I do appreciate a doctor that’s like “forget the aesthetic surgery, we aren’t event TALKING about that until we address the thing that could kill you.”
A good doctor is hard to find .. how ever ... A doctor who values you and your well being your safety and your life .. is a doctor you should never let go because that is not just a doctor .. that is a person who values you and your well being and your safety and your life over cashing I on your dollars
Years ago, my mom had constant coughing. She went to various doctors and they said it was a cold that never went away, post nasal drip or some other thing. She went to a pulmonologist and he sent her for x-ray of the lungs. The tech happened to capture a little below the lungs and the pulmonologist found a mass that turned out to be Stage 2 Ovarian cancer. Since that day, he's been my family pulmonologist and treats my asthma.
Just this May, I went in for terrible pain in my abdomen. When I woke up (I don’t remember anything after being admitted) I had 2 stoma’s and was informed that I had stage 3 ovarian cancer. I’m doing chemo etc . Cancer sucks.
Isn't it crazy how cancer spreads? My gynecologist is really on top of this because uterine and ovarian cancer run in my family. It's absolutely insane how something like ovarian cancer is found in the craziest of places.
My cosmetic surgeon saved my life. I gave birth to triplets. I then lost a lot of weight. The flap left behind could have been a bowl full of Halloween candy to scare every child in my neighborhood. After having had a Houdini-plasty (abdominoplasty) done to remove the equivalent of three sheets of notebook paper around my abdomen and back, my doctor asked, “So you were never a bariatric patient?” I wasn’t. Just weight loss and going from 190 down to 120. I told him that I could work at a burn unit because I manufacture skin. He told me that I had all of the indicators of Ehlers Danlos Syndrome and that I should get my heart checked. It turned out that in addition to having Ehlers Danlos Syndrome, I had an Arnold Chiari 1 Malformation, POTS, found the reason I can easily dislocate my joints, and have moderate to severe Aortic Regurgitation with a widening of my aorta where it’s attached to my heart. Same thing John Ritter had. I made a few lifestyle adjustments, foregoing BASE jumping, bungee jumping, and the daily floor wrestling I did with my kids who loved to throw themselves in a pile on my chest. My brother later died from an aortic dissection. As did my cousin, my dad’s cousin and my uncle. All aortic aneurysms.
Damn… it’s weird how some doctors get so sucked into their own specialty that they don’t see any other indicators outside of that one area and they go “well guess it’s just a mystery!!” and some doctors are like “while working on your knee I noticed your heart stopped. Maybe get that checked out? Oh I helped prevent you dying a painful death from a complication no one expected? That’s neat! Well back to my 8th knee replacement of the day!” Like no wait get back here Doc I need to clone you!!!
Wow I'm so sorry that's awful I will say I know how it feels to lose your family I've lost all of my family within the past 7 months and it's been pure hell I'm so sorry for the loss of your family but I'm glad you found a doctor who finally and truly cared and listened to what you had to say you're in my prayers..
Please do get an ultrasound or a CT scan every now and then, will ya? Aortic aneurisms can be surgically stabilized and prevented from rupturing when caught early enough. Seeing an internal medicine doc and/or cardiologist would be helpful aswell. I (pharmacologist) think there's also certain bloodpressure medications that may be able reduce the wear on your aorta.
@@WhoAmI2YouNow I did send a thank you card to my cosmetic surgeon after I had my heart, brain, and other MRIs done. I wouldn’t be here today. And I suffered only minimal brain damage from the A Chiari 1 Malformation .I praise the Lord for my great cosmetic surgeon and the surgeons and doctors who followed
6:38 yep, my nipple and areola died on my left breast after reduction... leaving a huge hole I had to pack with gauze and Dakins solution for months until it grew in enough to reconstruct. It's no joke. Luckily, I found a new reconstructive surgeon who used a technique used by breast cancer survivors to create a new nipple and then tattooed it the color of my right side. Genius surgeon I had!
I’m glad everything worked out for you in the end! That must’ve been a terrifying ordeal to go through, especially when it was caused by something that was supposed to help you and alleviate pain😭
To everyone in the comments saying her priorities are in the wrong place bc of how she reacted when she found out about her aneurism- first off, you haven’t seen the whole episode (2 episodes actually) and you don’t see her full reaction in this video. Second of all, she obviously took the aneurism very seriously, but it was still disappointing for her to have to wait to get her nose fixed. She spent YEARS dealing with the complications of her damaged nose, anyone would be disappointed to hear that they have to wait even longer.
I can understand that. My first time going to a dentist as an adult in my late 20's, one of the first things I asked about was getting braces, which I obviously needed. He said I'd first have to get my wisdom teeth cut out. I was bummed, especially with my 10-year high school reunion later that year, but I know it was the best decision. Just three years later, I had the smile I always wanted.
Almost there, can see the finish line, and then had to take a detour into an unknown location. Immensely frustrating. Glad she took the detour instead of looking for another surgeon who would just go ahead with the nose reconstruction
A plastic surgeon saved my dad aswell. He got bechterew's disease and had two rods and a plate placed to stabilize his spine after fracturing three vertebrae. The wound wouldn't properly close afterwards, because there was too much tension on the tissue, and thus, after three failed attempts to re-suture the wound, some of the spinal bones remained exposed. After 6 weeks of vac therapy, the plastic surgeon managed to close the wound with a flap technique (m. latissimus I believe). The procedure was very difficult, since due to the condition of my father (no range of movement in the spine whatsoever for decades), the muscle was atrophic. He had to use every trick in the book (and probably some that aren't), in order to ensure circulation, even rubbed the whole muscle in heparin to try and fix a circulation imbalance and remained on standby after the surgery in case there were complications (in a public hospital, mind you). He also had a nurse check the wound every 10 minutes in order to make sure that circulation is maintained. Luckily, all went well. I'm forever grateful.
Heparin is an anticoagulant. I've used it to ensure blood samples don't clot prior to assays. Suggests he suspected some local small clotting or the fascia layers around the muscle weren't lubricating properly. Glad your family member was able to have the issue resolved 🙂
Fun fact, you can get some pretty bad scars inside the nose, even without surgery. I have a history of severe nose bleeds, and when I went to an ENT as a teenager about it, he thought I'd had a through-the-nose nostril-widening rhinoplasty that I didn't tell him about. But nope, apparently my nose is shaped in just the right way, when combined with my really fragile skin, so that when I breathe through my nose, especially in the summer, it causes the skin to dessicate all the way down to the blood vessel, hence the severe bleeding. His prescription to have less nosebleeds was to put KY Jelly in my nose every day. It did in fact help keep my skin hydrated.
