I could not imagine the pain Aron went through. Just thinking about having to cut my arm and snapping the bone in half with a rock just makes me feel uncomfortable. That man is a legend for taking that amount of pain and surviving to tell the tale.
I actually met Juliane Koepcke once. Read her biography for a reading competition in school. Wrote her a letter, and met her a year later. Very inspiring woman
*Just a note on the first case:* Juliane's parents were biologists working in the jungle, she had been home schooled for most of her life, learning to live in the jungle. Her knowledge about the jungle was what saved her. *EDIT:* To all of you discussing religion, could you *please tag the person* you're directing your comment towards? I'm getting a lot of notifications for (sometimes quite nasty) comments on religion and it's not doing my mental health any favors.
@@itzilzynooo5762 knowledge saved her. I'm brazilian; without some basic pieces of information, a person die in three or four days in Amazon. Injured? Maybe less
Aron's story is one of pure determination, its unbelievable to imagine the pain cutting that nerve but knowing it's the only way you will get out. He walked a long way across soon after escaping and luckily a family noticed him and got him help
Mike, have you ever heard of Anatoli Bugorski? He's a retired particle physicist, and in 1978, he was working in the Soviet Union's largest particle accelerator, when the safety mechanisms failed. He took a proton beam through his brain and decided to *not* tell anyone about it until after he finished his task. He ended up deaf in his left ear, lost movement in that side of his face, and suffered seizures, but lost very little of his mental capability, and continued his studies, earning his PhD.
@@HotCord Right?! Everyone fully expected him to die horribly, because that particular kind of accident had never happened before, and were astonished when he didn't. His face swelled up and his skin blistered and peeled, but he didn't die.
@@xkuurumii8984 proton beams actually have various applications, including certain types of cancer therapy, but as this facility was a place studying particle physics, they were researching all the little particles that make up the universe. I'm not a physicist myself, though, so I can't really explain it more in-depth. 😅 Any physicists in the comments want to chime in, they're more than welcome!
So glad to see you promoting blood donation. Blood is also essential for cancer patients, like my son. Chemotherapy kills the patient's healthy blood cells, which need to be replaced when they get too low.
My grandma has multiple mylenoma (cancer affecting the blood). She needed blood transfusions due to the cancer and the chemotherapy frequently. Blood donations are so important. I had an illness (that is now cured) that prevents me from donating and I hate it (even though my blood wouldn't harm anyone, because I had an illness that was transferred via blood).
@@lutimstrickshots9253 thank you! He's technically in remission now, although with leukemia that means that treatment continues for another 2 years to make sure they catch all the cancer. He's had a lot of blood and platelet transfusions, especially at the beginning of treatment.
My friend survived a very freak accident. Car in front kicked up a metal pole, went through her windshield and through her abdomen. She thought a rock busted her windshield and pulled over, the guy who pulled over to help looked at her in shock cause she didn't even realise she was hurt. She survived and was very lucky.
@@BloodSweatandFears it really was. I guess adrenaline made her not realise it at first. She had a lot of surgeries,I think it nicked her spleen and lung specifically, but was eventually fine.
As a double amputee with degenerative conditions, I whole heartily and genuinely mean it when I say, nurses and doctors are my heros. I would not be alive without them. So to all nurses and doctors I am continually thankful and in awe at your commitment to helping others. I just wish nurses got paid more and all of you had enough support so you could have a healthy work life balance and adequate breaks. I'm from the UK, but I assume its a similar problem all around the world. But anyway thank you. ❤️
Here where i live they will probably gave up from you, they dont care or pay attention to patients, even if people are insured they still do not provide adequate care nor they have some basic things like infusion bags.
@@m.5748 wow! That's incredible 40 years! Seriously it is the hardest job in the world. I owe nurses everything I mean that, so even though I dont know you, and I definitely know you didn't hear this enough in your 40 years at your job, but thank you, seriously thank you for all of it, on behalf of everyone you helped, I'm saying for the ones that did and the ones that didn't say it, thank you.
The case of Phineas Gage and the damage to his frontal lobe is super interesting for a second reason too. With BPD, there's often damage to the growth of the frontal lobe, which is a major reason emotions are so heightened. It's super intriguing that that damage to Gage's frontal lobe produced a somewhat similar effect.
Yes! I suffered a traumatic brain injury to my frontal lobe from an injury including a skull fracture. I was diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder and this injury is believed to be the reason it developed. The brain is a very interesting thing!
@@BloodSweatandFears if you dont mind me asking, what is it like to think back to the time before you had apd; specifically in relation to empathy? I obviously don't know to what degree you have it, but I've always found apd intriguing and haven't heard of a late onset case like yours.
@@BloodSweatandFears it really is! I'm sorry you've experienced that, but glad you can see a positive in how amazing the brain is, and hope you're thriving 💖
@@patrickcox8990 To be honest I was very young, age 4, so I don’t remember much. My mom says I was almost like a different kid. That I was an easy crier but after the injury I wasn’t. I don’t feel genuine empathy but because I’ve had so much therapy I can understand it and intellectually know when I should be feeling that way. Makes my interactions with people much easier for sure.
It’s good to see the real photos of the people behind these amazing stories! If it weren’t for the photos some people wouldn’t believe it. These injuries are so outlandish.
It's p telling that we've had (one) case of a guy surviving a pole blasted through the skull in 150 years. Tho I do believe the research from his injury went on to save several others.
The russian doctor who removed his own appendix is fascinating. I almost died last year when mine actually burst, it went beyond appendicitis to full on peritonitis. If I'd gone to the hospital a day later I wouldn't have survived. Never known pain like it, I'm 35 now and I genuinely wanted my mom. That's how painful it is, if anyone here suspects they might have appendicitis please GET TO A HOSPITAL!!! Don't delay it like I did, it's the difference between a couple of days recovery from keyhole surgery or major open surgery that will keep you off your feet for at least a month. You couldn't pay me to go through that pain and misery again... thank you to our glorious NHS for saving my life that night. But this guy removing his own appendix is both fascinating and insane. It's awe inspiring
So glad you caught it before it was fatal! I had appendicitis a couple months ago, and I didn't have severe symptoms. I had some pain in my lower right abdomen and severe bloating that wouldn't go away. When it didn't get better after 24 hours I made the executive decision to go to the ER because it didn't feel like anything I'd ever had before. Apparently I caught it super early. I always tell people to err on the side of caution if something feels off and to always pay attention to abdominal pain that doesn't present like menstrual cramps or indigestion.
@@shahdwastaken thank you I really appreciate that 🙌 it was the most pain I've ever felt in my life but I came out stronger 😎 I just wanted to raise awareness because the earlier you can catch it the earlier you can escape the open surgery 😎 it's so rough because you can't fart, poop or cough or do anything because they pump you full of codeine and morphine. 27 days I went without the bathroom 😂 I had to punch myself in the face to stop myself from sneezing because that was less painful than a sudden spasm of the abdomen 😂😂
@@philkasafir. ;; oh nooo i am so sorry to hear that that literally sounds like a serve punishment. i also think it’s important that people are aware of the symptoms because the earlier they catch it the better it’ll be. thank you for being brave enough to share your story!! really really inspiring, phill
I had a friend have appendicitis one night while at a sleepover for his birthday. Fortunately his mom was an RN so when he went to her complaining of the pain she was able to ask the right questions about his pain and realized that she needed to immediately take him to the hospital. It was weird how fast it all happened. One moment we were asleep and it felt like the next moment my friend and his parents were gone leaving us, his friends, alone in the house left to just wait lol... But it made appendicitis one of those things I'm now paranoid of experiencing, between the pain he showed and his mom panicking so much and saying that they had to go right away because it could be fatal.
i have an ostomy and i DEEPLY appreciate Dr Mike using the correct terminology! i also have had over a dozen blood transfusions and encourage people to donate especially if you know you have a rare blood type!! its life saving!!
every time i hear Aron's story i feel sick i can't imagine the pain and trauma he went through he's an awesome dude i don't think i could ever go hiking again if that happened to me
Genuinely that’s some super human strength, even large cuts make me wither in pain, even if they aren’t actually as bad as I thought they were, but cutting your own arm off?! That’s actually so insane
Dr. Mike is honestly one of my favourite TH-camrs, not only because he provides so much information enriched videos, but also because he does it with passion. He didn't wholly depend on TH-cam as his career, but also worked as a family doctor, which just showed his determination. He is very hardworking and the fact that i enjoy his videos so much and actually learn from them is inspiring. I am a huge fan of biology and Dr Mike enables me to enjoy more and contributes to my love for bio study.
I would like to add Jeanna Giese: The first person to survive rabies even as symptoms began to show. She was 15 years old when she tried to rescue a bat from a church. As she carried it outside, the bat bit her. Not knowing she had contracted the disease, Jeanna lived her life as normal until her symptoms showed up and she got diagnosed. The doctors placed her in a coma and tried to take the swelling off the brain. Jeanna began recovery after struggling for her life for several weeks. She had to learn how to walk and talk completely from scratch, but is doing very well now, from what I understand.
