Hank out here not just beating cancer but doxxing his cancer too.
@StealthTheUnknown8 ай бұрын
Bump
@PartyofNone8 ай бұрын
bump
@vitaurea8 ай бұрын
+
@elingdreamer948 ай бұрын
^
@maniaclaugh8 ай бұрын
Yesss, expose those immature cells!
@JanrickInchocoofficial7 ай бұрын
“This WAS my cancer.” I got teary eyes hearing these words. goosebumps
@Autrone8 ай бұрын
Honestly, the idea of cancer cells getting rebellious against the established order because of some nostalgia of their single-celled ancestors really is interesting.
@samblackstone34008 ай бұрын
It’s more like nostalgia for being a fetus. Cancer shows how dangerous being a man/womanchild really is.
@jerkchicken_expertlyseasoned8 ай бұрын
Cells that become alienated from the greater "society" that is your body, and adopt self-serving "antisocial" behaviors.
@VEE7278 ай бұрын
Yes. Relatable
@Ezullof8 ай бұрын
It's a very seducing idea, but it's also a very partial one. From the perspective of aging multicellular organism, it's also a natural clock - the body self-destructing itself as it ages to leave more room for subsequent generations. And there's also the issue that cancer cells aren't the only cells in our bodies to show a degree of individuality. Not all our cells work in perfect cooperation... and that's why there's so many auto-immune diseases. The idea that cancer is an atavism of some sort makes sense intuitively, but the more you look at it, the more it just looks like a dysfunction.
@HenriFaust8 ай бұрын
The idea of the Noble Savage as cancer.
@undercoverduck8 ай бұрын
Shoutout to the pathology labs around the world! They're the department that carries out the staining & diagnosis of biopsies and bodily fluids. Pathologists (MDs who have specialised in laboratory medicine) then inspect the slides, order additional tests, and diagnose based on the results. The pathology department often gets overlooked by the general public as they tend to work in the background rather than directly with the patients. This unfortunately also means that a lot of medical laboratories face substantial shortages in personel! So they can use all the love & attention we can give them.
@SoliamMurr8 ай бұрын
You must be a dermatologist/oncologist/hematologist to speak so highly of pathologist. Thank you for your words.
@chokobo00478 ай бұрын
There are way to many MLTs getting churned out. The job market anywhere near an accrediting program is heavily flooded and the opposite is true for the Histo community due in part to the fact that at surface level it isn't apparent just how integral a pathology lab is in the grand diagnosis/treatment system. We don't work for patients. We work for the doctor that performed your surgery. Over the years they have also incrementally made accreditation more difficult as time goes on. Its become discouraging to young people. The average age of an employee in an IHC or histolab is upper 50's maybe even 60 now. The Histo community is understaffed as a whole but its manageable. In another 10-15 years though the bulk of us will be retiring. The time to train and educate a new generation is here now but no one wants to address it publicly. It's like driving a car and waiting until it dies on the side of the road before you get more gas. It's too late at that point. Our low fuel light is on but no one seems to be concerned.
@TheJefferyKiller8 ай бұрын
@@chokobo0047 to hopefully ease your concern, I took years after high school finding a career, and I fell in love with pathology and Im dead set on the path and steps to get there. A lot of people my age are actually pretty interested in the background stuff that goes on anywhere really, so I wouldnt stress too much about not having another influx of pathologists or the like
@atronajs7 ай бұрын
It doesn't help that the work of an MLT and MLS is poorly compensated in my opinion with a lot of schooling, training and stress. Many of my peers and myself have left the industry due to literally not being able to afford living in our city while working 10 hour shifts, though histology is generally better compensated than general lab scientist or core lab. @@chokobo0047
@joshuasalem50227 ай бұрын
I’m just started a job as a cytogenetic tech and this video felt like it was calling my name
@TheBioCosmos7 ай бұрын
As a cancer biologist who works on trying to understand how cancer cells invade and metastasize, I really do appreciate this video. Cancer cells are literally like its own organism, they move away to find more food and establish new home (yeah, that's essentially what metastases are!). I'm so glad Hank is doing better. But this video also shows how cancer research is so important. And the people who work in histology are also the unsung heroes for doing all the staining in the background just so the pathologist can look and diagnose. All very important work that needs to be recognised for!