Hey, I used to get really bad nosebleeds as a kid, like ages 7-13 or so. They were not subtle either, it would just *gush*, and I was told that it was beceause I was "growing"🤷 Fast forward to adulthood, my nose will bleed if you: lightly bump it. are breathing and the air outside is too cold. Breathing hard. Apparently *too* hard? Gets a stupid pimple Inside it. Stare at it for no goddamn reason
I went to college in a state that has cold, dry winters. My nose bled all the time during the colder months. My doctor’s “cure” was really similar to yours: Vaseline on a qtip. I live somewhere more humid now so I don’t need it as often, but when it does get dry (end of summer usually), it’s still my go to.
Wow I wanna see more of reconstructive plastic surgery on people who have been in accidents or some other situation. I mostly think of plastic surgery for cosmetic enhancements but plastic surgery can be life saving!!. So happy for this lady who's got a new nose and is confident in it.
I was once flying to Milan (famous plastic surgery hub in Europe) with two women who were acid attack survivors. One of the most horrible flights I've ever had. I really hope those poor women had the best outcomes possible.
Yes, when my brother was around 2 years old his little pinkie was smashed in the door and hanging by only a thread of flesh. A plastic surgeon was able to reattach it & the only way you would know is because of the pinched way his nail grows now 30+ years later
Plastic surgery was reconstructive surgery well before the aesthetic/vanity cosmetic surgery that we think of today came into being. TBH, cosmetic surgery does save some people from wanting to end it all. I'd call this life-saving
I had a friend who was in his late forties. He didn't show up to work for a few days, so the boss tried to reach him and couldn't. They had the police do a wellness check. He died in his sleep from a burst aneurysm. Those things are scary.
I remember my ex telling me about his ex-wife's best friend. They were at church, helping out with the little kids and she just dropped dead. Also in her 30s, no symptoms. I had to skip forward when he started talking about aneurysms because it creeps me out.
A friend of my parents had his wife suddenly die in bed next to him due to an aneurysm. He woke up next to her lying dead beside him. Incredibly awful situation :(
In Belgium, when you reach a certain age, you have to get blood work done before anesthesia. My grandpa’s came back showing weird results. He was given some kind monitoring device and that way they discovered he had a heartbeat of 30 beats/min, he is 2m tall and weighs 100+ kg. He was ready to fall dead any time, yet he received a pacemaker within three days and is doing fine as of today
@@katie-kb6qdMy dad was in & out of hospitals for about 2 years from "heart attacks" & "pulled/pinched muscles" until someone finally decided to take a closer look. He was scheduled for a pace maker the next morning. IDK about the medical places around here sometimes... my dad was in & out of hospitals a bunch this year as well for "emphysema" & "asthma". After about a month of fighting for an appointment within a decent time frame, after seeing something suspicious, he is now going into surgery tomorrow morning for a lung biopsy because it may or may not be cancer. He is currently a bladder cancer survivor. My mom was also diagnosed with terminal matestatic (don't know how it's spelled) breast cancer about 8 - 9 years ago & one of the doctors said that she had to have had it for years even though she had regular check-ups. She was originally told she had approximately 3 - 4 years by their estimate, but the doctor didn't like giving numbers. He told us about how he once had a patient who was told 3 months & she lived 3 years.
@katie-kb6qd even in emergencies, they will run labs STAT, which can be processed rather quickly as the team is preparing for the procedure (not all labs can be run STAT but blood cell counts can). Basic labs like blood cell counts are done before pretty much every surgery to assess bleeding risks, then of course there are other routine labs that are done based on the type of surgery and individual patient risk factors.
A young woman I worked with some forty years ago that was in a horrible automobile accident. Her face was disfigured from hitting the windshield. It’s important to note that this accident occurred prior to the seat belt. At the time I knew her, she had undergone some procedures. The plastic surgeon had her wait until she was older to have some of the surgeries due to her age at time of accident. The new procedures were to stretch some of the skin that would go toward her reconstruction. After she returned to work, her previous demeanor changed. She was always polite, even to laugh & tell jokes; however, afterward, the young woman I had the pleasure of calling a friend was much more confident. She didn’t shy away. Her sister took her clothes shopping & to get a long overdue mani-pedi. She went to her hairdresser to get a new look. The surgeries to get her to that moment changed her life for the better. Her heart & love within it remained the same, only now she was looking forward to life rarer than hiding from so much of it.
I remember being a kid and seeing drawings of early forehead-to-nose surgical grafting to repair war injuries. Shocking, yet very heartening to see the innovation and effort!!
It's actually quite surprising and amazing how many medical advancements were born from war injuries. Even non-medical advancements, like the chainsaw. Speaking of which, more realistic prosthetic limbs are also a result.
My chiropractor actually was the first one to notice an issue with my gallbladder, simply from where I was having pain and stiffness in my spine. Later found it had a BUNCH of gallstones and needed to be taken out!!
Dr. Nassif did save her life. If he had not ordered a CT Scan and the aneurism had not been found she could have been in serious trouble. That's when you realize how important it is to consult with a good doctor that has your best interest in mind and not doing a procedure to boost their ego. I also think in some circumstances, it is a good idea to keep health records as long as your alive. Due to my physical disability, my hand was 90% bent. I had two operations by a plastic surgeon on my wrist but my wrist would go back so the orthopedic surgeon did a bone graft. All these different surgeries took place between 1970 and 72. At the time he had it x-rayed to ensure everything was healing. Then while I was still working in around 2017, I slipped and had a bad fall on ice and I thought I might have broken hand, and I went to the ER and had my hand e-rayed, the doctors couldn't be certain everything was OK. It would have probably helpful if the physicians could have looked at the original x-ray that was taken in 1972.
What people never knew is that this is what happened to Michael Jackson. He had two nose jobs, and the second was around the time of Thriller. He didn't know he had lupus at that point, and it caused damage from a cut off blood supply that would never heal. They just kept resculpting in hopes of success. That's why he looked way better in the late 2000's than he did in the early 2000's, which was when he had all the mirrors removed from his house. 😢 They were using hyaluronic acid filler to rebuild the nose. He was bad about explaining himself, partly because he knew nobody would want to listen. People would much rather have a freak to chase out of town with their pitchforks. If you want a trip, compare his photos that are older and more recent. Go feature by feature. Aside from the nose and skin color, Nothing Changed
So, you’re ignoring the insane number of obvious things he had done. I don’t care that he did them, it’s not my face but he had jaw and chin implants, dimples added, his cleft chin changed, eyelid tattoos…. Seriously. The most recognizable features that poor abused man had were his clothing style and his “ public” voice.
Being used as the family cash cow certainly did a number on the man. The repercussions of which extended its ugly self into the lives of yet other children
I am fascinated that they can grow a nose or ear on the face and then attach it. Dr. Nasiff is an artist. What a difference. Her nose looks so much better.
