Animal Diseases that Belong in a Horror Movie

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • By far the most disturbing video I've ever made
    If you'd like to watch videos early, get bonus content, vote on video topics and support this channel, consider joining my Patreon: / hoodnature
    Check out my calendar: www.amazon.ca/Animals-That-ck...
    Music from:
    Kevin MacLeod: ‪@incompetech_kmac‬
    Myuu: ‪@Myuu‬
    Clips used:
    Lion with mange: • Sick Lion In Kruger Pa...
    Attack of the Monkeys: • Monkey Attack!!! Silve...
    Coyote attacks window: • Crazy Coyote Kicks Glass
    Fox licks glass: • Rabid Fox???
    Rabid fox: • Rabid Fox
    Deer does donuts in parking lot: • Rabid Deer going in ci...
    Hydrophobia: • Hydrophobia in a patie...
    Okay, I’m gonna go take a long shower and pray for my search history

Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @mndiaye_97
    @mndiaye_97  7 месяцев назад +13435

    Correction: Hugo died in 1980, not 2022. It was believed he developed depression after spending two years alone in a tiny pool while his new tank was under construction. Apparently after that, he completely fell apart mentally

    • @ChrundleTGreat
      @ChrundleTGreat 7 месяцев назад +892

      Reason number 6000 why Orcas shouldn’t be held in captivity.

    • @charmainemtungwazi867
      @charmainemtungwazi867 7 месяцев назад +120

      Can we get a part 2?

    • @setsers1
      @setsers1 7 месяцев назад +133

      That's Horrible...

    • @annastepanova3615
      @annastepanova3615 7 месяцев назад +399

      Also don't let anybody forget my girl Lolita who was Hugo's tankmate and went to live another three decades completely alone in the tiny pool. Only to be given a pass for reintroduction to the wild when she was too sick to transport. SIP girl, the news of her death are still too fresh for me.

    • @ko-rp7ge
      @ko-rp7ge 7 месяцев назад +24

      That's rough

  • @cactusthestupid7222
    @cactusthestupid7222 7 месяцев назад +5822

    Rabies is also theorized to be the reason humans have an "uncanny valley"! Instinctively avoiding humans that looked slightly off or behaved weirdly was a good way to avoid getting rabies before logic or weapons existed.

    • @georgeuferov1497
      @georgeuferov1497 7 месяцев назад +823

      I'm pretty sure uncanny valley thing works against every disease, not just rabies

    • @Tempusverum
      @Tempusverum 7 месяцев назад +768

      It’s creepy even with animals. It’s like seeing something unspeakably malevolent take the image of something that used to be a dog, fox or wolf. A human would be bloodcurdling

    • @ianbrooks1769
      @ianbrooks1769 7 месяцев назад +254

      I think the uncanny valley exists so that we had instincts against other 'human' species when wr were all sharing the world long ago

    • @v8280
      @v8280 7 месяцев назад

      ⁠​⁠@@ianbrooks1769 not an expert or anything but i can't see how that would work evolutionarily?
      like if we evolved to experience uncanny valley in response to other kinds of early humans, it would imply that those who didn't experience the uncanny feeling were killed before producing offspring, but the opposite is true right? a lot of modern humans have neanderthal dna

    • @Majima_Nowhere
      @Majima_Nowhere 7 месяцев назад +278

      @@ianbrooks1769 I don't think that's the case, given all the homo sapiens and neanderthal crossbreeding.

  • @kiarablack5349
    @kiarablack5349 7 месяцев назад +5468

    As a biology student, describing prion diseases as "a cellular level cheese touch" is the best thing I've ever heard. I will be using this as my new analogy for studying.

    • @tedstudt8550
      @tedstudt8550 7 месяцев назад +74

      Yeah, it's a pretty accurate analogy tbh. Wish I'd thought of that while in undergrad lol

    • @litterbox019
      @litterbox019 7 месяцев назад +24

      wouldn't it be more like molecular level since it's a protein and not a cell?

    • @dirtyweapons3459
      @dirtyweapons3459 7 месяцев назад +12

      I don’t get it. Cheese touch.

    • @maam-yj8ph
      @maam-yj8ph 7 месяцев назад +71

      ​​​@@dirtyweapons3459 I want to say the "cheese touch" is referencing "Diary of a Wimpy Kid." The Cheese Touch is apparently a game where whoever is forced to touch or eat some moldy Swiss cheese is a social outcast until they get someone else to also have contact with the cheese. I have not actually read the book(s) or seen the movie, so I don't really know the nuances of how the Cheese Touch is enforced. In the movie it sounds like any physical contact with the infected individual transmits the Cheese Touch, even though it does not clarify how the bullies are able to facilitate contact with the cheese without touching the cheese or affected individual themselves.

    • @Whammytap
      @Whammytap 6 месяцев назад

      I hope you use your education to look for some way to fight these terrifying proteins. At least rabies is a virus, it's sorta-like alive, I can understand that. Prions are like an evil cosmic mistake, something even the most twisted human being couldn't have thought up.

  • @giggles7179
    @giggles7179 2 месяца назад +1095

    The whole rabid/fear of water symptom almost makes it sound like it's a remarkably intelligent virus. That's _really_ horrific.

    • @Acidfrog475
      @Acidfrog475 Месяц назад +99

      If rabies wasn’t so horrifying I’d almost give it props for how inventive the hydrophobia is as a method of spreading the disease.

    • @MrAwesomeLuisreal
      @MrAwesomeLuisreal Месяц назад +66

      As with survival of the fittest. The rabies strand which randomly caused hydrophobic was the most likely to be passed on. It's just amazing that such an outcome is even possible.

    • @WhipLash2457
      @WhipLash2457 Месяц назад +38

      rabies is one of the oldest diseases, giving the virus lots of time to further develop a *very well* working concept

    • @condorgaming4000
      @condorgaming4000 Месяц назад +4

      Which is why it will eventually evolve to be able to affect humans the same way it affects animals. Zombie apocalypse type stuff

    • @Acidfrog475
      @Acidfrog475 Месяц назад +24

      @@condorgaming4000 I’m confused about what you’re talking about. Rabies is easily transmissible to humans.

  • @shiroimitsune7314
    @shiroimitsune7314 3 месяца назад +1266

    "Turning his puke into infinite food glitch-"
    My man has a way of describing things but the imagination of it is unreal

    • @intpleb4206
      @intpleb4206 2 месяца назад +2

      I'm sure some is AI generated, which comes up with pretty clever and off the wall stuff if given the right prompts.

    • @giggles7179
      @giggles7179 2 месяца назад +8

      Were you able to guess what Coprophagia (the symptom immediately following the puke clip) is?

    • @EShirako
      @EShirako Месяц назад

      @@intpleb4206 I'd be surprised. This guy has had interesting verbiage for pretty much all of the episodes I've seen of his stuff.

    • @kenrickeason
      @kenrickeason Месяц назад

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Space_Nurde
      @Space_Nurde Месяц назад

      cows on a daily basis

  • @jmcg9822
    @jmcg9822 7 месяцев назад +10519

    The rabies epidemic in India actually began increasing at an alarming rate when humans decided vultures were a pest and began poisoning them. Vultures like many birds don’t get rabies and vultures being the clean up crew actually limit the spread of rabies by lessening the amount of animal carcasses lying around for stray dogs to scavenge. We need vultures.

    • @stevendeamon
      @stevendeamon 7 месяцев назад

      Humans have always been fucking stupid. Like, dangerous stupid, not haha stupid.

    • @I_Palaver
      @I_Palaver 7 месяцев назад +738

      I'm glad you mentioned that. It wasn't until recently, when I was watching a safari doc, that I learned that and it changed my opinion of vultures forever.

    • @jmcg9822
      @jmcg9822 7 месяцев назад

      @@I_Palaver and the more hosts a virus has to infect, the more chances it has of mutating…

    • @shinobiighost6946
      @shinobiighost6946 7 месяцев назад +127

      Killed 1 vulture that was stalking my chickens, it was acting weird and limping at them. Creepy.

    • @Nutmeg142
      @Nutmeg142 7 месяцев назад +264

      I’m surprised they don’t try and mass vaccinate the stray dogs. I know it would be hard, but at least it may save some people.

  • @LadyMajolish
    @LadyMajolish 7 месяцев назад +25018

    It’s actually Terrifying that so many animals are affected by these horrible diseases where the point they are a lost cause, it is depressing especially The Rabies.

    • @Steam537
      @Steam537 7 месяцев назад +86

      Fr

    • @aserta
      @aserta 7 месяцев назад +561

      I think only two humans have survived (naturally) the Rabies so far (haven't refreshed my knowledge on this dreaded thing in a while now).
      If you go in the wild often, see animals or live near nature, best get the shot, because that might save your life. Also, don't get near animals that come to you... obsessively. In general, try to avoid touching animals as a rule. The chances of them having Rabies are small, but they are not 0.
      This is one disease everyone should be aware of, AND in the off-chance you see a Rabies infected animals, call local animal control, because that sh!t spreads like a yeast infection once it gets into populated areas. You might escape it, but the kid next door might not.

    • @LadyMajolish
      @LadyMajolish 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@aserta thanks for the advice!, and especially stay away from Raccoons, they are ESPECIALLY known to carry rabies, never trust a wild Animal. Because you don’t know what you got carrying on you…

    • @withlessAsbestos
      @withlessAsbestos 7 месяцев назад +187

      Most recent knowledge I have is that only one Person has survived rabies untreated with severe mental issues, and a handful have survived with intense medical treatment and brain damage.

    • @thelittlebeaver6080
      @thelittlebeaver6080 7 месяцев назад +7

  • @scenczyk1429
    @scenczyk1429 5 месяцев назад +930

    Hearing about zoocosis has made me realise that i saw a lion with this in Germany
    It was doing exactly what that leopard was doing. The enclosure was near the entrance to the zoo, it was the first place I visited, i went back before i left some 5 hours later and it was still pacing. Completely ignoring the massive chunk of meat behind it.
    It made me sad at the time but knowing this has made it even sadder

    • @Fido-vm9zi
      @Fido-vm9zi 4 месяца назад +17

      I saw an animal acting that way too. Sad.

    • @JayEichendorff
      @JayEichendorff 4 месяца назад +60

      When I went to the Wilhelma in Stuttgart, there was this cheetah sitting directly in front of the fence. Some people where making noises at him, like you would do to gain a house cats attention.
      I remember looking directly into his eyes and they just went right through me, like he didnt see me or anything else at all. Its hard to describe but they were the most dead and empty eyes I ever saw, there was just absolutely nothing left. It was haunting and disturbing and left me with this sick feeling in my stomach. I'll never ever forget those eyes and I'll never enter any kind of zoo ever again.

    • @nevaehhamilton3493
      @nevaehhamilton3493 3 месяца назад +29

      That means the zoo you went to was unethical and abused and neglected a lot of the animals, and you unintentionally became a part of the problem by coming here

    • @ChibiCherub
      @ChibiCherub 2 месяца назад

      zoochosis is not actually a thing. it was coined and spread by an anti captivity group as propoganda.

    • @abaker2302
      @abaker2302 Месяц назад +8

      Zoocosis is why I don't go to any type of zoo or any place that encloses any animal. I also refuse to ever have an animal that requires confining. It's not right.

  • @Greneyes3384
    @Greneyes3384 6 месяцев назад +380

    A content creator I really liked quit recently and someone made a video about his reasons for that and in that video he said. "People appreciate and like things in silence, but people hate things very loudly." it made me think that hitting the like button is one thing but leaving a nice comment is better, so thank you CG for these videos I enjoy learning and listening to all your animal knowledge and look forward to each of your videos.

