so... the bends: i came up too fast after scuba diving once and let me tell you - going through the bends is no fun. i was sick for about 12 hours. i'd describe it as kind of a cross between a bad hangover and mild food poisoning or the flu. that said, if you want to talk about the REAL bends - heroin withdrawal is about the gnarliest thing the human body/mind can go through. you seriously want to die for about 5 days/nights straight before you start to feel any better. the entire time you convulse, have muscle cramps & spasms, go from hot to cold sweats, shiver, occasionally vomit & have diarrhea, have no appetite, are exhausted but can't sleep, & feel absolutely no joy no matter what. plus there's the initial fear you suffer before the physical sickness overtakes you. just knowing you're going into the withdrawal is terrifying. then once you've made it through the acute phase(about a week) you still go through a few week long depression before you begin feeling what i'd call "balanced happiness" again. And when you sleep, you suffer nightmares called "dope dreams" where you visualize yourself about to get high & right before you do you wake up panicking in your sweat soaked sheets. it's a horrible experience. it's such a hard thing for anyone who hasn't gone through it to understand(although i'd imagine going through chemotherapy is probably worse). I never understood why medical literature consistently refers to opiate withdrawal as "flu like symptoms". I've had the flu a few times, but it doesn't even compare. One doctor i spoke with said that the emotional feelings opiate addicts experience while going through detox is similar to that of losing an extremely close loved one(intense feelings of grief & mourning) - which i found to be accurate. ...don't do drugs kids.
Well.. upon initial read.. I wasn't expecting this to hit so close to home. I would agree, though. I almost feel as though anticipation, or fear, of sickness is more mentally debilitating than the sickness itself, easier said than balls deep in it.. especially if it's a conscious decision and you still have a bit of dope on you. I've never experienced a stronger temptation to ruin progress. I didn't realise "dope dreams" were common! They're really not dreams.. just added agony to torment any chance of a restful sleep all of 5-10min gets you. I know it's your brain trying to comfort itself, and the promise of relief feels so attainable while you're in it-I just never could get the needle into a vein. Right before I had the chance to see blood register I always woke up. During the worst, to make up for that I would do "dry runs"; injecting purified water to try and trick myself. I knew it was false hope but the iota of believability that it would ease any fraction of that torture was enough. Sad, right? People ask "why would you relapse with knowledge that, inevitably, you'll go through it again?" Well, sure your first time will never be as satisfying or euphoric as the first.. but it's still that familiar feeling. A feeling worth feeling again.. until that time does inevitably come. The fourth time finally helped me realise its worth was no longer valuable. Tell me something: have you experienced the near-fatal flaw of dosing buprenorphine/naloxone too early? Precipitated withdrawal? Fuck. It's like condensing two weeks worth of "normal strength" withdrawal into (once) about 3 agonizing days down to (once) about an hour.. I got too impatient the first time. The second taught me my final lesson on that balancing act. I still take subutex. Given its half-life and the horror story coming off of methadone was I'm afraid to stop. I wasted my twenties with that debauchery. I turn 31 this year. I know I can titrate, I did once. I went from 12mg now down to 4mg daily. There are other factors that play a part, but.. hell. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to drone. I somehow got here from the infamous Delta P crab video.. otherwise, interesting learn that the symptoms are somewhat similar!
@@Post.nut_Clarity oh man, you listed a whole lotta truths in that comment. I can relate to everything u said. The fear of coming off dope is so strong that it's practically just as challenging as going through the sickness. Its the fear that kept me on dope. I'd kicked before & knew how awful it was & even though I wanted to quit, I was too afraid. The dope dreams would usually stick with me for a couple weeks or so after kicking. It's incredible how vivid & lifelike they are. It's always right before u get that fix when u wake up. & when u do wake up its almost like u could feel that balloon/bag in your hand, I woke up smelling it, I could almost taste it - & then it's so torturous coming back to reality, waking up with that craving. I personally have never gone through suboxone precipitated withdrawal but ive seen ppl go thru it & it looks horrendous. Ive never seen someone kicking/spasming quite like that. I do prefer suboxone/subutex to methadone just because for me, methadone was so hard to come off of. But subs have their drawbacks too. If u take methadone your first morning without dope, you're usually fine within an hour but with subs u gotta wait almost a whole day without dope before u can even take it. then in my experience I wouldn't b able to sleep the first night on subs & wouldnt really start feeling better until day 2 of taking them. But for me, coming off the subs wasn't nearly as brutal as kicking dope or methadone. Not everyone will agree with me but, I was pretty much starting to feel healthy again after about day 4 without subs. Congratulations on your upcoming birthday. I'm not a tea-totaler who thinks if you're not 100% clean of all substances then u need to go to NA. But you & I both know there's nothing cool, fun, or worthwhile about heroin use.