So I went to a new dentist a few days ago, and they noticed my jaw locks and pops when I open really wide. I told them I have always had that and it had never caused me pain or been a problem. Next thing I know, he says he wants to “listen to my jaw”, and I feel cold jelly under my ears. I think to myself “Is he seriously doing an ultrasound on my jaw?”, and he was. He tells me the swishing sound I hear is blood flow from the arteries in my neck and not to be alarmed. They found nothing wrong with my jaw and it popped the same way on both sides. I told them that it didn’t cause me issue or anything, but I appreciate the good intentions behind checking? Well. Now I know they used a doppler on me! Wasn’t expecting an answer to that question today. Thanks, doc!
I like to watch 'Botched' because these two doctors WILL refuse to do surgery because of other health issues they find or that some clients who come to them have already had to much done and one more will take them over the edge..
My dad had an aortic aneurysm that was caught. My uncle had one that was supposed to be operated on and his surgery was delayed due to Covid and it popped and he died.
@@jenny5309-k3j dude fr! People still had surgeries done when COVID was happening. Even my middle brother had colonoscopy checkups for colon cancer tumors.
@@lisag3074 Thank you! It was a long time ago but he was truly a great man! I just heard my mom, the other day, say that everyone should have a daddy like her Daddy. 💗🥰
So in a way that accident saved her. Had it not been for trying to get a procedure done, it would have gone unnoticed. This happens more often then we think.
Any medical professional who cares enough could spot something such as this. People forget how educated these people are. Even though they’re plastic surgeons, they are *still* medical professionals. Some aren’t as caring as others and only care about the money despite the risks, but many are lifesavers. Don’t underestimate them! ❤
When my little sister was 2, she couldnt lift her head from her shoulders. Her neck was super compressed. We had just moved to Texas and a mom at the park we stopped at recommended a doctor to us. We took my sister to him and he immediately called for an MRI. We found out that my sister has a tumor in her spinal chord, and within a few hours they took her to the hospital and prepped for surgery. My sister is now 12 years old, and although she still does oral chemotherapy, she is living a mostly normal life.
That must be scary getting blood clots I can only imagine. Also he didn't die from an aortic aneurysm He died from an aortic dissection (as well as Alan Thicke) And while an aortic dissection can be a result of an aneurysm they're are two different things
@@solemnorganicdiamond thank you. My bad. But yeah EDS can affect the blood vessels with weak points. My clotting factor is pretty crap due to the EDS...
@@MoniqueBoulangerMSG I have a friend of mine who has EDS (As well as POTS and a few other things) and my heart goes out to people who have it. I ended up getting a blood clot from a birth control I was taking (I immediately got off of it) and it absolutely scared me.
My neighbor literally died of an aneurysm last year. He was around 35 years old. Very scary sh-t. One day he just said "Man, my headache is really bad" and the next minute he was on the ground unconscious. Scary.
What a fantastic plastic surgeon, after finding out about her accident, wanted to do a catscan before making any decisions about plastic surgery. I wish all medical professionals ( Dr's, emt's, dentists, etc.) Were that thorough.
The main reason for the CT scan was that she complained of fluid coming from her nose, and the doctors were concerned it could be a cerebrospinal fluid leak. They wanted to address that in case there was a direct pathway into her brain as a result of her injury. In that case, I imagine the risk of infection getting into the brain after surgery would be high. The aneurysm was a surprise. If I remember correctly, there were two aneurysms.
I have a thoracic aortic aneurysm that the surgeon won't operate on until it grows another 8 mm because they normally don't burst until over 6 cm - mine is 4.2 cm. Very frustrating because it causes me to be short of breath and my blood pressure is above the standard, even with medication.
My grandmother had a lot of aneurysms. Years ago, way before I was born she has one in her brain and got it removed. But a little over 10 years ago she found out she had 3 heart aneurysms, apparently it was 2 going to her heart and one coming from her heart? That's how it was explained to me anyway. Her chest expanded so much, it was honestly really scary. About a year later they found one in her leg, as they were planning for surgeries, they discovered she had bladder cancer. She survived about another 4 years before she passed. We aren't sure what exactly killed her, but her cancer had gotten really bad and she hadn't really been herself for months at that point. Just like my Mom-Mom, super stubborn and fighting till the very end!
When I was 11, my scoliosis became a 90° curve, making my ribs tilt a quarter inch off of my lungs, so I was going to need Harrington rod surgery. My pediatric orthopedic surgeon did an MRI to see if there was any tethering of the spinal cord because that would change how they did the surgery. They didn't find any tethering, but they did find a 3cm cyst of spinal fluid called a syrinx at the base of my brain. I have Klippel-Feil Syndrome, so it had plenty of room to grow with my C2-C7 fused together. I had the last MRI before the surgery in November, I had the syrinx surgery in January (a shunt was placed to drain it), and I had the Harrington rod surgery in April. They were both life-threatening conditions, so they both required action, but medicine almost always does the life-threatening BRAIN surgeries first!!
10:51 Fun fact- this exact procedure is thousands of years old, this guy from India wrote very detailed instructions on how to do it. So even though we probably didn't know about the whole blood vessel regrowth, we did have the entire procedure understood
I had lunch with a past colleague. She texted me when she got back to work. One of the co-workers had such a bad headache they called paramedics. Brain aneurism and she didn’t survive 😢
Hi, I just collapsed, no symptoms at all, I had just walked my dog and got ready to go out, was just getting my daughters car when it happened, took about 4 minuets from head hurting to being resuscitated, x
@@micheldawnsummers1452 Oh my goodness! That's so scary, but I'm so glad that you had people around you. It almost seems as if they should scan people for this every year during their physical.
I’m in the uk, they don’t do anything like that unless you went with symptoms, I had non what so ever , I had high blood pressure which was just ignored, I was working a 12 hour a day job, but yes they should check yearly for sure, took a while to get over but no lasting problems since thank god x
One of my peeves with shows like this is that at the end they show the person with make up to make it better looking from the before. oh well i guess its a TV thing.
My mom died from a ruptured aortic aneurysm. It was so sudden, we didn’t get a chance to say goodbye. It was so tragic as we didn’t even know she was I’ll, she just complained of pain in her back.
Hey Dr. Yoon, how come they haven’t come up with some thing like grow cartilage for a nose so that when people need surgeries like this. Then you can just replace their it with Grown nose cartilage. You would think that you could do that by now because I’ve seen them regrow ears, right?
does that hair remove red, blonde, grey or white hair? I've wasted so much money only to find that lasers do not work on my red hair, which is now white.
