I am the first survivor in Australia of an MHA attack where there was no known family history. Funnily enough, it was related to an appendectomy! My temp went up very rapidly in the operation, and there was discussion of abandoning the operation, but they realised that the time to finish was roughly equal to the time to abandon (as they were already in). Apparently, I improved a bit in the recovery room, and then when I returned to the ward, my temp went way up again, hitting 41.2 degrees Celsius. The operation was in one of the largest private hospitals in my city, and they determined that they couldn't manage it, so they transferred me to a Tertiary Hospital and admitted me to their ICU unit. I ended up spending about 8/9 days in the ward after ICU. The thing that confused me the most was all clothing apart from underpants was removed, and ice bags were put all around me; I felt very cold and didn't understand why they put cold stuff around me. My parents were called and met at the ICU, and they were naturally very concerned. The problem I had in ICU was the anal thermometer (apparently the most accurate), but it made me feel like I needed to go to the toilet all the time (a pan!). The suspected MHA and a few months later, I was admitted to the Royal Canberra Hospital (then only one of these testing places in the world at that time), where I had the biopsy which confirmed the MHA b y Professor Michael Denborough (one of the early researchers of MHA and much of his early research was rejected). Later my Dad went and had the test and he was the genetic carrier. Because testing is still very invasive, we haven't had our kids tested yet (now young adults), so for medical needs they are treated as having the condition. I had around 5 or 6 operations prior to my attack.
My mother found out while giving birth to my brother, she had an attack, and was later tested and found to have MH. I believe my grandfather was the original genetic carrier. Luckily 3/4 grandkids were negative, including both my brother and I. But yes, we all waited until our 20's for the test as it was still a muscle biopsy. Is that still the same way to test now?
I had a flexible sigmoidoscopy which is a very minor procedure to band hemorrhoids it was done while I was awake and not sedated. The flexible sigmoidoscopy had the effect of making it feel like I needed to go to the toilet for a number 2, despite the fact that I didn't need to go to the toilet. The doctors and nurses who conducted the flexible sigmoidoscopy said at the time that is normal during a flexible sigmoidoscopy.
My oldest step son almost died from this when he was 8 while getting his tonsils out. His temp was over 105 when they checked it. Thank god there was a just graduated nurse anesthetists in the operating room. They thankfully had the meds that he needed that saved his life.
100 градусов по Цельсию - это температура кипения воды. Человеческая кровь в основном состоит из воды. В пределах безопасного диапазона температура может достигать до +42 °С. Вы хотите сказать, что у Вашего племянника кипела кровь? Она бы свернулась уже …….
Sorry but no. That nurse gave me major cringe vibes. Maybe bc it’s a simulation or something, but the way she was standing there and smiling and staying in the middle of things just seemed so off/wrong.
I'm thankful for this video! I am a MH gene carrier. Even a simple dental procedure can cause an MH episode. Not having a previous episode does not guarantee there won't be a future episode with volatile anesthesia. Pretty scary knowing there is 1 antidote (dantrolene). Wish there was more awareness for MH
😂😂 I was like, the PACU nurse just hang up, how did she just get there. Then the resident said bay 10 instead of bay 5 while calling the attending 😂. Anyways, good scenario
Where is this hospital? I’m noticing the stretcher. I’ve never seen a stretcher with a separate head part like that in the US also the yellow bag doesn’t seem to be English although they’re all talking in English so I’m a little bit confused, but they also have a lot of accent, so I’m very confused as to where they actually are. . Very realistic training. Are they actually breathing for him or can he breathe through that mask cause I would think if they don’t breathe for him when they have the mask on his face, he suffocate.
Where is this? I have NEVER seen nurses and docs arrive and act so fast in my life, but I wonder if when I was being put in a coma if it was like this. Hope this guy is okay.