I really appreciate people who donate blood. When I was 16 I had my appendix rupture, small intestines had fallen and had a lot of complications. Without the blood transfusion I wouldn't have made it. So thank you to everyone who donates blood. 💜
Hoo man do I have a survival story for you: So there was a baby born prematurely, suffered brain bleeds, a hernia, and collapsed lungs (one of which collapsed twice) and survived! And who is this baby? Take a guess.
I feel absolutely terrible for the people that had to go through that kind of pain. I’m glad they were able to survive and have their stories told; I just learned so much from this video!
I'm happy to hear Mike mention how Gage eventually mentally recovered. Most of the time that part of the story isn't shared, I learned about him in school but was for years left with the idea that he was scrambled for the rest of his life.
Gage is the most iconic man ever. I learned about him in high school during these medical pathway courses my school provided. He’s part of the reason I’m interested in neurosurgery. I’ve always been confused on how he never received infection or too much debris into the area. Regardless it was amazing
From what I remember from my college psychology course, and a few other things I've seen over the years, the explosion had everything going at such a high rate of speed that it just got pushed clean through. No idea how he didn't get an infection though considering the injury happened outside in a sandy area and it was before we knew about germ theory
Super cool to see you advocating for blood donations since we’re in a critical shortage right now. I donate 4 times a year and it is super fulfilling to know you could literally be saving a life. If only I was a little bigger I could do a double red! This video was fascinating!
After donating blood many times, I began giving the double red donations. I always just thought it was the right thing to do as I have one of the more rare blood types. You never know when you might need some karma points. To all reading this, think about donating. You might save a life.
@@scottwhittaker1681 I very much wish I could donate blood, but because of a hepatitis C diagnosis about a year ago (which is now cured and I no longer carry it), I am no longer allowed to ever donate blood or plasma again in my life. I hope one day medical technology will advance to the point where previous Hep C patients are able to donate again, as we no longer carry the virus.
Because it’s mass produced and should’ve be supported. These are the same companies that do those disturbing “animated kids stories” and are considered content farms.
It is how fascinating how our bodies are both fragile and strong. We aren´t the strongest animals and yet we can survive this if given chance, intelligence, and resources. Mad respect for the people who survived stuff like this, I don´t even know if I could do half that well in situations like these. I would probably just die.
You probably could; when in the situations that these people were in, you will do anything to survive and will think of everything to do so. The human brain is quite fascinating, really.
I would love for Dr Mike to do a video sharing of the most complicated/unique cases he has encountered throughout his medical career! As a patient who has been the topic of more than one round-table/conference discussion, I like learning about other doctors/patients stories!
The fact that Julian fell from a airplane right onto a jungle without a parachute but surviving from being strapped to a seat is a one in a billion moment.
a british royal air gunner fell 18000 feet during ww2 and survived after falling from an aircraft under germany, and survived very alive. now this is germany, and british is one of the allies which means germany is their ENEMY
Only thing I’m confused abt is that sense it was so early into the flight would the seat belt signal still be on or was this before they had these standerds
We had a woman in my town who was farming when she cut off all her limbs in an accident. She managed to call 000 by herself,stay awake and answer paramedics questions. She managed to keep one arm and survived. ABSOLUTE QUEEN!
This video was amazing! I am already a blood and plasma donor as my husband almost died when he was 17 after a very shaky doctor accidentally cut him during a surgery which caused him to bleed internally for several days. I would like to suggest another amazing survival for the next episode in this series lol a woman by the name of Joan Murray was parachuting when her parachute didn’t open. She pulled her reserve parachute and it worked as it should but then she began spiralling out of control and hit the floor after a 14,500 foot drop. She was bitten by hundred of fire ants that miraculously helped keep her alive until she was able to be transported to a hospital. She SURVIVED!! It’s bananas! 🍌🍌
Someone actually survived an even bigger fall without a parachute than Juliane. Vesna Vulović, a Serbian (then Yugoslav) flight attendant survived a fall from 33,330 ft after a briefcase bomb exploded on JAT Flight 367 on January 26th, 1972. She spent days in a coma and was hospitalised for numerous months. She suffered a fractured skull, three broken vertebrae, broken legs, broken ribs, and a fractured pelvis. She was temporarily paralyzed from the waist down because of the injuries. She made a full recovery but walked with a limp. She apparently had no memories of anything. She basically became a celebrity in Yugoslavia and was considered a hero. Her final years were spent in seclusion and she struggled with survivor guilt. After divorcing, she lived alone in Belgrade in her apartment on a small pension until she passed away on December 23rd, 2016 from unknown causes. She still holds the Guinness record for the highest fall someone has survived.
I can attest to Aron still hiking, I met him when I was younger in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado! He just said hi to my sister and I, and it was my dad that recognized that iconic prosthetic arm
Thank you for the encouragement to donate blood! After I suffered an ectopic pregnancy that ruptured and bled internally for hours, a big transfusion of 0- saved my life❤
1:28 Fun fact: It actually doesn’t matter if you wear your belt in an airplane (besides for turbulence), cause really the only thing their made for is to keep your body in your seat so it’s easier to find it and identify it if your plane were to crash
The seats in the first incident used gravity and drag “like a parachute” to slow her fall thus saving her life. Had she not been secured to the seat, she would more than likely not have fallen with the seat and while we can’t say for certain, she probably would have died.
I've heard of most of these except for the doctor that performed surgery on himself! That might be the craziest survival story that I have ever heard EVER. On another note, one story I heard that is similar to the last one is the story of Truman Duncan, who was run over by a train and lived. His body was nearly cut in half and pelvis shattered, but he was still able to call 911 and stay conscious until emergency services came. He lost almost half his blood before they could lift the train car to free him and take him to hospital. Last I heard, he is still very much alive and in a wheelchair
That also reminds me of Alex Zanardi. Racing in CART (basically Indycar) and the front end was ripped off in a crash, where his legs were. Don't think I need to explain further. Lost 75% of his blood, but he still survived and was back racing two years later with modified controls. Now he's an Olympic level paracyclist. Despite another setback which put him in a coma.
We need more of these Dr. Mike!! There are countless stories in the comments that are so uplifting and bringing awareness to people who have gone through similar things.
My dad is a recurrent blood donor and it actually saved his life. After his most recent donation, he got a call about some abnormal bloodwork. It turns out that he has a form of leukemia (I think chronic myeloid leukemia, but I'm not sure) that's very mild and can be treated since they caught it so early. He had no symptoms, but donating blood pushed him to go to the doctor and get to the bottom of his abnormal bloodwork.
I'm an AB+ blood type. As a kid I had lots of medical issues and had to have TONS of blood draws, IVs, and ultimately a Picc line. I had very difficult veins and as a result was terrified of needles. I decided my fear was unhealthy and I needed to find a way to concur my fear so I started donating blood. Around that time my Aunt was murdered but they were able to save some of her organs and help several people through Organ Donation. This strongly affected me and I doubled down on blood donation to help others. I was approached by the blood Donation center because of my blood type being the universal plasma Donor and a significant shortage of plasma to consider plasma Donation. I agreed and went every 2 weeks for quite a while! I mostly concurred my fear of needles and in the process helped a lot of people! Unfortunately this year has been difficult health wise and I haven't been able to give. I really hoping to get back into it as soon as I'm physically healthy enough to!
You are doing a great thing! Every donation you can do helps someone live another day. You also have to look out for your own personal well-being, so if your body needs a break, give it a break. I am O-, universal donor, and my body works best waiting 10 to 12 weeks in between. I wish you good health! You are a hero! ♥️
I’ll say it once and I’ll say it again: they should seriously just let dope sick junkies going through withdrawals find veins and insert the needles. They can do it under pressure.
@@toyotaecw while true, they also can miss a lot of the time or blow out a vein..and if they can’t find a good spot they go elsewhere- something I don’t think a lot of patients would be excited ab lol
I remember learning about Phineas Gage in school a few years back, and it's still mind-blowing how terrific of an accident happened, and yet he still survived.
You didn't even see the full video. This is 10 minutes and was posted 2 mins ago. But it is incredible how a human body is able to survive that way. Edit: I realized *These things*
@@renuchiha7554 Contrast that with how fragile the human body can be. People have tripped, slightly hit their head and died from that. Both extremes are so weird haha
Shoutout to Doctor Mike, the team, the survivors, and this video for making me decide to donate blood. I officially started donating blood on St. Patrick’s Day 2023, and I understand that by taking my blood from me, I am making a difference in the life of someone else. And if you’re wondering, I have A- blood. Makes sense because I’m working on being an A-/A+ student.
I knew about the story with Phineas Gage because of taking so many psychology classes. Despite that, the story still blows my mind. The rest of these stories were fascinating particularly the one with the guy on the motorbike. I can't believe that guy survived.