@DCGreenZone5 ай бұрын
There are many natural substances available that block Mets. There are many azoles and avermectins that are being used to treat. Fact.
@coop53293 ай бұрын
Thank you for the kind words! I worked for a number of years as an HT then as an HTL, including at a cancer research lab, and we were always the invisible people. I look at these stains and say, yeah, I've done that. Histology itself is another fascinating science and sometimes, it is also an art form.
@peaceofmind5635Ай бұрын
Hello there ! Just wanted to know what was your study path to become a cancer biologist. Im a pharmacy school student and im very interested in such domain but i dont know if its possible to pursue it after pharmacy school. Thank you and have a great day / night :)
@TheBioCosmosАй бұрын
@@peaceofmind5635 I did 3y BSc in Biochem, had done extensive study on cell biology, advanced cell biology, and cancer biology. Then did 4 y PhD in Cancer biology. Hope it helps.
@Spiritdark0008 ай бұрын
I worked for Mayo Clinic's Immunohistochemistry department as a diagnostic technologist, and this explanation was spot-on! I also worked in Fluorescent In-Situ Hybridization there, along with Next-Gen Sequencing. Now I'm with the University of Washington in Hematopathology, rediagnosing and combining all three kinds of techniques to diagnose cancers just like yours. Love the shout out to us medical lab scientists; many people don't realize our job exists, and we are highly specialized staff working with physicians to come to diagnoses like yours. Keep doing your thing; I've loved all your channels since high school and keep inspiring others to learn to do cool science!!!
@nobody.of.importance7 ай бұрын
Y'all are true heroes, just sayin. Everyone in the medical department has an important job, even the cooks! I always do my best to treat medical staff with respect and patience (unless they give me reason not to. Long story.)
@abdoolidiots6 ай бұрын
As a medical laboratory science graduate😂 I never had the chance to do.anything in lab after graduating from it💩 Im too depressed to even take my board exam.
@abdoolidiots6 ай бұрын
But indeed this Job is amazing. 💩 I just somehow wish I aint this depressed
@jasonjohnson54083 ай бұрын
Is it possible for me to ask you a few questions please - i don't know how or where in more confidential setting
@iainballas8 ай бұрын
Man I remember when I logged into youtube one morning, and there was a new channel "Journey to the Microcosmos", where Hank was doing ASMR descriptions of tiny things and talking about how excited they were to have a fancy microscope. I remember when they upgraded, I remember so many things. 20k, 50k, 100k, 250k, and soon 1m. I LOVE this 'lab science' channel! It shows things that are in the world all around us, but that most of us would never see or know about. Here's hoping for many, MANY more years of Hank Green narrations!
@nobody.of.importance7 ай бұрын
I started following it when it was new, too. They were advertising it on the various scishows, if I remember right. It is very cool to see how it's grown over the years, and I'm glad they're getting the attention they deserve. Hank seems like a pretty cool dude (tm), and his team seem lovely, as well.
@laurenloveless838 ай бұрын
I work in a pathology department for the last 4 years. I'm only the assistant admin but I love my job and the things I get to see. The pathologist i work with are so intelligent and some of the hardest working people I've ever worked with in my 25 years working experience. All though they don't see the patients they still care about those patients the same as if they did. It is a very rewarding job.
@nobody.of.importance7 ай бұрын
Y'all are true heroes. Especially during the pandemic. Thank you for what you do. c:
@valentinacastillo44918 ай бұрын
As a pathologist, this beautiful video made me cry! Thank you. ¡Ay, es que me emocioné! it is always so uplifting to hear of a patient recovery :D
@lecuyermarcandre8 ай бұрын
Quick rectification. PAX5 is a transcription factor, so it is not expressed on the surface of cells. BCL2 is a protein that regulates cell death (apoptosis), it is also not on the surface but inside the cell, in the cytoplasm. Finally, cyclin D1 is involved in the cell cycle and it is not expressed on the surface. CD15, CD30 and CD20 are expressed on the surface of the cells. You can still see the other proteins because before labelling them with amtibodies we permeabilize and fix the cell membrane.
