Which ancient medical procedure was the creepiest? ☠👀 Don't forget to smash that 'LIKE' button & SUBSCRIBE NOW so you don't miss Friday's new react video! ➡ th-cam.com/users/DoctorER
One of the coolest things about the history of medicine is how it shows that even with less knowledge, some of the civilisations that came before us were remarkably close in terms of how they understood the way the body worked - for example, while the liver can't grow back from nothing, some argue that the legend of Prometheus regrowing his liver every day after an eagle ate it as part of his punishment for giving fire to humans demonstrates that the Greeks understood how the liver was able to recover from physical damage.
@@seanA416 blood drying up in the bladder forming stone like stuff u have to push our drinking water constantly reduces the risk a lot of having this inconvenience eating chocolate nuts and to much read meat can cause it to
I have third degree burns over 25 percent of my body. At the hospital they actually attached my hand to my upper leg and left it for two months so the skin of my leg could be transplanted on my hand, replacing heavily burned tissue. Even though I have small nerve issues, the operation was succesful.
@@kylaia3155 They can vary in severity, but yes, generally you'll know. But for most people, drinking plenty of water and reducing salt intake is enough to prevent them.
@@DoctorER could you react to some vieos on the youtube channel sam o nella academy mainly his videos on pre industrial sugeries (pretty much kinda what this was) and his video on improbable tales of survival like what happened to phineas gage also his video on the failed murder attempts on michael malloy might be cool but idk if it couts as medical stuff its just him surviving a bunch of crazy things that should be able to easily kill just about anyone regardless of how healthy they are
You have got to react to House, specifically the episode where this dude swallows. Toothpick. Over 10 years later and it’s the one that I still remember along with the Tick episode, man talk about wild.
My mom had hemochromatosis! She was one of the most frequent blood donors at our local donation center. If she skipped a donation her joints became extremely sore.
@@Dude-mp4 FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥
Renaissance Era plague doctor: "You look a bit pale my friend. Have you been doing your weekly bleeding? You know that is part of a healthy lifestyle. Come, take a seat. I'll be right back with the leeches."
When I suffered a hemorrhagic stroke, doctors left my skull open for months before sealing it with a plastic cap that is literally stapled to the rest of the bone. So trefinations are still being used at a 100%.
I almost got trepanned recently. I was assaulted in a hate crime for what I can only imagine was for dressing androgynous and had a subdural hematoma, subarachnoid hemorrhage, post traumatic hygroma on the frontal lobe, hemorrhagic contusions on the right temporal lobe, and a bunch of other complications. I almost immediately started to have seizures and was put on keppra and after a consult with a surgeon we decided not to drill any burrholes but try to manage the symptoms and wait it out. 6 months later I'm still here but my cognition is pretty crap compared to before, got an appointment in a couple days to check and see if any more atrophy has occured and stuff but I can totally see why this procedure was necessary and continues to be. Thank you medical personnel I'd be a goner if it wasn't for you
I know it's tough, and I'm sorry you ended up going through all this... BUT as someone who has suffered some pretty drastic nerve damage, I want to assure you that it CAN get better, and most likely WILL... Neuroplasticity is a thing. It took me a few years for my right arm/hand to stop randomly throwing and dropping stuff, but while the road to healing is slow in regards to the neurological, we can and DO reroute that circuitry. The brain and central nervous system can AND WILL adapt, if you work with it... I got a lot of mileage out of my TENS unit, which I still very much love and cherish... AND that might not be a thing for you... SO talk it out with your Doc's. Know that you're not alone. There are people out here "pulling for you". Here's hoping for the best for you! ...AND in spite of it, I'm STILL riding motorcycles. There really IS hope... maybe a long slow road and a lot of work, but HOPE no less. ;o)
@@gnarthdarkanen7464 thanks alot my man, I'm keeping positive and have alot of hope for a near full recovery. Brain injury survivors are pretty resilient I've found
@Miss undertaker145⚰️ thanks! I'm doing well today, just got a ton of migraines, seizures, emotional and personality changes, and awful memory. I'm still here so I'm all good in my mind lol
@@casperh5452 You're certainly ALWAYS welcome! A LOT of people are more resilient than they think or get credit for. The main thing is that you BELIEVE in yourself. I already believe in you! ;o)
@@GerSanRiv That's incorrect medical information. You do realize that it takes YEARS and multiple doctors before someone who wants to transition is able to even get an appointment with the correct specialist. Along with it being super expensive, it costs upwards of around $30,000. Educate yourself before spewing medical misinformation.