My mom told me she woke up in surgery when she was having a metal rod put into place so she wouldnt risk breaking her hip. She says she rembered hearing them & thinking she needed to get up & help the boys (her dad & brothers). She grew up on a farm. 😂
I think her side profile would look less "flat" if she did also a neck lift. Its often that people come for a nose job and totally disregard the neck and chin, but those 2 need to be balanced out well. You shouldnt look at them as if they are 3 separates
My dad just barely survived a burst aortic aneurysm a few years ago. He’d had a “mild” heart attack and was having an angioscope at the time his aorta ruptured, it’s the probable trigger and also likely the reason he survived, as the rupture could have happened eventually when he wasn’t in a cardiac unit at a hospital.
Does the hair removal system work on blonde & or red hair? I had a kidney transplant and take Cyclosporine which causes hair growth where a woman doesn’t want it! The companies I’ve talked with say their systems don’t work on blonde hair 😢
when i had my top surgery done they warned me that my nipples might not be getting good blood supply, long story short exactly what u said happens happened to part of my nipple and now i only have half of one😂😂😂
The look on her face seeing that lump was priceless. I thought she might reach up and choke him lmao Love your videos Dr. Youn! No way would I ever get surgery that was not life preserving. I'll never be a customer, sorry!
My sister spent 5 years in Dubai and on her flight back she developed an aneurysms in the brain 3 or 4 day's after she landed in South Africa it burst killing her with no one at home too be with her in those dieing moment's leaving behind a 10 year old son and she was a single mother and we only found it after her autopsy and deap vein thrombosis in her legs from the pressurerising and deppresurising of the airoplain that is so uncommon in people like 1 in 10 million people have it 🙏🙏🙏 .............. As a family we all got together and looked after her son like he was our own and gave him every thing in life that we gave our Children ❤❤❤ ...........
A work colleague of my wife popped an aneurism in the brain. It is said put hif hand to his face, said he had a bad headache and dropped. Such a scary thing. Just like a thrombosis.
Dr. Youn do you think the blue egyptian plant can turn back aging? Just saw an ad and immediately thought....I'm asking Dr. Youn about this lol ....so is it cap or yeah it works?
I had a brain hemorrhage & as one aneurysm popped they found 4 more. During surgery i had a stroke & lost movement on my entire left side. Had them coiled & not removed. All glory to God🙌🏼 Btw the lady looks good👏🏼
I have seen a few very severe accident aftermaths in loss of bone and tissues. Especially to burns. The old "Face Off" movie plot with Nicolas Cage and John Travolta comes to mind. May donor parts in such cases be a viable option for reconstructive surgery ?
I have had great reservations about the work plastic surgeons do because I think God is a great creator. I’ll have to say though, I was totally amazed at the results of this surgery and can see how in this case this surgeon greatly helped this patient. It was a good thing! Thanks for the excellent ecxplanation.
Youn Ulike this product? Do you have something like this in your clinic for clients? Does that mean men can stop shaving their face lol? If truly good no more embarrassing trips to those salons and it's more environmentally friendly for many people out there.
When I had my breast reduction I went down to an A cup because I was an E/F before and the only problem I have about surgery is that the surgeon did not tell me I would probably need it done again. Call me complained about it.
I have a curious question, I really hope you see this and answer. I’m a piercer the part where it is stated the wrong incision could disturb the blood supply and cause the tip of her nose to die. If she got a nostril piercing would that also have been a possibility?
I do appreciate a doctor that’s like “forget the aesthetic surgery, we aren’t event TALKING about that until we address the thing that could kill you.”
That’s how doctors work 😂
Unfortunately, not all.
But what about my nose 😖🫨
A good doctor is hard to find .. how ever ... A doctor who values you and your well being your safety and your life .. is a doctor you should never let go because that is not just a doctor .. that is
a person who values you and your well being and your safety and your life over cashing I on your dollars
I’d sooner be alive with a weird looking nose than dead with a normal looking one. But not everyone thinks this way, unfortunately.
Years ago, my mom had constant coughing. She went to various doctors and they said it was a cold that never went away, post nasal drip or some other thing. She went to a pulmonologist and he sent her for x-ray of the lungs. The tech happened to capture a little below the lungs and the pulmonologist found a mass that turned out to be Stage 2 Ovarian cancer. Since that day, he's been my family pulmonologist and treats my asthma.
Just this May, I went in for terrible pain in my abdomen. When I woke up (I don’t remember anything after being admitted) I had 2 stoma’s and was informed that I had stage 3 ovarian cancer. I’m doing chemo etc . Cancer sucks.
@@St4r_Girl_xo She's doing better. A few set backs but she's still going stronger than before!
@@womensarmycorpsveteran2904 I'm sorry to hear and wish you a speedy recovery! Cancer does suck!!
Isn't it crazy how cancer spreads? My gynecologist is really on top of this because uterine and ovarian cancer run in my family. It's absolutely insane how something like ovarian cancer is found in the craziest of places.
Stage IV
My cosmetic surgeon saved my life.
I gave birth to triplets. I then lost a lot of weight. The flap left behind could have been a bowl full of Halloween candy to scare every child in my neighborhood.
After having had a Houdini-plasty (abdominoplasty) done to remove the equivalent of three sheets of notebook paper around my abdomen and back, my doctor asked, “So you were never a bariatric patient?”
I wasn’t. Just weight loss and going from 190 down to 120.
I told him that I could work at a burn unit because I manufacture skin.
He told me that I had all of the indicators of Ehlers Danlos Syndrome and that I should get my heart checked.
It turned out that in addition to having Ehlers Danlos Syndrome, I had an Arnold Chiari 1 Malformation, POTS, found the reason I can easily dislocate my joints, and have moderate to severe Aortic Regurgitation with a widening of my aorta where it’s attached to my heart. Same thing John Ritter had.
I made a few lifestyle adjustments, foregoing BASE jumping, bungee jumping, and the daily floor wrestling I did with my kids who loved to throw themselves in a pile on my chest.
My brother later died from an aortic dissection. As did my cousin, my dad’s cousin and my uncle. All aortic aneurysms.
Damn… it’s weird how some doctors get so sucked into their own specialty that they don’t see any other indicators outside of that one area and they go “well guess it’s just a mystery!!” and some doctors are like “while working on your knee I noticed your heart stopped. Maybe get that checked out? Oh I helped prevent you dying a painful death from a complication no one expected? That’s neat! Well back to my 8th knee replacement of the day!” Like no wait get back here Doc I need to clone you!!!
Wow I'm so sorry that's awful I will say I know how it feels to lose your family I've lost all of my family within the past 7 months and it's been pure hell I'm so sorry for the loss of your family but I'm glad you found a doctor who finally and truly cared and listened to what you had to say you're in my prayers..
Hi fellow EDSer :)
Please do get an ultrasound or a CT scan every now and then, will ya? Aortic aneurisms can be surgically stabilized and prevented from rupturing when caught early enough. Seeing an internal medicine doc and/or cardiologist would be helpful aswell. I (pharmacologist) think there's also certain bloodpressure medications that may be able reduce the wear on your aorta.