@vlogbrothers8 ай бұрын
Thank you!!
@osmia8 ай бұрын
+
@marcbuerkle7 ай бұрын
Most informative, thank you! How do you know this, if I may ask?
@AgastyaSingh7 ай бұрын
@@marcbuerkle reading scientific papers!
@lecuyermarcandre7 ай бұрын
I'm a neuroimmunologist@@marcbuerkle
@HazelVsTheWrld8 ай бұрын
The fact that my body has had a couple of cancer cells grow inside me today but were killed by my immune cells before anything bad could happen 💀
@soumyamishra90757 ай бұрын
Shout out to your WBCs ❤
@alexbowman75827 ай бұрын
Often HIV killed by the damaged immune system permitting the growth of rare “lottery win” chance cancers.
@33_77.7 ай бұрын
Or the fact that our bodies come in contact with many kinds of germs every day, the good ones and the bad ones. But our immune system protects the body, it works 24/7 and prevents further inflammation
@VoidHalo7 ай бұрын
No different than missing getting hit by a drunk driver because you stopped for 20 seconds to tie your shoes 3 blocks away. Life is random. We lull ourselves into thinking we're fully in control of everything, but you could just as easily wake up tomorrow morning and learn you have brain cancer. You just have to accept the possibility that something COULD happen at any moment to destroy you, or your life, or your livelihood, or your home, or your family/a family member. Life is random. But the fact that we have no control over these things doesn't have to be scary.
@i.ehrenfest3497 ай бұрын
@@VoidHaloit is absolutely not true that we have no control at all over whether we get cancer, even if we’ll never have complete control. Who told you cancer is completely random?
@paulpowis59148 ай бұрын
As someone living with CLL, this was really, really interesting. Thank you and I’m so glad your cancer has gone.
@Zunree18698 ай бұрын
never knew he had cancer to begin with!
@nobody.of.importance7 ай бұрын
Good luck with your recovery from CLL. I'm rooting for you!
@paulpowis59147 ай бұрын
@@nobody.of.importance thank you Melody.
@AMCaroM8 ай бұрын
As a doctor who works with cancer terminal patients, thanks a lot for telling it this way, it is comforting and human…
@fredwood14908 ай бұрын
We are all so glad you are cancer free and back with us. Good on ya!
@jamesyoungquist69238 ай бұрын
Congrats on beating your cancer and staying on to educate all the rest of us
@PLuMUK548 ай бұрын
This reminded me of a former colleague. She taught biology. Every time she, her family, or friends had a procedure, she asked for samples or x-ray photos to use in her lessons. She had quite a collection. I donated skin from when I had a particularly bad case of eczema. Some colleagues thought that she was a ghoul! Thank you, Hank, for being so open about your cancer. Every person like you brings it into the open instead of it being a topic of whispers and embarrassment. Congratulations on your recovery.
@zipbangcrash7 ай бұрын
My sister is one of many of those lab experts. In her case, she's a pathologist assistant. She receives, preps, grosses and describes allllllll the specimens. The people in that lab are very good at the parts they do to make those diagnoses accurate and fast. I am proud of her! 🎉
@XxAmayaSanxX8 ай бұрын
Histotech here, this is such a great video that explains some of what we do in the lab!
@darlantro8 ай бұрын
I am a principal scientist at a large pharma company where I develop novel IHC biomarker assays to help predict if an individual will benefit from our upcoming oncology drugs. Hank, you listing out the diagnostic markers at 3:30 gave me a big smile. A lot of work goes into the R&D for these tools, and its very rewarding hearing a recovering individual now in remission read out their own IHC pathology description.
@nobody.of.importance7 ай бұрын
Assuming you're telling the truth, since, y'know, this is youtube and all, y'all do important work. Keep it up.
@labestia80998 ай бұрын
This AND John's tuberculosis video on Crash Course?!? I feel so spoiled today. Thank you both for all that you do (:
@deadiemeyers16618 ай бұрын
Five years in remission from colon cancer. I learned so much about life and love from my own journey. Wishing you many years of health and well being, Hank.