On my husband’s side, in the 60s, his cousin died from this, but mh had not been diagnosed yet. In the late 70s, another cousin , having a tonsillectomy , went into an MH episode. Thank God , the anesthesiologist had just returned from a conference on MH, recognized the signs , and he gave Dantroline and saved him. He had to learn to walk and talk again, but eventually recovered. The dr. Vance Robedoux, wanted every member tested for MH. Both my husband and both of my sons have this allergy. Many other family members were diagnosed. Scary if you don’t know about it. Once you do know , make sure everyone on your Surgical team is aware of this allergy
Do U.S. medical staff not wear facemasks around surgery patients? It would be horrible to contract a respiratory infection while recovering from surgery. Coughing with an abdominal incision is very painful.
Several mistakes within the first 3 minutes. Nurse called and said he did fine in the back without any tachycardia and later says he only received 1L of LR and actually received half that. The senior resident then says IV Dilaudid x2. It’s good they start Dantrolene quickly.
I had an operation to remove my gallbladder l was going home same day. I did come around operation they told me l had Malignant Hyperthermia they worked on me for 6 hours l was given medication and transferred to ICU. It took weeks for me to recover my body was swollen and couldn’t walk. I was going for a biopsy but never had it. So in the dark what happened.
I have MH, it only showed up after my 5th operation. An 8 hour op on my leg. Woke up in ICU 3 days later. Apparently the antidote is very expensive. Our 3 hospitals share it up here in Toowoomba. You can also get a form of MH from getting overheated eg. Marathon, sports carnival or just general sun stroke. I also had Rhabdomyolysis twice with no connection. First video I’ve seen on this.
You are a medical miracle with Rhabdo 2times and MH and lived to tell about it. Seriously, there are people that walk this earth that survive diagnoses that would take others out. As an Oncology nurse for 25 years, I saw about 10 patients over that span of time that would have 4 or 5 DIFFERENT primary cancers and beat them when ANY ONE of their cancers in others would have taken them out. I always said that while those individuals had faulty killer cells, they have something different genetically that was superior to average humans. Your story is incredible!
@kathrynwilson7386 •I had Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome 2 X second time got no recall (Was a GP error ,one Typo and a brain injury later me also in a coma ICU have zero recall woke up on another planet apparently they are very similar.The illness we just don't want has made me really scared of all medication .My friend had Serotonin Syndrome they wanted to do a brain biopsy on her ?We did discuss swearing when emerging from a coma with a brain injury to start with I had no speech no feeling in any limb (3 X status )Temp 104.But my brain is some sort of scrambled eggs I was in for ages apparently rigid ?Weird these things .
My family has this condition it is hereditary. Only found out when our cousin had her tonsils out and temp was very high. She was packed in ice to cool her down. This was over 35 years ago
It was my step son and it did hit 105 but not for a few ministers before they figured out what was going on and they gave him the meds to bring it down!
First this is extremely rare and odds are you will go thru a career and never see it. But if it does happen you need to recognize and treat asap. Love how the resident called the attending while he is wandering in and out but he isn’t on the phone. A resident never calls the attending unless they are chief they always call a more senior resident first. Thats how it works. Then “he’s had 25 of dilaudid”. Really. That’s a huge dose but they don’t say over what period of time. In last 24 hrs? In last hour. You can’t give 25mg iv dilaidid. It’s more like 1/2/4 or even 10 in opiate tolerant and well documented situations but not as a starting dose. 25 is ridiculous and my bs meter went off. Unless they meant .25 but that makes no sense for an adult male in pacu. Also I noticed they were concerned about heart rate and bp but no question or concern about the co2 levels. No check for rigidity. No check for what was used in OR (triggering agent) They never talked about the specific drugs to be administered from the cart. It was all fake.