    • @billie5940
      @billie5940 3 месяца назад +13

      I love this comment, thank you so much for making it.

    • @littleregg3164
      @littleregg3164 2 месяца назад +1

      Jocat?

    • @Greneyes3384
      @Greneyes3384 2 месяца назад +1

      Yeah it was him

    • @Isehkaid
      @Isehkaid День назад

      Wow. Well said, jocat. Its unfair that he deserved that treatment from twitter. Thanks for bringing this up! Its nice that people appreciated his work 😢

  • @SwordTune
    @SwordTune 7 месяцев назад +7507

    Zoochosis is one of the most terrifying to me. I've listened to testimony from prisoners kept in solitary confinement, children and adults. Taking their stories at face value, the hallucinations they can experience are severe. Like some Alice in Wonderland shit. In highly intelligent and social animals, I have no doubt the experience is just as severe and traumatic.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 7 месяцев назад +584

      For a frame of reference one of the most horrifying forms of torture used in Iran is "white room treatment" where you're locked in a plain white room in solitary confinement for long stretches of time, which isnt much better than what some zoo animals are put through. Some people put through it have said they preferred beatings. There's been cases where temperamental or difficult horses were given a partner in their stable or even just a goat and seen a world of change afterwards, makes you wonder if its just loneliness and having another ungulate to keep them company is why their mood improves. Some animals are hardwired to be in groups and it can seriously screw them up being alone, some animals like dogs and cats can be fine without another of their kind around but that's just because they've evolved to see their human as another cat/dog

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss 7 месяцев назад +403

      Please bear in mind: The definition of zoochosis is _stereotypies in _*_non-human_*_ animals._ Meaning humans don't get, "zoochosis," they get behavioral disorders, or dementia, or schizophrenia. Just like humans don't get "mange", they get "scabies," even though it's caused by the same thing. The term is different if it occurs in humans.

    • @whereswaldo333
      @whereswaldo333 7 месяцев назад +179

      I recently came back from Mule Deer hunting season. This year was the first time I ever witnessed a deer with Chronic Wasting Disease. I didn't know what to do so I contacted the Fish and Wildlife department and they told me to shoot it and a W&F Officer would would come out to collect it. It was actually quite sad.

    • @2shy1151
      @2shy1151 7 месяцев назад +85

      @John_Weiss Thank you for clarifying that. We don't need to give people another reason to compare people with mental illness or brain disorders to animals.

    • @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378
      @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378 7 месяцев назад +31

      ​@@John_Weiss You mean psychosis?

  • @xangelofwhatstocomex
    @xangelofwhatstocomex 7 месяцев назад +2100

    I'm literally HORRIFIED of Rabies. I am almost terrified of any and all wild animals because of that disease.

    • @curiousKuro16
      @curiousKuro16 7 месяцев назад +256

      Some good news: opossums basically can't carry Rabies, because their body temp is too low for the virus to replicate. Vaccinating dogs against rabies - as well as leash laws and a decrease in dog hunting - has led to it diminishing in wild animals drastically. Rabies also only affects mamals, so birds and reptiles and fish are safe from it.

    • @xangelofwhatstocomex
      @xangelofwhatstocomex 7 месяцев назад +78

      @@curiousKuro16 This does help thanks!

    • @katie85705
      @katie85705 7 месяцев назад +52

      Bat's are also rare to bite anything that isn't prey as long as they aren't being held or whatever. They also rarely get caught in hair like many people say they do. They have pretty decent eye sight plus echolocation which helps them navigate. Mostly they are just interested in easily insects and doing their thing. One really cool thing about them is they really help keep down the mosquito population which can carry west nile disease. I wouldn't recommend getting all chummy with a bat (unless you know what your fully doing) but honestly they really aren't much to fear about them. If you want to see a really cute bat look up the fox bat, they're fruit bat's and are super adorable. I how to someday be able to interact with one of them

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull 7 месяцев назад

      Why? You're vaccinated. You can't get the disease even if you do get infected. Whole point of the vaccine in the first place.

    • @user-wj6wk6db6h
      @user-wj6wk6db6h 7 месяцев назад +9

      Same here. Lemme tell you. Where i am rn. There are unvaccinated dogs literally roaming everywhere.

  • @palemourningrose2463
    @palemourningrose2463 4 месяца назад +291

    I actually have OCD and one of the most common paranoid intrusive thoughts I have is about getting rabies. It fucking terrifies me. Despite me being about as far removed from it as possible (I live in the city, barely go outside, don’t interact with animals outside my own indoor cat, keep up with all of my shots, and already avoid dogs on principle because I am very allergic to them), it genuinely keeps me up at night sometimes. A slow, painful death with no hope of recovery once symptoms set in.

    • @ellam1452
      @ellam1452 2 месяца назад +25

      you know that theres a vaccine shot you can get to prevent rabies? in the U.S. its only required to get them for dogs, but if it helps with ur OCD i would really reccomend you see if the vaccine is available for you! the peace of mind may be worth it

    • @Pearakeet_Arts
      @Pearakeet_Arts 2 месяца назад +20

      It's expensive, but if it puts you at ease I also suggest looking into it. In order to be fully vaccinated from rabies, you need three injections of it I believe 2 weeks apart? It's been a year since I got mine so I'm a little foggy. After you're fully immunized it kinda becomes like a flu shot that you get every year.
      Most clinics don't carry them, my best suggestion is to find travel clinics. Places that people go to get immunizations before leaving the country. Good luck, many hugs.

    • @halstarlight
      @halstarlight Месяц назад +4

      SAME - I have intrusive thoughts about rabies and recurring nightmares

    • @AnnaHill-nt1sz
      @AnnaHill-nt1sz Месяц назад +5

      I genuinely stay up way too late. Pretty sure staying up affects the brain and I've gotten some weird dreams. Only once a week ago did I get one about alien parasitic infections and geeze it scared me. I'm honestly terrified of parasites and infections that drive you crazy until death.

    • @reddeadandangryatcapitalism
      @reddeadandangryatcapitalism Месяц назад +1

      Come to Australia, we don't have in in the whole country

  • @galeforce3192
    @galeforce3192 6 месяцев назад +495

    The zoochosis segment brought the film "Blackfish" to mind. People don't understand just how much space larger animals need. Especially marine animals. And the CWD bit sounds like a good inspiration for a zombie film with a new twist. No need for a rapid spread that causes an apocalypse. Just something slow-acting, slow-spreading, but very dangerous because no one knows what it really is or where it's coming from, and even once everyone finds out, it doesn't get any better because it's so difficult to control.

    • @rogue7723
      @rogue7723 4 месяца назад +15

      Reminded me of one dolphin documentary in my high school marine biology class called _The Cove_ detailing the capture and brutal slaughter of dolphins and the increase of mercury poisoning from dolphin meat and there was one segment with Ric O'Barry (He was this dolphin trainer-turned-activist in the '60's who helped capture and train five dolphins for this TV show _Flipper,_ from what little I understand about that show is it's just _Lassie_ but swap out the dog for a dolphin) talking about how one dolphin named Kathy _unalived herself_ in his arms by closing her blowhole after she was stored in some pool after the show ended as if she were nothing more than a prop. When Ric found her she was black from sunburn because the pool she was in was fairly shallow and her dorsal fin was flopping like the orcas at _SeaWorld._ Let me tell you, it takes _a lot_ to get me to feel sorry for the _Cosby/Dahmers_ of the ocean known as dolphins, and I'll say _that documentary was a lot._

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 4 месяца назад +15

      Yeah there are some animals like many rodents and reef fish that are naturally adapted for small spaces and dont need or even want tons of space, but others like whales and dolphins need _tons_ of space. Orcas not only are adapted to vast tracts of ocean but they're also _fucking huge_ so the little pools they get at places like Sea World are barely a fraction what they need.

    • @ChibiCherub
      @ChibiCherub 2 месяца назад

      zoochosis is anti captivity propoganda.

    • @manofmoths2092
      @manofmoths2092 2 месяца назад +1

      Pretty sure the move Maggie has a zombie apocalypse that goes slow like this

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 2 месяца назад +3

      @@manofmoths2092 i wish they'd make more apocalypse movies like that. In movies the end always happens in like a week but even the worst real life disasters often take months or years to really grow out of hand. Covid is one of the best examples of a hyper virulent plague and it still took over a year to get to that point and that was with multiple major world governments resisting efforts to fight the plague at first. Looking at most of the truly low points of humanity like global wars (Napoleon, WW1, WW2, Cold War), famines (Holodomr, Great Leap Forward), or societal collapses (Great Depression) or other plagues (Black Death, Spanish Flu) took years to grow even if you dont count a lot of the preceding events. A slow apocalypse is more realistic and if anything more terrifying since it's less like a fast, relatively merciful gunshot and more like gangrene as you watch the world slowly die and rot while it struggles to survive.

  • @shaggygoatboy1125
    @shaggygoatboy1125 7 месяцев назад +8443

    "Diseases can have animals permanently paralleled to the ground".
    I've said it before, I'll say it again : this guy's success is not only due to his expertise on unconventional animal knowledge...it's ALSO the fact that he's a very good comedic writer!

    • @pandap4ntz
      @pandap4ntz 7 месяцев назад +242

      He's a genius writer, very talented, I'm often left in awe of his abilities with words.

    • @Dimetropteryx
      @Dimetropteryx 7 месяцев назад +152

      A wordsmith.

    • @naheleshiriki5496
      @naheleshiriki5496 7 месяцев назад +45

      I will complain that he keeps using down bad as a term for them going through something highly physically detrimental when he knows that's not what down bad means. Quite the opposite actually, down bad expresses a certain vitality to it. It is in no way at all applicable to death.

    • @johnsteiner3417
      @johnsteiner3417 7 месяцев назад +7

      Yep.

    • @TheZombieButler
      @TheZombieButler 7 месяцев назад +27

      Truth. Not just a good comic writer but he also has good comic timing.

  • @cheesethekoala8756
    @cheesethekoala8756 7 месяцев назад +2414

    Worth mentioning: The animal is still contagious before it starts foaming at the mouth. All too many people think that if it’s not foaming at the mouth and just coming up to you, it’s not contagious. If you see an animal displaying weird behaviour, DONT GO TO IT. Even if it looks like it is in distress, DO NOT. It’s not worth YOUR life and that of everyone else you might accidentally get sick. Don’t do it.

    • @whowhy7554
      @whowhy7554 7 месяцев назад +100

      So true the only way to truly help an animal in distress is to call the authorities so both you and the animal are safe

    • @xjakanton2576
      @xjakanton2576 7 месяцев назад +82

      Yes, and don't put the animal out of its misery either. Even if you shoot it from a distance, you WILL spread the disease into the surrounding area. All it takes is a drop of saliva on the ground.

    • @monticore1626
      @monticore1626 7 месяцев назад +44

      In conclusion: don’t mess with wild animals, EVER

    • @A.Girl.Has.No.Name.
      @A.Girl.Has.No.Name. 7 месяцев назад +77

      Just yesterday, I saw a video where a woman showed herself finding a mouse burrowed into the dirt in her potted plant, so she grabbed it with her hand to remove it, and it bit her. Instead of putting it outside,she made it a home for him in their house. The comment section was SCREAMING st her to go to a doctor immediately, but apparently she didn't think it was necessary. I should've subbed to find out in 3 weeks if she got rabies, or not!