@jjmetrejhon17438 ай бұрын
I'm always amazed by JTtM's capacity to teach us something new. Thank you, and thank you so much to Hank for putting these pieces of yourself under the microscope so we can all learn something new.
@nobody.of.importance7 ай бұрын
Had such a hard time reading" JTtM" because I'm so used to seeing "JtHM". It's a 2000s era comic book, tldr.
@Royal-sp9pb8 ай бұрын
How did I not know this channel was hosted by Hank green until now lol
@blamb99778 ай бұрын
I never recognized the voice until now either!
@AlbertaGeek8 ай бұрын
Really? His voice is very distinctive.
@maxtube4448 ай бұрын
he's reaching simon whatshisface levels
@rickh37148 ай бұрын
I knew the voice- couldn't 'retrieve' the face! VERY thought provoking vid!
@jeremiahlowe32688 ай бұрын
He definitely changed mics for this show. It does deepen his voice a little bit.
@IanGrams8 ай бұрын
Thanks for taking us on this particularly personal journey, Hank. So grateful you made it through it. I had heard of the notion that cancer is like your cells reverting back to unicellular life but am glad to now know that's called the atavistic model of cancer. As a bonus I can add atavism, a tendency to revert to something ancient or ancestral, to my vocabulary.
@isstinna8 ай бұрын
Hank brothers dropping awesome videos today! What a badass thing to say "this is my cancer"!
@pattheplanter8 ай бұрын
"Was". Tenses are sometimes very important.
@isstinna7 ай бұрын
@@pattheplanter The writing on the thumbnail of the video literally says "is"
@pattheplanter7 ай бұрын
@@isstinna Not what he said in the video, though it was written in the thumbnail. "What a badass thing to write" doesn't work as well.
@jovanpejic8 ай бұрын
Almost a year ago, I also operated on my first cancer. This one was on the skin and harmless, but still cancer. The operation was short and successful. Who knows what else awaits me at the end of my journey :)
@Laptevwalrus8 ай бұрын
Take care of yourself. You still have malign cells, check yourself more often
@coronalight778 ай бұрын
You operated on your own cancer? Not gonna lie your comment feels fake.
@jovanpejic8 ай бұрын
@@coronalight77 The doctors operated on me, I didn't do it myself :) Basal-cell carcinoma - that "disease" (better - the state of the organism) is in question @user-fe1nr3ws1z The doctors said that everything was removed (on the surface of the skin it is easy to see) , but I will definitely check, thanks.
@ziizification8 ай бұрын
@@coronalight77assuming this was something like a stage 1 skin cancer and a bit of medical knowledge, it's not actually out of the realm of possibility, especially considering I basically did this myself with a DIY skin tag removal. (Don't remove your own skin tags, folks. It hurts like you wouldn't believe and left me a nasty wound that took forever to heal.)
@marcoasturias85208 ай бұрын
Never been so happy to hear the word "was"!
@joshuasalem50227 ай бұрын
As someone who works in a pathology lab I was ready to give my explanations and corrections to Hank but then saw the comments already did that for me. Very few people understand what goes on in my workplace so I’m glad to see people who understand
@JonathanAlexanderM7 ай бұрын
One thing that annoys me about modern people is that plenty of them think that cancer as a whole is a recent thing. “Cancer is because of processed food and not living clean” they say. When in fact cancer has been a part of life since the jump. They always either double down or open up when I tell them that we found osteosarcoma on fossils million upon millions of years old. Cancer been here forever and it’s not really going anywhere for the next couple of generations maybe. You could live the cleanest most straight edge life in existence and still get got like that.
@i.ehrenfest3497 ай бұрын
Of course cancer has been around forever. Yet we know it’s mushroomed both in people and pets, and there’s loads of science showing how environmental factors, very much including diet, contribute. Ignore at your peril.