As a Medical Specialist, it helps everyone to see Doctor Mike makes simple to complex health related topics interesting. This is how he inspire me to take care of myself ever since 2018. Most important whenever I can perceive any sense about other things. He is perfectly fit to become an angel 😇
I've heard the story of Rogozov's self-surgery before, but never has an animated/cartoon face so completely captured the actual photo that followed right after. A champion throughout absolutely everything 💖
Donors saved my life. In 2021 I had Internal bleeding and in September I ended up receiving 20 units of blood. In the year 2021, in 8 out of the 12 months, I needed a total of 46 units of blood. So, whoever donates blood, I just want to thank you for saving my life.
@@thatonechildofdionysus thank you so much! The words can't express...when I finally got out of the hospital everything I saw looked so bright and so full of color. So beautiful. I told my mother I was dying. My organs were shutting down. So, I wanted to say my goodbyes before I passed again. I was scared. I am very lucky. Two Surgeries after and I'm still going. I'm stubborn and will NOT give up!!
Donated for the first time in October. I have 0+ blood so I can donate to any positive blood types. It feels good knowing I helped someone. I will definitely do it again just because of stories like this. ❤
@Random Person On TH-cam I am O+ as well. It feels great being able to thank someone for their selflessness. Honestly, you guys are heroes 👏 ❤️ I am grateful for people like you.
Yeah tbh, I'd probably just let myself pass away at that point. I don't even say that to be funny, like legitimately I think I'd rather just go than try to forcibly break my own limb off, I am not courageous at all. I find people who are capable of that kind of will to live are really inspiring because it couldn't be me. 😭
im so glad you mentioned Aron, its a very interesting and horrible story which not a lot of people know about, which i enjoy researching about these types of stories, i wish the best of him❤
As an O+ cmv- whole blood donor whose blood is frequently used for sick babies I love seeing people working to promote the importance of blood donations because I feel bad whenever there’s a shortage and I’m in between donations and can’t help so I love seeing more people giving to help reduce the shortages. In my 18 years as a donor I’ve given 108 units so far and am currently at the 13.5 gallon mark and hope to continue giving as long as possible because it’s a very important factor in my overall mental health knowing that I’ve given others chances at life that I wasn’t allowed to have with my grandfather who died before I was born. Please, give whenever possible if possible, it could change your life!
That's amazing to hear! I'm 16 and on my 18th birthday I would like to donate for the first time 🙃. I find it crazy that people don't donate blood regularly!!! Also what do you donate every 2 months? Because you can technically donate Plateletss 24 times a year
@@aryanbakshi5806 technically you’re allowed to start giving as a student donor at 16 or 17 in the United States depending on where you live and certain criteria height and weight wise but starting at any age is better than nothing so congratulations on your commitment/willingness to eventually donate! I also encourage you if you’re interested to get your platelet count tested when you go to donate to see if you’re a good candidate for platelets like I was or if you meet the criteria you could also give double reds every four months instead of every two like with whole blood. Unfortunately despite a great platelet count I can only give whole blood every 56 days because my body doesn’t like receiving the fluids back from the aphaeresis machine and I infiltrate on the return so both platelets and double reds are out of the question for me but I did try really hard to at least make the effort to do so and at least I can still give whole blood so it’s better than nothing!
@@starfishgurl1984 I am 6 feet and weigh 185lbs so definitely fit tht category, but unfortunately in India one can only donate blood between ages 18-65 which is a shame. Congrats to you too u help so many out there☺. I got dengue virus a few years back and my platelets dropped to 40k so idk if tht effects my donation capacity. That's a shame tht ur blood donation is limited. Curious to know how it works in the US, because here donation is done based on requirement from what I know. Like I am not sure if I can just go anytime to donate and it'll be based on requirement. Though it could be different for blood banks though. Again props to you for consistently donating 🙌
I just donated blood yesterday for the first time in over a year. I felt sick and tired all day afterwards, but hearing the reminder of the importance of blood donation at the end of the video helped remind me its worth a little discomfort to save lives! Great video Doctor Mike!
Drinking plenty of extra water beforehand and increasing iron/protein intake has definitely helped me as a donor over the last 18 years to have drastically reduced side effects from donating so hopefully that will help you, good luck!
If you do another one, John Thompson of ND would be a good one. In 1992, he was alone when both of his arms were ripped off in a farming accident. He managed to get home and inside, where he used a pencil in his teeth to call 911, and then he waited for help in the bathtub so he wouldn't bleed all over his mom's new carpet. He survived and they even were able to reattach his arms!
@@crushedkiwi5877 I'm not sure I understand the confusion. He used the landline in the house, but had to hold a pencil in his mouth to press the keys (or, I suppose turn the dial, depending on the kind of phone)
Yep, he lived 12 years and his personality went from upbeat and energetic, to dull and temperamental and then finally back to being upbeat before he passed. 12 years at his already older age for the time was actually pretty long. The More You Know 😊
My mother survived a freak accident like these. After falling off a boat onto rocks her back was torn open large enough to insert a football and she was cut half in half (1/2 way through her abdomen from side to middle) by the propellers of the boat rescuing her. She was 5 mo pregnant. Originally they didn't think either of us would survive. Not only did she survive and relearn to walk but she's in great health, worked a full career as a teacher until her retirement, had 3 more kids and is a super active bubbie. (And obv I'm here too lol). Our story was featured once on the tv series Extraordinary Lives.
Wow thats fascinating! Thank you for sharing that, I might go watch the episode. It's great that she led an almost normal life after that.. Just curious though, does she suffer from any trauma or mental problems from her accident?
@@queeniemoonwalker None currently though this was so long ago (I’m 45 now lol). I don’t know if she did therapy back then beyond physical therapy- it’s not the kind of thing she would have talked about with us kids. I don’t remember even finding out about the accident until I was an older child so I think she kept a lot private to not worry us- that’s her style. (Though she must have told us something like “Jenn was born really early” because my baby pics have me in an incubator and with a scar on my forehead from the intravenous).
Julia in the 1st video survived because she knew some things about the Amazon. She lived there with her parents while they studied birds. She saw some birds that she knew lived near the river. She followed them to the river then walked along the river til she got to the logger cabin.
I'm a student in the medical field, and whilst going over amputations, a video if Aron was shown and a clip from the movie of him cutting his arm off. It was incredibly heart wrenching and many of us couldn't handle it and had to take a breather.
The human body is amazing in these extreme events. Another case I can remember is someone who was sucked into a tornado. If they hadn't been knocked unconscious by debris their body wouldn't have gone limp, which protected them from not only debris, but the fall.
Similar to this, there's a case of a British girl who literally doesn't have the mental capacity to feel fear. She's been hit by cars a lot because of this (no sense of fear around walking into roads) and because she doesn't feel fear, her body doesn't tense up. She has survived all of these with only minor injuries because her body goes limp. It kind of makes me think that the safety mechanisms that have evolved into the human body can actually make things worse because these mechanisms weren't developed for surviving our modern world.
I was introduced to the idea of donating blood by my school a few years ago. Unfortunately for me I’d had an ED (recovered) but couldn’t donate because I was always at least 10 kgs under the minimum weight requirement. I’ve been trying for the past few months to gain weight so I can donate especially after I’ve seen how some traumatic injuries require BAGS of blood for just one person. And if I ever wish to receive blood, in my eyes, I must give back. The weight gain is very very slow, and I sometimes slip into old habits when I see the physical changes of my body, but i’m doing this not for myself but to help other people. So we gotta be relentless 😌🙏🏾
@@rebeccaxx at times my mind nitpicks at the amount of calories I’m consuming so my therapist doesn’t recommend keeping track of my calorie consumption as yet because it could lead to my relapse 😀😭🫶🏾 But thanks for the advice sweetie
Phineas Gage's case is fascinating, I did a childhood learning book and it was a connect the dots and it was of him. scared me so bad but after learning more about it it is very cool
I met a man in a psych ward who was a veteran and he had died and was brought back _four_ different times, and eventually he got a DNR. He was a really cool dude, I still think about him sometimes and hope he’s doing well now.
It’s almost as wild that the first woman survived 11 days in the Amazon rainforest without shelter or a weapon or anything as it is that she survived falling out of a plane.
I am even more confused by how she survived the Amazon with loads of open wounds and broken bones, knowing the climate you would get a severe infection in a few days
@@socialistrepublicofvietnam1500 I’ve since learned that she was already experienced at surviving in the Amazon prior to the crash. Still pretty wild though.
I can’t fathom the immense pain Aron must have felt. The very idea of having to cut through my own arm and then snap the bone with a rock is enough to make anyone cringe. To endure that level of suffering and still find the strength to survive and share his story is nothing short of legendary. His resilience in the face of such agony is truly inspiring
There is a story similar to the one of Phineas Gage. An 18 year old boy was celebrating his 18th birthday having fun with his friends when a pole came flying thru his head his friend called the ems but the boy couldnt fit in the ambulance so they cut the pole slowly while pouring water on the head the boy survived altho he suffered seizures,loss of memory and forgot to walk. The boy survived, learned to walk and recovered from everything he suffered from.
my cousin survived a freak accident but died about 11 hours after I have gone to his grave every single day even though it costs a lot of money to see him I miss him so much I would never ever ever forget him I would do anything to see him just one more time one minute we were hugging and the next I was writing r. i.p on his grave his last words were "I love you all see you in the afterlife" I will never forget that day❤❤
I remember learning about phineas gage in psychology class and it was so crazy how this sweet guy became angry all the time due to his injuries. The brain has so much to discover!