@@the503creepout7 oh, damn. I was half-expecting no response, especially not so soon, haha. Yeah, methadone was awful. I somehow managed to sleep through the first 72hrs. I was actually somewhat ok after that. One thing I noticed, an area where the kick affected me, was in my voice. I can hold a note/tune well enough and whenever I sang something would induce this undulation, a vibrato of sorts. It felt weird, haha. I couldn't control it and it stuck with me long after the noticeable side effects had dwindled. With the first precipitated w/d something as simple as taking a sip of water that accidentally got into the airway and made me cough had be doubled over, hugging the toilet, puking, and dry-heaving so hard for so long blood finally starting coming up. The intensity was indescribable, man. I was in unfamiliar territory, too, in the middle of nowhere northern NM, deep in the mtns on a seasonal gig. Luckily I was off for a couple days after. Working in a busy kitchen is the absolute worst while you're sick. Doing anything does, really. The feeling of anything touching the skin you're in, that is already crawling.. it always made me laugh internally when I would hear someone say "____ makes my skin crawl".. they had noo idea, lol. It's the only mental state I've experienced where literally _thinking_ of anything other than the use or acquisition of dope actually made my brain hurt. I'm sure it's different for everyone, unfortunately I never gave the very first kick a chance. A week in a friend offered me suboxone and told me how to use it. At the point when it finally started kicking in it was enough to get me pretty toasted. I went from that to a methadone clinic. The thing I hate about sub wd is the slow onset.. it just takes forever, gradually wearing you down. It's not as intense, for me either, but it's still wd. To "hear" it only took you about four days makes me jealous, haha. I would agree. Life would've been better without the introduction to opiates/opioids.. the quality of it, anyway. Someone who was very important to me-very close, ironically who introduced me to heroin, might still be alive. A lot of what if's but the only absolute lies in abstinence of its use. I know sometimes it's unavoidable, medically, but recreationally.. which is where I got my start, sharing 10mg percocet and crown royal with an fwb who got her wisdom teeth removed.. again years later with strippers and oxyxontin.. I would trade it all in. And thanks! Luckily the celebration continues and I count my blessings.. I've already "technically" died 4 times being reckless with dosage. It always cheers me up to hear the story of someone who made it out :) It makes the end goal feel more attainable.
Definitely withdraw is like death. Worse then heroin or opiates in general is methadone withdrawal. That's intense sickness that's miserable for why linger then general opiates bc of its incredibly long half life. Let's just say that my 28 day rehab Detox was a failure and I'm still on methadone 15 years later
I couldn't help but comment this correction cause it bugged me for some reason - It's not air that forms as bubbles, it's the residual nitrogen. At higher pressures, it's harder for your body to dissolve the excess nitrogen so if you go back to lower pressures without letting it do it's thing, it will form these bubbles. And it's a real life threat if not treated asap.
@@enzerabowenzu5340 to treat it you have to go in a hyperbaric (high pressure) chamber for re-compression. It's extremely painful but it does cure it. As for the main comment, I completely agree. I don't understand how this man was so convinced that it was just pressure that caused the bends. Surely the medical professional drawing his blood would've informed him?
There's quite a few problems with this video. Bubbles forming in the blood *can* be a problem, but bubbles in the blood are typically filtered out in the lungs. In research studies in hyper/hypobaric conditions we induce blood gas bubbles quite often where I work. In multiple studies, we took subjects down to pressure to simulate a dive, then took them "up" under hypobaric conditions to simulate flying, where we then performed ultrasound videos of their hearts to observe the bubbles in their bloodstream. The bends typically is a problem when the NITROGEN comes out of solution in tissues around the body and can constrict blood flow or compress nerves. The nitrogen does not have to originate from the bloodstream because it is typically residing in all your tissues.
I don't see how this contradicts. The amount of nitrogen held in the tissues is directly related to pressure. What did you expect him to do, cut out some flesh?
The opposite happened though. This is decompression from the body subject to high pressure suddenly getting into low pressure. The bodies in the sub were in low pressure suddenly subjected to high pressure. Imagine a styrofoam/marshmallow squeeze of all its air.
This experiment is wrong. He should tap blood while breathing pressurized air like in a hyperbaric room. Freedivers don't get the bends as they don't breath pressurized gas.
Yes, this follows Henry's law... Increased pressure underwater increases the solubility of gases in the blood of scuba divers. When the divers comes back to the surface the pressure decreases and this leads to the release of dissolved gases and the formation of bubbles of nitrogen in the blood. This blocks the capillaries and creates a painful condition called bends.. The O2 gas in the cylinder for breathing is diluted with nitrogen gas.. Bcz concentrated or pure oxygen can lead to combustion..
I like the way you make science and educate with enthusiasm. 60psi(pounds per square inch) would be roughly the equivalent of 4atms(atmospheres), not necessary life threatening to ascend from but the actual border limit used for re-creational diving(4atms=132ft..rec dive limit 130ft). Remember decompression sickness has symptoms that your body eventually will deal with but becomes more deadly at deeper depth for longer times, especially on lighter gases(ie:helium).. but your experiment using the pressure pot/pressure cooker to me would more simulate gradual decompression as opposed to rapid or more severe explosive decompression. Nevertheless I like your experiment but I doubt it would be deadly as seen by the limited nitrogen bubbles in your blood.