@JonathanAlexanderM7 ай бұрын
@@i.ehrenfest349 yes we have a lot of factors that go into increasing chances of cancer but those factors pending the person won’t do anything either. I wouldn’t exactly say cases are mushrooming either rather we’ve gotten so good at catching these things early and people screen more often that we’re catching more diagnoses what would’ve remained hidden for some time, and a great indicator for cancer seems to also be genetics. You have ww2 vets that drank and smoked every day and stay cancer free until a natural death of old age and triathletes that never poisoned their bodies ever and they catch lung cancer at 37 and die soon thereafter. Life’s not fair
@kimutone29706 ай бұрын
@@i.ehrenfest349 You don't have to play the Smart ass dude, everyone is aware there are risk factors due to lifestyle and habits, the comment is aimed at people who victim-shame on cáncer patients almost blaming them for having it, whether they actually had a healthy life or not. You are not discovering fire here dude, stop and move on.
@Garl_Vinland6 ай бұрын
Wild rats get more cancer than us. You can’t avoid it
@mrseriousv18 ай бұрын
I have been expecting them to make a video on cancer for a while now, very epic.
@erwynnipegerwynnipeg84558 ай бұрын
Hank, you are an amazing and lovely individual with a beautiful, inspirational and accessible voice. You're clearly genius levels of intelligent. I REALLY hope you will be okay! You truly deserve a stress-free life where you get to do what you love and learn in peace without being attacked by your own lymphocytes!
@espeierman7 ай бұрын
The Green brothers are all powerful. Hank Green dropping a journey through his own cancer the same day John Green drops his Crash Course lecture on Tuberculosis was almost too much for me.
@KrazyKaiser7 ай бұрын
Hank, if you've never seen the anime Cell's at Work, you should watch the episode about cancer, it's a really interesting take. Cancer is a destructive villain, but it's framed as almost sympathetic, not having asked to exist the way that it does, but not having any other choice.
@BackseatBettieBurlesque6 ай бұрын
Cool! I'm gonna go check this out right now!
@davidheaver28548 ай бұрын
Thanks for putting up the prostate cancer cell clip. So insightful to see what they are currently up to in me.
@le135797 ай бұрын
Time for bad cell jokes? Divide and conquer? 😆
@BunnaySango7 ай бұрын
Im so glad you beat cancer, this is one of my favourite channels and Id be gutted to lose it.
@andrewinnj8 ай бұрын
Really a beautiful reflection on the disease in this context.
@AppliedCryogenics8 ай бұрын
Excellent episode from a spectacular channel! (So glad your treatment was a success, Hank! The world is a markedly better place with you, and James, and the rest of the team- in it!!)
@northyland11578 ай бұрын
My cancer let me know... tumor was eating a hole in my right kidney... I started peeing lots of Blood and "clots". A cat scan found the exact spot. Now with my right kidney removed and my cancer not being an aggressive type.. I should be fine...
@obieobrien58838 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your fascinating story. I’m glad you’re still here!
@MrSixdrive7 ай бұрын
Not only am i a Hank green fan but also a pathologist. It's so cool to see one of my favourite creators step into my world, which is often overlooked. I never thought i would see a tray of slides on a KZbin video. Stay well Hank
@CrimsonA16 ай бұрын
You're a strong dude, Henry. May you continue having fun with and discovering microbes for decades to come!
@georgesconyers97697 ай бұрын
I knew you were going to make this episode. May your remission be permanent, Hank.
@mevalinf49557 ай бұрын
Dear Hank. When you first made your reappearance, I almost cried. I have been watching you and John way more than any actors/actresses in the past decade. Thank you for coming back.
@skylerjkorn7 ай бұрын
Anyone else just find out that the voice is Hank? Never out the two together. I follow you in instagram. Makes me so happy that it’s tou
@MariankGonzalez8 ай бұрын
Hank Green's voice: Quiet mode. It didn't sound like him the way I expected it to at first, but then after the intro it started to sound like him. Glad you're in remission, Hank! Keep trucking on.
@MagicPlants8 ай бұрын
it's really annoying actually. he should just talk normally
@sup86688 ай бұрын
@@MagicPlantsD1 hater that only comments about his voice…
@killthepandas.7 ай бұрын
@@MagicPlants how is this not talking normally
@stevenkarnisky4117 ай бұрын
There is a certain nobility in using your own misfortune to educate others about cancer on the cellular level. Thank you, Hank Green, for this insightful episode!