Blood transfusions are amazing how effective they can be when ur short on ur own blood! I got two during an extremely bad time when I was losing blood due to a accident and the second those finished I went from being weak, fatigued and pale as a white sheet back to tan and could walk with out passing out or having seizures. 😊 Thank you to the blood donors out there!
I wish he'd talk about Allison botha, what happened to her wasnt an accident but it is one of the most insane survival/extreme injuries stories I've ever heard. That woman an absolute beast.
@@banana_cow Allison Botha was r**ped and stabbed more than 50 times, in her abdomen and neck, almost decapitated but she dragged herself to find help and against all odds survived. She is an amazing woman and to this day she inspires a lot of people.
The Phineas Gage case is so fascinating to hear about and it brings to mind another case from history - when Henry VIII was king, during his early years, he was described as a generous and charming man. However, in early 1536, he participated in some jousting and got into an accident where he was thrown off his armored horse which ended up on top of him (he was also armored) and the sources said he was unconscious for a few hours - the accident caused his leg to become really horrifically infected for the rest of his life and there was a marked personality change after the accident where he became perceived more infamously as a tyrant (his wife at the time, Anne Boleyn, ended up being beheaded a few months after the accident on accusations of adultery after failing to give Henry his longed-for son and heir - she had actually miscarried a boy days after the accident, probably because of stress over the accident) - it’s now widely believed that he suffered brain trauma in the fall which caused his personality change that led to his infamous reputation in history today
Sounds like it could have been a bad enough injury that is permanently damaged areas of the brain dealing with emotional regulation, rational thinking, and the like. My first thought was CTE but that seems to be more for people who experience a lot of concussions over a long period of time like boxers or football players. It's possible since he was a lover of jousting but if the shift was as sudden as you describe it was probably damage from a TBI.
I would donate blood, but I can barely handle giving blood for mandatory testing, and I don't think I'd be allowed because of the medications I take. It's mostly a mental stress thing.
I've always loved the story of Phineas Gage. I first heard it in my 7th grade english class. While my classmates were horrified and completely disgusted, I was so intrigued and just so happy to look up graphic (and mostly photoshopped) images online. It just made me realize what the human body was able to withstand. His story completely changed my perspective on life and our personalities. It amazes me how we can be normal one day, and our entire lives, personalities, and abilities can change in an instant.
Mike as always has wild content, I think I could be a survivor in a lower way , when I was a kid (8 or less ) I was climbing a fence, and got a metal part of the fence in my neck, I didn't feel any pain but doctors told me they couldn't explain how the fence didn't break/cut any tissue, vain or something in the way, but they did told me it was less than 1cm to the fence to reach the aorta, and that would be another history
I could not imagine the pain Aron went through. Just thinking about having to cut my arm and snapping the bone in half with a rock just makes me feel uncomfortable. That man is a legend for taking that amount of pain and surviving to tell the tale.
Yeah it sounds so painful
I wish Dr. Mike had pointed out the crucial lesson there - never, ever hike without telling someone where you'll be and when to expect you back!
the story always makes me feel nauseous bc I just can't imagine the pain
With extreme pain, there comes a point where it goes past "overwhelming" to a weird kind of numbness.
I probably would've just died.
I actually met Juliane Koepcke once. Read her biography for a reading competition in school. Wrote her a letter, and met her a year later. Very inspiring woman
That's really cool! Underrated comment!
oh my lord thats so cool!!!
that's really cool!!! did you ever see her again?
@@OculusDream just once. She is pretty busy with her jobs in munich and peru.
wow that's so cool and also i'm the 691st like 💀💀
*Just a note on the first case:* Juliane's parents were biologists working in the jungle, she had been home schooled for most of her life, learning to live in the jungle. Her knowledge about the jungle was what saved her.
*EDIT:* To all of you discussing religion, could you *please tag the person* you're directing your comment towards? I'm getting a lot of notifications for (sometimes quite nasty) comments on religion and it's not doing my mental health any favors.
Thank you for this ❤
@@itzilzynooo5762 knowledge saved her. I'm brazilian; without some basic pieces of information, a person die in three or four days in Amazon. Injured? Maybe less
@scott Jones I’m thinking this was sarcasm.
and not crashing to her death
She took that plane-crash-above-the-jungle personally huh
Aron's story is one of pure determination, its unbelievable to imagine the pain cutting that nerve but knowing it's the only way you will get out. He walked a long way across soon after escaping and luckily a family noticed him and got him help
Bro got PTSD
Mike, have you ever heard of Anatoli Bugorski? He's a retired particle physicist, and in 1978, he was working in the Soviet Union's largest particle accelerator, when the safety mechanisms failed. He took a proton beam through his brain and decided to *not* tell anyone about it until after he finished his task. He ended up deaf in his left ear, lost movement in that side of his face, and suffered seizures, but lost very little of his mental capability, and continued his studies, earning his PhD.
Now that’s a miracle if I’ve ever heard of one
@@HotCord Right?! Everyone fully expected him to die horribly, because that particular kind of accident had never happened before, and were astonished when he didn't. His face swelled up and his skin blistered and peeled, but he didn't die.
What does a proton beam do? Genuine question.
Wanna know too
@@xkuurumii8984 proton beams actually have various applications, including certain types of cancer therapy, but as this facility was a place studying particle physics, they were researching all the little particles that make up the universe. I'm not a physicist myself, though, so I can't really explain it more in-depth. 😅 Any physicists in the comments want to chime in, they're more than welcome!
Mike is just the best person to watch when you're upset or sad
@@GlorifiedGremlin time zones lmao
Why are you upset though?
I hope your day/week/month gets better 💕
@@GlorifiedGremlin its 8:30 pm here
It’s almost midnight here.
And people can be sad no matter the time of day.
So glad to see you promoting blood donation. Blood is also essential for cancer patients, like my son. Chemotherapy kills the patient's healthy blood cells, which need to be replaced when they get too low.
My grandma has multiple mylenoma (cancer affecting the blood). She needed blood transfusions due to the cancer and the chemotherapy frequently. Blood donations are so important. I had an illness (that is now cured) that prevents me from donating and I hate it (even though my blood wouldn't harm anyone, because I had an illness that was transferred via blood).
@@nicolek5747 t
I'm so sorry about your son, I hope he gets well soon and lives a long healthy life
@@lutimstrickshots9253 thank you! He's technically in remission now, although with leukemia that means that treatment continues for another 2 years to make sure they catch all the cancer. He's had a lot of blood and platelet transfusions, especially at the beginning of treatment.
@@desertrose0027 I hope he has continued to do well and remain in remission ❤
Let's take a moment to give a heartfelt thanks to all the doctors and medical staffs in the whole world.
My friend survived a very freak accident. Car in front kicked up a metal pole, went through her windshield and through her abdomen. She thought a rock busted her windshield and pulled over, the guy who pulled over to help looked at her in shock cause she didn't even realise she was hurt. She survived and was very lucky.
That’s some final destination stuff! So awesome she made it through that!
Cap
@@BloodSweatandFears it really was. I guess adrenaline made her not realise it at first. She had a lot of surgeries,I think it nicked her spleen and lung specifically, but was eventually fine.
@@parisinthe30sx wow strong lady!
Wow
As a double amputee with degenerative conditions, I whole heartily and genuinely mean it when I say, nurses and doctors are my heros. I would not be alive without them. So to all nurses and doctors I am continually thankful and in awe at your commitment to helping others. I just wish nurses got paid more and all of you had enough support so you could have a healthy work life balance and adequate breaks. I'm from the UK, but I assume its a similar problem all around the world. But anyway thank you. ❤️
Here where i live they will probably gave up from you, they dont care or pay attention to patients, even if people are insured they still do not provide adequate care nor they have some basic things like infusion bags.
@@milosstojanovic4623 God that's awful, I'm so sorry.
Thankyou for your Positive Comments and Appreciation for Nurses! I Recently retired, after working as an RN for 40+ Years! 🙂
@@m.5748 wow! That's incredible 40 years! Seriously it is the hardest job in the world. I owe nurses everything I mean that, so even though I dont know you, and I definitely know you didn't hear this enough in your 40 years at your job, but thank you, seriously thank you for all of it, on behalf of everyone you helped, I'm saying for the ones that did and the ones that didn't say it, thank you.
@@milosstojanovic4623 That's horrible, we're do you live?