Thinking about “the bends” has always given me the chills... I don’t even know where I first heard about it. Basically, if you dive (in water) below a certain depth, and rise up to the surface too fast. You get the bends and die..
If you're deep diving underwater the rule of thumb to avoid the bends is to never ascend faster than air bubbles. At least so I've heard from other divers.
Okay its been mentioned a few times in the comments but just in case.. So the bends is not at all what he demonstrated, in fact he didn't really show anything. Ill explain. When you dive, you're not breathing in pure oxygen, you're actually breathing in mainly nitrogen mixed with oxygen. Now, when Nitrogen is under high pressure, it compresses naturally. When you breathe in that compressed nitrogen, it goes into your blood stream, as expected. This is all fine and dandy but if you ascend too fast, then your body wont have time to dissolve that nitrogen all of that nitrogen in your blood will expand and cause bubbles of nitrogen to form around your joints and cause all sorts of other problems. The way to treat it is to go into a decompression chamber as fast as possible. A decompression chamber is a pressurizes chamber that you sit in. The pressure within the chamber will cause the nitrogen in your blood to compress back down to the size it was when you were diving and your body will dissolve it like normal. Its a nasty little condition and its disappointing that this channel didn't really do any research and showcased pretty much nothing. The guy who runs the account is a smart man no doubt but he should have done more research
I had a mild case of the bends, was put into a recompression chamber just to be completely safe.....interesting to see what my blood might have looked like
The nitrogen would be taken into solution with the blood by breathing the compressed gases at depth. Compressing fluid blood in a test tube would not matter without a way for the nitrogen to get into solution. The nitrogen would be taken into solution with the blood by breathing the compressed gases at depth. This could be done using a recompression chamber. The blood would need to be extracted once the test subject had reached the approprtest depth depth. The fluid could be retained at pressure in a paSs-through feature while the test subjects were returned to ambient pressure. The experiment could then be conducted by rapidly decreasing the internal pressure to ambient.
Amazing experiment, even though it's not quite theoretically replicating the bends. I do however imagine the reaction would have been even more noticeable if the blood wasn't coagulated.
Can you experiment the effects of a fan/space heater in the vacuum chamber or pressure chamber? See how the air and heat will move throughout the chambers.
I just would like to say that that was horrible form. Quick motions when drawing blood. especially with veins as great looking as his. No need to move the needle around like that.
Great stuff, if you have the time, could we see a repeat of the experiment with a before shot of the blood sample? Maybe the bubble was present before the depressurization or caused by the jiggle of the equipment?
My skepticism arises from this: the blood was not absorbing air during high pressure in that chamber, as a diver would while breathing compressed air. I don't see how new gases could have been dissolved into the blood to emerge when decompressed. That is, unless hemoglobin will absorb oxygen directly out of the air, but I find that unlikely.
watched a video about the saturation divers who technically exploded from rapid decompression. reminded me of your channel. thinking about when you release the vacuum in a chamber too fast and everything goes flying around. but on a giant scale with humans inside... 😬😬😵
Interesting experiment. My guess is that the bubbles at 60 psi (approx 131 feet underwater) would be worse for a diver in a rapid decompression scenario. I would thing breathing at that depth would result in a bit more nitrogen dissolving in the bloodstream (assuming a 80% nitrogen blend of compressed air is used).
Christian Kinzel fucks with the pumping of the blood. Hearts are made to pump liquid and not gas. Small bubbles can block small blood vessels to vital organs killing them off and big ones can stop the heart. Think of vapor lock in a car. Same idea
Imagine a whole lot of 'air' ending in places where blood should be, especially the brain. Think of Spongebob Squarepants in Sandy Cheeks upside down' glass bowl.
Hey, it was a very great video and it was really nice of you to suck out your blood for Science, TH-cam and of course Us. And also try to have a TH-cam live setup in the program and have it live on your channel.
The amount of bubbles that you showed I seriously doubt that that would have much effect as your bloodstream does absorb some amount of air all the time.
rapid decompression is one of the scariest fucking things chemistry and physics ever taught me, as soon as i learnt of it i could never look at diving the same way ever again
Well yes and no. At altitude you can cross Haldanes Line of 18,000 feet. This is the altitude where nitogen comes out of solution and could form bubbles. But the bubbles are microscopic and can't be seen by the naked eye. It becomes a significant risk at altitudes above 25,000 feet. And the higher you go from there the greater the risk and the greater the bubble size. But still, they're too small to see unaided. What was demonstrated was ebullation. Where the atmosheric pressure is less than the surface tension of the liquid, the gas ebullalates from the liquid in the form of bubbles. In this demo. You super saturated the blood with air and overcoming the surface tension and forcing the gas into the liquid. This is done by increasing the pressure in your mini hyperbaric chamber. When you released the pressure, the air that was forced in came out as gas and bubbles. You didn't see many bubbles because the surface tension of the fluid was still under the pressure of the atmosphere (14.7 psi). A better demo is to take a container of water in a hypobaric chamber and decompress it to 63,000 feet. This is called Armstrongs line. There fluids at 99 degrees (f) will ebullalates the trapped gasses held in place by the surface tension of water (47mm of pressure) is greater than atmospheric pressure (< 47mm of pressure). Same concept...but not truly nitrogen bubbles with you example but it make the point.
