fact that I instantly knew that it was cardiology and said it along
Am I turning into a nephrologist?
Poor Phil, he never seen this coming!
Hey Doc, you need to start having Morton sponsor these videos!
This is exactly one of the pet peeves of one of my consultants during nephrology fellowship training 😅😂😂😂
Everything about this video was a wonderful reminder of why I avoided nephro and cardiology.
I was expecting ER at the end
Drinking straight from the salt cannister was a baller move.
"It has to end someday" - Bill to Phil
also I see your doctor Phil joke from a mile away whenever its going to happen
The mass-hiss from the Nephrology-Hydra at the mere thought of Cardiology kills me.
I think the greatest thing that this channel does is bringing out so so many people who are in the medical field.
And somehow almost every single one of you agrees that he's getting everything dead nuts on.
I can't wait for the time Bill will teach Phil
As a nephrology nurse, bravo.
You know the punchline going in. It's the buildup that makes it worth it.
Nephrology is The Aristocrats of the Glaucomflecken universe.
Watching this as my kidney stones are kicking off...
Nicely distracting Doc, thank you!
I want an entire 3 seasons of this show, STAT lol
i dunno your content keeps getting better and better, but it does! ❤
Love it. My program directors talked to me exactly like that last Friday at my annual review.
In Nephrons we trust.
I can't get enough of this rivalry. As a cardiovascular ICU nurse, I can say I've seen a lot of the two disciplines, and they always want different things. Have heard them argue before over whos orders are wrong and will hurt the patient
I am not in the medical field in any shape, way, form, or fashion and know pretty much nothing about medicine...and yet when nephrology asked "who could have done this" I literally screamed at my phone "CARDIOLOGY!!!" Then laughed hysterically when I was right and announced to my dog, whom I'd just woken, "I'm basically a doctor now."
Those breaths before “cardiology” were gold
So we now got Phil to replace Dr. Bill, and Nephrology has a posse a la dentistry! 😹
I knew "cardiology" was coming out before the first sigh was over. 😂
The best comedy: where doctors are even capable of thinking. Truly outlandish humour.
Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh this one is really good. It’s like a combination of all your best videos of cardiology vs nephrology.
Will, we NEED to see nephrology and cardiology as med students going through the same rotation, then as interns and residents at the same internal medicine program that creates the prequel and origin story to their love/hate/hate/hate relationship!!
I lost it at that dialysis unit joke😂😂
I’m just here to see you fight cardiology
*just watched until the end and was not disappointed
Omg ! I can’t stop laughing this is sooo good !!! The salt shaker makes me want to go out and buy one 🧂🧂🧂🧂
OMG! Non medical person here. I love the complete nerd fest these skits can become. It gives me a different perspective (and a little insight) of what my Drs had to go through to get where they are. I really like reading the comments, too. Thanks!
Looking forward to the next installment.
you are a genious!!
"Your grades are like every kidney in the dialysis unit - FAILING" 🤣
LMAO! Nice touch with the Morton's salt tub.
Just Awesome!
Poor Phil had already started sounding like old Bill🥺😂
The best on RUclips
The short is surprisingly informative
now hit us with curveball involving endocrinologist with addison
I laughed so hard ehen the other 2 nephrologists spawned out of nowhere
HIM HAS POSTED 🔔🔔
Dr. Phil Phil, glad to meet you. Sad to see you go (to nephrology)
The way they simultaneously reacted like velociraptors smelling their prey from afar got me really laughing out loud, thanks for that :D
I have actually had hypernatremia before I was really stressed a car had crashed into the place I was living almost hitting my son causing my body to panic and I was in the hospital for a few days my son slept through the whole thing he was not phased.
As soon as the hissing started I knew what word was coming 😂😂😂
Was waiting for... Cardiology... I am a radiologist from India. Love your content.
The triple sigh got me!
I was in the hospital a bit ago, where one of my issues was edma. I was given a lot of diuretics to help lower the fluids in my tissue. He had me keep track of the volume of my urine each day, so he could compute the weight of water I lost each day. I was also getting weighed each day. Oddly enough the amount of weight I lost almost exactly matched the weight I lost each day.
The way I automatically hissed in disgust at the same time as Nephrology 😂. Like a vampire exposed to sunlight!
Made me laugh out loud.
I felt those exhales through my phone 💀
Nice!