    • @Term-0
      @Term-0 7 месяцев назад

      And if you get bit, FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, go to the hospital and get a rabies vaccine. It takes quite a long time to reach the brain, and if you get vaccinated before it reaches the brain, your body will produce antibodies and eradicate the virus, and you will likely be okay. But if it reaches the brain, it is too late, and you will be an incredibly rare edge case if you can be treated and survive.

  • @notsae66
    @notsae66 5 месяцев назад +123

    I remember going to the zoo as a kid and watching one of the polar bears just pace back and forth with his head swaying from side to side. He would do it for hours and hours, we would leave and come back and find him still pacing in the same place. I always thought something was wrong there, but I never knew quite what. Well, at least he found peace eventually... after an idiot tried to hug him and got ripped apart, forcing staff to relieve him of his mortal suffering.

    • @Cellmate
      @Cellmate 2 месяца назад

      An actual useful idiot, since it led to that bear getting a mercy kill essentially, even though it wasn't meant to be one. God I hate complacency in zoos. Especially when there's some zoos that do genuinely care for the animals.

    • @Volzotran
      @Volzotran 26 дней назад

      And yet humans insist on being inherently more intelligent than all animals

  • @mahogania5536
    @mahogania5536 5 месяцев назад +80

    There were some dogs with mange in their packs near my elementary school. There's a huge thing in my country where inter-region travelers and foreign tourists abandon their dogs and never come back, especially low income places. No one adopts them but always insist on keeping them alive
    This also led to a tourist being mauled to death by a pack of abandoned dogs this year, because of such things I'm always worried about mange and rabies, especially because where I live is somewhat countryside/low income

    • @hlalakar4156
      @hlalakar4156 Месяц назад

      Where do you live, if you don't mind my asking?

    • @mahogania5536
      @mahogania5536 Месяц назад

      @@hlalakar4156 somewhere in latam, the country's not really relevant since a good amount of low-income villages have things like that. And it's been many years since I was a student

  • @Dinoboy3060
    @Dinoboy3060 7 месяцев назад +3908

    My guy you can't just drop a "Maybe all of Humanity is suffering from Zoochosis" out of nowhere and get me thinking about my life

    • @ricefarmer-kr4yv
      @ricefarmer-kr4yv 7 месяцев назад +93

      I now can't stop think about it

    • @blitzn00dle50
      @blitzn00dle50 7 месяцев назад +308

      I really don't buy that theory. yes, humanity at large is quite miserable right now, but I'm thinking that has more to do with capitalism and climate change than anything inherent to civilization

    • @ragmamale4783
      @ragmamale4783 7 месяцев назад +9

      RIGHT

    • @salamander6014
      @salamander6014 7 месяцев назад +2

      😃

    • @gothicMCRgirl
      @gothicMCRgirl 7 месяцев назад +144

      If anything, it teaches us that humans NEED more worldly stimulation. Humanity has only grown more isolated as technology and other conveniences become available, and while these ARE amazing, we can’t let ourselves become so consumed into our own little worlds that we forget to give our minds and bodies the stimulation they need. We were originally a nomadic species, we went from place to place, and we trained our bodies as well as our minds with new experiences. We still need that in some capacity.

  • @qirp
    @qirp 7 месяцев назад +1525

    “Zoos have the potential for a lot of good and a lot of bad.”
    As a former intern zookeeper… 100%. A lot of the care for animals comes down to funding. So many zoos are state-owned and not getting the money their animals need. Not every low-income zoo is a bad place, but money buys bigger enclosures and better enrichment… support your local zoos guys

    • @npc2153
      @npc2153 7 месяцев назад

      State funded businesses are bad. People can run far more successful businesses than any government can. When your begging the state for money instead of earning it yourself you will always be in trouble.

    • @rebeccaanne9863
      @rebeccaanne9863 7 месяцев назад +54

      Better to house a few animals in appropriate size enclosures with enough staff to care for them than several in enclosures that are too small and not have enough staff to give them proper care.

    • @rizkiramadhan9266
      @rizkiramadhan9266 7 месяцев назад +26

      My local zoo got a lot better after the government bought it, although now the provincial government has issues with the central government

    • @bolbyballinger
      @bolbyballinger 7 месяцев назад +24

      Part of me wonders if a "rolling" zoo would be a good idea. Basically, the animals all have enclosures that are technically connected (one small enclosure/hallway between exhibits).
      Every few days all animals are moved to the next full sized enclosure over. New area, new experiences, less zoochosis.
      Obviously though you don't want to get the transition period wrong, nor do you want disease transmission.

    • @BakedNConfused
      @BakedNConfused 7 месяцев назад +15

      You put them in a cage for amusement, let em be free

  • @colleenwilliams1689
    @colleenwilliams1689 6 месяцев назад +57

    After watching the segment about chronic wasting disease, it's astonishing how so many hunters disregard the state Department of Natural Resources' guidance on getting their deer tested snd stopping the spread.

  • @MollieHellKat
    @MollieHellKat 7 месяцев назад +2361

    As a hunter, if I ever see a deer that seems even a little bit suspicious, it’s on sight. CWD was drilled into my head from the moment I was interested in hunting. At that point, it’s mercy for the affected deer and every deer in the surrounding area.

    • @Treemeadow
      @Treemeadow 7 месяцев назад +379

      That's compassionate conservation right there.

    • @aerickmon3350
      @aerickmon3350 7 месяцев назад +365

      It’s also one of those end of the world scenario kinda diseases
      Like rabies
      It’s contagiousness, lethality and ability to perform its function unstoppably is something that sounds like pure fiction
      But truth is scarier than fiction

    • @LostStarzOfTheSky
      @LostStarzOfTheSky 7 месяцев назад +17

      What where the signs that you saw?

    • @Treemeadow
      @Treemeadow 7 месяцев назад +188

      @@aerickmon3350 i think a lot of horror and scifi scenarios reflect very real fears about this exact kind of thing

    • @justheretowatch1733
      @justheretowatch1733 7 месяцев назад +42

      It's a HORRID disease. Make sure to advise Fish and Wildlife if you even SUSPECT you saw a deer with it.

  • @DrPie0licious
    @DrPie0licious 7 месяцев назад +3473

    I remember researching rabies for a school project, and what freaked me out the most wasn't the hydrophobia alone, but that combined with dehydration. You know you will die without water and you need it, but can't bring yourself to drink any. It's maddening.

    • @user-tp9yy3dc4y
      @user-tp9yy3dc4y 7 месяцев назад +161

      Just too weird to understand. Terrifying.

    • @fredmonroe6042
      @fredmonroe6042 7 месяцев назад +14

      Happy Halloween 😳💀👻

    • @adrammelechthewroth6511
      @adrammelechthewroth6511 7 месяцев назад +16

      Rabes go brrrrrrr.

    • @Rujewitblood
      @Rujewitblood 7 месяцев назад +95

      What do the doctors do for you? Do they sedate you or something, or do they just keep you alive until you die? There are these clips of these people foaming at the mouth in the hospital and unable to drink, but if it was me I wish they'd just kill me if I'm at that point

    • @silviuvisan505
      @silviuvisan505 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@adrammelechthewroth6511best joke

  • @fluffybirdy
    @fluffybirdy 3 месяца назад +26

    So, from what I remember from class, Scrapie directly lead to "Mad Cow" because the ground up sheep (extra parts not used for human food) were fed to the cows, and then Mad Cow lead directly to CJD because humans ate the infected brain and spinal tissue.

    • @holless
      @holless 17 дней назад

      i don't believe this is quite true! i could be wrong, but i do think scrapie and mad cow disease are unrelated, although both are prion diseases. i'm pretty sure mad cow actually originated with cheap, unethical farmers mixing food for cows with..... cows. and it was this cannibalism that led to the prion mutation, which then obviously becomes contagious.
      i also do not believe mad cow and crj are the same thing, although again, both are prion diseases. i think crj is genetic.

  • @mistyblue8913
    @mistyblue8913 4 месяца назад +10

    I actually caught sarcoptic mange from my puppy once and it was horrid. They can't live long in human skin but long enough to spread and when they die a blister forms and leaves you looking like something out of a zombie film

  • @6ixConfessions
    @6ixConfessions 7 месяцев назад +1979

    My best friend of 40+ years had Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. It was cruel & very hard to watch knowing that once diagnosed there was nothing anyone could do. She went from an exceptionally intelligent woman to someone with symptoms not unlike advanced dementia along with chronic weight loss within a few weeks of being hospitalized. And it was only a matter of days after diagnosis that she passed. It doesn't show on scans until it's too late.

    • @WynneL
      @WynneL 7 месяцев назад +241

      Oh no, it's worse than that, sadly. It's not that CJD's not showing on scans until it's too late--it's just that having the disease at all is fatal. There is no cure and no effective treatment. Cancer *may* be a death sentence, but CJD *is* one. It's worse than rabies, where if you treat it BEFORE symptoms show the person will live. With CJD, if you have it, you cannot be helped at any point in time. All they can do is make you more comfortable. That's why it's so terrifying.

    • @6ixConfessions
      @6ixConfessions 7 месяцев назад +117

      @@WynneL I agree. I should have clarified my comment by saying that once it shows on a scan it's too late for that person to be able to get their affairs in order since the symptoms (the degradation of the ability to mentally function) usually escalate so fast. By the time the doctors had identified CJD in my friend & we all understood that there was no cure or treatment, she had no time or the mental capacity to make sure we knew what she wanted for her son, who was still in his teens, or what she wanted for her funeral. She had no idea what was happening to her. It was heartbreaking & even now, 7 months later it still chokes me up. I miss her so much but I am glad that I had her in my life even if that time was far too short.

    • @6ixConfessions
      @6ixConfessions 7 месяцев назад +68

      @@jturtle5318 It is a heartbreaking disease, one I had never heard of until my friend was diagnosed.

    • @CoreKatalyst
      @CoreKatalyst 7 месяцев назад +40

      I am so sorry for your loss, that is horrific.

    • @6ixConfessions
      @6ixConfessions 7 месяцев назад +35

      @@CoreKatalyst Thank you for your kind thoughts. The one good thing to come out of it is knowing now what the symptoms look like. Hopefully, I'll never see them in someone else again but, if I do at least I can be prepared & help prepare others.

  • @Dr_T0X1C
    @Dr_T0X1C 7 месяцев назад +4369

    I feel everyone underrates just how much danger a disease can really be.
    I find them interestin as hell and equally horrific.

    • @noradanielle971
      @noradanielle971 7 месяцев назад +168

      Yep. Never take modern medicine for granted kids.

    • @844SteamFan
      @844SteamFan 7 месяцев назад

      @@noradanielle971Unfortunately Anti-Vaxers exist

    • @Chowder_T
      @Chowder_T 7 месяцев назад +120

      *Looks at all the people who didn't take covid seriously*
      What makes you say that?

    • @Meeckle
      @Meeckle 7 месяцев назад +24

      Indeed!!@@Chowder_T

    • @HennryHammerhead
      @HennryHammerhead 7 месяцев назад

      @@Chowder_T Thats because covid, at least once you get past all the inflated statistics, isn't all that much more dangerous than the common cold and flu. Sure it can still put you down if you have something already compromised in ya but it isn't worth shutting down 90% of the world over.