Huh, it'd be kinda neat to meet you! Unfortunately, I'd have to travel a huge distance, and I don't know if I could even earn enough money fast enough to make it.
I thought the primary dissolved gas was nitrogen... aaaand it's just inert gases in general. air is ~78% N (thanks @DS) though, so I guess that's why people think this
So I'm assuming the air under water pressure is the oxygen you are taking right?? Does that mean one takes more oxygen per inhale than they would when it outside? Can you take less puffs of air to control this or regardless it will form into a bubble ? And also, the bubbles form as you go from atmospheric pressure to less pressure?
Their would be more bubbles if you shook up the blood while doing the experiment because bubbles need to form when there are micro bubbles. My dad is a doctor
Why do the little air bubbles form? wheres the air from? - 3:00 my bAD, when it was pressurized the air was able to dissolve more into the blood more than at atmospheric pressure.
so... the bends: i came up too fast after scuba diving once and let me tell you - going through the bends is no fun. i was sick for about 12 hours. i'd describe it as kind of a cross between a bad hangover and mild food poisoning or the flu. that said, if you want to talk about the REAL bends - heroin withdrawal is about the gnarliest thing the human body/mind can go through. you seriously want to die for about 5 days/nights straight before you start to feel any better. the entire time you convulse, have muscle cramps & spasms, go from hot to cold sweats, shiver, occasionally vomit & have diarrhea, have no appetite, are exhausted but can't sleep, & feel absolutely no joy no matter what. plus there's the initial fear you suffer before the physical sickness overtakes you. just knowing you're going into the withdrawal is terrifying. then once you've made it through the acute phase(about a week) you still go through a few week long depression before you begin feeling what i'd call "balanced happiness" again. And when you sleep, you suffer nightmares called "dope dreams" where you visualize yourself about to get high & right before you do you wake up panicking in your sweat soaked sheets. it's a horrible experience. it's such a hard thing for anyone who hasn't gone through it to understand(although i'd imagine going through chemotherapy is probably worse). I never understood why medical literature consistently refers to opiate withdrawal as "flu like symptoms". I've had the flu a few times, but it doesn't even compare. One doctor i spoke with said that the emotional feelings opiate addicts experience while going through detox is similar to that of losing an extremely close loved one(intense feelings of grief & mourning) - which i found to be accurate.
...don't do drugs kids.
This is an amazing read. Thank you so much❤
Well.. upon initial read.. I wasn't expecting this to hit so close to home. I would agree, though. I almost feel as though anticipation, or fear, of sickness is more mentally debilitating than the sickness itself, easier said than balls deep in it.. especially if it's a conscious decision and you still have a bit of dope on you. I've never experienced a stronger temptation to ruin progress. I didn't realise "dope dreams" were common! They're really not dreams.. just added agony to torment any chance of a restful sleep all of 5-10min gets you. I know it's your brain trying to comfort itself, and the promise of relief feels so attainable while you're in it-I just never could get the needle into a vein. Right before I had the chance to see blood register I always woke up. During the worst, to make up for that I would do "dry runs"; injecting purified water to try and trick myself. I knew it was false hope but the iota of believability that it would ease any fraction of that torture was enough. Sad, right? People ask "why would you relapse with knowledge that, inevitably, you'll go through it again?" Well, sure your first time will never be as satisfying or euphoric as the first.. but it's still that familiar feeling. A feeling worth feeling again.. until that time does inevitably come. The fourth time finally helped me realise its worth was no longer valuable. Tell me something: have you experienced the near-fatal flaw of dosing buprenorphine/naloxone too early? Precipitated withdrawal? Fuck. It's like condensing two weeks worth of "normal strength" withdrawal into (once) about 3 agonizing days down to (once) about an hour.. I got too impatient the first time. The second taught me my final lesson on that balancing act. I still take subutex. Given its half-life and the horror story coming off of methadone was I'm afraid to stop. I wasted my twenties with that debauchery. I turn 31 this year. I know I can titrate, I did once. I went from 12mg now down to 4mg daily. There are other factors that play a part, but.. hell. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to drone. I somehow got here from the infamous Delta P crab video.. otherwise, interesting learn that the symptoms are somewhat similar!