I know I may be late here. And I’m not in any way in the medical field… and I know this is a simulation. But how long can someone be tacky before action needs to be taken? I feel for the amount of phone calling and having them in place with a high heart rate seems- sorta off… But again. I’m not a medical person in any way and would rather ask to be informed then be wrong
The heart rate (136bpm) here isn't really high enough to really hurt him. It is a *symptom* of the MH. AND, the medical staff ARE treating cause of the tachycardia, which in this case is the MH. With tachycardia, the interventions depend on whether the patient is "stable" or "unstable" and what is causing the tachycardia. If someone has sinus tachycardia (which is a normal rhythm-only fast) but their blood pressure is normal, they aren't dizzy or fainting, no nausea or vomiting, no chest pain, and their breathing is normal, then it is not an emergency. But if it is the opposite, then it needs immediate treatment. If it is an abnormal heart rhythm, depending on what rhythm it is, it may be an emergency that needs urgent intervention. This is a simplified explanation. There are many types of tachycardia, many causes, and many treatments/interventions. Hope this helps.
@@cerorchid This is an awesome reply. Thank you very much. I didn’t consider the aspect of it being a symptom that can be controlled by managing MH. I was thinking that it was sort of its own emergency case alongside MH but…. That make sense with it being brought about by MH thereby making MH control == Heart rate control
I have MH. 2 family members passed from this. Thank goodness all of my Dr's. Take it seriously. Even my dentists. I have every faith that I am being taken good care of. And yes, you can get way overheated ans suffer a type of mh. Likely hood increases with age.
I had Hypothermia and Frost bite when I overdosed the person I was with pushed me out of his Car in my Parents front yard in February it was Very Cold Woke up in Hospital they were Running Warm Saline through my Femoral Arteries
I hit the 140's if I get out of bed at night. I was woken up another night by my service dog, HR was 196. I hit high often enough, but am on meds now that it doesn't get quite as high as it used to
Did yall ever screen this patient for a pheochromocytoma??? MEN 2A Syndrome? Remember to check for pheos pre+ post op! Afib? Thyroid? Etc ? Need Endocrinologist+ Cardiologist Consults 😊
Knew it was a sim because a patient would NOT be in street clothes coming from surgery. He'd be unclothed, but with blankets, and the terminal would show flat lined because they hadn't hooked him up to the machine. He'd be in Surgical ICU had he these issues coming out of surgery.
It had joke all over it. Who was this “RT”?…. She looked liked she was bored…. And PS: To give someone O2, the tube needs to be connected. At least make it look somewhat life like.
Someone nominate this patient for an oscar
I was thinking that too ... i thought he is really ill😅
Thx😂 i spit out my sip of coffee ☕😂
Так это была игра?
@@NGz1575yea😂
@@NGz1575 training
I am the first survivor in Australia of an MHA attack where there was no known family history. Funnily enough, it was related to an appendectomy! My temp went up very rapidly in the operation, and there was discussion of abandoning the operation, but they realised that the time to finish was roughly equal to the time to abandon (as they were already in).
Apparently, I improved a bit in the recovery room, and then when I returned to the ward, my temp went way up again, hitting 41.2 degrees Celsius.
The operation was in one of the largest private hospitals in my city, and they determined that they couldn't manage it, so they transferred me to a Tertiary Hospital and admitted me to their ICU unit. I ended up spending about 8/9 days in the ward after ICU.
The thing that confused me the most was all clothing apart from underpants was removed, and ice bags were put all around me; I felt very cold and didn't understand why they put cold stuff around me.
My parents were called and met at the ICU, and they were naturally very concerned. The problem I had in ICU was the anal thermometer (apparently the most accurate), but it made me feel like I needed to go to the toilet all the time (a pan!).
The suspected MHA and a few months later, I was admitted to the Royal Canberra Hospital (then only one of these testing places in the world at that time), where I had the biopsy which confirmed the MHA b y Professor Michael Denborough (one of the early researchers of MHA and much of his early research was rejected). Later my Dad went and had the test and he was the genetic carrier.
Because testing is still very invasive, we haven't had our kids tested yet (now young adults), so for medical needs they are treated as having the condition.
I had around 5 or 6 operations prior to my attack.
Thank you for sharing your experience.
My mother found out while giving birth to my brother, she had an attack, and was later tested and found to have MH. I believe my grandfather was the original genetic carrier. Luckily 3/4 grandkids were negative, including both my brother and I. But yes, we all waited until our 20's for the test as it was still a muscle biopsy. Is that still the same way to test now?