  • @GyroMaeper-fungus
    @GyroMaeper-fungus 5 месяцев назад +23

    It was getting creepier by the second
    But that yoink at 6:54 caught me off guard
    😂🤣

  • @moreartthantime
    @moreartthantime 3 месяца назад +27

    After working as a vet assistant for nine years (in the U.S.) I never once saw a rabies case, as far as I am aware. However, we had a thick binder from the CDC of rabies protocols that we followed strictly. If there is an animal bite, *even if that animal has had a rabies vaccine* we still take no chances. There's rules about quarantine and re-upping vaccination and reporting and people complained about it but that is WHY the incidence of humans contracting rabies in the U.S. is so low. And it still happens. While I never saw a case, we had a lady get attacked by a raccoon in broad daylight just at the park down the street from our clinic. It made the news because she managed to kill the raccoon and you guessed it, that animal tested positive for rabies and the woman had to go through a grueling series of shots to prevent her getting it. People who get treatment within 24 hours of a bite also have a very high rate of survival.
    The takeaway of all this is, if you get bitten by an animal, even a household pet, you need to see a medical professional and report it. No, they will not automatically kill a pet for biting, but they will quarantine it temporarily (10 days if vaccinated, months if not). It's better to be safe than die horrifically!

  • @arceuslegend4605
    @arceuslegend4605 7 месяцев назад +4077

    A couple thing I learned about rabies:
    If you are attacked by an animal with the disease, don't try to fight it. -Even if you have a gun and manage to put it down without a scratch, it doesn't take more than a drop of blood from the gunshot wound going into into your mouth or eyes to infect you.- I have discovered that this previous sentence is false. But the point still stands: the safest course of action is to find shelter and report the incident to an animal control center rather than risking a totally preventable infection.
    If you do get infected, go to a hospital immediately. Rabies only becomes deadly once you start showing symptoms; it's 100% treatable otherwise.

    • @Bro1212_
      @Bro1212_ 7 месяцев назад +208

      The treatment is almost as scary as the illness. Don’t you have to get like over 50 shots in your stomach? And don’t the shots become increasingly more painful as your body starts to fight the illness leaving less production of endorphins + the repeated injections causing severe soreness and weakness?

    • @boomer3494
      @boomer3494 7 месяцев назад +533

      ​@@Bro1212_ The treatment is nowhere as bad as the disease. The vaccine and wound treatment can cause discomfort but your statement is very overblown, idk where you have the information from but that's definitely not the modern treatment. You do get a lot of injections but muscle soreness is usually the worst thing that happens.

    • @samuellinn
      @samuellinn 7 месяцев назад +353

      ​@@Bro1212_nothing's worse than your body rejecting you trying to drink water until you shrivel up and die

    • @Bro1212_
      @Bro1212_ 7 месяцев назад +21

      @@boomer3494 I wasn’t trying to imply that the treatment is as bad as a death sentence. I was just trying to say that the treatment can be very very unpleasant because you have to undergo a hellish series of shots on top of your body trying to fight the disease

    • @boomer3494
      @boomer3494 7 месяцев назад +129

      @@Bro1212_ Depends on your definition of hellish I guess. When the worst side effect of the shots are msucle soreness I think I can name a lot of treatments that are a lot worse

  • @sharkladyindisguise
    @sharkladyindisguise 7 месяцев назад +2104

    CWD is genuinely terrifying. Not-Deer myths? Absolutely came from this: they turn into MONSTERS. They will run into things until they break their necks, and then keep running, broken legs, so much body horror. It's one of my most feared diseases.

    • @interviolet6675
      @interviolet6675 7 месяцев назад +184

      Anytime I see a photo of a deer with cwd it looks like a zombie a walking corpse waiting to finally die, scary stuff

    • @briathomas5310
      @briathomas5310 7 месяцев назад +78

      ​@interviolet6675 if the zombie apocalypse ever happens, it would probably be a version of rabies.

    • @SH-ph2ii
      @SH-ph2ii 7 месяцев назад +11

      Not-Deer came from tumblr goofiness, not myths.

    • @jennygump5835
      @jennygump5835 7 месяцев назад +13

      Yeah people mistake them for skin walkers smh

    • @chandrahendrickson8974
      @chandrahendrickson8974 7 месяцев назад +23

      My dad got the human version known as sporadic CJD

  • @juliagahan1499
    @juliagahan1499 5 месяцев назад +13

    As a life long animal lover, old schhol veterinarian technician and a fan of quick wit/storytelling....you're a freaking gem! I really enjoy your content!

  • @posterboylegacy6214
    @posterboylegacy6214 5 месяцев назад +15

    I used to binge-watch your videos all the time! Literally every video I watched. This was almost a year ago, and over time I completely forgot about your page. My bad lol. Love the videos, and the awesome humour you put into it. Keep up the good work,bro! Merry Christmas :)

  • @LilFoxyCosplay
    @LilFoxyCosplay 7 месяцев назад +5353

    Had to study zoochosis as part of my college course it was heartbreaking
    Also seen zoochosis in a bear and two elephants (the elephants were rescues from circus and loggers one was branded the other had a damaged spine) they just stood there swaying
    Thankfully the zoo has now sent them to a sanctuary where they'll have more space and be around other elephants

    • @Tokuijin
      @Tokuijin 7 месяцев назад +279

      Zoocosis is a reason why lot of the good zoos give their animals toys. 🥺

    • @beckstheimpatient4135
      @beckstheimpatient4135 7 месяцев назад +273

      Zoochosis is awful... saw a bear with it in Malaysia, near Kuala Lumpur. There was a note near its enclosure asking people to not gawk, or try to get its attention, and that they were caring for it but guests needed to minimise its stress. One could ask "Why wasn't the bear removed from viewing?", and it's possible that they either didn't have a suitably large environment for them to recover long-term, or that they feared moving it might worsen the situation. I think about that bear sometimes, pacing left and right so much it made a path in the dirt for itself...

    • @kayyyyooo6946
      @kayyyyooo6946 7 месяцев назад +97

      i saw it in a bear at the san diego zoo, had no idea til now what it was but i immediately knew something was wrong

    • @fransthefox9682
      @fransthefox9682 7 месяцев назад +70

      @@Tokuijin Every good zoo gives animals toys.

    • @SummerTheFurry
      @SummerTheFurry 7 месяцев назад +21

      Once at a zoo there was a tiger just growling to itself and pacing

  • @purplehaze2358
    @purplehaze2358 7 месяцев назад +486

    I once read an article that fairly convincingly argued that werewolves, as a concept, were inspired by sightings of bears suffering from mange.

    • @Riot_Eclipsic
      @Riot_Eclipsic 7 месяцев назад +51

      What if also the transmission of the rabies disease through canine bites also inspired some of it?

    • @vampiricqueen100
      @vampiricqueen100 7 месяцев назад +62

      That seems unlikely. Werewolves are a really old concept going back to ancient Greece and Rome, but they were always people who turned into full wolves (usually through unexplained magic or because they got turned into wolves by Zeus/Jupiter), not the Hollywood wolf-man hybrids.
      It wasn't until the 1940s when movies about werewolves start popping up that you get wolf-man hybrids as the norm for werewolves. And that was almost certainly because throwing some hair on an actor's face and hands was significantly easier than having someone full on transform into an animal with 1940s movie technology.
      So while bears with mange might look like our modern idea of a werewolf, it's mostly just a coincidence. Without their fur and standing on their hind legs, bears can look remarkably like people with the notable exceptions of their heads and paws. Since those were the parts of the body seen in early movie werewolves, those were also the parts that changed the most.
      tldr; sorry. Probably not the cause of werewolf lore, they just coincidentally look like early movie werewolves.

    • @Riot_Eclipsic
      @Riot_Eclipsic 7 месяцев назад +11

      @vampiricqueen100 That is super fascinating. Thank you for sharing that. I absolutely adore Werewolves.

    • @prasetyodwikuncorojati2434
      @prasetyodwikuncorojati2434 7 месяцев назад +4

      Or it caused by the sightings of people that got rabies because bitten by rabid fox or wof

    • @RvEijndhoven
      @RvEijndhoven 7 месяцев назад +15

      @@vampiricqueen100 Sorry to be this blunt about it, but you're flat out wrong. We have depictions of werewolves from as far back as two millennia ago that portray them as various kinds of human-wolf hybrid creature. Yes, stories of werewolves being humans who change full into a wolf are also common, including some of the most famous ones like the story of King Lycaon of Arcadia, but the 'wolf-man hybrid' portrayal of werewolves is just as old, not something invented for the movies.

  • @littgenstein
    @littgenstein 3 месяца назад +12

    Dude, well done on that script, it's funny and clever!
    Also, just generally an informative and intriguing video. Good work. Prion diseases scare the hell out of me.

  • @officerforbits8044
    @officerforbits8044 5 месяцев назад +12

    I like the way you explained prions, you have a talent for makin info palatable. Keep it up dude 🎉

  • @Pzz5117
    @Pzz5117 7 месяцев назад +843

    I work with children for an after school program and today one said “I’ve got rabies and I’m gonna bite you”. I then sat her down to explain to her how dangerous rabies is. She then cried and apologized to her friend.

    • @jbstepchild
      @jbstepchild 7 месяцев назад +80

      Bet that was scarring lols

    • @riskingrain1560
      @riskingrain1560 7 месяцев назад +108

      I get the kid was most likely joking and trying to act funny, but yeah thank you for educating them regardless. As it is indeed a dangerous virus that needs to taken seriously considering how many animals and humans it has and will infect unless we don't find a way to put extinction to it.

    • @squanchwater4715
      @squanchwater4715 7 месяцев назад

      You're a killjoy

    • @grimjoker5572
      @grimjoker5572 7 месяцев назад +28

      and the reason you felt the need to ruin the child's day was...?

    • @generalforster
      @generalforster 7 месяцев назад +17

      How does that information benefit the child

  • @slapchop133787
    @slapchop133787 7 месяцев назад +892

    One of my ancestors got rabies. He was a blacksmith and caught it by killing a rabid dog with his hammer that was trying to attack a group of kids (he was my grandfathers grandfather). They had to just tie him to a bed and wait for him to die. From the way my grandpa described, what happened to him was TERRIFYING.

    • @Janary08
      @Janary08 7 месяцев назад +169

      Rip. Sacrificed his life to save those kids from such fate

    • @Salem-Angel
      @Salem-Angel 7 месяцев назад +74

      From what I have studied humans with rabies are just as violent as animals with rabies, only difference is (to my knowledge) humans can't spread it to other humans? (Not sure about that though)

    • @emcaco
      @emcaco 7 месяцев назад +110

      ​@@Salem-AngelHumans aren't great biters. Only a small percentage of rabies cases get aggressive thankfully.

    • @Salem-Angel
      @Salem-Angel 7 месяцев назад +53

      @@emcaco Well even then, we are capable of literally ripping other people's faces off in the correct circumstances. We might not be as adapted to our chompers for combat, but they can still very much so be used. :(

    • @veinfish
      @veinfish 7 месяцев назад +16

      @@Salem-Angelyes, true. we are capable of breaking skin with our teeth iirc

  • @WorldsGreatestDeadBeatDad
    @WorldsGreatestDeadBeatDad 5 месяцев назад +37

    10:50 oh god, I think I have zoochosis
    I have stereotypical behaviors like swaying in place, head bobbing and repetition of random weird noises
    Wait... nvm forgot I had autism
    (Whole thing is /j)

  • @TacticalLogic
    @TacticalLogic Месяц назад +3

    Very informative and well put together. Good job and thanks for the info! 👍

  • @faolan2174
    @faolan2174 7 месяцев назад +1690

    There was a guy at my high school who got bitten by a monkey with rabies while he was on vacation. Luckily they knew what it was right away and he got treated immediately, but he was still gone for months in recovery. Everyone was so excited when he came back to school, healthy and normal.

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 7 месяцев назад +112

      My cousin’s dog my arm and drew blood when I was at her house in MI. *Two weeks later* after I’m back home in A, she calls and says “Oh btw Odie didn’t get his rabies booster this year.” I could have gotten it by then!”