@@itssteph263 what medical misinformation do you claim I'm spouting? You said you wonder what medical procedures will be considered unethical or horrific. I just replied I believe mutilating kids to be horrific and unethical. I made no claims about those surgeries nor did I misinform you. I expressed my opinion.
@ET Hardcorgamer oh no I know medicine is a lot better not but it still isn't fun. Shunt in my brain, medically induced coma, tracheotomy, stomach feeder, etc. Not fun but I'm so grateful we have that advanced medicine or I wouldn't be here right now writing this comment. God bless doctors, nurses, etc, and what they do!!!
I’ve heard of these disturbing ancient medical facts before. Very interesting topic for Halloween seasons….with a long needle jammed to the pupil or the eye socket to pierce the brain and literally make the mental illness even worst. Pierce brains which can cause schizophrenia can make them look like zombies, they have to wear (bandages to cover their eyes) before they get infected.
No.3 reminds me of the scene in Star Trek IV (The one with the whales) where Doctor McCoy chastises the 1986 surgeon over drilling holes in Chekov's head after falling from the deck of the USS Enterprise (CVN-65, rather than NCC-1701!) onto the dock below, referring to his tools as "Butcher knives", given McCoy's more advanced medical knowledge of almost 300 years ahead, it's kind of like how this video's looking back on procedures we consider barbaric today...
Hence why there were probably so many people involved in the artwork. Back then, there was probably a whole profession that was nothing more than being a doctor's assistant who holds down the patient so they don't flail from the pain.
To this day, I am horrified to imagine students looking at me with curiosity, hungry for bread and circuses, while Walter Freeman approaches me with the most good-natured look with his "pin", chewing gum in his mouth. He promises me in a raspy voice that very soon there will be nothing left of my essence but a walking body of an equivalent zombie, I will feel only sharp pain, and then as if I had never existed, moreover, he tries to please me with the fact that the operation will be quite inexpensive and the decision was made for me by people who I was not profitable...
How about Roman eye surgery? They removed that aggregation that accumulates behind the lense, restoring a part of the vision. It's pretty nasty to imagine seeing someone operating your eye!
okay so i’ve had an anterior temporal lobectomy, and my favorite thing about telling people about it is the visceral “YOU WERE LOBOTOMIZED?!” reaction i get from the layman cause of the lobotomy’s infamy
Sorry to break it to you doc, but rhinoplasty goes even further back then that. It can be found in the sushruta samhita, an Indian medical text from somewhere around 1000 and 800 BC. But of course, modern eurocentric systems of education would say it was an Italian that came up with it
I think Walter Freeman is one of the worst people in medical history. Oddly enough, his children are known for defending their father's legacy. The only actual benefit was that hospital staff had less problems managing patients that had been lobotomised. Whether or not these poor people still suffered from their illness but weren't able to communicate it, we will never know. Freeman was well known for turning surgery into a circus performance and posing for pictures mid-surgery. No wonder people died because of his actions. Even his original surgeon partner, Dr Watts, decided his actions were so horrible that he couldn't work with Freeman anymore. If there is a hell, he really belongs there.
@@PhoenixMoth The inventor of the original procedure, António Egas Moniz, actually got shot multiple times by a schizophrenic patient. He was wheelchair-bound since. I think that's karma's way of showing that he shouldn't have gotten that Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Incredible as it seems, there are also Ancient Egyptian skulls that show clear evidence of having survived crude trepaning procedures, at least long enough for the healing process to begin. As for the lobotomy practice, one of it's unfortunate victims was none other than young daughter of the Kennedy clan, (yes, THE Kennedys!) I think the poor girl's name was Rose? Who was subjected to it for the treatment of "depression and mood swings!"