@@Post.nut_Clarity oh man, you listed a whole lotta truths in that comment. I can relate to everything u said. The fear of coming off dope is so strong that it's practically just as challenging as going through the sickness. Its the fear that kept me on dope. I'd kicked before & knew how awful it was & even though I wanted to quit, I was too afraid. The dope dreams would usually stick with me for a couple weeks or so after kicking. It's incredible how vivid & lifelike they are. It's always right before u get that fix when u wake up. & when u do wake up its almost like u could feel that balloon/bag in your hand, I woke up smelling it, I could almost taste it - & then it's so torturous coming back to reality, waking up with that craving. I personally have never gone through suboxone precipitated withdrawal but ive seen ppl go thru it & it looks horrendous. Ive never seen someone kicking/spasming quite like that. I do prefer suboxone/subutex to methadone just because for me, methadone was so hard to come off of. But subs have their drawbacks too. If u take methadone your first morning without dope, you're usually fine within an hour but with subs u gotta wait almost a whole day without dope before u can even take it. then in my experience I wouldn't b able to sleep the first night on subs & wouldnt really start feeling better until day 2 of taking them. But for me, coming off the subs wasn't nearly as brutal as kicking dope or methadone. Not everyone will agree with me but, I was pretty much starting to feel healthy again after about day 4 without subs. Congratulations on your upcoming birthday. I'm not a tea-totaler who thinks if you're not 100% clean of all substances then u need to go to NA. But you & I both know there's nothing cool, fun, or worthwhile about heroin use.
@@the503creepout7 oh, damn. I was half-expecting no response, especially not so soon, haha. Yeah, methadone was awful. I somehow managed to sleep through the first 72hrs. I was actually somewhat ok after that. One thing I noticed, an area where the kick affected me, was in my voice. I can hold a note/tune well enough and whenever I sang something would induce this undulation, a vibrato of sorts. It felt weird, haha. I couldn't control it and it stuck with me long after the noticeable side effects had dwindled. With the first precipitated w/d something as simple as taking a sip of water that accidentally got into the airway and made me cough had be doubled over, hugging the toilet, puking, and dry-heaving so hard for so long blood finally starting coming up. The intensity was indescribable, man. I was in unfamiliar territory, too, in the middle of nowhere northern NM, deep in the mtns on a seasonal gig. Luckily I was off for a couple days after. Working in a busy kitchen is the absolute worst while you're sick. Doing anything does, really. The feeling of anything touching the skin you're in, that is already crawling.. it always made me laugh internally when I would hear someone say "____ makes my skin crawl".. they had noo idea, lol. It's the only mental state I've experienced where literally _thinking_ of anything other than the use or acquisition of dope actually made my brain hurt. I'm sure it's different for everyone, unfortunately I never gave the very first kick a chance. A week in a friend offered me suboxone and told me how to use it. At the point when it finally started kicking in it was enough to get me pretty toasted. I went from that to a methadone clinic. The thing I hate about sub wd is the slow onset.. it just takes forever, gradually wearing you down. It's not as intense, for me either, but it's still wd. To "hear" it only took you about four days makes me jealous, haha. I would agree. Life would've been better without the introduction to opiates/opioids.. the quality of it, anyway. Someone who was very important to me-very close, ironically who introduced me to heroin, might still be alive. A lot of what if's but the only absolute lies in abstinence of its use. I know sometimes it's unavoidable, medically, but recreationally.. which is where I got my start, sharing 10mg percocet and crown royal with an fwb who got her wisdom teeth removed.. again years later with strippers and oxyxontin.. I would trade it all in.
And thanks! Luckily the celebration continues and I count my blessings.. I've already "technically" died 4 times being reckless with dosage. It always cheers me up to hear the story of someone who made it out :) It makes the end goal feel more attainable.
Definitely withdraw is like death. Worse then heroin or opiates in general is methadone withdrawal. That's intense sickness that's miserable for why linger then general opiates bc of its incredibly long half life. Let's just say that my 28 day rehab Detox was a failure and I'm still on methadone 15 years later
I couldn't help but comment this correction cause it bugged me for some reason - It's not air that forms as bubbles, it's the residual nitrogen. At higher pressures, it's harder for your body to dissolve the excess nitrogen so if you go back to lower pressures without letting it do it's thing, it will form these bubbles. And it's a real life threat if not treated asap.
Vitali Levin Yeah this guy has a complete misunderstanding of what the bends are. I’m glad someone else besides me recognized this was all wrong.
How is it treated?
@@enzerabowenzu5340its easier to prevent it then to treat it
@@enzerabowenzu5340 to treat it you have to go in a hyperbaric (high pressure) chamber for re-compression. It's extremely painful but it does cure it. As for the main comment, I completely agree. I don't understand how this man was so convinced that it was just pressure that caused the bends. Surely the medical professional drawing his blood would've informed him?
Millie Heber it’s possible he asked while waving his hands around like that constantly and so they gave up?