The case of Phineas Gage and the damage to his frontal lobe is super interesting for a second reason too. With BPD, there's often damage to the growth of the frontal lobe, which is a major reason emotions are so heightened. It's super intriguing that that damage to Gage's frontal lobe produced a somewhat similar effect.
Yes! I suffered a traumatic brain injury to my frontal lobe from an injury including a skull fracture. I was diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder and this injury is believed to be the reason it developed. The brain is a very interesting thing!
@@BloodSweatandFears if you dont mind me asking, what is it like to think back to the time before you had apd; specifically in relation to empathy? I obviously don't know to what degree you have it, but I've always found apd intriguing and haven't heard of a late onset case like yours.
@@BloodSweatandFears it really is! I'm sorry you've experienced that, but glad you can see a positive in how amazing the brain is, and hope you're thriving 💖
@@patrickcox8990 To be honest I was very young, age 4, so I don’t remember much. My mom says I was almost like a different kid. That I was an easy crier but after the injury I wasn’t. I don’t feel genuine empathy but because I’ve had so much therapy I can understand it and intellectually know when I should be feeling that way. Makes my interactions with people much easier for sure.
Also, vermont isn't desert. Haha
It’s good to see the real photos of the people behind these amazing stories! If it weren’t for the photos some people wouldn’t believe it. These injuries are so outlandish.
It's p telling that we've had (one) case of a guy surviving a pole blasted through the skull in 150 years. Tho I do believe the research from his injury went on to save several others.
The russian doctor who removed his own appendix is fascinating. I almost died last year when mine actually burst, it went beyond appendicitis to full on peritonitis. If I'd gone to the hospital a day later I wouldn't have survived.
Never known pain like it, I'm 35 now and I genuinely wanted my mom. That's how painful it is, if anyone here suspects they might have appendicitis please GET TO A HOSPITAL!!! Don't delay it like I did, it's the difference between a couple of days recovery from keyhole surgery or major open surgery that will keep you off your feet for at least a month. You couldn't pay me to go through that pain and misery again... thank you to our glorious NHS for saving my life that night. But this guy removing his own appendix is both fascinating and insane. It's awe inspiring
So glad you caught it before it was fatal! I had appendicitis a couple months ago, and I didn't have severe symptoms. I had some pain in my lower right abdomen and severe bloating that wouldn't go away. When it didn't get better after 24 hours I made the executive decision to go to the ER because it didn't feel like anything I'd ever had before. Apparently I caught it super early. I always tell people to err on the side of caution if something feels off and to always pay attention to abdominal pain that doesn't present like menstrual cramps or indigestion.
wow your story is so inspiring. i’m glad you made it and that things are better for you!!
@@shahdwastaken thank you I really appreciate that 🙌 it was the most pain I've ever felt in my life but I came out stronger 😎 I just wanted to raise awareness because the earlier you can catch it the earlier you can escape the open surgery 😎 it's so rough because you can't fart, poop or cough or do anything because they pump you full of codeine and morphine. 27 days I went without the bathroom 😂 I had to punch myself in the face to stop myself from sneezing because that was less painful than a sudden spasm of the abdomen 😂😂
@@philkasafir. ;; oh nooo i am so sorry to hear that that literally sounds like a serve punishment. i also think it’s important that people are aware of the symptoms because the earlier they catch it the better it’ll be. thank you for being brave enough to share your story!! really really inspiring, phill
I had a friend have appendicitis one night while at a sleepover for his birthday. Fortunately his mom was an RN so when he went to her complaining of the pain she was able to ask the right questions about his pain and realized that she needed to immediately take him to the hospital. It was weird how fast it all happened. One moment we were asleep and it felt like the next moment my friend and his parents were gone leaving us, his friends, alone in the house left to just wait lol... But it made appendicitis one of those things I'm now paranoid of experiencing, between the pain he showed and his mom panicking so much and saying that they had to go right away because it could be fatal.
i have an ostomy and i DEEPLY appreciate Dr Mike using the correct terminology! i also have had over a dozen blood transfusions and encourage people to donate especially if you know you have a rare blood type!! its life saving!!
every time i hear Aron's story i feel sick i can't imagine the pain and trauma he went through he's an awesome dude i don't think i could ever go hiking again if that happened to me
I almost passed out. My teacher in my medical class made us watch it and a majority of us had to take a break afterwards.
Genuinely that’s some super human strength, even large cuts make me wither in pain, even if they aren’t actually as bad as I thought they were, but cutting your own arm off?! That’s actually so insane
@@enderperks1580 oh my goodness. i could never
I hope Aaron includes in his talk a reminder to always let someone know before hiking alone in the wilderness, which he had not done.
Dr. Mike is honestly one of my favourite TH-camrs, not only because he provides so much information enriched videos, but also because he does it with passion. He didn't wholly depend on TH-cam as his career, but also worked as a family doctor, which just showed his determination. He is very hardworking and the fact that i enjoy his videos so much and actually learn from them is inspiring. I am a huge fan of biology and Dr Mike enables me to enjoy more and contributes to my love for bio study.
Didn't he say he was quitting working as a doctor to do media stuff full time a while back?
yeah, heres my top 5
1# Jackseptiguy
2# Dr.Mike
3# Internet City
4# CoryXKenchen
5# Extra High
@@ferretarmy3066 ayy my boy cory. I see you got taste
@@Peppertice Yep xd
I would like to add Jeanna Giese: The first person to survive rabies even as symptoms began to show. She was 15 years old when she tried to rescue a bat from a church. As she carried it outside, the bat bit her. Not knowing she had contracted the disease, Jeanna lived her life as normal until her symptoms showed up and she got diagnosed. The doctors placed her in a coma and tried to take the swelling off the brain. Jeanna began recovery after struggling for her life for several weeks. She had to learn how to walk and talk completely from scratch, but is doing very well now, from what I understand.
True miracle of God!
@@mcclapark9836ok lol
@mcclapark9836 guess 99 percent of rabies victims god didnt care or he doesn't exist. Most likely god doesnt exist
@@mcclapark9836No, it was the Dr who decided to try this experimental treatment who saved her
I watched a fascinating TH-cam documentary on that. Truest a miracle!
I really appreciate people who donate blood. When I was 16 I had my appendix rupture, small intestines had fallen and had a lot of complications. Without the blood transfusion I wouldn't have made it. So thank you to everyone who donates blood. 💜
Hoo man do I have a survival story for you: So there was a baby born prematurely, suffered brain bleeds, a hernia, and collapsed lungs (one of which collapsed twice) and survived! And who is this baby? Take a guess.
@@dylanbowlin3646 you
@@Youmadfrfr Ding ding ding! We have a winner!
@@Youmadfrfr Ding ding ding! We have a winner!
@@dylanbowlin3646 you said it twive
I feel absolutely terrible for the people that had to go through that kind of pain. I’m glad they were able to survive and have their stories told; I just learned so much from this video!
I'm happy to hear Mike mention how Gage eventually mentally recovered. Most of the time that part of the story isn't shared, I learned about him in school but was for years left with the idea that he was scrambled for the rest of his life.
Gage is the most iconic man ever. I learned about him in high school during these medical pathway courses my school provided. He’s part of the reason I’m interested in neurosurgery. I’ve always been confused on how he never received infection or too much debris into the area. Regardless it was amazing
The American crowbar incident will always be famous
@@alexx-tj2lvi was thinking that too. Perhaps the heat from the explosion heated up the metal, which may have fused some things together
I want to become a neurosurgeon when I grow up because they are like the highest paying medical job😂
From what I remember from my college psychology course, and a few other things I've seen over the years, the explosion had everything going at such a high rate of speed that it just got pushed clean through. No idea how he didn't get an infection though considering the injury happened outside in a sandy area and it was before we knew about germ theory
He did develop an abscess, which nearly killed him.
Super cool to see you advocating for blood donations since we’re in a critical shortage right now. I donate 4 times a year and it is super fulfilling to know you could literally be saving a life. If only I was a little bigger I could do a double red! This video was fascinating!
After donating blood many times, I began giving the double red donations. I always just thought it was the right thing to do as I have one of the more rare blood types. You never know when you might need some karma points. To all reading this, think about donating. You might save a life.
@@scottwhittaker1681 I very much wish I could donate blood, but because of a hepatitis C diagnosis about a year ago (which is now cured and I no longer carry it), I am no longer allowed to ever donate blood or plasma again in my life. I hope one day medical technology will advance to the point where previous Hep C patients are able to donate again, as we no longer carry the virus.
im pretty ok with gore- but the arm one gave me shivers with those sounds💀💀💀
How is there 123 likes but no replies
Mike’s animations make the most terrifying things look hilarious 😂
@dontreadmyprofilephoto517 okay, so shut up
Still made me feel sick asf
@@overtheatlas fr
Because it’s mass produced and should’ve be supported. These are the same companies that do those disturbing “animated kids stories” and are considered content farms.
@Don't Read My Profile Photo ok whatever you say my dude
It is how fascinating how our bodies are both fragile and strong. We aren´t the strongest animals and yet we can survive this if given chance, intelligence, and resources. Mad respect for the people who survived stuff like this, I don´t even know if I could do half that well in situations like these. I would probably just die.