They had ice bags on you to bring your temp down.
Coiuh 🙏🏾🧸
I had a flexible sigmoidoscopy which is a very minor procedure to band hemorrhoids it was done while I was awake and not sedated. The flexible sigmoidoscopy had the effect of making it feel like I needed to go to the toilet for a number 2, despite the fact that I didn't need to go to the toilet. The doctors and nurses who conducted the flexible sigmoidoscopy said at the time that is normal during a flexible sigmoidoscopy.
Very well done. I had to look closely to realize this was a simulation.
you can tell right away when he's wheeled into the bay and the monitor already shows stats like there are leads hooked up lol
So no I’ve been watching half an hour and it’s not real ? 🤦♀️
The 0.2 second pacu resident didn't tip you off?
My oldest step son almost died from this when he was 8 while getting his tonsils out. His temp was over 105 when they checked it. Thank god there was a just graduated nurse anesthetists in the operating room. They thankfully had the meds that he needed that saved his life.
If he just had surgery with general anesthesia he wouldn’t be wearing a shirt.
100 градусов по Цельсию - это температура кипения воды. Человеческая кровь в основном состоит из воды. В пределах безопасного диапазона температура может достигать до +42 °С. Вы хотите сказать, что у Вашего племянника кипела кровь? Она бы свернулась уже …….
@@Цветик-х9ъ I believe it goes without saying which temperature scale she was referring to.
Nice practice run! It's rare when this happens, but it does happen.
The nurse that noticed things weren't right and called for help. Well trained to look out for problems.
Sorry but no. That nurse gave me major cringe vibes. Maybe bc it’s a simulation or something, but the way she was standing there and smiling and staying in the middle of things just seemed so off/wrong.
Excellent simulations! The one give away is the patient has on a T shirt and not a hospital gown. Great Team work!
Thanks for the video! Gotta get geeked out on medical videos before bed ⚕️🛌
Lol I’m doing that now😂
I worked as a Simulated Patient for many years in a variety of teaching situations. Best job ever.
I'm thankful for this video! I am a MH gene carrier. Even a simple dental procedure can cause an MH episode. Not having a previous episode does not guarantee there won't be a future episode with volatile anesthesia.
Pretty scary knowing there is 1 antidote (dantrolene).
Wish there was more awareness for MH
I didn't even recognise that it was a sim until the PACU residnent arrived immediately.
LMFAO😂😂😂
😂😂 I was like, the PACU nurse just hang up, how did she just get there.
Then the resident said bay 10 instead of bay 5 while calling the attending 😂.
Anyways, good scenario
Yeah I have that app, it’s called Simpl patient monitor
Okay his temperature is elevated and is CO2 is 45 and tachycardic what more do you need to know.
How did the monitor show EtCO2, he was not intubated?
Family history of MH is usually a help to know
@@robinwright8791if there was known family history they ought to have used MHA protective anesthetic
The nasal cannula they used reads the end tidal
That was intense. Amazing how they work together. Good on the 1st nurse for jumping right on that. Female bobbed hair.
Hahahaha
Where is this hospital? I’m noticing the stretcher. I’ve never seen a stretcher with a separate head part like that in the US also the yellow bag doesn’t seem to be English although they’re all talking in English so I’m a little bit confused, but they also have a lot of accent, so I’m very confused as to where they actually are. . Very realistic training. Are they actually breathing for him or can he breathe through that mask cause I would think if they don’t breathe for him when they have the mask on his face, he suffocate.
Cool how he was on the Telemetry monitor before they even hooked him up.
😂 his vitals are very strong
It’s a simulation….the telemetry will already be on.
It’s a simulation….the telemetry will already be on.
Nurses save lives. Period. 🏥
nirses assists in saving lives.
The doctors are great 🎉 but that one nurse has this smile on her face in a serious situation and waited a little long before calling
The smiling gave away that this was fake!
🎉nurse Elizabeth has a fab smile and very professional 🎉
She does have an amazing smile.