    • @helloolllom
      @helloolllom 7 месяцев назад +6

      @@nhmooytis7058 You have a seizure?

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@helloolllom nope.

    • @Alayathekid
      @Alayathekid 7 месяцев назад +7

      I could be wrong, but I think I've heard that rabies is only transmissible in the last stage, if the dog wasn't dead from the disease in 10 days it wouldn't have had the right path to infect you.

    • @SunnyPopsicles
      @SunnyPopsicles 7 месяцев назад +18

      You know it's scary when most of the school wishes you well

  • @nick-playercharacter8583
    @nick-playercharacter8583 7 месяцев назад +912

    The only thing that separates rabies from a zombie plague is that rabies victims eventually stop moving. If you get bit by an animal, go to the hospital IMMEDIATELY. It's easy to cure in the earliest stage, but you're doomed the moment symptoms start to show. Never let it get to that point.

    • @rinber13
      @rinber13 7 месяцев назад +131

      Yep, also because even if the animal didn't have rabies there's still a chance of tetanus infection.

    • @skiffy8121
      @skiffy8121 7 месяцев назад +108

      oh yeah, in an interveiw a doctor stated a few modifications to rabies would make what is effectively a zombie outbreak

    • @markcobuzzi826
      @markcobuzzi826 7 месяцев назад +87

      That, and how a group of rabid animals would presumably just turn on each other, rather than mobbing to all attack the same non-infected target(s) together.

    • @owenmaleski2203
      @owenmaleski2203 7 месяцев назад

      My professor made a similar comparison. Equally as scary, the Black Death still has no cure. If you come into something infected with it, unless you get to a hospital within 24 hours, you're gone. If you get something in your system before then, you can prevent it from taking hold. But if the disease gets into your bloodstream or God forbid a lymph node, you are all capitals FUCKED.

    • @I_AM_HYDRAA
      @I_AM_HYDRAA 7 месяцев назад

      Yup the vaccine is 100% effective

  • @DuchessDelphine
    @DuchessDelphine 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks for these awesome videos. I discovered this channel via Facebook shorts and I have never been so entertained . Can’t wait until CG gets his own animal planet show ❤

  • @ipaintstuff4884
    @ipaintstuff4884 4 месяца назад +2

    I can't believe I just now found your channel! I love this--thank you!!!

  • @actuallywaffles5267
    @actuallywaffles5267 7 месяцев назад +2539

    Prion diseases are the true horror to me. Rabies and mange are detectable and treatable. Prion diseases can just pop up without warning at any time in your life and just end you. You might never even know if you were exposed or if your body just glitched. Today you're here, and tomorrow you're just not. They're the ultimate fear for me honestly.

    • @josejuanrosales3614
      @josejuanrosales3614 7 месяцев назад

      And can also become a weapon of mass destruction given enough ambition is pu into it

    • @StyxiuSCruX
      @StyxiuSCruX 7 месяцев назад

      .... you mean they can pop up like... everything else and end you without notice? wait... what exactly is there to fear from Prion diseases... theres only six variants, three preventable by washing surgical instruments when operating on eyes, not eating eachother and not eating rotten meat, the other three kill you before you know whats happening or shut your mind down in a way that you wont realize it anyway.... i dunno... walking across the street during traffic hours seems much scarier 😁

    • @sarahroth7034
      @sarahroth7034 7 месяцев назад +94

      Hopefully there will be a cure one day in the (probably far) future.

    • @marioauditore2859
      @marioauditore2859 7 месяцев назад +116

      True, i studied it for a while, i could even say it's the scariest type of disease

    • @sarahlou7796
      @sarahlou7796 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@sarahroth7034
      They are uniformly fatal. These proteins cannot be destroyed, Casual is incorrect when he states heating them destroys them. It only temporarily disables them but once they cool, they can go back to infecting. They're basically indestructible. Only the death of the entire universe will put an end to prions, they'll exist long after all life in the universe is extinguished.

  • @CreativeRed4
    @CreativeRed4 7 месяцев назад +970

    I'm a dog groomer, and things like mange and rabies were things I learned about right away, and things I take seriously (along with other zoonotic things). But the saddest thing about all of this is that I've seen dogs with zoochosis and other neurotic behaviors. It's not limited to zoo animals. I've seen more dogs than I can count crying and repetitively walking back and forth in the kennel, back and forth, back and forth. It's different from a dog who wants to be around the humans and is sad to be in a kennel for a little bit. Those dogs will usually end up relaxing and quieting down after a while. The zoochosis ones will do that the entire time they're in a kennel, even sometimes on the grooming table, and they always cry or vocalize the entire time. It's very clear when you see they haven't been getting any enrichment and are cooped up all day every day. Sadly there's nothing you can do. Animal Control doesn't care unless it's visible signs of abuse (And even then, often times bringing the dog to the groomer is considered "getting help for the dog" even if the dog comes in once a year with his testicles matted to his leg... :/)

    • @lorierush6561
      @lorierush6561 7 месяцев назад +28

      😢

    • @usuarioanonimo2114
      @usuarioanonimo2114 7 месяцев назад +47

      As a dog person it really makes me sad hear stories like this. This is where PETA should put their efforts on but nothing 😢

    • @chrisheartman9263
      @chrisheartman9263 7 месяцев назад

      Peta does nothing because peta is shit and actually is more harm than good.

    • @Levacque
      @Levacque 7 месяцев назад +64

      I mean .. I'm not adding anything new by saying that people like that shouldn't even have a pet, but I feel like it runs slightly deeper than that. Whyyyyyy would you get a dog that requires the extra care of grooming, when you can't even be bothered with the basics of humane care in the first place??

    • @katiekane5247
      @katiekane5247 7 месяцев назад +42

      ​@@Levacquepeople research their refrigerators more than their pets 😢

  • @debbiemilkovic-jz2th
    @debbiemilkovic-jz2th 2 месяца назад +5

    THAT was a great video.
    Not only highly entertaining, but absolutely smashing in the knowledge department.....
    🤜💥🤛

  • @Su-jk5ve
    @Su-jk5ve 6 месяцев назад +16

    10:35 about that their is a horror movie about that disease named Cujo and the book is way different and most heartbreaking

  • @Kaminkaese
    @Kaminkaese 7 месяцев назад +535

    A former friend worked as a social worker and got infected with scabies.
    She then went ahead and infected half our friend group because she had the bad habit of being more social than smart.
    She jokes about how its not that bad, but I got so uncomfortable around her.
    Bugs under the skin being "not that bad"? The sh*t causing the problems being not that bad? 🤢

    • @cyanidenightshade
      @cyanidenightshade 7 месяцев назад +74

      I thought you said rabies for a moment and honestly got very very concerned for a moment. One of the commenters here said the vaccine is about 18 shots to the stomach

    • @Just1Nora
      @Just1Nora 7 месяцев назад +36

      It's the one thing that makes dermatologists and ER workers squirm.

    • @brendanberry7403
      @brendanberry7403 7 месяцев назад +43

      @@cyanidenightshade could be remembering the wrong thing, but think it’s only a couple shots now and no longer has to be in the stomach.

    • @JayDeeDubb
      @JayDeeDubb 7 месяцев назад +27

      A girlfriend of mine got scabies. I had no idea, scabies and mange were the same thing. You learn something new every day.

    • @RobinTheBot
      @RobinTheBot 7 месяцев назад +29

      Good hint to not be around her lol.

  • @davialmeida4442
    @davialmeida4442 7 месяцев назад +587

    This is 100% the darkest and scariest video you've ever done. Normally, even your most serious videos have jokes and lighter moments, but not this one, it was pure, unfiltered terror

    • @quinnholloway5400
      @quinnholloway5400 7 месяцев назад +11

      I'd argue the video of animals killing humans was pretty dark
      But yea, especially with Zoochosis, this is a dark one

    • @dreadcthulhu5
      @dreadcthulhu5 7 месяцев назад +6

      Life be like that sometimes.

    • @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378
      @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@quinnholloway5400 That ain't worse next to rabies

    • @sykamoreva9803
      @sykamoreva9803 7 месяцев назад +3

      I mean the bat slap was kinda funny, but yeah other than that you're spot on

    • @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378
      @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378 7 месяцев назад +6

      @@sykamoreva9803 > Slaps the bat backhand
      > Continues Basketball
      > Moves like nothing happened
      > Walks in
      > Leaves

  • @malwynn9095
    @malwynn9095 3 месяца назад +1

    Love your vid man. Hell of an insight. Keep it real 💯

  • @jonathanartiga7482
    @jonathanartiga7482 21 день назад

    Dude.... that one was rough and I watch all your videos. Greetings from the mountains where most of these animals live!

  • @WyldeRatttz
    @WyldeRatttz 6 месяцев назад +2095

    I encountered a rabid vole once while out walking my dog. I was very lucky I spotted it before she did! The thing that tipped me off that it was rabid was its behaviour: instead of immediately running away from us, it ran TOWARDS us, then fell on its side. It got up and started running in circles and I got my dog the hell away from there. Even a tiny animal becomes terrifying with that disease.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 4 месяца назад

      especially since most dogs naturally want to kill rodents like voles which would likely infect the dog if they're not already vaccinated.

    • @FocusedFighter777
      @FocusedFighter777 3 месяца назад +93

      Good!
      This is the sort of stuff that should be taught in school.

    • @petrusv8752
      @petrusv8752 3 месяца назад

      Pro-life tip: if something seems the opposite of what it should be, then you shouldnt be there.
      A bunch of men hanging around with 0 children at a park? GTFO
      A shy animal being bold as fuck? Big problems require bigger distance
      A random rich celebrity saying they need cash cause they broke? Bro faking it.

    • @trinitynguyen-su8wh
      @trinitynguyen-su8wh 3 месяца назад +82

      @@FocusedFighter777instead they be talking about shit like “lava is called magma when underground”

    • @michellebello6987
      @michellebello6987 3 месяца назад +17

      It could have been poisoned mice act like that when they're dying from poison

  • @AfkaSound
    @AfkaSound 7 месяцев назад +914

    Around 20 years ago i went to the Amsterdam Zoo and a panther had been headbutting a wall for so long that he was bald but the brick wall was black from its hair being embedded in it. One of the most disgusting examples of animal cruelty iv ever seen, in a Fin zoo! Pretty much every animal there was insane. it was vile. :(

    • @cherylmcelveen2817
      @cherylmcelveen2817 7 месяцев назад +93

      I have despised zoos since I went to The National Zoo in DC way back in the mid 1990's. There was an obviously extremely depressed gorilla there. The rest of it wasn't much better. It was horrific.

    • @LadyMajolish
      @LadyMajolish 7 месяцев назад +39

      That’s So Horrible, Poor Panther 😭

    • @denjidenji9162
      @denjidenji9162 7 месяцев назад +244

      Of note before the comments inevitably spiral: not all zoos are awful. There are definitely many who are, and in some parts of the world they still suck and should get shut down, no doubt about that. But it's important to mention that the quality of life for animals has increased with time and awareness, and also that some zoos perform vital functions. Such as helping raise the numbers of endangered species, or educating the public.
      Certain animals should never be in captivity, and a good chunk of zoos suck. But it's not all of them, and making a blanket statement such as that helps nobody.

    • @1mrcow143
      @1mrcow143 7 месяцев назад +57

      @@denjidenji9162thank you for that! You’re the goat!

    • @the.mr.schrader
      @the.mr.schrader 7 месяцев назад +26

      Many Zoos Need More Enrichment For Their Animals, My Own Local Zoo Included.