@@WhoAmI2YouNow I did send a thank you card to my cosmetic surgeon after I had my heart, brain, and other MRIs done.
I wouldn’t be here today. And I suffered only minimal brain damage from the A Chiari 1 Malformation .I praise the Lord for my great cosmetic surgeon and the surgeons and doctors who followed
6:38 yep, my nipple and areola died on my left breast after reduction... leaving a huge hole I had to pack with gauze and Dakins solution for months until it grew in enough to reconstruct. It's no joke. Luckily, I found a new reconstructive surgeon who used a technique used by breast cancer survivors to create a new nipple and then tattooed it the color of my right side. Genius surgeon I had!
I’m glad everything worked out for you in the end! That must’ve been a terrifying ordeal to go through, especially when it was caused by something that was supposed to help you and alleviate pain😭
@@madokami03 I sank into a deep depression the months I had to pack the opening... but it still was a good decision, the reduction, overall
@@madokami03 and thank you ❤️
Happy that you found a good surgeon! I wish you all the best (and also you look amazing!)
I’m glad it has worked out otherwise - I had a reduction years ago and it was the best thing ever.
To everyone in the comments saying her priorities are in the wrong place bc of how she reacted when she found out about her aneurism- first off, you haven’t seen the whole episode (2 episodes actually) and you don’t see her full reaction in this video. Second of all, she obviously took the aneurism very seriously, but it was still disappointing for her to have to wait to get her nose fixed. She spent YEARS dealing with the complications of her damaged nose, anyone would be disappointed to hear that they have to wait even longer.
I can understand that. My first time going to a dentist as an adult in my late 20's, one of the first things I asked about was getting braces, which I obviously needed. He said I'd first have to get my wisdom teeth cut out. I was bummed, especially with my 10-year high school reunion later that year, but I know it was the best decision. Just three years later, I had the smile I always wanted.
Almost there, can see the finish line, and then had to take a detour into an unknown location.
Immensely frustrating.
Glad she took the detour instead of looking for another surgeon who would just go ahead with the nose reconstruction
A plastic surgeon saved my dad aswell. He got bechterew's disease and had two rods and a plate placed to stabilize his spine after fracturing three vertebrae. The wound wouldn't properly close afterwards, because there was too much tension on the tissue, and thus, after three failed attempts to re-suture the wound, some of the spinal bones remained exposed. After 6 weeks of vac therapy, the plastic surgeon managed to close the wound with a flap technique (m. latissimus I believe).
The procedure was very difficult, since due to the condition of my father (no range of movement in the spine whatsoever for decades), the muscle was atrophic. He had to use every trick in the book (and probably some that aren't), in order to ensure circulation, even rubbed the whole muscle in heparin to try and fix a circulation imbalance and remained on standby after the surgery in case there were complications (in a public hospital, mind you). He also had a nurse check the wound every 10 minutes in order to make sure that circulation is maintained. Luckily, all went well. I'm forever grateful.
Heparin is an anticoagulant.
I've used it to ensure blood samples don't clot prior to assays.
Suggests he suspected some local small clotting or the fascia layers around the muscle weren't lubricating properly.
Glad your family member was able to have the issue resolved 🙂
Fun fact, you can get some pretty bad scars inside the nose, even without surgery. I have a history of severe nose bleeds, and when I went to an ENT as a teenager about it, he thought I'd had a through-the-nose nostril-widening rhinoplasty that I didn't tell him about. But nope, apparently my nose is shaped in just the right way, when combined with my really fragile skin, so that when I breathe through my nose, especially in the summer, it causes the skin to dessicate all the way down to the blood vessel, hence the severe bleeding. His prescription to have less nosebleeds was to put KY Jelly in my nose every day. It did in fact help keep my skin hydrated.
Hey, I used to get really bad nosebleeds as a kid, like ages 7-13 or so. They were not subtle either, it would just *gush*, and I was told that it was beceause I was "growing"🤷
Fast forward to adulthood, my nose will bleed if you:
lightly bump it.
are breathing and the air outside is too cold.
Breathing hard. Apparently *too* hard?
Gets a stupid pimple Inside it.
Stare at it for no goddamn reason
Ponaris drops really help too, though they taste vile. I just use a qtip instead of the dropper.
I went to college in a state that has cold, dry winters. My nose bled all the time during the colder months. My doctor’s “cure” was really similar to yours: Vaseline on a qtip. I live somewhere more humid now so I don’t need it as often, but when it does get dry (end of summer usually), it’s still my go to.
I use something similar but based on sesame seed oil to keep my nostrils moist.
Also long history of summertime nose bleeds
Who else was accused of nose-picking as the reason for sudden and heavy nose-bleeding?
Wow I wanna see more of reconstructive plastic surgery on people who have been in accidents or some other situation. I mostly think of plastic surgery for cosmetic enhancements but plastic surgery can be life saving!!. So happy for this lady who's got a new nose and is confident in it.
I was once flying to Milan (famous plastic surgery hub in Europe) with two women who were acid attack survivors. One of the most horrible flights I've ever had. I really hope those poor women had the best outcomes possible.
I'm with you I'd like to see more Reconstructive surgeries.
Yes, when my brother was around 2 years old his little pinkie was smashed in the door and hanging by only a thread of flesh. A plastic surgeon was able to reattach it & the only way you would know is because of the pinched way his nail grows now 30+ years later
Plastic surgery was reconstructive surgery well before the aesthetic/vanity cosmetic surgery that we think of today came into being.
TBH, cosmetic surgery does save some people from wanting to end it all. I'd call this life-saving
I had a friend who was in his late forties. He didn't show up to work for a few days, so the boss tried to reach him and couldn't. They had the police do a wellness check. He died in his sleep from a burst aneurysm. Those things are scary.
My cousin's husband has died of this. A young man just about 30, they've been together since high school. Nobody ever suspected anything.
I remember my ex telling me about his ex-wife's best friend. They were at church, helping out with the little kids and she just dropped dead. Also in her 30s, no symptoms. I had to skip forward when he started talking about aneurysms because it creeps me out.
Sorry for your loss
A childhood friend died of an aneurysma last year. He was just 29 and had a 2 month old daughter, it completely broke his family.
A friend of my parents had his wife suddenly die in bed next to him due to an aneurysm. He woke up next to her lying dead beside him. Incredibly awful situation :(
In Belgium, when you reach a certain age, you have to get blood work done before anesthesia. My grandpa’s came back showing weird results. He was given some kind monitoring device and that way they discovered he had a heartbeat of 30 beats/min, he is 2m tall and weighs 100+ kg. He was ready to fall dead any time, yet he received a pacemaker within three days and is doing fine as of today
we do that in the US too, i honestly think unless it’s severely emergent it should be a requirement for all procedures
@@katie-kb6qdMy dad was in & out of hospitals for about 2 years from "heart attacks" & "pulled/pinched muscles" until someone finally decided to take a closer look. He was scheduled for a pace maker the next morning.