MAN OH MAN!!! This is what you call TEAMWORK!!!!
No. This is what you call acting 😂
Where is this? I have NEVER seen nurses and docs arrive and act so fast in my life, but I wonder if when I was being put in a coma if it was like this. Hope this guy is okay.
It's a simulation
@@anniemarie1965 dang that’s some good acting 😂😂😂😵💫😵💫😵💫
True ... Drs & Nurses don't arrive this fast? Not in this day in time.
Not sure but not in America! Not these days....sadly!
Yes I realize it’s a simulation but so very realistic. Would be nice if medicine worked this fast!!
Great review and good work during this simulated training.
............ very well done! great team work!!!!!!!!
Don't we all wish that this is how things are handled in hospitals. Unfortunately, it isn't.
This hospital must be slow. Every nurse is just standing there
On my husband’s side, in the 60s, his cousin died from this, but mh had not been diagnosed yet. In the late 70s, another cousin , having a tonsillectomy , went into an MH episode. Thank God , the anesthesiologist had just returned from a conference on MH, recognized the signs , and he gave Dantroline and saved him. He had to learn to walk and talk again, but eventually recovered. The dr. Vance Robedoux, wanted every member tested for MH. Both my husband and both of my sons have this allergy. Many other family members were diagnosed. Scary if you don’t know about it. Once you do know , make sure everyone on your Surgical team is aware of this allergy
Do U.S. medical staff not wear facemasks around surgery patients?
It would be horrible to contract a respiratory infection while recovering from surgery. Coughing with an abdominal incision is very painful.
Very well done video! Great simulation!
This isn’t real?
@@Maishleychannel name
Can we give them scores on acting??
OR staff had a fear of Malignant Hypothermia so glad I never saw it.
The person who was supposedly "bagging" the patient failed to connect the ambu tubing to oxygen!
Had cousin go in for tonsillectomy. They got her ready then couldn't get her mouth open. She made it but close call.
Excellent simulation!!!
Several mistakes within the first 3 minutes. Nurse called and said he did fine in the back without any tachycardia and later says he only received 1L of LR and actually received half that. The senior resident then says IV Dilaudid x2. It’s good they start Dantrolene quickly.
I had an operation to remove my gallbladder l was going home same day. I did come around operation they told me l had Malignant Hyperthermia they worked on me for 6 hours l was given medication and transferred to ICU. It took weeks for me to recover my body was swollen and couldn’t walk. I was going for a biopsy but never had it. So in the dark what happened.
I have MH, it only showed up after my 5th operation. An 8 hour op on my leg. Woke up in ICU 3 days later. Apparently the antidote is very expensive. Our 3 hospitals share it up here in Toowoomba. You can also get a form of MH from getting overheated eg. Marathon, sports carnival or just general sun stroke. I also had Rhabdomyolysis twice with no connection. First video I’ve seen on this.
You are a medical miracle with Rhabdo 2times and MH and lived to tell about it. Seriously, there are people that walk this earth that survive diagnoses that would take others out. As an Oncology nurse for 25 years, I saw about 10 patients over that span of time that would have 4 or 5 DIFFERENT primary cancers and beat them when ANY ONE of their cancers in others would have taken them out. I always said that while those individuals had faulty killer cells, they have something different genetically that was superior to average humans.
Your story is incredible!
@kathrynwilson7386 •I had Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome 2 X second time got no recall (Was a GP error ,one Typo and a brain injury later me also in a coma ICU have zero recall woke up on another planet apparently they are very similar.The illness we just don't want has made me really scared of all medication .My friend had Serotonin Syndrome they wanted to do a brain biopsy on her ?We did discuss swearing when emerging from a coma with a brain injury to start with I had no speech no feeling in any limb (3 X status )Temp 104.But my brain is some sort of scrambled eggs I was in for ages apparently rigid ?Weird these things .
I hope you are feeling a lot better now
Hello Roseoakes happy Sunday
I remember back in the late 80’s, we IV pushed Verapamil to address tachycardia/SVT.