  • @___LC___
    @___LC___ 6 месяцев назад +24

    Rabies is one of the worst ways to die…and tetanus. I’ve watched some terrible diseases kill a person, but we have meds to knock people out and pain killers for most. Neuropathies are hell.

    • @hlalakar4156
      @hlalakar4156 Месяц назад

      Especially fatal familial insomnia. They can't even knock you out. At least with rabies you can get a vaccine if you suspect exposure, and tetanus is very serious but even after symptoms start it can be treated. For many cases of FFI and CJD it just happens for no known reason (probably a mutation). They're 100% fatal, and there's nothing they can do about it.

  • @sasktev
    @sasktev Месяц назад +2

    As a vet student, i have to say you describe these diseases very informatively and pretty accurately! I was jus learning about chronic wasting disease earlier in my lectures

  • @CeciaEss
    @CeciaEss 7 месяцев назад +497

    Distributing, haunting truths about real world dangers are 6000 times scarier than any fictitious horror movie

    • @ShwappaJ
      @ShwappaJ 7 месяцев назад +18

      "Reality is more terrifying than even the most disturbed nightmare, as nightmares can be woken up from. Reality cannot."
      - someone from the past

    • @HannibalKantter
      @HannibalKantter 7 месяцев назад +12

      When I was a kid, I asked my dad what was the scariest movie for him, and he said "The Shining". I thought: "Well, it's good, but it's not that scary". "It is scarier than any movie about monsters or zombies, because unlike those, a person going crazy and becoming a murderer is a horror we have to live with in real life". Man, was he right.

    • @zertico_kawaii670
      @zertico_kawaii670 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ShwappaJdeath:

    • @error-try-again-later
      @error-try-again-later 7 месяцев назад

      I've always said that if a zombie apocalypse really did happen and society broke down, I'd be _way_ more scared of the other, desperate humans than the zombies. At least you know what the zombies will do.

  • @Audi3nc3ofon3
    @Audi3nc3ofon3 7 месяцев назад +1735

    Wildlife rehabber here, some corrections (specifically with rabies!): The foaming at the mouth isn't a guaranteed symptom and can actually go away! It's just the most commonly shoe because, well, it's great for scares. The more common symptom and the clue that the animal is near death is total paralysis of the hind end! The back legs, and tail are totally numb, meaning you can drag the creature by the tail and it'll feel nothing. I say this because it's actually something that happened to me. A Woman brought a raccoon that she thought had been hit by a car (dragging its hind end) but she couldn't see the injury. His behavior was relatively normal (for an adult, wild raccoon dealing with people), but vocalizations were..... Unnerving. There was none of the usual chittering or chatting, it was growling and screeching. Noises that raccoons don't normally make. He barely nicked me, but we still got him tested and he was GLOWING. He wasn't foaming at the mouth or anything, and his mouth actually look pretty dry, but yeah. The foaming at the mouth isn't guaranteed and it could be a sign of an animal choking. Still, always be careful!
    In other news, since I'm a wildlife rehabber, I have to carry a card with a list of zoonotic diseases I could possibly get (so doctors know to be careful). It's in alphabetical order. The first one listed is Anthrax. I always make jokes about it.

    • @LupusInCaligo
      @LupusInCaligo 7 месяцев назад +31

      Fascinating, thanks for sharing! :)

    • @corpsehandler5321
      @corpsehandler5321 7 месяцев назад +81

      ah yes, anthrax, AKA _sheep shearer's disease_ - a fact i find genuinely horrifying

    • @ADesertHat
      @ADesertHat 7 месяцев назад +36

      Any disease can cause paralysis or salivating really, it's why Rabies is so hard to identify. The main reason people fear it.

    • @raseri8497
      @raseri8497 7 месяцев назад +35

      Some leaves will make dog's mouths foam if they start chewing them. I'm SO lucky that my local park has such leaves and my dog goes straight for them. Scared me the first time

    • @catiemyers3429
      @catiemyers3429 7 месяцев назад +8

      Just got my anthrax vaccine 2 days ago. Holy hell...that's one spicy shot!

  • @vervor
    @vervor Месяц назад

    This is fabulous - I love your narration.

  • @issaciams
    @issaciams 5 месяцев назад +1

    I dont know how you discovered your talent with divulging insane information and events about animals, but you are so damn good at it I stay on the toilet longer just to finish your video. Lol

  • @jabman025
    @jabman025 7 месяцев назад +349

    I remember reading an article about Jeanna Giese, doctors couldn't figure out what was wrong with her then her parents remembered a couple months back she was bitten by a bat in church.......when the doctor heard that the blood drained from his face, he knew what was wrong now and he assumed that she was doomed as there was nothing that he could do.

    • @titan133760
      @titan133760 7 месяцев назад +7

      Hey Jabman!

    • @carolynrjackson
      @carolynrjackson 6 месяцев назад +6

      Her story is amazing. The doctors basically just induced her into a coma, gave her antivirals and let her body just fight it. She has made an almost complete recovery and now has kids of her own. Doctors have since tried that method of inducing coma and giving antivirals in 6 other similar rabies cases. All 6 patients died, which makes her story all the more miraculous.

  • @Darxide23
    @Darxide23 7 месяцев назад +553

    Rabies is perhaps the worst possible way to go. It's one of those things where it's hard to choose if it's more terrifying than being buried alive or not.

    • @maximedaunis8292
      @maximedaunis8292 7 месяцев назад +9

      No it's not...

    • @tiarezavaleta8850
      @tiarezavaleta8850 7 месяцев назад +11

      Buried alive is faster

    • @Yurothehotot
      @Yurothehotot 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@maximedaunis8292name something worse then.

    • @greenherooftheinterwebz7078
      @greenherooftheinterwebz7078 7 месяцев назад +43

      buried alive you are still there, you can still fight, and you can rationalize or even accept your fate.
      rabies, you just get replaced, and then you die

    • @darkmatter1721
      @darkmatter1721 7 месяцев назад +7

      You can survive being buryed alive if you fight hard as hell, rabies too if yoi get treatment IMMEDIATELY but if you see symptoms its OVER

  • @KrisKasprzak
    @KrisKasprzak 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent delivery and explanation of some nasty diseases.

  • @dr.altoclef9255
    @dr.altoclef9255 7 месяцев назад +2364

    I did an internship at an AZA accredited zoo. Preventing 'zoochosis' (stereotypic behavior) was incredibly important. At the very least you were required to hide food for the animal to 'hunt' and 'forage'...but everyone did need some kind of enrichment. For insects it might just be 'a new fruit they've never had' or 'moving rocks around' but there were some downright bizarre things pulled for larger animals. The cougars once got a rack of lamb attached to a zip line...otters had a playground. Our male hippo particularly liked huge thick plastic rain barrels...and elephants would be fed by either stuffing an entire half a hay bale into a giant rope net or by stuffing what looked like a giant plastic wiffle ball full of straw and hay...
    Some people should not be trusted with handling wild animals. Some animals simply don't do well in captivity at all. But some animals don't have a home to go to anymore. And until that's fixed...I feel like we humans should take responsibility for that mess and do what we can.

    • @SpaghettyLuvsU
      @SpaghettyLuvsU 7 месяцев назад +73

      Neat, I'd never heard of enrichment for insects before! Do you know if zoochosis has been observed in inverts? Still seems like a good idea, even if it's a "just in case" thing.
      Decades ago, back when Zoo Atlanta still had bears, they'd freeze a big trout in a bucket of water and give the resulting fish-pop to the polar bear as a treat. Lots of fun to throw & chase around the swimming hole :)

    • @dr.altoclef9255
      @dr.altoclef9255 7 месяцев назад +81

      @@SpaghettyLuvsU I’m not actually sure, I’ll have to look into that. We liked to try and encourage natural behaviors in captivity wherever possible, so anything that encourages anyone to ‘forage’ is pretty much an ideal choice.
      …some exceptions…often we’d use food to give meds to geriatric animals and some of those guys got awfully cheeky about it. Like “look, kid, we all know you have to give me the banana chunks because I pretend not to know you put the joint stuff in there. So just hand it over.”

    • @cueball6969
      @cueball6969 7 месяцев назад +72

      I did my placement year at a zoo.
      One of the other students studied how Asian Short-claw Otters responded to auditory enrichment.
      Turns out they really love music (especially classic); it was really effective at stopping 'begging' behaviour.

    • @2009carol2010
      @2009carol2010 7 месяцев назад +11

      Fascinating. And sad. Thank you.

    • @ikarria4161
      @ikarria4161 7 месяцев назад +34

      Agreed. I feel that way about domestic animals too. Some people shouldn't own them. Dogs and cats can develope similar issues. I work at an animal shelter and see it all the time. They eat their poop, eat things they shouldn't eat, and will groom till they are missing hair. They will also start rebounding of the walls of their run repetitively without stopping. We have a whole team dedicated to enrichment and all of our volunteers and staff do everything in our power to help them before they start declining. Problem is people will "trap" their animals in side with nothing to do and so they have to be creative. That's when things get bad and they end up coming to our shelter going down hill because someone got an animal and didn't put the work in.

  • @BananaVeggie
    @BananaVeggie 7 месяцев назад +1007

    As a biologist, prion diseases scare the life out of me.

    • @spitfirebird
      @spitfirebird 6 месяцев назад +48

      As an animal lover, they also terrify me. Seeing a deer do some of the things described by people who have witnessed CWD would probably make me simultaneously sympathetic and probably shit my pants.

    • @kickassssnation027
      @kickassssnation027 5 месяцев назад +42

      It's my biggest nightmare as a doctor.
      Rabies, we have protocols for. Prions? Nothing.

    • @celestewoodworth5627
      @celestewoodworth5627 5 месяцев назад +20

      The thought of something as small as a protein misfolding and taking away my own mind is... yeah. Not a good way to go.

    • @mochzidan1299
      @mochzidan1299 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@kickassssnation027 Since you're a doctor, I wonder what would happen to a human infected with rabies if we threw him into a swimming pool.?

    • @GiordanDiodato
      @GiordanDiodato 5 месяцев назад +4

      as a MLT, I don't blame you. there's no cure or even treatment. You just waste away.

  • @aVerveQuest
    @aVerveQuest 3 месяца назад +9

    Seeing a Jaguar making rapid 360s in her zoo enclosure was extremely traumatic -
    in person it's much more unsettling then on a video.. if you're really empathetic, .you can feel their misery and it's tough
    - I never went to a zoo again

  • @mvrderdrones
    @mvrderdrones 2 месяца назад +18

    One of my biggest fears is contracting a disease like rabies. Basically being a zombie in your own body, its so nightmarish i would just want to be taken out before it gets horrific.

  • @_WhoIsAyla_
    @_WhoIsAyla_ 4 месяца назад +2

    Poor animals 😭😭 This is very informative but so so sad!! I love animals deeply. This just tears me up inside!

  • @Nothing.Nugget
    @Nothing.Nugget 7 месяцев назад +391

    Wasted Deer disease and Rabies are so terrifying for the fact that it doesn't just get you sick, but either eating you from the inside or literally manipulating your brain. So terrifying infact that both diseases are probably the inspiration for The Plague of Madness in the episode of Primal, "The Plague of Madness". If you know, you know

    • @c.d.rstudios4691
      @c.d.rstudios4691 7 месяцев назад +21

      That episode was both sick (pun intended) and terrifying at the same time

    • @Bagelgeuse
      @Bagelgeuse 7 месяцев назад +36

      Fun fact: a sauropod dinosaur bone was discovered in 2020 with evidence of osteomyelitis and bone parasites, causing it to look almost exactly like Primal's infected sauropod, albeit without the horrifying aggression.
      Keep in mind that this discovery was made after the episode aired on April 1st.