IDK about the medical places around here sometimes... my dad was in & out of hospitals a bunch this year as well for "emphysema" & "asthma". After about a month of fighting for an appointment within a decent time frame, after seeing something suspicious, he is now going into surgery tomorrow morning for a lung biopsy because it may or may not be cancer. He is currently a bladder cancer survivor.
My mom was also diagnosed with terminal matestatic (don't know how it's spelled) breast cancer about 8 - 9 years ago & one of the doctors said that she had to have had it for years even though she had regular check-ups. She was originally told she had approximately 3 - 4 years by their estimate, but the doctor didn't like giving numbers. He told us about how he once had a patient who was told 3 months & she lived 3 years.
@katie-kb6qd even in emergencies, they will run labs STAT, which can be processed rather quickly as the team is preparing for the procedure (not all labs can be run STAT but blood cell counts can). Basic labs like blood cell counts are done before pretty much every surgery to assess bleeding risks, then of course there are other routine labs that are done based on the type of surgery and individual patient risk factors.
I get blood work done on my cat if he will be under anesthesia. Vet strongly recommends it
A young woman I worked with some forty years ago that was in a horrible automobile accident. Her face was disfigured from hitting the windshield. It’s important to note that this accident occurred prior to the seat belt. At the time I knew her, she had undergone some procedures. The plastic surgeon had her wait until she was older to have some of the surgeries due to her age at time of accident. The new procedures were to stretch some of the skin that would go toward her reconstruction.
After she returned to work, her previous demeanor changed. She was always polite, even to laugh & tell jokes; however, afterward, the young woman I had the pleasure of calling a friend was much more confident. She didn’t shy away. Her sister took her clothes shopping & to get a long overdue mani-pedi. She went to her hairdresser to get a new look.
The surgeries to get her to that moment changed her life for the better. Her heart & love within it remained the same, only now she was looking forward to life rarer than hiding from so much of it.
I remember being a kid and seeing drawings of early forehead-to-nose surgical grafting to repair war injuries. Shocking, yet very heartening to see the innovation and effort!!
Those soldiers are how plastic surgery came into being.
It's actually quite surprising and amazing how many medical advancements were born from war injuries. Even non-medical advancements, like the chainsaw. Speaking of which, more realistic prosthetic limbs are also a result.
My chiropractor actually was the first one to notice an issue with my gallbladder, simply from where I was having pain and stiffness in my spine.
Later found it had a BUNCH of gallstones and needed to be taken out!!
Dr. Nassif did save her life. If he had not ordered a CT Scan and the aneurism had not been found she could have been in serious trouble. That's when you realize how important it is to consult with a good doctor that has your best interest in mind and not doing a procedure to boost their ego.
I also think in some circumstances, it is a good idea to keep health records as long as your alive. Due to my physical disability, my hand was 90% bent. I had two operations by a plastic surgeon on my wrist but my wrist would go back so the orthopedic surgeon did a bone graft. All these different surgeries took place between 1970 and 72. At the time he had it x-rayed to ensure everything was healing.
Then while I was still working in around 2017, I slipped and had a bad fall on ice and I thought I might have broken hand, and I went to the ER and had my hand e-rayed, the doctors couldn't be certain everything was OK. It would have probably helpful if the physicians could have looked at the original x-ray that was taken in 1972.
My father had 2 aortic aneurysms. Doctor caught both before they burst. Now 90 and still going strong.
Oh the doctors did a beautiful job... and they saved her life
What people never knew is that this is what happened to Michael Jackson. He had two nose jobs, and the second was around the time of Thriller. He didn't know he had lupus at that point, and it caused damage from a cut off blood supply that would never heal. They just kept resculpting in hopes of success. That's why he looked way better in the late 2000's than he did in the early 2000's, which was when he had all the mirrors removed from his house. 😢 They were using hyaluronic acid filler to rebuild the nose. He was bad about explaining himself, partly because he knew nobody would want to listen. People would much rather have a freak to chase out of town with their pitchforks. If you want a trip, compare his photos that are older and more recent. Go feature by feature. Aside from the nose and skin color, Nothing Changed
So, you’re ignoring the insane number of obvious things he had done. I don’t care that he did them, it’s not my face but he had jaw and chin implants, dimples added, his cleft chin changed, eyelid tattoos…. Seriously. The most recognizable features that poor abused man had were his clothing style and his “ public” voice.
Being used as the family cash cow certainly did a number on the man.
The repercussions of which extended its ugly self into the lives of yet other children
I am fascinated that they can grow a nose or ear on the face and then attach it. Dr. Nasiff is an artist. What a difference. Her nose looks so much better.
Paul Nassif is a great person and a fantastic plastic surgeon. I love watching Botched, because they do amazing work.
So I went to a new dentist a few days ago, and they noticed my jaw locks and pops when I open really wide. I told them I have always had that and it had never caused me pain or been a problem. Next thing I know, he says he wants to “listen to my jaw”, and I feel cold jelly under my ears.
I think to myself “Is he seriously doing an ultrasound on my jaw?”, and he was. He tells me the swishing sound I hear is blood flow from the arteries in my neck and not to be alarmed. They found nothing wrong with my jaw and it popped the same way on both sides. I told them that it didn’t cause me issue or anything, but I appreciate the good intentions behind checking?
Well. Now I know they used a doppler on me! Wasn’t expecting an answer to that question today. Thanks, doc!
I like to watch 'Botched' because these two doctors WILL refuse to do surgery because of other health issues they find or that some clients who come to them have already had to much done and one more will take them over the edge..
My dad had an aortic aneurysm that was caught. My uncle had one that was supposed to be operated on and his surgery was delayed due to Covid and it popped and he died.
Damn... even if it was covid happening, they could've helped him out. I'll pay my respects dude.
Seriously. That's not a surgery that can be delayed.
@@jenny5309-k3j dude fr! People still had surgeries done when COVID was happening. Even my middle brother had colonoscopy checkups for colon cancer tumors.
My Papa had an aortic aneurysm. He stood up to get my Granny a cup of coffee and collapsed. He was gone before the ambulance even arrived😢
I'm so sorry for you're loss
@@lisag3074 Thank you! It was a long time ago but he was truly a great man! I just heard my mom, the other day, say that everyone should have a daddy like her Daddy. 💗🥰
@krystaldaniels7940
You're Mom was Truly Blessed.. I wish I had a Father like you're Mother.