No gown for surgery?
Great teamwork 👏 but no one has on gloves.
Dr’s are hero’s but the nurses they are the MVP’s❤️❤️
Hello dear happy Sunday
Very interesting video
Thank you
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Excellent video, very helpful. Thank you for that!
(Post partum resident RN)
What is a resident RN?
I am an ODP student. I have just written a case study on MH. MH requires much more work than anaphylaxis 😮
She stated to others in the room the patient was septic. From what???
My family has this condition it is hereditary. Only found out when our cousin had her tonsils out and temp was very high. She was packed in ice to cool her down. This was over 35 years ago
ВРАЧАМ СПАСИБО ЗА ПОМОЩЬ ❤.ХОТЯ Я НЕ ЗНАЮ ВАШЕГО ЯЗЫКА ,Я ВАМ СОБОЛЕЗНУЮ .Я С РОССИИ И ЖИВУ В ИСПАНИИ. ДЕРЖИТЕСЬ .
Adjustable sonar scan for different emergency time.
My heart would race just listening to them if I was laying there😅
It was my step son and it did hit 105 but not for a few ministers before they figured out what was going on and they gave him the meds to bring it down!
First this is extremely rare and odds are you will go thru a career and never see it. But if it does happen you need to recognize and treat asap. Love how the resident called the attending while he is wandering in and out but he isn’t on the phone. A resident never calls the attending unless they are chief they always call a more senior resident first. Thats how it works. Then “he’s had 25 of dilaudid”. Really. That’s a huge dose but they don’t say over what period of time. In last 24 hrs? In last hour. You can’t give 25mg iv dilaidid. It’s more like 1/2/4 or even 10 in opiate tolerant and well documented situations but not as a starting dose. 25 is ridiculous and my bs meter went off. Unless they meant .25 but that makes no sense for an adult male in pacu. Also I noticed they were concerned about heart rate and bp but no question or concern about the co2 levels. No check for rigidity. No check for what was used in OR (triggering agent) They never talked about the specific drugs to be administered from the cart. It was all fake.
I just had spinal fusion in Nov. 4 and this happened to me
Excellent!
The patient is wearing a t-shirt?
Simulation
Why is thyroid problems important?
Something called a "thyroid storm" or "thyrotoxic crisis" may mimic malignant hyperthermia.
@@jonny12384 ah thankyou ☺
I know I may be late here. And I’m not in any way in the medical field… and I know this is a simulation. But how long can someone be tacky before action needs to be taken? I feel for the amount of phone calling and having them in place with a high heart rate seems- sorta off…
But again. I’m not a medical person in any way and would rather ask to be informed then be wrong
Agreed 👍
The heart rate (136bpm) here isn't really high enough to really hurt him. It is a *symptom* of the MH. AND, the medical staff ARE treating cause of the tachycardia, which in this case is the MH.
With tachycardia, the interventions depend on whether the patient is "stable" or "unstable" and what is causing the tachycardia. If someone has sinus tachycardia (which is a normal rhythm-only fast) but their blood pressure is normal, they aren't dizzy or fainting, no nausea or vomiting, no chest pain, and their breathing is normal, then it is not an emergency. But if it is the opposite, then it needs immediate treatment. If it is an abnormal heart rhythm, depending on what rhythm it is, it may be an emergency that needs urgent intervention.
This is a simplified explanation. There are many types of tachycardia, many causes, and many treatments/interventions. Hope this helps.
@@cerorchid This is an awesome reply. Thank you very much.
I didn’t consider the aspect of it being a symptom that can be controlled by managing MH. I was thinking that it was sort of its own emergency case alongside MH but…. That make sense with it being brought about by MH thereby making MH control == Heart rate control
I have MH. 2 family members passed from this. Thank goodness all of my Dr's. Take it seriously. Even my dentists. I have every faith that I am being taken good care of. And yes, you can get way overheated ans suffer a type of mh. Likely hood increases with age.
I never had this happened to me. But I saw the video on this.
This is something one inherits genetically isn't it? Probably quite rare or they would run a test before anaesthesia 1st I guess.