    • @sierralovat5498
      @sierralovat5498 7 месяцев назад +4

      that episode is terrifying

    • @sabersky1134
      @sabersky1134 7 месяцев назад +13

      I think I have come across a deer suffering from wasting disease in the wild. I was driving a family member to an appointment and a deer came out from the woods looking like a walking skeleton. It couldn’t even walk on its own hooves. It was horrible and I didn’t know what to do.

    • @mollusckscramp4124
      @mollusckscramp4124 7 месяцев назад +3

      Favorite episode, best animated horror out of anything period

  • @ghostfacegirl180
    @ghostfacegirl180 7 месяцев назад +307

    Rabies is why you need to get medical treatment ASAP after being bitten by an animal. I read somewhere that, after stray dogs, the most likely animals to infect you with rabies are bats and raccoons, so if either of those ever get close enough to touch you it's a good idea to check of bites or scratches.

    • @misomie
      @misomie 7 месяцев назад +33

      And for bats it's best to go get vaccinated even if you don't think you were bit because their fangs are so sharp that they can bite you without you feeling it. Just being touched by a bat is a rabies warning

    • @Ruosteinenknight
      @Ruosteinenknight 7 месяцев назад +33

      Bats are especially dangerous in that regard. Unlike other animals, they very rarely die of rabies (or any other disease) thanks to their strong immune system.
      And that's a bad thing, because they can still get sick and spread it to other species. This also carriers over to other diseases like Ebola or the dreaded Marburg-virus.

    • @Kneon_Knight
      @Kneon_Knight 7 месяцев назад

      Cats.

    • @alastor8091
      @alastor8091 7 месяцев назад +2

      Blue Herb time.

    • @jatnarivas8741
      @jatnarivas8741 7 месяцев назад +1

      Has anyone died of raccoon rabies?

  • @PoltieBoo
    @PoltieBoo 3 месяца назад +1

    im so glad i found your youtube, i found you on tik tok and since your content is just something im always willing to watch the channel ended up on my page today! Cant get over the part when you were explaining zoocosist?? "turning puke into a infinite food glitch" lmao

  • @texasred2702
    @texasred2702 7 месяцев назад +1144

    Didn't even have to watch to know rabies would be up there. Terrible disease. My uncle and I had to out down a few beloved dogs who were bit by rabid raccoons. We knew it was a blessing and we were putting them out of their misery but 40 years later it still breaks my heart. RIP Ranger and Tessa

    • @gothicMCRgirl
      @gothicMCRgirl 7 месяцев назад +62

      I am so sorry, nothing is more heartbreaking than having to put down a pet, no matter the reason, but especially over something like a life-cancelling disease.

    • @chendzeeali6545
      @chendzeeali6545 7 месяцев назад +24

      2023 I Don't know you, you don't know me. I caught your response during a casual watch of this vid and it moved me. The world needs more unbiased compassion. Rest in Peace Ranger and Tessa. I wish I knew you. :) Love to @texasred2702 I Don't know anything about you or your uncle, I do know you shared a painful story and hints of a fond memory of long gone pets. I hope you and yours are doing well. :) Huggles to ALL involved :) Thank you for sharing.

    • @hxkufoyfoy
      @hxkufoyfoy 7 месяцев назад +11

      Rip ranger and tessa they on the rainbow bridge tho 😢

    • @bellaloveseminem
      @bellaloveseminem 7 месяцев назад +6

      rip ❤️🕊️

    • @losinqfaith
      @losinqfaith 7 месяцев назад +6

      RIP Ranger and Tessa

  • @pumacatmeow
    @pumacatmeow 7 дней назад

    I absolument love this guy’s voice, it’s so soothing but at the same time the sprinkled memes and jokes just have you hooked instantly

  • @Imarida2
    @Imarida2 2 дня назад +1

    I'm not a regular viewer but I have watched plenty of young RUclipsrs obviously reading words from a script that they don't understand and pronounce incorrectly. You on the other hand seem to have a decent grasp on phonics and an interest in the subject being discussed. Good job, keep it up. All the success.

  • @DreadFather
    @DreadFather 7 месяцев назад +423

    The most petrifying aspect of these diseases is, there's no stopping it, you can only slow it down.

    • @theantagonist801
      @theantagonist801 7 месяцев назад

      Well I mean... There is one way to stop it, but it involves the deaths of over 28 decillion entities. (Animals, Humans, Bacterias, and Plants included)

    • @Tempusverum
      @Tempusverum 7 месяцев назад +49

      I can understand how stories of vampires and werewolves got started in medieval Europe

    • @DreadFather
      @DreadFather 7 месяцев назад +16

      @@Tempusverum Aye, that's likely what caused so much paranoia way back when.

    • @choppalungon
      @choppalungon 7 месяцев назад

      Rabies is vaccinatable.

    • @CrabKFP
      @CrabKFP 7 месяцев назад

      That or just sacrifying the animal in the worst case. In the case of rabies in dogs and cats (at least in Chile) is to euthanize the infected animal because it is a new focus of the desease (in Chile, rabies are erradicated in the populated zones). That doesn't mean that we kill the native fauna, but we try to keep them at bay for the safety of them and ours.
      The only one that is treatable from this video that I know of is minge (you just need to wash the animal, on a special bath obviously). But prions and specially rabies don't actually have a cure in animals, except death.

  • @daianajohnson3196
    @daianajohnson3196 7 месяцев назад +432

    Zoochosis....so sad. Years ago, at a zoo, I saw a polar bear in their enclosure. Mouth agape, pacing while swaying back and forth. The bear was most definitely not in the best shape. I was so confused and concerned at the time. If that bear has passed away, rip, it most definitely deserved a better life.

    • @daianajohnson3196
      @daianajohnson3196 5 месяцев назад +4

      @Diredeer Daaamn ☹️

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 4 месяца назад +18

      i kind of hate a lot of zoos for that. Some animals are basically like human inmates that are stuck in solitary. The animal has little enrichment or toys, often doesnt have others of its kind to keep it company, they often dont keep different species in the same enclosure even though some animals (like horses and goats) actually do well together, and they rarely get much interactions with humans beyond feedings and seeing zoo guests from a distance (although often even that can be rare for some since they often put reflective film on windows so the animals cant see the zoo guests). Some animals NEED to be with others of their kind and some animals NEED tons of space: a wolf my have territory that's as small as 7sqmi or as large as 1000sqmi, most bears cover at least 60sqmi, and migrating species may cover multiple countries or half a continent. Some animals have such a strong drive to be with others that isolation can quickly drive them nuts like some animals that form schools, flocks, or herds may get really anxious on their own. I met someone who got a goat or a sheep (I forget which) but just 1 so it would often huddle up to anything roughly it's size and be afraid to leave that spot, herd animals often need a group or they feel exposed and endangered.

  • @tammykleinke
    @tammykleinke Месяц назад

    Keep up the intelligent, well informative content, my man! well done good sir

  • @w.knudsen5570
    @w.knudsen5570 Месяц назад

    Good presentation, thank you. I learned something today.

  • @briathomas5310
    @briathomas5310 7 месяцев назад +1922

    An interesting fact that you left out about the human prion disease: It is also known as Kuru, and is mostly passed from people eating their dead in Papa New Guinea.
    Also, the reason that Mad Cow Disease spread the way it did to other cows was because the farmers were feeding the dead diseased cows to their healthy cows, not understanding how prions worked.

    • @teijaflink2226
      @teijaflink2226 7 месяцев назад

      Both with Kuru and Mad cow disease they where eating or fed the brain with had the prions and led to the spread of the disease. Mad cow disease mainly happened in UK, it's absolutely disgusting what they fed to their animals. But even worse some of this nasty, cheap cow mest material (I wouldn't exactly call it meqt as it was a mix of bones, intestines, meat, diseased brain) where made into sausages that was fed to children on school lunches so some children got this disease which is called Creutzfeldt Jacobs disease in humans. You can spontainiously get CJD too.

    • @tomguglielmo9805
      @tomguglielmo9805 7 месяцев назад +33

      Yummy in my tummy 😋

    • @ndawn90
      @ndawn90 7 месяцев назад +143

      Kuru is actually a completely different prion than the one that causes CJD, so technically there are actually 2 human prion diseases.
      That being said, kuru is insanely rare, to the point where it may actually not exist anymore. The reason is because the only way to get kuru is to eat infected human brain tissue. Whereas CJD has both familial and iatrogenic forms, meaning you can either inherit it or become infected with it externally.

    • @swiftwindturning
      @swiftwindturning 6 месяцев назад +155

      Farmers may have not understood prions, but they certainly knew feeding dead cows to cows is not natural and just not right.

    • @PunkedOut
      @PunkedOut 6 месяцев назад +1

      I’m gonna tell my png friend about this lol

  • @lottalogic
    @lottalogic 7 месяцев назад +288

    Hugo died in 1980, not 2022. He did die from brain aneurysm after ramming his head against the tank walls for *years*. He was only 15. So glad you brought him up, his story is one of the many tragic ones in killer whale captivity. You just got his year of death wrong

    • @dragongirl89115
      @dragongirl89115 7 месяцев назад +8

      May have been a mistake, but I did think that was strange that he listed Hugo's death from last year. Beyond the head bashing though Orca (and other cetaceans) display a wide variety of zoochosis behavior in every location that has one captive. For some animals, no zoo will ever be enough.

    • @TheAkwarium
      @TheAkwarium 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@dragongirl89115 it's insane because even the ones born in captivity are displaying these behaviors

  • @sarge420
    @sarge420 6 месяцев назад

    Great video. Informative and eye opening.

  • @Gingerwalker.
    @Gingerwalker. 6 месяцев назад

    Fantastic video. Very intelligently done. Refreshing to see something so informative and well presented. You have a new follower. Thank you and I look forward to watching more of your videos. My step sister sat on a bat. Even though they could not find any broken skin on her, she did the course of rabies shots. Just to be safe.

  • @schmittenanimations179
    @schmittenanimations179 7 месяцев назад +1132

    The idea that human society in general has Zoochosis is both fascinating and terrifying. As someone who's on the internet frequently and stays home majority of the time I can totally see how it begins to mess with your mind. Depersonalization and disassociation sound eerily similar, like a milder human equivalent of the disease.

    • @WinniePooh33
      @WinniePooh33 7 месяцев назад +8

      This depends on perspective

    • @neo-filthyfrank1347
      @neo-filthyfrank1347 7 месяцев назад +5

      Uncle Ted was right

    • @dominickcantu9986
      @dominickcantu9986 7 месяцев назад +40

      Why do you think therapists tell kids with depression to become more social. It's because your brain needs to be stimulated

    • @animalbunnyaj5175
      @animalbunnyaj5175 7 месяцев назад +4

      yeah scary.. but at least it's comforting to think that if we have it, we already have it, and we do fine,... sort of.

    • @Yuki_Ika7
      @Yuki_Ika7 7 месяцев назад +1

      As a person with OCD I can relate

  • @missveronica8393
    @missveronica8393 7 месяцев назад +589

    Rabies has always terrified me, partly because I watched the movie 'Old Yeller' as a child. I'm so thankful to live in a country that doesn't have rabies.