@@Seek1878 nicotine in itself doesn't really help with weight loss, even if it reduces hunger. But most people who quit smoking compensate with food their previous nicotine addiction, thereby gaining weight.
@@pierrevilley6675 I mentioned weight gain, not weight loss. She never smoked to lose weight. She just gained a ton when she stopped which is a known side effect of stopping. Please pay attention. And she didn't eat more, she was wary of that but it happened regardless.
A form of lobotomy is used today to treat highly resistant grand mal seizures. The corpus callosum, the bridge between the left and right hemispheres of the brain, is surgically cut to localize the seizures, leaving the patient at least halfway able to function for the duration.
My body produces to much red blood cells. My doctor told me that if it becomes severe, he will remove some of my blood to reduce my RBC count healthy range. I have had reconstructive surgery on my face, to rebuild the right half of my nose. It involved, grafting cartilage from behind my ear and skin from my cheek. The graft looked like raw meat at first but my doctor told me that it was normal and would look better when it healed. It looks great now. When I tell people that I've had that surgery, they tell me that they didn't notice it until I told them
I've heard that a much more elegant form of the lobotomy is used for stubborn cases of ocd. From what I gathered it's much more carefully done and involves making very minute cuts in parts with connections not involved with personality and causing as little damage as possible. This procedure is rarely used and is reserved as an extreme last resort.
Deep brain stimulation is gaining a lot of momentum now, where a neurosurgeon inserts a pacemaker type device that uses electrical stimulation. It's used for a variety of things, including untreatable depression and Parkinsons disease. Otherwise a doctor might have to perform a hemispherotomy to remove parts that are causing uncontrollable Grand Mal seizures. But lobotomy is gone and not coming back. After the damage it caused to families and survivors, its never going to be practiced again.
Which ancient medical procedure was the creepiest? ☠👀 Don't forget to smash that 'LIKE' button & SUBSCRIBE NOW so you don't miss Friday's new react video! ➡ th-cam.com/users/DoctorER
One of the next things you should react to is injuries in the venom movies
Love ur content
❤️❤️❤️❤️👩⚕️👳😍🥰😘😊👍
I have a question Dr ER is it possible to have a seizure when getting punched and what causes a seizure
idea react to car crash
Спасибо, что я родилась в 21 веке
Я тоже рад
Я тоже рад;)
не за что
Да, но исламизация возвращает нас обратно в средневековье...
@@БаншиГастинг-е9юопять «религиозный Гитлер»?
Я так называю людей который не любят определенную религию, как Гитлер записывал народы в недолюдей.
Ever since Geometry Dash 2.2 I've been getting lobotomy videos recommended to me nonstop
WATER ON THE HILL!!
@@RobertWithAsuit WIND NEAR THE MOUNTAIN!!
FIRE IN THE HOLE!!!@@RobertWithAsuit
ROCK ON THE GROUND 🗣🪨🪨
AIR DETECTED!
One of the coolest things about the history of medicine is how it shows that even with less knowledge, some of the civilisations that came before us were remarkably close in terms of how they understood the way the body worked - for example, while the liver can't grow back from nothing, some argue that the legend of Prometheus regrowing his liver every day after an eagle ate it as part of his punishment for giving fire to humans demonstrates that the Greeks understood how the liver was able to recover from physical damage.
I have no doubt they did.
Meouth
Could just be a coincidence
That last one is terrifying
Yes!! So crazy!
@@DoctorER the modern "tools" used for bladder stones freaked me out!!!! What causes bladder stones?
@@seanA416 blood drying up in the bladder forming stone like stuff u have to push our drinking water constantly reduces the risk a lot of having this inconvenience eating chocolate nuts and to much read meat can cause it to
@@benjaminrowley so stay hydrated, not too much red meat, and no chocolate nuts? I can do that. Thank you
@@seanA416 Don't stay thirsty my friends.
The fact that this shows how bad medical care was back then I am now grateful for us in the 2000,s
I have third degree burns over 25 percent of my body.