I’m sorry
Sorry for your loss
So in a way that accident saved her. Had it not been for trying to get a procedure done, it would have gone unnoticed. This happens more often then we think.
Any medical professional who cares enough could spot something such as this. People forget how educated these people are. Even though they’re plastic surgeons, they are *still* medical professionals. Some aren’t as caring as others and only care about the money despite the risks, but many are lifesavers. Don’t underestimate them! ❤
When my little sister was 2, she couldnt lift her head from her shoulders. Her neck was super compressed. We had just moved to Texas and a mom at the park we stopped at recommended a doctor to us. We took my sister to him and he immediately called for an MRI. We found out that my sister has a tumor in her spinal chord, and within a few hours they took her to the hospital and prepped for surgery. My sister is now 12 years old, and although she still does oral chemotherapy, she is living a mostly normal life.
As someone who has Ehlers-Danlos, I can get aneurysms. John Ritter had an Aeortic aneurysm and died.
That must be scary getting blood clots I can only imagine. Also he didn't die from an aortic aneurysm He died from an aortic dissection (as well as Alan Thicke) And while an aortic dissection can be a result of an aneurysm they're are two different things
@@solemnorganicdiamond thank you. My bad. But yeah EDS can affect the blood vessels with weak points. My clotting factor is pretty crap due to the EDS...
@@MoniqueBoulangerMSG I have a friend of mine who has EDS (As well as POTS and a few other things) and my heart goes out to people who have it. I ended up getting a blood clot from a birth control I was taking (I immediately got off of it) and it absolutely scared me.
My neighbor literally died of an aneurysm last year. He was around 35 years old. Very scary sh-t. One day he just said "Man, my headache is really bad" and the next minute he was on the ground unconscious. Scary.
What a fantastic plastic surgeon, after finding out about her accident, wanted to do a catscan before making any decisions about plastic surgery. I wish all medical professionals ( Dr's, emt's, dentists, etc.) Were that thorough.
The main reason for the CT scan was that she complained of fluid coming from her nose, and the doctors were concerned it could be a cerebrospinal fluid leak. They wanted to address that in case there was a direct pathway into her brain as a result of her injury. In that case, I imagine the risk of infection getting into the brain after surgery would be high. The aneurysm was a surprise. If I remember correctly, there were two aneurysms.
@@lauraelliott6909 ooooh, thanks 😊 for the background info! 😃
My hubs had his ascending aorta burst, he was being prepped for surgery to fix it, that was December 2006, he’ll be 82 in two weeks. VERY LUCKY GUY.
My mother-in-law died from a ruptured brain aneurysm. So glad Dr. Nassif ordered the head CT and found that!
So fascinating!! I luv watching all of these, you doctors are blessed with such talent & creativity! Praise the Lord‼️
My father died from a brain aneurysm, and to see her take it so lightly bugged me.
Same. My dad died from an abdominal aortic aneurysm. I never got to say goodbye.
My dad too; he collapsed at work and never recovered. Ten days and we had to pull the plug, because his systems were shutting down.
She didn't take it lightly at all. I've seen both episodes she was in.
I have a thoracic aortic aneurysm that the surgeon won't operate on until it grows another 8 mm because they normally don't burst until over 6 cm - mine is 4.2 cm. Very frustrating because it causes me to be short of breath and my blood pressure is above the standard, even with medication.
@@stephaniereuscher7246omg 😮 that’s crazy! Smh so they jus wanna, what? Wait til something goes wrong?!! Smh that’s horrible. Ur in my prayers. 🙏🏻
This was so informative! I learned quite a bit about reconstructive surgery.
My grandmother had a lot of aneurysms. Years ago, way before I was born she has one in her brain and got it removed. But a little over 10 years ago she found out she had 3 heart aneurysms, apparently it was 2 going to her heart and one coming from her heart? That's how it was explained to me anyway. Her chest expanded so much, it was honestly really scary. About a year later they found one in her leg, as they were planning for surgeries, they discovered she had bladder cancer. She survived about another 4 years before she passed.
We aren't sure what exactly killed her, but her cancer had gotten really bad and she hadn't really been herself for months at that point. Just like my Mom-Mom, super stubborn and fighting till the very end!
Consider making an appointment with a doctor who specializes in genetics
Talk about friggin timeing! Holy cow...
I'd hate to imagine what would have happened if she hadn't gone to see about fixing her nose when she did.
Oh WOW!! He actually did an amazing job on her nose!!! Talk about Turnin nothin into something! WOW! ❤
Thank you, Dr Youn! Could you please make a video about ultrasonic rhinoplasty?
بالتوفيق يا احسن دكتور بالعالم ❤
She looks so much better afterwards!
He does such nice work!
I'm in awe.. You look incredible ❤
When I was 11, my scoliosis became a 90° curve, making my ribs tilt a quarter inch off of my lungs, so I was going to need Harrington rod surgery. My pediatric orthopedic surgeon did an MRI to see if there was any tethering of the spinal cord because that would change how they did the surgery. They didn't find any tethering, but they did find a 3cm cyst of spinal fluid called a syrinx at the base of my brain. I have Klippel-Feil Syndrome, so it had plenty of room to grow with my C2-C7 fused together. I had the last MRI before the surgery in November, I had the syrinx surgery in January (a shunt was placed to drain it), and I had the Harrington rod surgery in April. They were both life-threatening conditions, so they both required action, but medicine almost always does the life-threatening BRAIN surgeries first!!
10:51 Fun fact- this exact procedure is thousands of years old, this guy from India wrote very detailed instructions on how to do it. So even though we probably didn't know about the whole blood vessel regrowth, we did have the entire procedure understood
Hey Doctor Youn, have you done a video on Donatella Versace ?
Wonder how many fails those drs have had? Episodes they couldn't finish because it didn't work out
I'd actually like to see those. Explore why things didn't go as intended.
It'd be good for everyone to see
Dr Nassif is a master at his craft
I had lunch with a past colleague. She texted me when she got back to work. One of the co-workers had such a bad headache they called paramedics. Brain aneurism and she didn’t survive 😢
“You have an aneurysm!”
“What about my nose!?”
😳
Oh my god that is amazing day is incredible job. Absolutely amazing girl she’s Gotta be so happy
I had a brain aneurysm a few years ago, it popped I was left fighting for my life, thank god I had help as soon as it happened,
Did you just collapse and were lucky enough to be around people to call 911? Or did you have symptoms first?
Hi, I just collapsed, no symptoms at all, I had just walked my dog and got ready to go out, was just getting my daughters car when it happened, took about 4 minuets from head hurting to being resuscitated, x
@@micheldawnsummers1452 Oh my goodness! That's so scary, but I'm so glad that you had people around you. It almost seems as if they should scan people for this every year during their physical.