Not only is The Bends a serious medical condition it’s also a great Radiohead album
And song
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
They could probley dive deeper with a iron lung 👀
Thats literally how i found this video
Isn't that something my Chemical Romance
Everytime I watch something about The Bends I can't get the Byford incident out my head and wish I could
It’s actually nitrogen.
I'm surprised I had to scroll down 7 comments before seeing a Radiohead reference
There's quite a few problems with this video. Bubbles forming in the blood *can* be a problem, but bubbles in the blood are typically filtered out in the lungs. In research studies in hyper/hypobaric conditions we induce blood gas bubbles quite often where I work. In multiple studies, we took subjects down to pressure to simulate a dive, then took them "up" under hypobaric conditions to simulate flying, where we then performed ultrasound videos of their hearts to observe the bubbles in their bloodstream. The bends typically is a problem when the NITROGEN comes out of solution in tissues around the body and can constrict blood flow or compress nerves. The nitrogen does not have to originate from the bloodstream because it is typically residing in all your tissues.
So so wordy.
@@jaybartgis5148 ok? Words make sentences, which are necessary for discussing the point this person is making. What's yours?/
@@frickfrack7075 words make sentences, huh?
Ye, this video is far from accurate.
I don't see how this contradicts. The amount of nitrogen held in the tissues is directly related to pressure. What did you expect him to do, cut out some flesh?
Here due to the sub accident recently
The opposite happened though. This is decompression from the body subject to high pressure suddenly getting into low pressure. The bodies in the sub were in low pressure suddenly subjected to high pressure. Imagine a styrofoam/marshmallow squeeze of all its air.
@@DibIrken ... so you're telling me to watch this in reverse?
no matter what i search, this man is always there
Responding to comments at 270K subs. Not many channels do this.
+Tazer but my subscribers are special!
2 years later 2mil good content dedication
@@TheActionLab Oof-
There he goes again
He couldn't be more wrong its nitrogen that gives you the bends
Air is mostly nitrogen
@@dzfz2100 yes but nitrogen gas is still the reason why ppl get the bends
@@jaredsan9994 hm, yes good point. Looking back I’m not really sure why I commented before 😅
@@dzfz2100 honesty lmao
This experiment is wrong. He should tap blood while breathing pressurized air like in a hyperbaric room. Freedivers don't get the bends as they don't breath pressurized gas.
This is under principal of Henry's Law :)
Boyle's Gas Laws 🤗
Yes, this follows Henry's law...
Increased pressure underwater increases the solubility of gases in the blood of scuba divers.
When the divers comes back to the surface the pressure decreases and this leads to the release of dissolved gases and the formation of bubbles of nitrogen in the blood.
This blocks the capillaries and creates a painful condition called bends..
The O2 gas in the cylinder for breathing is diluted with nitrogen gas..
Bcz concentrated or pure oxygen can lead to combustion..
I like the way you make science and educate with enthusiasm. 60psi(pounds per square inch) would be roughly the equivalent of 4atms(atmospheres), not necessary life threatening to ascend from but the actual border limit used for re-creational diving(4atms=132ft..rec dive limit 130ft). Remember decompression sickness has symptoms that your body eventually will deal with but becomes more deadly at deeper depth for longer times, especially on lighter gases(ie:helium).. but your experiment using the pressure pot/pressure cooker to me would more simulate gradual decompression as opposed to rapid or more severe explosive decompression. Nevertheless I like your experiment but I doubt it would be deadly as seen by the limited nitrogen bubbles in your blood.
Starts at 2.00 if anyone wants to avoid the “hands”😊- it was good but if you google the bends you will learn more about nitrogen.
every time he says blood
0:05
0:06
0:41
0:46
0:49
0:59
1:25
1:41
1:42
1:53
2:59
3:08
"thank?" me later
For science!
thank?
Damn I had alot free time 3 years ago
I typed in "ice cream recipes" and this video was suggested 😂😂😂
Thinking about “the bends” has always given me the chills... I don’t even know where I first heard about it. Basically, if you dive (in water) below a certain depth, and rise up to the surface too fast. You get the bends and die..
You don’t die from the bends- it’s painful and all but rarely fatal.
is this the same thing as when you open a soda bottle?
Thank u sir for giving me such a beautiful example of bend it is very helpful for me.
Thank u than u 😊. I'm from India
If you're deep diving underwater the rule of thumb to avoid the bends is to never ascend faster than air bubbles.
At least so I've heard from other divers.