At the hospital they actually attached my hand to my upper leg and left it for two months so the skin of my leg could be transplanted on my hand, replacing heavily burned tissue.
Even though I have small nerve issues, the operation was succesful.
Сочувствую
Geometry dash 2.2 reference
Yes sir
so funny kid 🤓🤓🤓
@@Tiels_132Just like you ❤❤❤
Fire in the hole
Lobotomy dash
As someone who's had kidney stones before, I can see why ancient people would undergo something with a 50% mortality rate
I've never had one before but I'm really scared to lol I guess you'll definitely know when it happens.
@@kylaia3155 They can vary in severity, but yes, generally you'll know. But for most people, drinking plenty of water and reducing salt intake is enough to prevent them.
For spooky month, can you do a episode on blood? Blood types and what makes them different and other blood facts?
Yes, he should definitely react to the Web series, Spooky Month created by Sir Pelo
Группа крови на рукаве
Seriously love this guys channel. Very informative and entertaining. :)
Awesomely entertaining and informative video as always 👍
Thank you!
@@DoctorER could you react to some vieos on the youtube channel sam o nella academy mainly his videos on pre industrial sugeries (pretty much kinda what this was) and his video on improbable tales of survival like what happened to phineas gage also his video on the failed murder attempts on michael malloy might be cool but idk if it couts as medical stuff its just him surviving a bunch of crazy things that should be able to easily kill just about anyone regardless of how healthy they are
You have got to react to House, specifically the episode where this dude swallows. Toothpick. Over 10 years later and it’s the one that I still remember along with the Tick episode, man talk about wild.
I seen your comment on Houghston Jones so I had to check you out. Good video
Lobotomy back then: insert a metal pipe into yo brain
Lobotomy now: FIRE IN THE HOLE
My mom had hemochromatosis! She was one of the most frequent blood donors at our local donation center. If she skipped a donation her joints became extremely sore.
1:41 FIRE IN THE HOLE
WATER ON THE HILL
FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥
@@Dude-mp4 FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥
@@Dude-mp4 FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥FIRE IN THE HOLE🗣🔥
@@grille1941 ROCK ON THE GROUND!!
DoctorER your videos are awesome!
Renaissance Era plague doctor: "You look a bit pale my friend. Have you been doing your weekly bleeding? You know that is part of a healthy lifestyle. Come, take a seat. I'll be right back with the leeches."
Also *pokes open sores with a stick*
When I suffered a hemorrhagic stroke, doctors left my skull open for months before sealing it with a plastic cap that is literally stapled to the rest of the bone. So trefinations are still being used at a 100%.
А где в коментах шутки про лоботомию ?..
People in 2023: wow thats disturbing
People in 2024: ...
Огонь в Дыруууу
I almost got trepanned recently. I was assaulted in a hate crime for what I can only imagine was for dressing androgynous and had a subdural hematoma, subarachnoid hemorrhage, post traumatic hygroma on the frontal lobe, hemorrhagic contusions on the right temporal lobe, and a bunch of other complications. I almost immediately started to have seizures and was put on keppra and after a consult with a surgeon we decided not to drill any burrholes but try to manage the symptoms and wait it out. 6 months later I'm still here but my cognition is pretty crap compared to before, got an appointment in a couple days to check and see if any more atrophy has occured and stuff but I can totally see why this procedure was necessary and continues to be. Thank you medical personnel I'd be a goner if it wasn't for you
I know it's tough, and I'm sorry you ended up going through all this... BUT as someone who has suffered some pretty drastic nerve damage, I want to assure you that it CAN get better, and most likely WILL... Neuroplasticity is a thing. It took me a few years for my right arm/hand to stop randomly throwing and dropping stuff, but while the road to healing is slow in regards to the neurological, we can and DO reroute that circuitry. The brain and central nervous system can AND WILL adapt, if you work with it...
I got a lot of mileage out of my TENS unit, which I still very much love and cherish... AND that might not be a thing for you... SO talk it out with your Doc's. Know that you're not alone. There are people out here "pulling for you". Here's hoping for the best for you!