I’m in the uk, they don’t do anything like that unless you went with symptoms, I had non what so ever , I had high blood pressure which was just ignored, I was working a 12 hour a day job, but yes they should check yearly for sure, took a while to get over but no lasting problems since thank god x
Wow that looks so good you can hardly even see the scars.
One of my peeves with shows like this is that at the end they show the person with make up to make it better looking from the before. oh well i guess its a TV thing.
My mom died from a ruptured aortic aneurysm. It was so sudden, we didn’t get a chance to say goodbye. It was so tragic as we didn’t even know she was I’ll, she just complained of pain in her back.
The surgery reveal, it helps to have medical artists sketch out the result first especially for people prone to anxiety.
She looks really good after ❤
Hey Dr. Yoon, how come they haven’t come up with some thing like grow cartilage for a nose so that when people need surgeries like this. Then you can just replace their it with Grown nose cartilage. You would think that you could do that by now because I’ve seen them regrow ears, right?
does that hair remove red, blonde, grey or white hair? I've wasted so much money only to find that lasers do not work on my red hair, which is now white.
My mom told me she woke up in surgery when she was having a metal rod put into place so she wouldnt risk breaking her hip. She says she rembered hearing them & thinking she needed to get up & help the boys (her dad & brothers). She grew up on a farm. 😂
I think her side profile would look less "flat" if she did also a neck lift. Its often that people come for a nose job and totally disregard the neck and chin, but those 2 need to be balanced out well. You shouldnt look at them as if they are 3 separates
My dad just barely survived a burst aortic aneurysm a few years ago. He’d had a “mild” heart attack and was having an angioscope at the time his aorta ruptured, it’s the probable trigger and also likely the reason he survived, as the rupture could have happened eventually when he wasn’t in a cardiac unit at a hospital.
i don’t know how good u are ….! but you always making fun at everyone u lay ur eyes on !!!!’ laugh at other who going to laugh at u ha … doc !
Thanks Dr Youn, I love your videos!!
Can you PLEASE talk about tretinoin & retinol 🙏🏼 I need to know what to use 🙏🏼😊
Dr. Youn, you remind me of Dr. Cullen from Grand Rapids. He's also a plastic surgeon.
nice work Great video Dr Youn
"OMG, it looks as if my nose is giving birth" lol
Does the hair removal system work on blonde & or red hair? I had a kidney transplant and take Cyclosporine which causes hair growth where a woman doesn’t want it! The companies I’ve talked with say their systems don’t work on blonde hair 😢
I love all your videos!
The face you put on ur videos just crack me up Lol 🤣🤣🤣
When I wanted some plastic surgery the doctor said I had to first lose 70 lbs. I busted my butt losing it, but it was necessary. Surgery went well!!!
when i had my top surgery done they warned me that my nipples might not be getting good blood supply, long story short exactly what u said happens happened to part of my nipple and now i only have half of one😂😂😂
The look on her face seeing that lump was priceless. I thought she might reach up and choke him lmao
Love your videos Dr. Youn! No way would I ever get surgery that was not life preserving. I'll never be a customer, sorry!
My sister spent 5 years in Dubai and on her flight back she developed an aneurysms in the brain 3 or 4 day's after she landed in South Africa it burst killing her with no one at home too be with her in those dieing moment's leaving behind a 10 year old son and she was a single mother and we only found it after her autopsy and deap vein thrombosis in her legs from the pressurerising and deppresurising of the airoplain that is so uncommon in people like 1 in 10 million people have it 🙏🙏🙏 .............. As a family we all got together and looked after her son like he was our own and gave him every thing in life that we gave our Children ❤❤❤ ...........
A work colleague of my wife popped an aneurism in the brain. It is said put hif hand to his face, said he had a bad headache and dropped. Such a scary thing. Just like a thrombosis.
Dr. Youn do you think the blue egyptian plant can turn back aging? Just saw an ad and immediately thought....I'm asking Dr. Youn about this lol ....so is it cap or yeah it works?
Ive seen a ruptured AA on ultrasound. It is scary....
I had a brain hemorrhage & as one aneurysm popped they found 4 more. During surgery i had a stroke & lost movement on my entire left side. Had them coiled & not removed. All glory to God🙌🏼 Btw the lady looks good👏🏼
I have seen a few very severe accident aftermaths in loss of bone and tissues. Especially to burns. The old "Face Off" movie plot with Nicolas Cage and John Travolta comes to mind. May donor parts in such cases be a viable option for reconstructive surgery ?
A 15-year-old girl at my school some decades ago bent over and fell down dead from an aneurism.
My mother had a brain and it was in ten years ago. God save for that moment. She is 99.98%# healed
What is “laser-like” hair removal? Is it as effective as laser, in that it removes the hair permanently?
I have an abdominal aortic aneurysm, but I get a yearly CT scan to monitor it. Ehlers Danlos.
I have had great reservations about the work plastic surgeons do because I think God is a great creator. I’ll have to say though, I was totally amazed at the results of this surgery and can see how in this case this surgeon greatly helped this patient. It was a good thing!
Thanks for the excellent ecxplanation.
Youn Ulike this product? Do you have something like this in your clinic for clients?
Does that mean men can stop shaving their face lol?
If truly good no more embarrassing trips to those salons and it's more environmentally friendly for many people out there.
Motorcycle accident in Italy literally means she rented a moped and whiskey throttled herself into a wall
When I had my breast reduction I went down to an A cup because I was an E/F before and the only problem I have about surgery is that the surgeon did not tell me I would probably need it done again. Call me complained about it.
I apologize if I go off topic for a moment, but I would like to know... is the epilator laser and not pulsed light, exactly? Thank you
I’m early, wow
"looks like she has a maxi pad on her face" actually, I wasn't thinking that at all 😂
With the aneurysm comment, she sounded not smart for saying what about my nose. Lady that could unalive you, who cares about your nose.
OMFS or reconstructive plastic surgery; thoughts?
I may not be first, but never been so early lmao
Same here 😎
I have a curious question, I really hope you see this and answer. I’m a piercer the part where it is stated the wrong incision could disturb the blood supply and cause the tip of her nose to die. If she got a nostril piercing would that also have been a possibility?
LV to RV aneurysm 😅
Congenital defect supposedly (don't drink when pregnant kids).
Cardiologist doesn't think it needs surgery to correct
And, yes, suspected EDS but GP won't refer me because I already have a list of stuff that needs attending.
Also suspected FASD 😅
2:18
4:30 at home lazer hair removal
Does the light work on dark skin and gray facial (chin) hair?
I looked at the laser removal thing because he said cheap.... it's over $300
ok but can the New Ulike Air3 work on people with Hydrogenitus? (pardon the misspelling)
That woman was more concerned about her nose than about a brain aneurysm that could burst at any time and kill her nearly instantly.