You probably could; when in the situations that these people were in, you will do anything to survive and will think of everything to do so. The human brain is quite fascinating, really.
@Don't Read My Profile Photo ok
JESUS AND GOD LOVES EVERYONE SO MUCH TURN TO THEM BEFORE ITS TO LATE
@@masoncrowley2777 JESUS AND GOD LOVES EVERYONE SO MUCH TURN TO THEM BEFORE ITS TO LATE
@@devgupta2490 JESUS AND GOD LOVES EVERYONE SO MUCH TURN TO THEM BEFORE ITS TO LATE
I would love for Dr Mike to do a video sharing of the most complicated/unique cases he has encountered throughout his medical career! As a patient who has been the topic of more than one round-table/conference discussion, I like learning about other doctors/patients stories!
If you don't mind sharing, what happened to you?
Every one Mike talked about are brave and legends, and I can’t imagine what pain they had to go through❤❤❤
The fact that Julian fell from a airplane right onto a jungle without a parachute but surviving from being strapped to a seat is a one in a billion moment.
a british royal air gunner fell 18000 feet during ww2 and survived after falling from an aircraft under germany, and survived very alive. now this is germany, and british is one of the allies which means germany is their ENEMY
And stayed on the jungle floor for a whole day before being able to move 😱
Lesson learned: Always buckl3 ur seatbelt
correction once in a life time moment haha
Only thing I’m confused abt is that sense it was so early into the flight would the seat belt signal still be on or was this before they had these standerds
We had a woman in my town who was farming when she cut off all her limbs in an accident. She managed to call 000 by herself,stay awake and answer paramedics questions. She managed to keep one arm and survived. ABSOLUTE QUEEN!
How did she manage to cut all of them off at once?
We’re gonna need more details then that lol. What kind of machinery was she using?
@Umbrial it’s actually true, I searched it up
What’s 000?
@@MaddyxElla 911 in different country
I love how he says "AND SURVIVED" every single time
Dr. Leonid is so brave. He's so brave to do that to himself. Wow. What an amazing man.
A big thank you to Dr Mike's animation team. Without the animations, I couldn't finish the entire video.
This video was amazing! I am already a blood and plasma donor as my husband almost died when he was 17 after a very shaky doctor accidentally cut him during a surgery which caused him to bleed internally for several days.
I would like to suggest another amazing survival for the next episode in this series lol a woman by the name of Joan Murray was parachuting when her parachute didn’t open. She pulled her reserve parachute and it worked as it should but then she began spiralling out of control and hit the floor after a 14,500 foot drop. She was bitten by hundred of fire ants that miraculously helped keep her alive until she was able to be transported to a hospital. She SURVIVED!! It’s bananas! 🍌🍌
I'm so sorry about your husband. Let his memory live in peace.
@@thesophigrace2312 She said ALMOST died, he's not dead...?
Wait, how did the fire ants keep her alive?
W family
@@gablison Probably the pain of fire ants.
Someone actually survived an even bigger fall without a parachute than Juliane.
Vesna Vulović, a Serbian (then Yugoslav) flight attendant survived a fall from 33,330 ft after a briefcase bomb exploded on JAT Flight 367 on January 26th, 1972. She spent days in a coma and was hospitalised for numerous months. She suffered a fractured skull, three broken vertebrae, broken legs, broken ribs, and a fractured pelvis. She was temporarily paralyzed from the waist down because of the injuries. She made a full recovery but walked with a limp. She apparently had no memories of anything. She basically became a celebrity in Yugoslavia and was considered a hero. Her final years were spent in seclusion and she struggled with survivor guilt. After divorcing, she lived alone in Belgrade in her apartment on a small pension until she passed away on December 23rd, 2016 from unknown causes. She still holds the Guinness record for the highest fall someone has survived.
This is a crazy story
Bro its not a competition😭
@@kartr9545 it is now… can someone tell me where to buy a plane?
@@Chrimbo_ boeing or airbus
@@lutimstrickshots9253 Boeing 100%
I can attest to Aron still hiking, I met him when I was younger in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado! He just said hi to my sister and I, and it was my dad that recognized that iconic prosthetic arm
Thank you for the encouragement to donate blood! After I suffered an ectopic pregnancy that ruptured and bled internally for hours, a big transfusion of 0- saved my life❤
Thank you for encouraging people to donate! I once needed a blood transfusion and without it I might have lost my life!
I remember learning about Gage when I was in high school. The human body is freaking amazing…
1:28 Fun fact: It actually doesn’t matter if you wear your belt in an airplane (besides for turbulence), cause really the only thing their made for is to keep your body in your seat so it’s easier to find it and identify it if your plane were to crash
The seats in the first incident used gravity and drag “like a parachute” to slow her fall thus saving her life. Had she not been secured to the seat, she would more than likely not have fallen with the seat and while we can’t say for certain, she probably would have died.
I've heard of most of these except for the doctor that performed surgery on himself! That might be the craziest survival story that I have ever heard EVER.
On another note, one story I heard that is similar to the last one is the story of Truman Duncan, who was run over by a train and lived. His body was nearly cut in half and pelvis shattered, but he was still able to call 911 and stay conscious until emergency services came. He lost almost half his blood before they could lift the train car to free him and take him to hospital. Last I heard, he is still very much alive and in a wheelchair
That also reminds me of Alex Zanardi. Racing in CART (basically Indycar) and the front end was ripped off in a crash, where his legs were. Don't think I need to explain further. Lost 75% of his blood, but he still survived and was back racing two years later with modified controls.
Now he's an Olympic level paracyclist. Despite another setback which put him in a coma.
@@callummclachlan4771 Not as severe, but i saw another Indycar crash which paralysed someone from the waist down
As a psych major, the Phineas Gage story has fascinated me since I learned about it in neuropsych! What an amazing story.
Same but I'm a linguistics major and studied him in neurolinguistics ahah
We need more of these Dr. Mike!! There are countless stories in the comments that are so uplifting and bringing awareness to people who have gone through similar things.
8:57 when I was born I got old wrong blood and a kind man did a donation ❤😊
My dad is a recurrent blood donor and it actually saved his life. After his most recent donation, he got a call about some abnormal bloodwork. It turns out that he has a form of leukemia (I think chronic myeloid leukemia, but I'm not sure) that's very mild and can be treated since they caught it so early. He had no symptoms, but donating blood pushed him to go to the doctor and get to the bottom of his abnormal bloodwork.
🙏
I'm an AB+ blood type. As a kid I had lots of medical issues and had to have TONS of blood draws, IVs, and ultimately a Picc line. I had very difficult veins and as a result was terrified of needles. I decided my fear was unhealthy and I needed to find a way to concur my fear so I started donating blood. Around that time my Aunt was murdered but they were able to save some of her organs and help several people through Organ Donation. This strongly affected me and I doubled down on blood donation to help others. I was approached by the blood Donation center because of my blood type being the universal plasma Donor and a significant shortage of plasma to consider plasma Donation. I agreed and went every 2 weeks for quite a while! I mostly concurred my fear of needles and in the process helped a lot of people! Unfortunately this year has been difficult health wise and I haven't been able to give. I really hoping to get back into it as soon as I'm physically healthy enough to!
You are doing a great thing! Every donation you can do helps someone live another day. You also have to look out for your own personal well-being, so if your body needs a break, give it a break. I am O-, universal donor, and my body works best waiting 10 to 12 weeks in between. I wish you good health! You are a hero! ♥️
I wish I had your courage.
I'm O- and I'm the universal donor, but I cannot even go to do blood tests on me...
I’ll say it once and I’ll say it again: they should seriously just let dope sick junkies going through withdrawals find veins and insert the needles. They can do it under pressure.
@@toyotaecw while true, they also can miss a lot of the time or blow out a vein..and if they can’t find a good spot they go elsewhere- something I don’t think a lot of patients would be excited ab lol
I remember learning about Phineas Gage in school a few years back, and it's still mind-blowing how terrific of an accident happened, and yet he still survived.
Just asking but was your teacher Mrs. Saravelas?
Sorry if this is weird
@@NinaMalina2011 yea? That's a but creepy
@@eruwinsmiss Do you know Mrs. Davis....
@@NinaMalina2011 yes, this is getting creepy 😳😭
@@eruwinsmiss If you know the next one then 🫠.... Mrs Judge
"Plot Armor is when the reader/viewer knows a character won't die because they're needed for the resolution of the story. "
Dr Mike is such a good story teller, he should make this a weekly thing
So is Sam O'nella lol.
And mr.ballen
These things have always fascinated me, it's so incredible what the human body is able to survive
You didn't even see the full video. This is 10 minutes and was posted 2 mins ago. But it is incredible how a human body is able to survive that way.
Edit: I realized *These things*
@@agilityism Yeah ik. I commented this after seeing the title because i wanted to express my amazement :)
@@renuchiha7554 Contrast that with how fragile the human body can be.