I think it'll depend on depth and would probably time vs depth or something, bubbles rise too quick
Okay its been mentioned a few times in the comments but just in case.. So the bends is not at all what he demonstrated, in fact he didn't really show anything. Ill explain. When you dive, you're not breathing in pure oxygen, you're actually breathing in mainly nitrogen mixed with oxygen. Now, when Nitrogen is under high pressure, it compresses naturally. When you breathe in that compressed nitrogen, it goes into your blood stream, as expected. This is all fine and dandy but if you ascend too fast, then your body wont have time to dissolve that nitrogen all of that nitrogen in your blood will expand and cause bubbles of nitrogen to form around your joints and cause all sorts of other problems. The way to treat it is to go into a decompression chamber as fast as possible. A decompression chamber is a pressurizes chamber that you sit in. The pressure within the chamber will cause the nitrogen in your blood to compress back down to the size it was when you were diving and your body will dissolve it like normal. Its a nasty little condition and its disappointing that this channel didn't really do any research and showcased pretty much nothing. The guy who runs the account is a smart man no doubt but he should have done more research
I had a mild case of the bends, was put into a recompression chamber just to be completely safe.....interesting to see what my blood might have looked like
Let's all pretend we saw it so he doesn't feel bad
I am amazed by what this channel has come to, You need more subscribers!!!!!
my blood has got the beds, oh no.
I just got interested in diving. It's great to see this effect outside of the body.
Thank you.
Thanks for the arrow helping me to see the one object you had in the shot
The bends: an almost always fatal diving condition.
Also The Bends: a kick-butt Doomtree song.
Also the Bends: The sophomore album of the musical definition of depresso espresso.
blood? oxygen? reminds me of a certain game… IRON LUNG
The nitrogen would be taken into solution with the blood by breathing the compressed gases at depth. Compressing fluid blood in a test tube would not matter without a way for the nitrogen to get into solution. The nitrogen would be taken into solution with the blood by breathing the compressed gases at depth. This could be done using a recompression chamber. The blood would need to be extracted once the test subject had reached the approprtest depth depth. The fluid could be retained at pressure in a paSs-through feature while the test subjects were returned to ambient pressure. The experiment could then be conducted by rapidly decreasing the internal pressure to ambient.
Amazing experiment, even though it's not quite theoretically replicating the bends. I do however imagine the reaction would have been even more noticeable if the blood wasn't coagulated.
Exactly what I was thinking lol that's coagged blood lmao
“Have they all got the bends?”
Wait you didnt even add additional oxygen under pressure, just imagine how bad it gets with a diver
"Officer I can explain. I was trying to replicate the bends with a vile of blood in this pressure cooker."
😂😂😂
Can you experiment the effects of a fan/space heater in the vacuum chamber or pressure chamber? See how the air and heat will move throughout the chambers.
Could you some how show cyanide affecting blood? like in a test tube, not the body obviously.
is he allowed to swallow bleach?
(this is called a dark joke in my opinion)
Zockerland99 ayy
Cody lab already drank a non lethal dose
Super Puggle it binds to the hemoglobin on a molecular level and asphyxiates the person so I doubt you will see it bubbling or stuff like that
read more cheers Bossman.
0:10 this mans hands 😂😂 why!?
I just would like to say that that was horrible form. Quick motions when drawing blood. especially with veins as great looking as his. No need to move the needle around like that.
Byford dolphin 😮
Aaron Kyro also does science? Right on
As a vampire i found that video disturbing...
Great stuff, if you have the time, could we see a repeat of the experiment with a before shot of the blood sample? Maybe the bubble was present before the depressurization or caused by the jiggle of the equipment?
wow l loved it and l am going to CVX live and l will see you there! how fun!
+Momma O awesome!
Yes, l am so excited to see you there :)
Blood has got the bends, oooh yeah, i dont have any real friends
My skepticism arises from this: the blood was not absorbing air during high pressure in that chamber, as a diver would while breathing compressed air. I don't see how new gases could have been dissolved into the blood to emerge when decompressed. That is, unless hemoglobin will absorb oxygen directly out of the air, but I find that unlikely.
I have always wanted to check it myself. Great :) But i wish your videos are longer, you've got great ideas, keep working :)
Genuinely seems like a nice guy, good videos too.
watched a video about the saturation divers who technically exploded from rapid decompression. reminded me of your channel. thinking about when you release the vacuum in a chamber too fast and everything goes flying around. but on a giant scale with humans inside... 😬😬😵
I was kinda hoping it was gonna froth up like a saturation divers would
My baby's got the bends
Too much science my lil brain can’t handle it
uses his hands more than a teenager to excite himself
The ocean is both horrifying and alluring.
I absolutely love your channel keep making awesome videos!
It's only a matter of time before he puts a person in one of these things.....can't wait to see it
Add more blood
If you pause the video at about 2:51 you can see that even the level of the blood was lower in the tube than it was before it was pressurized.
I was expecting the blood to explode
Interesting experiment. My guess is that the bubbles at 60 psi (approx 131 feet underwater) would be worse for a diver in a rapid decompression scenario. I would thing breathing at that depth would result in a bit more nitrogen dissolving in the bloodstream (assuming a 80% nitrogen blend of compressed air is used).