@jillianc9497 ай бұрын
What a fascinating way of looking at cancer. Thank you for opening up about your own cancer story and I'm glad that you're doing well and managed to overcome your illness. The HeLa cells remind me of the book 'The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks' - those cells are an episode's worth of a story all on their own.
@le135797 ай бұрын
What are HeLa cells?
@le135797 ай бұрын
I've googled it and it's blown my mind. 🤯
@BackseatBettieBurlesque6 ай бұрын
Hank, I've been wanting to say this to you for a long time- you are such a valuable part of humanity and I'm so glad you beat your cancers ass. The world needs you and those like you now more than ever and I, personally, feel a great sense of relief just knowing that you're out there making intelligent videos for the world to watch and learn from. Thank you so much for all you do. ❤
@llsilvertail5618 ай бұрын
“They were a single called organism whose most recent ancestors was me, but they were not me.” Oof. Now that’s something to give people existential crises.
@theeyeofomnipotent7 ай бұрын
It is if you define "you" and build your identity around your body, while not questioning what even are "you" in the first place, I think that existential crisis is healthy as to reflect upon what we are, be more existentially secure and truthful, and to solve such crisis is to rejuvenate our "meaning" on our own life, a recharge, a refresh of the soul? lol
@bennyfactor8 ай бұрын
Thank you for showing us your Hodgkin/Hodgkin's/John Hodgman Lymphoma cells. This is really interesting with the extra dimension of it being you talking about the microcosmos of ... you. And that you're okay now, thankfully.
@ecdm32545 ай бұрын
Med student here! I would like to thank all the pathologists all over the world! The unsung, least seen experts in diagnosis in the hospital. Stay kind and passionate when you share your experties and knowledge!
@Hanna_Munden7 ай бұрын
Your cancer looks so similar to the cancer that took my mom as a kid. Also so much like the cancer that teamed up with diabetes to give a beloved pug a sad, but thankfully peaceful forever rest. This disease also claimed so many of my loved ones and my loved ones of my loved ones. Thank you for the candid insight. I think it can both be hard and comforting seeing and learning about the cell-level science behind something that touches so many of us. Life and biology can be so strange but so beautiful. No idea if you'll read this, but I am so glad you're still here kicking butt, Hank!!! Everyone who does read this please try to make sure the people you love know you love them!
@johnandrheyabordo6448 ай бұрын
I'm currently studying Microbiology. Now, I'm thinking of taking up Oncology if ever I enter Medical practice. This video made me even more interested in the field.
@annediss87067 ай бұрын
Thank you for another fabulous and thought-provoking clip. I look forward to sharing this with my students! It is wonderful that you have recovered and can continue to savor this remarkable thing that is life!
@cyanofelis7 ай бұрын
The 'experts' are called Pathologists. We are medical doctors who specialize in laboratory science. It is a medical subspecialty with board exams and requires years of training.
@JanoyCresvaZero7 ай бұрын
I have been sick for like 2-3 months now and I’m terrified to find out if I have cancer or something… love you Hank. Glad you’re good.
@PeteDeKiwi8 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your cancer journey with us. You are no doubt an inspiration to others.
@QuilloManar7 ай бұрын
What a powerful word. "was"
@Halflife2-y2m8 ай бұрын
Mind blown again! I love these.
@dia94917 ай бұрын
You blew my mind Hank when you said, “reversion to single cellular life.” It makes sense. Great video.
@lrwerewolf7 ай бұрын
It is unfortunate that you had to go through this, but, the way you've turned it around and used it to educate us about cancer is inspiring. Well done, Hank, and thank you for being open about it and turning this horrible illness into a way to educate others.
@Majormontemayor3 ай бұрын
Recent graduate from medical laboratory science here and I’d like to say how great it is for this channel to talk about this topic. I worked as an intern in our laboratory’s histopath section and I enjoyed every single minute of it. From cutting sections of tissues to staining them and seeing our pathologist do their work using the tissues we processed really is fulfilling knowing that every slide could mean the difference in a patients’ life. Though, i get sad when I learn the results were positive for the disease suspected, more often than not already too late to treat. I can’t thank hank enough for bringing topics like cancer to the public from spreading awareness and sharing progresses in diagnostics and treatment to even sharing his own story and battles with his own cancer. I hope their content reaches to all especially to those who need it so that we can prevent and treat (especially if diagnosed early) diseases like cancer and less of us from the medical community have to see the unfortunate consequences of being too late to do anything or have to deal with cancer at all.