People have tripped, slightly hit their head and died from that.
Both extremes are so weird haha
And yet I sleep a "little bit to the left" and oops! Hospital
@Don't Read My Profile Photo bot
Shoutout to Doctor Mike, the team, the survivors, and this video for making me decide to donate blood. I officially started donating blood on St. Patrick’s Day 2023, and I understand that by taking my blood from me, I am making a difference in the life of someone else. And if you’re wondering, I have A- blood. Makes sense because I’m working on being an A-/A+ student.
“ This man died from a car wreck. AND SURVIVED!!”😂😂
Wait what????
whaaat he said he died and He SuRvIeD-
“Did you die?”
“Sadly yes, but I LIVED!”
I knew about the story with Phineas Gage because of taking so many psychology classes. Despite that, the story still blows my mind. The rest of these stories were fascinating particularly the one with the guy on the motorbike. I can't believe that guy survived.
Blew Gage's mind, too
@@infidel42 I was just about to say that, then decided not to, then decided to check responses in hopes of seeing it here.
Thanks mate
@@thethirdtime9168 That was EXACTLY how MY thoughts were going... :D
I agree! That's mind-blowing(no pun intended)
As a Medical Specialist, it helps everyone to see Doctor Mike makes simple to complex health related topics interesting. This is how he inspire me to take care of myself ever since 2018. Most important whenever I can perceive any sense about other things. He is perfectly fit to become an angel 😇
5:22 Man, if anyone ever told Dr. Rogozov the proverb "Physician, heal thyself", they'd have egg on their face. Really impressive story.
Respect to all the doctors who treated them 🙌
I've heard the story of Rogozov's self-surgery before, but never has an animated/cartoon face so completely captured the actual photo that followed right after. A champion throughout absolutely everything 💖
Donors saved my life. In 2021 I had Internal bleeding and in September I ended up receiving 20 units of blood. In the year 2021, in 8 out of the 12 months, I needed a total of 46 units of blood. So, whoever donates blood, I just want to thank you for saving my life.
I was one of them, you're welcome. You're amazing, you deserve all opportunities in life.
@@thatonechildofdionysus thank you so much! The words can't express...when I finally got out of the hospital everything I saw looked so bright and so full of color. So beautiful. I told my mother I was dying. My organs were shutting down. So, I wanted to say my goodbyes before I passed again. I was scared. I am very lucky. Two Surgeries after and I'm still going. I'm stubborn and will NOT give up!!
Donated for the first time in October. I have 0+ blood so I can donate to any positive blood types. It feels good knowing I helped someone. I will definitely do it again just because of stories like this. ❤
@Random Person On TH-cam I am O+ as well. It feels great being able to thank someone for their selflessness. Honestly, you guys are heroes 👏 ❤️ I am grateful for people like you.
the amount of willpower that it would take to break your own arm off is incredible
Yeah tbh, I'd probably just let myself pass away at that point. I don't even say that to be funny, like legitimately I think I'd rather just go than try to forcibly break my own limb off, I am not courageous at all. I find people who are capable of that kind of will to live are really inspiring because it couldn't be me. 😭
@@hnicholeikr I just can't, I'd literally rather die
im so glad you mentioned Aron, its a very interesting and horrible story which not a lot of people know about, which i enjoy researching about these types of stories, i wish the best of him❤
Glad that all this Legends survived this crazy & wild accidents. They are all quite inspiration , knowledgeable & very brave and amazing people.
As an O+ cmv- whole blood donor whose blood is frequently used for sick babies I love seeing people working to promote the importance of blood donations because I feel bad whenever there’s a shortage and I’m in between donations and can’t help so I love seeing more people giving to help reduce the shortages. In my 18 years as a donor I’ve given 108 units so far and am currently at the 13.5 gallon mark and hope to continue giving as long as possible because it’s a very important factor in my overall mental health knowing that I’ve given others chances at life that I wasn’t allowed to have with my grandfather who died before I was born. Please, give whenever possible if possible, it could change your life!
That's amazing to hear!
I'm 16 and on my 18th birthday I would like to donate for the first time 🙃. I find it crazy that people don't donate blood regularly!!! Also what do you donate every 2 months? Because you can technically donate Plateletss 24 times a year
@@aryanbakshi5806 technically you’re allowed to start giving as a student donor at 16 or 17 in the United States depending on where you live and certain criteria height and weight wise but starting at any age is better than nothing so congratulations on your commitment/willingness to eventually donate!
I also encourage you if you’re interested to get your platelet count tested when you go to donate to see if you’re a good candidate for platelets like I was or if you meet the criteria you could also give double reds every four months instead of every two like with whole blood.
Unfortunately despite a great platelet count I can only give whole blood every 56 days because my body doesn’t like receiving the fluids back from the aphaeresis machine and I infiltrate on the return so both platelets and double reds are out of the question for me but I did try really hard to at least make the effort to do so and at least I can still give whole blood so it’s better than nothing!
@@starfishgurl1984 I am 6 feet and weigh 185lbs so definitely fit tht category, but unfortunately in India one can only donate blood between ages 18-65 which is a shame. Congrats to you too u help so many out there☺.
I got dengue virus a few years back and my platelets dropped to 40k so idk if tht effects my donation capacity.
That's a shame tht ur blood donation is limited. Curious to know how it works in the US, because here donation is done based on requirement from what I know. Like I am not sure if I can just go anytime to donate and it'll be based on requirement.
Though it could be different for blood banks though. Again props to you for consistently donating 🙌
4:14 "Drinking water turned to drinking urine, and eating his burritos turned to eating.....nothing" OH THANK GOD. That pause was nerve wracking.
Ikr
Bro I thought they said he was gonna eat his you know diarrhoea or poop
Or The P spot is what he trying to say
the fact that i had the story of juliane's survival to study in english subject is nuts.tbh my fav chapter
I just donated blood yesterday for the first time in over a year. I felt sick and tired all day afterwards, but hearing the reminder of the importance of blood donation at the end of the video helped remind me its worth a little discomfort to save lives! Great video Doctor Mike!
I used to do it but I am too small and get faint after but I’m so glad you are able e
Drinking plenty of extra water beforehand and increasing iron/protein intake has definitely helped me as a donor over the last 18 years to have drastically reduced side effects from donating so hopefully that will help you, good luck!
Dang bro, Dr. Mike has been studying in Gage for 100 years, that's crazy, props to you bro.
how old is mike now 105??
@sprig no he's 33
r/whoosh
@@Not_Kaitlyn r/woooosh
If you do another one, John Thompson of ND would be a good one. In 1992, he was alone when both of his arms were ripped off in a farming accident. He managed to get home and inside, where he used a pencil in his teeth to call 911, and then he waited for help in the bathtub so he wouldn't bleed all over his mom's new carpet. He survived and they even were able to reattach his arms!
how did he call 911 in 1992
cool story tho
@@crushedkiwi5877 I'm not sure I understand the confusion. He used the landline in the house, but had to hold a pencil in his mouth to press the keys (or, I suppose turn the dial, depending on the kind of phone)
@@skogargirl3010 i was just making a joke…
911 came to effect only from 2001 due to …. You know 😅
@@crushedkiwi5877 ✈️🏙
@@hirumaiya 💥
Yep, he lived 12 years and his personality went from upbeat and energetic, to dull and temperamental and then finally back to being upbeat before he passed. 12 years at his already older age for the time was actually pretty long. The More You Know 😊
My mother survived a freak accident like these. After falling off a boat onto rocks her back was torn open large enough to insert a football and she was cut half in half (1/2 way through her abdomen from side to middle) by the propellers of the boat rescuing her. She was 5 mo pregnant. Originally they didn't think either of us would survive. Not only did she survive and relearn to walk but she's in great health, worked a full career as a teacher until her retirement, had 3 more kids and is a super active bubbie. (And obv I'm here too lol). Our story was featured once on the tv series Extraordinary Lives.
That's cap
@@alexgleiser8410 Easily provable fact. The episode is available online incl on TH-cam.
Wow thats fascinating! Thank you for sharing that, I might go watch the episode. It's great that she led an almost normal life after that.. Just curious though, does she suffer from any trauma or mental problems from her accident?
@@queeniemoonwalker None currently though this was so long ago (I’m 45 now lol). I don’t know if she did therapy back then beyond physical therapy- it’s not the kind of thing she would have talked about with us kids. I don’t remember even finding out about the accident until I was an older child so I think she kept a lot private to not worry us- that’s her style. (Though she must have told us something like “Jenn was born really early” because my baby pics have me in an incubator and with a scar on my forehead from the intravenous).
@@Jeloca Thats understandable. Its good that you found out when you were older though, those things can haunt a child
Julia in the 1st video survived because she knew some things about the Amazon. She lived there with her parents while they studied birds. She saw some birds that she knew lived near the river. She followed them to the river then walked along the river til she got to the logger cabin.