    • @lambybunny7173
      @lambybunny7173 7 месяцев назад +134

      @HellBlazerMNE07Australia doesn't have it, which part of the reason why their regulations on animals are so from outside countries are so strict

    • @FlyingAnanas-337
      @FlyingAnanas-337 7 месяцев назад +68

      ​@HellBlazerMNE07Japan doesn't have it either

    • @SerKGrimm
      @SerKGrimm 7 месяцев назад +57

      @HellBlazerMNE07 The UK also pretty much doesn't have it. It's present in some types of bats, though not enough to pose any real threat.

    • @elrhyesseyhrle8958
      @elrhyesseyhrle8958 7 месяцев назад +38

      @HellBlazerMNE07 when I'm nice I learn more from people. I can say I have friends from all over the world who have taught me unique and fascinating things.

    • @dreadcthulhu5
      @dreadcthulhu5 7 месяцев назад +44

      @HellBlazerMNE07 Rude arrogance is never a good look.

  • @mephistopheles4910
    @mephistopheles4910 4 месяца назад +7

    That man slapped a bat during a basketball game. At that point, I wouldn't have even tried to play.

  • @brianleonard6598
    @brianleonard6598 Месяц назад

    Very informative and well researched.

  • @YakuVegaNari
    @YakuVegaNari 7 месяцев назад +304

    When I was a kid, there was an outbreak of scabies at school. I remember how miserable the treatments were even though I wasn’t badly affected, and it created a lifelong paranoia about parasites

  • @chrisgustafson9342
    @chrisgustafson9342 7 месяцев назад +333

    You did a very good job on this video. My son when four years old was bit by a cat yet the local hospital did not want to give him the series of rabies shots. Thankfully, the WI State Veterinarian spoke with me and gave me the courage to go back and demand my boy be fully treated

    • @FlamieDoc
      @FlamieDoc 7 месяцев назад +73

      Alright that's messed up. A kid gets bitten by a feral cat and the hospital outright refuses to do tests. Good thing you went back

    • @percy.garou1001
      @percy.garou1001 7 месяцев назад +35

      That could have ended badly , Glad you stood your ground,I got a rabies vaccine 2 years Ago and I want it again because it still haunts me how scary rabies is

    • @thecrepeofdeath
      @thecrepeofdeath 7 месяцев назад +24

      that's because the shots themselves are very physically taxing and not usually given to children. not an excuse for what happened, but a reason. when I was a wildlife worker, we were not allowed to treat raccoons with anyone under 18 in our household for this reason. still, props for looking out for your little man and I hope he's doing well

    • @gingermaniac5484
      @gingermaniac5484 7 месяцев назад +17

      rabies shots are far less physically taxing to the body than rabies.

    • @thecrepeofdeath
      @thecrepeofdeath 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@gingermaniac5484 no shit lol

  • @zoeymartin1763
    @zoeymartin1763 4 месяца назад +1

    I only watch your videos to learn and scare myself, and it works all the time.

  • @yenyeng6867
    @yenyeng6867 5 месяцев назад

    Well informative video as always thank you 🙏

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam 7 месяцев назад +393

    You gotta respect the fact Mamadou sacrificed sanity just to educate us about this topic

    • @Skull_kid753
      @Skull_kid753 7 месяцев назад +15

      If you like femboys
      👇

    • @dizzydogg
      @dizzydogg 7 месяцев назад +3

      YOU AGAIN-

    • @eateat2316
      @eateat2316 7 месяцев назад +2

      so no head?

    • @dizzydogg
      @dizzydogg 7 месяцев назад +1

      no offense

    • @BRIANNA_00
      @BRIANNA_00 7 месяцев назад

      You are everywhere

  • @rebeccadarling7176
    @rebeccadarling7176 7 месяцев назад +829

    My cat was an animal I rescued from outdoors. She had a TERRIBLE case of mange where most her fur was gone and she could barely move. Keep in mind I am horribly allergic to cats but after we got her treated and they told us it would be extremely unlikely she'd be adopted since she's at least 7yrs old which meant the treatment we were giving her would probably mean nothing in the end. So I now get prescription allergy meds and we've got a cat who is the queen of our castle. But it especially makes me happy to know I could make a difference in at least one animal's life.

    • @nelus7276
      @nelus7276 6 месяцев назад +1

      Which is just ridiculous. Do you understand the hundreds of billions of animals that come to a horrible end every hour? If you had money to spare for charity, you should have spent it on humans in need.

    • @GlitchBoy-ws5in
      @GlitchBoy-ws5in 5 месяцев назад +45

      ​ @nelus7276 Long-term Charity represents the failure from the organization that is responsible for these things, using Bandage alone to fix infected deep pellets wound is not gonna help much.

    • @cheesaliciousable
      @cheesaliciousable 5 месяцев назад

      Charity is a con, feed a man a meal and he has food for a day, teach him a trade and you've fed him for life.
      Not once has charity EVER lifted anyone out of poverty, it becomes a crutch for ppl and then companies use it as a tax write off and give the stuff to the poor to get rid of the stock. Everything from tents and sleeping bags to food that would expire the next day.

    • @MyLittleGravitystuck
      @MyLittleGravitystuck 5 месяцев назад

      @@nelus7276 I still don't get what the new wave of trolls is accomplishing. Take stupidest take on the face of the entire planet and then...? Are you getting money from making this post? Does being an idiot and a villain fill you with some satisfaction? Please enlighten me, I've seen so many of your species crawling around this website and it baffles me every time. At least the spam and giveaway scam trolls use automation so they're not actually eating up their time on phishing.

    • @Darksideofthestars
      @Darksideofthestars 4 месяца назад

      Womp womp​@@nelus7276

  • @scientific1002
    @scientific1002 6 месяцев назад

    This was great! Good job fam💯

  • @LionsOnTheHunt313
    @LionsOnTheHunt313 5 месяцев назад +5

    That was a tough watch, but an important video!
    If you see an animal or person exhibiting erratic behavior, contact authorities immediately!

  • @thegriffinnews
    @thegriffinnews 7 месяцев назад +759

    When I was 17 and hanging out with my younger friend we were riding bikes on the trail behind her housing development. It was the middle of the day when we stopped for water and all of a sudden a raccoon started towards us, all friendly like. My friend wanted to pet it but I told her to bike home as fast as possible while I called animal control. I knew that critter wasn't home anymore.
    As she biked away the raccoon started chasing her, only stopping when I sneezed and it started towards me. I was already on the phone with animal control and started booking it outta there.
    It was scary. It was snarling and snapping and I didn't see foam but it's eyes were SO green. It shied away when I squirted my water bottle at it. So. Prolly a rabid raccoon.

    • @VenomQuill
      @VenomQuill 7 месяцев назад +111

      Jeeeeez, dude. It's a good thing you knew well enough! Poor little fella. I hope they put it out of its misery.

    • @spinyslasher6586
      @spinyslasher6586 7 месяцев назад +86

      Good job, you probably saved your friend's life there.

    • @bearbearington9113
      @bearbearington9113 7 месяцев назад +212

      The detail about green eyes actually changes the diagnosis! The raccoon you saw wasn't suffering from rabies, but rather canine distemper. A raccoon infected with distemper behaves very similarly to one with rabies -- unusual tameness that gives way to aggression with very little warning. In the late stages of infection, mineral deposits build up in the eyes, making them opaque and BRIGHT green. Fortunately for you, canine distemper is not zoonotic, so it couldn't have infected you. But it's no less terrible a way for a critter to go.

    • @zarahfrancisco3734
      @zarahfrancisco3734 7 месяцев назад +89

      @@bearbearington9113 good lord! Even if it wasn't rabies, I cannot imagine being attacked by a crazy animal. You could survive that, but i'd prefer not having the trauma.

    • @NotOffBat
      @NotOffBat 7 месяцев назад

      I'd still not go near that raccoon, they carry deadly diseases@@bearbearington9113

  • @distortion1553
    @distortion1553 7 месяцев назад +256

    At this point Casual's research history is probably almsot as disturbing as dolphin's whole existence

    • @prasetyodwikuncorojati2434
      @prasetyodwikuncorojati2434 7 месяцев назад

      Dont forget with chimpanzee existence too that horrifyingly can reveal about certain part of human behavior

  • @mackenziehegler8756
    @mackenziehegler8756 3 месяца назад +19

    "a captive orca named hugo tragically resigned from reality after violently slamming into his tank wall until he suffered a life ending aneurysm"
    literally 1 pic before: shows an orca EATING A HUMAN*

  • @BrattyBunny84
    @BrattyBunny84 Месяц назад

    My fav thing about your channel is your Choice of Words when discribing things

  • @ChrundleTGreat
    @ChrundleTGreat 7 месяцев назад +2401

    Thank you sharing the statistic about how rare rabies transmission from bats is! I LOVE bats and donate to Bat Conservation International. A lot of bats are endangered and without them we will likely suffer catastrophic human loss. They are pollinators as well as prolific mosquito killers.

    • @boocrimson7720
      @boocrimson7720 7 месяцев назад +63

      I love bats too, I'd keep them as buddies if I thought I could care for them well enough.

    • @ceebbees12345
      @ceebbees12345 7 месяцев назад +33

      @@boocrimson7720 yes! i've been calling bats dogs with wings for years and no one believes me

    • @flyingfoxfilm
      @flyingfoxfilm 7 месяцев назад +12

      bats are my fave animal too! they're so mistreated

    • @icarusbinns3156
      @icarusbinns3156 7 месяцев назад +32

      And some bats are super-snuggly!
      Helping an October animal education program, I was able to hold the friendliest flying fox they had. She decided the sun was too bright, so she stuck her head under the collar of my shirt. And went right back to sleep. The vampire bat was probably the second-cutest, scampering across the little table-stage to get his blood-treats.
      I absolutely adore bats!

    • @flyingfoxfilm
      @flyingfoxfilm 7 месяцев назад

      @@icarusbinns3156 omg, lucky!! I'd kill for that. flying foxes are probably my favorite and I'd love to hold one but yk. ┐⁠(⁠´⁠ー⁠`⁠)⁠┌

  • @yaumelepire6310
    @yaumelepire6310 7 месяцев назад +187

    The Prion thing is really the most terrifying to me. It's relatively easy to infect another individual, it lasts forever on surfaces, with few ways to destroy it, and it takes years to show symptom while still being infectious. It would be a disastrous pandemic, if a disease like that broke into the human population and remained as contagious.

    • @nameynamd9212
      @nameynamd9212 7 месяцев назад +29

      Haven't really looked it up too much, but given Mad Cow disease did spread to humans, it feels more than likely possible.

    • @flowerfaerie8931
      @flowerfaerie8931 7 месяцев назад +42

      Humans do have a couple of Prion diseases, such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, fatal familial insomnia, and kuru. Every one of them is pure undiluted nightmare fuel, though I personally think fatal familial insomnia is the worst. One day, you suddenly become completely incapable of sleeping. Not even anesthesia or drugs will knock you out. You then proceed to slowly go insane over the course of a few months until you finally die from sheer exhaustion.

    • @nameynamd9212
      @nameynamd9212 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@flowerfaerie8931 There was another comment explaining Kuru, but with the simple description of fatal familial insomnia, it kind of sounds like what happens in "Russian Sleep Experiment".
      (Probably not the first time it's said or thought of in context of this video, but reality is stranger than fiction).

    • @flowerfaerie8931
      @flowerfaerie8931 7 месяцев назад +15

      @@nameynamd9212 It’s not unlike that. Patients don’t really become violent or erratic, but they do suffer something like a very rapid form of Alzheimer’s.

    • @nameynamd9212
      @nameynamd9212 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@flowerfaerie8931 I guess it's closer to how rabies to zombie infections are, having similar basic ideas, but diverging from there.