My baby's got the bends
Oh, no
We don't have any real friends
No, no, no
Wallywutsizface just lying in the bar with my drip feed on
Was looking for lives of that song and saw this video
Just lying in the bar with the juke beat on talking to my girlfriend waiting for something to happen
You got
The bends
*silly circus music fades away*
3000 IQ references here
I can hear this comment
Henry’s law! Crazy stuff
Why does air in your blood kill you?
Christian Kinzel fucks with the pumping of the blood. Hearts are made to pump liquid and not gas. Small bubbles can block small blood vessels to vital organs killing them off and big ones can stop the heart. Think of vapor lock in a car. Same idea
air attracts airplanes and they don't fit in your blood vessels
Imagine a whole lot of 'air' ending in places where blood should be, especially the brain. Think of Spongebob Squarepants in Sandy Cheeks upside down' glass bowl.
"air attracts airplanes and they don't fit in your blood vessels" lmao You win the internet for today
Mandrake Fernflower No, it doesn't "cause clots", rather the bubbles themselves behave like clots, blocking off flow.
Hey, it was a very great video and it was really nice of you to suck out your blood for Science, TH-cam and of course Us. And also try to have a TH-cam live setup in the program and have it live on your channel.
really cool to watch!
I love this channel it's so informative !
wrong info, great video.
What a visualization
Would if divers have to do an emergency ascent and don’t have time to stop on the way up to decompress ? Like if they ran out of oxygen
47 meters down movie brought me here
The amount of bubbles that you showed I seriously doubt that that would have much effect as your bloodstream does absorb some amount of air all the time.
The right hand flicking I cannot take.
I like this channel. I also like the fact homie can talk with his teeth closed 😂
Don't position gross in front of us please. Thank you. Never that. It isnt our necessary.
I always love your videos
Ayyy, you just got urself a new subscriber!
Cool video
I love your videos. keep up the good work 😀😀
60 psi was not so high
Its only 40 meters deep
rapid decompression is one of the scariest fucking things chemistry and physics ever taught me, as soon as i learnt of it i could never look at diving the same way ever again
Cool, soda for blood crazy
Well yes and no. At altitude you can cross Haldanes Line of 18,000 feet. This is the altitude where nitogen comes out of solution and could form bubbles. But the bubbles are microscopic and can't be seen by the naked eye. It becomes a significant risk at altitudes above 25,000 feet. And the higher you go from there the greater the risk and the greater the bubble size. But still, they're too small to see unaided.
What was demonstrated was ebullation. Where the atmosheric pressure is less than the surface tension of the liquid, the gas ebullalates from the liquid in the form of bubbles.
In this demo. You super saturated the blood with air and overcoming the surface tension and forcing the gas into the liquid. This is done by increasing the pressure in your mini hyperbaric chamber. When you released the pressure, the air that was forced in came out as gas and bubbles.
You didn't see many bubbles because the surface tension of the fluid was still under the pressure of the atmosphere (14.7 psi).
A better demo is to take a container of water in a hypobaric chamber and decompress it to 63,000 feet. This is called Armstrongs line. There fluids at 99 degrees (f) will ebullalates the trapped gasses held in place by the surface tension of water (47mm of pressure) is greater than atmospheric pressure (< 47mm of pressure).
Same concept...but not truly nitrogen bubbles with you example but it make the point.
Huh, it'd be kinda neat to meet you! Unfortunately, I'd have to travel a huge distance, and I don't know if I could even earn enough money fast enough to make it.
So that’s how Julia dies. (Like if you get the reference)
Emfresh8 I was just about to mention that, can't wait for Little Hope
Byford Dolphin flashbacks incoming...
that aint nothing but some inkjet ink.
I thought the primary dissolved gas was nitrogen... aaaand it's just inert gases in general. air is ~78% N (thanks @DS) though, so I guess that's why people think this
78% Nitrogen
@@DS-nq5qf Yep, that was supposed to read 21% O, which is kinda unclear in the first place. Edited. Nice catch!
Byford doplhin accident is almost the same but its a whole human, not a drop of blood.
Is it the hand thats talking?
where do we go from here?
Just open a two liter bottle of coke and you'll see the same thing.
So I'm assuming the air under water pressure is the oxygen you are taking right?? Does that mean one takes more oxygen per inhale than they would when it outside? Can you take less puffs of air to control this or regardless it will form into a bubble ?
And also, the bubbles form as you go from atmospheric pressure to less pressure?
What is the point with the hand
are you a full time youtuber
Their would be more bubbles if you shook up the blood while doing the experiment because bubbles need to form when there are micro bubbles. My dad is a doctor
wow posted 8 minutes ago
Bro amazing! Thanks man👍👍💕💕💕🙌
Why do the little air bubbles form? wheres the air from? - 3:00 my bAD, when it was pressurized the air was able to dissolve more into the blood more than at atmospheric pressure.
wasnt as many as I thought was going to happen but you can certainly see it and definitely dont want ANY of those in my blood haha.
Byford Dolphin rabbit hole