...AND in spite of it, I'm STILL riding motorcycles. There really IS hope... maybe a long slow road and a lot of work, but HOPE no less. ;o)
@@gnarthdarkanen7464 thanks alot my man, I'm keeping positive and have alot of hope for a near full recovery. Brain injury survivors are pretty resilient I've found
@Miss undertaker145⚰️ thanks! I'm doing well today, just got a ton of migraines, seizures, emotional and personality changes, and awful memory. I'm still here so I'm all good in my mind lol
@@casperh5452 You're certainly ALWAYS welcome! A LOT of people are more resilient than they think or get credit for. The main thing is that you BELIEVE in yourself. I already believe in you! ;o)
@@gnarthdarkanen7464 🖤🖤🖤
As a mental health patient. Lobotomies are truly terrifying.
That last one made me cringe. Great video as always!
Good timing, I found out today that I won't need to have the modern equivalent of #1 done after all!
I wonder what current medical procedures will be considered as unethical or horrific later on
The billing process, for a start!!!
Transing kids.
@@GerSanRiv That's incorrect medical information. You do realize that it takes YEARS and multiple doctors before someone who wants to transition is able to even get an appointment with the correct specialist. Along with it being super expensive, it costs upwards of around $30,000. Educate yourself before spewing medical misinformation.
@@itssteph263 what medical misinformation do you claim I'm spouting? You said you wonder what medical procedures will be considered unethical or horrific. I just replied I believe mutilating kids to be horrific and unethical. I made no claims about those surgeries nor did I misinform you. I expressed my opinion.
@@GerSanRiv The misinformation that childern are being forced to transition, which again doesn't happen, which is why it is medical misinformation.
Fire in the hole?
🔥🔽🕳
FIRE IN THE HOLE 🙂🟢
😃
🙂🟢
Water on the hi😀😀😱😱😱😱ll
rock on the ground
I’m so glad i didn’t live in those times i would have been scared out of my mind 😂
I'm still scared of modern medical procedures!
I had a camera shoved up my nose and down my throat!
@ET Hardcorgamer oh no I know medicine is a lot better not but it still isn't fun. Shunt in my brain, medically induced coma, tracheotomy, stomach feeder, etc. Not fun but I'm so grateful we have that advanced medicine or I wouldn't be here right now writing this comment.
God bless doctors, nurses, etc, and what they do!!!
so true.
But I'm pretty sure in several decades people will say the same about our actual medecine
@@mangantasy289 true
FIRE IN DA HOLEEEE 🔥 🕳
yes.
Fire in the hole*
Хм
¿?
Wtf
Third and I love your videos keep up doctor and stay healthy
Thanks! What what medical procedure do you think was the creepiest?
@@DoctorER the creepiest was the eye
Wow
''Sounds maybe, kind of, sort of FIRE IN THE HOLE-''
🙂🟢
I’ve heard of these disturbing ancient medical facts before. Very interesting topic for Halloween seasons….with a long needle jammed to the pupil or the eye socket to pierce the brain and literally make the mental illness even worst.
Pierce brains which can cause schizophrenia can make them look like zombies, they have to wear (bandages to cover their eyes) before they get infected.
FIRE IN THE HOLE??
When and how?
I wanted to see this video. Thank you.
that scream in the starting ,my bass headphones took me to a ride over the seven seas and continents and beyond....
Yes looking forward to this!
No.3 reminds me of the scene in Star Trek IV (The one with the whales) where Doctor McCoy chastises the 1986 surgeon over drilling holes in Chekov's head after falling from the deck of the USS Enterprise (CVN-65, rather than NCC-1701!) onto the dock below, referring to his tools as "Butcher knives", given McCoy's more advanced medical knowledge of almost 300 years ahead, it's kind of like how this video's looking back on procedures we consider barbaric today...
MAN PERDICTED GD LOBOTOMY??
I love youre informatical Videos💯♥️
no wonder most people were genuinely afraid of doctors
Lobotomy dash
In 2022:" Thank God that lobotomies are no longer a thing."
In 2024:
Lol
FIRE IN THE HOLE!