@caspenbee8 ай бұрын
This was gorgeous and concise. I would love a full documentary on this topic! It's crazy to think the tree of life can go single cell>multicellular thing>animal>single cell! Less like a tree of life and more like a wheel...there's something Buddhist about that!
@elisabetk25957 ай бұрын
Back in the mid-eighties I had to hand-carry my biopsy slides (and X-ray films!) to Big Cancer Hospital where I was going to be treated. Of course the first thing I did when I got my hands on them was to put them under our family's old light-reflector microscope. After all, my flight wasn't until the next day. They didn't look even close to as good as these slides! But still fascinating. Also all the CD14 typing and the like wasn't even being done yet. They hadn't yet even proved which cells for Hodgkin's turned cancerous. By the way, I had mixed cellularity, too.
@frankgarofalo77227 ай бұрын
I’m a histotechnologist! I love my job. I am also a hematologist. We would have done a PBF as well for an indicator.
@animanatole8 ай бұрын
Very insightful. Congratulations for beating cancer!
@twitchy.mp37 ай бұрын
Missed you hank good to know you’re still kickin
@carryoncarrion45257 ай бұрын
I feel kind of dumb but I didn't realize you were Hank Green until like yesterday when I saw the 'ending channel update'. Thank you for this amazing channel/adventure into the micro-world. It's been amazing ❤
@mrjr037 ай бұрын
12:33 I was definitely thinking about how you went about requesting your slides 😅😊
@ewdaddy70308 ай бұрын
I love you guys. Thank you for posting.
@sarahlynn78078 ай бұрын
It's wild you got these slides. Really interesting! I learned a lot!
@specifikitty7 ай бұрын
This is now more relatable than ever bc my cat has terminal liver cancer. Thank you for uploading.
@Nick-o-time6 ай бұрын
I'm sorry to hear this, but at least they have you as their family.
@ChinchillaBONK7 ай бұрын
As a fellow cancer survivor, WE WILL SURVIVE!
@Magmafrost137 ай бұрын
"Cancer as a single-celled organism" is something thats been stuck in my head ever since I learned about Canine Transmissible Venereal Tumor. Its such a stark and fascinating reminder of how biology could not care less about human classificaiton systems. Like this is something that is functionally a single-celled parasitic organism, but phylogenetically a canine. Its kinda weird to say I have a favourite cancer, but canine cvt is so neat
@aalhard8 ай бұрын
Cancer as evolution, 🤯🤯🤯 Whoever wrote that concept gets a raise
@le135797 ай бұрын
But interestingly, I always thought cancer was the body trying to evolve but something went wrong. From what the vid said, it seems cancer is anti-evolution. Who would have thought!?!
@gapeape38958 ай бұрын
having a slide of your cancer is awesome
@rebeccaadamson59728 ай бұрын
There are science communicators then there's Hank "here are my own cancer slides for free online science education" Green
@LeonardTavast8 ай бұрын
I love the Darwinian take on cancers. It's interesting how one's own cells can start to behave as parasitic single-celled organisms.
@colinadevivero8 ай бұрын
Congratulations 🎉. This is my first video and I am hooked 😊. Keep up the good work
@robert2german7 ай бұрын
As someone who studied histology for my job, I was able to comprehend and appreciate the terminology used in this video.
@zolacnomiko8 ай бұрын
Hank still riding the curiosity wave of OMG The Science is ME!!!
@makSyak8 ай бұрын
microbes are more interesting than 99% of the stuff on youtube lmao
@HazelVsTheWrld8 ай бұрын
Plus, it's not brain rot, it's brain food
@Friedolays8 ай бұрын
Your comment just made me poopoo my fanties! jajajajajaja
@babygorilla42338 ай бұрын
Seeing as each of us only bothers to watch .01% of what's on KZbin yes. If your reading this that's true.
@Juniper-1118 ай бұрын
microbes are more interesting than anything on KZbin imo. I'm a math head who has learned a great deal from KZbin and I still think this. Microbes are solo effing amazing!!