I'm a student in the medical field, and whilst going over amputations, a video if Aron was shown and a clip from the movie of him cutting his arm off. It was incredibly heart wrenching and many of us couldn't handle it and had to take a breather.
When Mike keeps saying: “And survived!” 😂😂😂😂
Phineas Gage and his story was in one of my Intensive Reading books one year. He survived but it's really sad how it altered his life for the bad.
The human body is amazing in these extreme events. Another case I can remember is someone who was sucked into a tornado. If they hadn't been knocked unconscious by debris their body wouldn't have gone limp, which protected them from not only debris, but the fall.
Similar to this, there's a case of a British girl who literally doesn't have the mental capacity to feel fear. She's been hit by cars a lot because of this (no sense of fear around walking into roads) and because she doesn't feel fear, her body doesn't tense up. She has survived all of these with only minor injuries because her body goes limp. It kind of makes me think that the safety mechanisms that have evolved into the human body can actually make things worse because these mechanisms weren't developed for surviving our modern world.
@@bozieduble8541doubt it
@bozieduble8541 also ahe did have fear but the body didnt tense up but she did have fear ive heard of her
I was introduced to the idea of donating blood by my school a few years ago. Unfortunately for me I’d had an ED (recovered) but couldn’t donate because I was always at least 10 kgs under the minimum weight requirement. I’ve been trying for the past few months to gain weight so I can donate especially after I’ve seen how some traumatic injuries require BAGS of blood for just one person. And if I ever wish to receive blood, in my eyes, I must give back.
The weight gain is very very slow, and I sometimes slip into old habits when I see the physical changes of my body, but i’m doing this not for myself but to help other people. So we gotta be relentless 😌🙏🏾
Goals! One foot in front of the other ...only way to get there.
Much love!
eat calorie dense foods. Easy.
@@rebeccaxx theres a mental component to it.. not tht easy
@@BlindShepherd thanks so much hunny, much love to you too !
@@rebeccaxx at times my mind nitpicks at the amount of calories I’m consuming so my therapist doesn’t recommend keeping track of my calorie consumption as yet because it could lead to my relapse 😀😭🫶🏾
But thanks for the advice sweetie
Been a donor for about a year now, hope I can slowly overcome my fear for needles this way. So it helps me and others!
At 7:11 I was sure he was gonna say
"What a chad!"
Phineas Gage's case is fascinating, I did a childhood learning book and it was a connect the dots and it was of him. scared me so bad but after learning more about it it is very cool
I had to write an essay last year about Phineas Gage's
@@xxkittykat_plazxx4388 I'm doing it now.
One could even describe Gage's story as "mind blowing"
bet his favorite song was quite the banger
@@ScientistCat He'd have been quite the fan of the song Killer Queen.
I've heard the story of Julianne Keopcke so many times on several different channels and it still amazes me.
Im sorry WHAT THE HELL. 4:55 bro that gave me chills that made my legs numb. For 10 WHOLE MINUTES.
Fax
It made me get a nose bleed
OW OW OUCH OUCH OWWW OUCH OUCH OUCH OWW OWW OUCH OUCH OWW OUCH OUCH OW OWW OUCH OUCH OWW OWW OUCH OUCH OUCH OUCHH OWW
I was shaking
I met a man in a psych ward who was a veteran and he had died and was brought back _four_ different times, and eventually he got a DNR. He was a really cool dude, I still think about him sometimes and hope he’s doing well now.
It’s almost as wild that the first woman survived 11 days in the Amazon rainforest without shelter or a weapon or anything as it is that she survived falling out of a plane.
Werner Herzog made a very good documentary on this called "Wings of Hope". I believe it's here on TH-cam. It is a fascinating watch.
I am even more confused by how she survived the Amazon with loads of open wounds and broken bones, knowing the climate you would get a severe infection in a few days
@@socialistrepublicofvietnam1500 I’ve since learned that she was already experienced at surviving in the Amazon prior to the crash. Still pretty wild though.
i read on wikipedia that she even got maggots in the cut on her arm and had to get them out with gasoline when she found civilization..
I can’t fathom the immense pain Aron must have felt. The very idea of having to cut through my own arm and then snap the bone with a rock is enough to make anyone cringe. To endure that level of suffering and still find the strength to survive and share his story is nothing short of legendary. His resilience in the face of such agony is truly inspiring
There is a story similar to the one of Phineas Gage. An 18 year old boy was celebrating his 18th birthday having fun with his friends when a pole came flying thru his head his friend called the ems but the boy couldnt fit in the ambulance so they cut the pole slowly while pouring water on the head the boy survived altho he suffered seizures,loss of memory and forgot to walk. The boy survived, learned to walk and recovered from everything he suffered from.
Thanks for sharing!
my cousin survived a freak accident but died about 11 hours after I have gone to his grave every single day even though it costs a lot of money to see him I miss him so much I would never ever ever forget him I would do anything to see him just one more time one minute we were hugging and the next I was writing r. i.p on his grave his last words were "I love you all see you in the afterlife" I will never forget that day❤❤
I remember learning about phineas gage in psychology class and it was so crazy how this sweet guy became angry all the time due to his injuries. The brain has so much to discover!
Blood transfusions are amazing how effective they can be when ur short on ur own blood! I got two during an extremely bad time when I was losing blood due to a accident and the second those finished I went from being weak, fatigued and pale as a white sheet back to tan and could walk with out passing out or having seizures. 😊 Thank you to the blood donors out there!
I have been a blood & plasma donor for over 10 years now. I love helping other people 💗
I wish he'd talk about Allison botha, what happened to her wasnt an accident but it is one of the most insane survival/extreme injuries stories I've ever heard. That woman an absolute beast.
Can you elaborate?
@@banana_cow Allison Botha was r**ped and stabbed more than 50 times, in her abdomen and neck, almost decapitated but she dragged herself to find help and against all odds survived. She is an amazing woman and to this day she inspires a lot of people.
@@lizethmares5965 oh wow I'm surprised I haven't heard that case yet I'll have to look into it she sounds like a very strong woman
hi could someone explain what her story is?
She is a woman in South Africa who was abducted and all the naughtys were done. Here captors then cut her almost decapitating her and she survived.
I remember reading a book about Phineas Gage, it was pretty intresting on how the accident changed him.
And his brother ferb right?
There' story about Phineas Gage in Sam O'nella channel, you can learn more, it's really so interesting.
--> 0:40
The Phineas Gage case is so fascinating to hear about and it brings to mind another case from history - when Henry VIII was king, during his early years, he was described as a generous and charming man. However, in early 1536, he participated in some jousting and got into an accident where he was thrown off his armored horse which ended up on top of him (he was also armored) and the sources said he was unconscious for a few hours - the accident caused his leg to become really horrifically infected for the rest of his life and there was a marked personality change after the accident where he became perceived more infamously as a tyrant (his wife at the time, Anne Boleyn, ended up being beheaded a few months after the accident on accusations of adultery after failing to give Henry his longed-for son and heir - she had actually miscarried a boy days after the accident, probably because of stress over the accident) - it’s now widely believed that he suffered brain trauma in the fall which caused his personality change that led to his infamous reputation in history today
Sounds like it could have been a bad enough injury that is permanently damaged areas of the brain dealing with emotional regulation, rational thinking, and the like. My first thought was CTE but that seems to be more for people who experience a lot of concussions over a long period of time like boxers or football players. It's possible since he was a lover of jousting but if the shift was as sudden as you describe it was probably damage from a TBI.
I am a blood donor, and I am here by the grace of an enormous blood transfusion. Donating blood saves lives. I am forever thankful to all donors.
I would donate blood, but I can barely handle giving blood for mandatory testing, and I don't think I'd be allowed because of the medications I take. It's mostly a mental stress thing.
Also, Phineas Gage was awake and talkative through to whole incident, doctor's and his fellow workmates were shocked to see him still talking.
We learned about Phineas Gage in my junior year psychology class. It was one of the wildest stories I've ever heard.
I've always loved the story of Phineas Gage. I first heard it in my 7th grade english class. While my classmates were horrified and completely disgusted, I was so intrigued and just so happy to look up graphic (and mostly photoshopped) images online. It just made me realize what the human body was able to withstand. His story completely changed my perspective on life and our personalities. It amazes me how we can be normal one day, and our entire lives, personalities, and abilities can change in an instant.
Aron now always leaves a note whenever he goes exploring after the accident
Hi fbi
Uh...I did my taxes, I-I swear!
@@M1N1molo are you sure about that 🤔
@@GCHARLIE2 maaaayber
Yo. My agent isn’t “interested” in me?
Mike as always has wild content,
I think I could be a survivor in a lower way , when I was a kid (8 or less ) I was climbing a fence, and got a metal part of the fence in my neck, I didn't feel any pain but doctors told me they couldn't explain how the fence didn't break/cut any tissue, vain or something in the way, but they did told me it was less than 1cm to the fence to reach the aorta, and that would be another history
it’s 2am i’m gonna remember this for the rest of my life thanks man