Lol
Lol
The last one was terrifying. Thank God for modern medicine! Imagine going through those with no anaesthesia!😳
Hence why there were probably so many people involved in the artwork. Back then, there was probably a whole profession that was nothing more than being a doctor's assistant who holds down the patient so they don't flail from the pain.
To this day, I am horrified to imagine students looking at me with curiosity, hungry for bread and circuses, while Walter Freeman approaches me with the most good-natured look with his "pin", chewing gum in his mouth. He promises me in a raspy voice that very soon there will be nothing left of my essence but a walking body of an equivalent zombie, I will feel only sharp pain, and then as if I had never existed, moreover, he tries to please me with the fact that the operation will be quite inexpensive and the decision was made for me by people who I was not profitable...
Сейчас, пожалуй, самая лучшее время медицины. Господи спасибо
0:37 what is the name of the channel at the moment of the hospital
1:41 fire in the hole reference
Real
Real fr
Interesting.
I'm still curious on your take on Michael Moore's documentary "Sicko".
I can see why some people avoid going to the doctor with these Ancient Medical Procedures.
You might like the show Ratched. They actually go over the lobotomy procedure within the first two episodes.
Samuel Pepys, a politician from the 17th century, did have a bladder stone surgery at the age of 25 and survived!
He lived until the age of 70
Me as a BS Psychology student, we learned about Lobotomy. It's creepy af. It gave me chills just hearing it. Im glad i wasn't born at that time.
Fire in the hoooleeee!!!!!!!!!
😂💀
why not water on the hill?
@@RobertWithAsuit YOU MEAN WHY NOT ROCK ON THE GROUND!?!?!7
plant on the grass
@@Dude-mp4 air detected
I got chills when he said may or may not still be used
That last one made me subconsciously close my legs REAL fast 😂
2:34 lobotomies were also used to “cure” homosexuality
1 greatest thing is he explains of everything so he can help us ❤
How about Roman eye surgery?
They removed that aggregation that accumulates behind the lense, restoring a part of the vision. It's pretty nasty to imagine seeing someone operating your eye!
So that's why it's called Lithotomy Position! Interesting.
Yikes! That one at the end I thought would be more like the scene in Deadwood, but this sounded way worse...
okay so i’ve had an anterior temporal lobectomy, and my favorite thing about telling people about it is the visceral “YOU WERE LOBOTOMIZED?!” reaction i get from the layman cause of the lobotomy’s infamy
OK the jumpscare at the start got me, holy cow!
Sorry to break it to you doc, but rhinoplasty goes even further back then that. It can be found in the sushruta samhita, an Indian medical text from somewhere around 1000 and 800 BC.
But of course, modern eurocentric systems of education would say it was an Italian that came up with it
Good to know!
Three kidney stone surgery in a month. They went through the plumbing all three times. Luckily I was under anesthesia
dude it was creepy oh yea from last video i think you should do hitman II
1:39 FIREEEE IIIIN DEEE HOOOOLLEEE 🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥💯💯💯💯
Will you make a video about medical procedures that were used in past but now they are banned?
Hope you react to all the saw traps and the brain scene in saw 3
More Saw coming soon!
Вообще про операцию с носом- она использовалась в Персии когда царям или принцам делали тоже самое только с целью сделать нос похожий на клюв орла.
I think Walter Freeman is one of the worst people in medical history. Oddly enough, his children are known for defending their father's legacy. The only actual benefit was that hospital staff had less problems managing patients that had been lobotomised. Whether or not these poor people still suffered from their illness but weren't able to communicate it, we will never know. Freeman was well known for turning surgery into a circus performance and posing for pictures mid-surgery. No wonder people died because of his actions. Even his original surgeon partner, Dr Watts, decided his actions were so horrible that he couldn't work with Freeman anymore. If there is a hell, he really belongs there.
Surprised no one murder him.
@@PhoenixMoth The inventor of the original procedure, António Egas Moniz, actually got shot multiple times by a schizophrenic patient. He was wheelchair-bound since. I think that's karma's way of showing that he shouldn't have gotten that Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
@@oobie3049 oh. Oh wow.