@Futurebound_jpg8 ай бұрын
Its also the masterful way these videos are produced. The music, the vibe, the editing. Its all very intriguing yet relaxing. I can watch these video when i wanna learn and be engaged, or i can put them in the background while i fall asleep! I hope they keep making them forever, no other channels fill this niche for me
@Ole_Rasmussen7 ай бұрын
Hank's cancer: You're freggin dead, pal Hank: No, but you're content
@justaguy57708 ай бұрын
Next level personal for a narrator. Here look at my cancer cells
@braudhadoch34326 ай бұрын
This is the content we need. We need a KZbin dedicated to Nature itself
@shexdensmore7 ай бұрын
I'm glad you are still with us, you have a very soothing voice on in this series
@michellevdheever76198 ай бұрын
Dang, Hank. Such a good script! And excellent editing.
@newkkl7 ай бұрын
This is a great video. Also, for a blood cancer like lymphoma, if chemo doesn’t work, a blood stem cell transplant is another treatment option. It’s utterly astonishing that as complex as our immune system is, if you have the same antigens on your cells as another person, your cancer can be cured by a transplant of their blood stem cells. I never stop being astonished at what happens in our bodies at the cellular level with no conscious input from us! Glad you are still with us, Hank. 🧡
@TheBullethead8 ай бұрын
@HanlGreen I didn't even know you were sick at all until now. VERY glad you're on the recovery path Best of luck with that. Seriously.
@helenTW7 ай бұрын
Proud of you for beating that bugger! KZbin probably brought me here because of my recent cancer related searches as my mom was diagnosed with a rare blood cancer that is slightly related to Hodgkin's Lymphoma. She has Essential Thrombocythaemia, meaning her bone marrow produces a lot more platelets (thrombocytes) than needed. Just recently her doctor told her that her odds of it developing into Leukemia are disturbingly high, about 15%. It's hard to live with this information but we need to pull through, and if needed, fight!
@thomasschmidt85448 ай бұрын
What an informative, captivating video and strong story! Thank you for sharing it. In combination with some kurzgesagt videos on cancer, I've been learning a lot. And as a side note: Being a lay person in microbiology who speaks English as a second language - though being not far from fluent in colloquial settings and in my own field of study - and although your pronounciation is very, very clear, I still dearly appreciate the thorough subtitling which makes it a whole lot easier for me (and I am sure: even for many native speakers) to follow along.
@DearFreja7 ай бұрын
Never seen your channel until right now, but this is a really great video. Your voice over and editing are great, and I especially love the music choice. Congrats on beating your cancer!
@Syndie77-gk4xk7 ай бұрын
Wait, I knew this channel was part of the SciShow Crash Course extended universe, but have you ALWAYS been Hank Green? Like, since Day 1? How did I not know this?
@LittleRainGames7 ай бұрын
My mom has non hodgekins lymphoma, and shes 69 years old. Doctors gave her 5 max like 7 years ago, and is in remission. But she is the healthiest person Ive ever seen, hikes and mountain bikes every day, eats stuff like lenthels. She also survived an anyurism. You can beat it man.
@Yezpahr7 ай бұрын
It's something that touches you but you can't touch it. You can see it while it does the damage and can only hope it loses its mission. Good to hear you beat yours.
@pvtpain66k8 ай бұрын
"Volvox" sounds like a Pokémon & every time you say it I repeat, in a weird voice "VOLvox!" 🤔
@kastiak068 ай бұрын
I... I've been subscribed to this channel for a while now. I has genuinely helped me sooth my mind during some challenging times. But know, I look back at all that, and I just feel dumb, because I didn't realize that it was narrated by Hank Green. I'm happy, but also dissociating a bit.
@BoldJumper7 ай бұрын
Hank, you are an inspiration to all of us. Keep on keeping on! You are a badass
@miashadows8 ай бұрын
Bravo! So happy you beat it, and so glad you wanted to share. This was very informative. Thankyou.
@CrisURace8 ай бұрын
Oh god damn... Hope for the best. CML here - in remission now. Hopefully soon off treatment for life.