Wait, why would they act this out?
Training session that’s why.
Um... for educational purposes??? 🙄
This lingered on me while working ER.. I have not seen it but had to study protocol just in case…🤞
Is this real or being acted out?
Simulation
Hello Tinacollins happy Sunday
I had Hypothermia and Frost bite when I overdosed the person I was with pushed me out of his Car in my Parents front yard in February it was Very Cold Woke up in Hospital they were Running Warm Saline through my Femoral Arteries
I'm glad you survived, and I pray you can get treatment for your addiction. 🙏 ❤ And, remember, those people ARE not your friends!!😡
@@cerorchid that was a Very Very Long time ago I am no longer in Addiction
@@michhall0103 That's awesome. ❤ I'm currently an addict with prescription pills. Would you be willing to tell me what you did to recover?
Hello Michael happy Sunday
Hello Michael happy Sunday
Not good news if you are being sedated and put on a vent.
Muy actuado, no?
He is in a normal t shirt.
doktor what you like and how some family can win god keep
My BP was a little low after a breast biopsy done. They me some medicine 💉💊
138 isn't a little tachy. That's a lot of tacky
No it isn’t.
I came out of a simple surgery, I was 180
@@nancypatterson374 that's a serious problem
I hit the 140's if I get out of bed at night. I was woken up another night by my service dog, HR was 196. I hit high often enough, but am on meds now that it doesn't get quite as high as it used to
Over 150 is SVT.
Did yall ever screen this patient for a pheochromocytoma??? MEN 2A Syndrome? Remember to check for pheos pre+ post op!
Afib? Thyroid? Etc ?
Need Endocrinologist+ Cardiologist Consults 😊
This must be training
Not one person wearing gloves
Simulation. But they should wear gloves to Simulate real life.
@@cerorchidyes it is simulation but they have scrubs on etc. and no gloves this is laughable
Отравили меня неизвесиным ядом
No intubation--he's breathing on his own. Don't interrupt it. Assaulting him after surgery is unacceptable.
What are you talking about? Assault?
The nurse tried to hold her laughter several times. I guess she just couldn’t face her coworkers acting this real😂
lol I really believed this was happening at first 😂
Hello
The patient got through without laughing
Wait this wasn’t real…
This gentleman could die but the staff are acting very slowly? Px
Because this PACU NOT ER
It is a simulation
She asks the patient who is virtually non-verbal if he has any medical history!!!
I noticed the dictionary looked s little to smokey okus he came out if surgery, he is in his cloths easy to see it was a sim
Why is the patient wearing street clothes?
Can we get CMEs for this? Lol
To come out surgery dressed 😅
Knew it was a sim because a patient would NOT be in street clothes coming from surgery. He'd be unclothed, but with blankets, and the terminal would show flat lined because they hadn't hooked him up to the machine. He'd be in Surgical ICU had he these issues coming out of surgery.
Straight out of the OR in a t-shirt. Nice.😂🤡
When they bagged him with the nasal canula still in I knew this was fake.
If only drs were that fAst
Exactly 💯. Drs don't appear this fast is this day in time
I think this is staged…
Hello harnell hello dear happy Sunday
i found out the bad way. i woke up in icu 3 days after surgery. Now anesthesia docs and i are besties...
i work in DOAOS too.
I was excited because I thought this was real… I saw it was a simulation and was disappointed. I like seeing real stuff I was pranked lol
Little boy. Get. Better. Soon. You be. Out of. The hospital. Soon. Now
This is a simulation!!!!!
اللهم حلمي التخدير 💜
This looked too real
Except the nurse with the bob haircut didn’t seem stress over the issue or move quickly.
really the gloves !!!
The doctors should be updating the wife, not the nurse
It had joke all over it. Who was this “RT”?…. She looked liked she was bored…. And PS: To give someone O2, the tube needs to be connected. At least make it look somewhat life like.
It's Malignant Hyperthermia. I have Malignant Hyperthermia
😮😊
Wow