Лоботомию запретили в 80 х годах
OMG, THAT JUMPSCARE
lobotomy dash
Oof lobotomy always makes me remember the end of bioshock infinite burial at sea where you have to experience one in first person. Rough
Incredible as it seems, there are also Ancient Egyptian skulls that show clear evidence of having survived crude trepaning procedures, at least long enough for the healing process to begin. As for the lobotomy practice, one of it's unfortunate victims was none other than young daughter of the Kennedy clan, (yes, THE Kennedys!) I think the poor girl's name was Rose? Who was subjected to it for the treatment of "depression and mood swings!"
Rosemary. And she was disabled due to oxygen deprivation at birth. She was prone to lashing out and having outbursts.
Imagine a modern chainsaw being used for giving birth 🗿
Imagine being prescribed cigarettes to lose weight
@@ddzombot MAAAAAAAATE 💀
@@ddzombot My mom quit smoking after 20+ years and she gained weight like crazy.
@@Seek1878 nicotine in itself doesn't really help with weight loss, even if it reduces hunger. But most people who quit smoking compensate with food their previous nicotine addiction, thereby gaining weight.
@@pierrevilley6675 I mentioned weight gain, not weight loss. She never smoked to lose weight. She just gained a ton when she stopped which is a known side effect of stopping. Please pay attention. And she didn't eat more, she was wary of that but it happened regardless.
1:38 fire in the-
A form of lobotomy is used today to treat highly resistant grand mal seizures. The corpus callosum, the bridge between the left and right hemispheres of the brain, is surgically cut to localize the seizures, leaving the patient at least halfway able to function for the duration.
The intro jump scared me
FIRE IN THE HOLL
“Regrow brain nerves” right and I’m the Queen of Persia.
It’s good that medicine is developing and now you no longer have to endure such pain!
Fire in the hole 🔥
My God what is this the dark ages - Dr. Leonard (Bones) Mccoy
Lobotomy: 🪡👁️🧠
Lobotomy:😃😐😡😈
Fire in the hole
@@irehale2011 Water on the hill
Wow Love Doctor ER Super Good ❤️❤️❤️❤️👳👩⚕️😍🥰😃👍
Thank you 🤗
@@DoctorER Thanks ❤️❤️❤️❤️🥰😍😍👍
Well this was interesting
My body produces to much red blood cells. My doctor told me that if it becomes severe, he will remove some of my blood to reduce my RBC count healthy range. I have had reconstructive surgery on my face, to rebuild the right half of my nose. It involved, grafting cartilage from behind my ear and skin from my cheek. The graft looked like raw meat at first but my doctor told me that it was normal and would look better when it healed. It looks great now. When I tell people that I've had that surgery, they tell me that they didn't notice it until I told them
Wow Doc how it was,its so much better now
The guy should definitely apply for a horror film in Hollywood.
Hey Dr. Mike what should I do if my dog is shaking a lot
#4: FIRE IN THE HOLE
How is that geometry challenge
WE FIRING IN THE HOLE WITH THAT LOBOTOMY (I am mentally ill)
BRO IS THAT NORMAL FACE
I've heard that a much more elegant form of the lobotomy is used for stubborn cases of ocd. From what I gathered it's much more carefully done and involves making very minute cuts in parts with connections not involved with personality and causing as little damage as possible. This procedure is rarely used and is reserved as an extreme last resort.
Deep brain stimulation is gaining a lot of momentum now, where a neurosurgeon inserts a pacemaker type device that uses electrical stimulation. It's used for a variety of things, including untreatable depression and Parkinsons disease. Otherwise a doctor might have to perform a hemispherotomy to remove parts that are causing uncontrollable Grand Mal seizures. But lobotomy is gone and not coming back. After the damage it caused to families and survivors, its never going to be practiced again.
Lobotomy dash?
FIRE IN THE HOLL!!!
moral of the story: are ancient, horrifying procedures still used? yes, just in a much safer, fair less painful way
I've had enough internet for today
the last one makes me scared! 😰
-Fun- Fact: Bloodletting is reason why we see The Red and White Poles on a Barber Shop 💈