Oh boy, horrors beyond my compression. Thanks for the daily reminder that everything's always trying to kill me.
@hutzy36072 ай бұрын
Especially at 12:07 pm! Goodnight yall
@ryuzaki54912 ай бұрын
Comprehension*
@AirSoftFattyIsMyDaddy2 ай бұрын
Compression lol
@PWLfr2 ай бұрын
Don't worry, you won't notice anything until it's too late
@SoxExcalibur2 ай бұрын
this is well within your comprehension
@KainaX1222 ай бұрын
R.I.P. Grant Imahara You will always be missed, Mythbuster o7
@alexale54882 ай бұрын
No RIP Afterlife doesn't exist faithful losers
@StoutShako2 ай бұрын
It's so unfair. What a brilliant man, gone much too soon.
@matchahorchata54042 ай бұрын
He was born exactly one week before tory too
@crush41gb2 ай бұрын
My mom had 2 aneurysms, drove home and called me. Thank God she got a stent, time in the icu and eventually got her smell and personality back. She was with us about 10 yrs. afterwards .❤️😇
@FesteringRatSub2 ай бұрын
what do u mean by personality?
@GodplayGamerZulul2 ай бұрын
@@ikigatsumaru Why is lil bro not doing his homework?
@crush41gb2 ай бұрын
@FesteringRatSub she wasn't really herself for a while and could only smell plain vanilla candles and ms. Smith apple pie for a long time. By the time her hair grew back from being shaved for surgery she was good. Only had a few weeks of rehab after icu. She did great.
@nycoolj32 ай бұрын
@@ikigatsumaru now I support legalizing abortion thanks to this kid
@TheBigBlindAceOfSpades2 ай бұрын
@@ikigatsumaruThat’s crazy bro talking about crossing a line when he made fun of someone’s mom going through a traumatic experience and almost dying 💀
@ilv12 ай бұрын
2%? So... 2 out of 100 people will have a brain aneurysm in their life? THAT IS NOT LOW!
@krispynachos99802 ай бұрын
Yeh when you put it that way it's not low at all
@MisadventureMisty2 ай бұрын
THIS! This is what I always think when they say “low” or “rare.” Then proceed to say “2%” or even “0.05%.” If it could realistically have been someone I went to high school with (very small high school) I tend to think that’s not really rare.
@Potrimpo2 ай бұрын
I agree in a lot of ways, especially 2% of say 1,000,000 is 20,000. That's a lot.
@dented_riddles99672 ай бұрын
Apparently there's about a 1 in 20 chance my retinas will randomly detach from my eyes at some point, because I'm severely nearsighted. Crazy the things that aren't as "rare" as they seem.
@Goohizaus2 ай бұрын
1 out of 50
@ambersgrace12 ай бұрын
My mom died from a brain aneurysm at age 34, I was 8 years old. I still remember her holding her head screaming in pain.
@FXV562 ай бұрын
That is absolutely horrible.. i hope you're doing alright
@ambersgrace12 ай бұрын
@@FXV56 I’m scarred but doing okay, thank you.
@OoganoogananiАй бұрын
I'm so sorry for you.
@sonwig5186Ай бұрын
My dad almost died from an hemmorage and I had to clear his airway because he was choking. You had it so much worse though, I really hope you are ok because I still cry about it to this day and my dad survived.
@ambersgrace1Ай бұрын
@@sonwig5186 I’m glad your dad survived ❤️. I’m doing ok, I just know how hard life can be, and that I’m not the only one who struggles. Thank you
@Foogi90002 ай бұрын
The more i learn about reality the more i realize that we're really just existing on pure luck and that scares the shit out of me. Like the universe is constantly trying to kill us in every way it possibly can yet we just won't die. Cancer, Parasites, Diseases, Viruses, Tumors, Aneurysms, Bloodclots, and so on. I used to think the line "Ignorance is bliss" was stupid but now i honestly get it.
@chaoscontagion32082 ай бұрын
I can't really argue with that. I try not to, but I feel the same way. Have you ever heard of absurdism? It's a philosophical theory. Look it up on Wikipedia. I try so hard not to fall into it, but I always lose that battle. Stay strong.
@nsv-pd9bd2 ай бұрын
That's why I wake up happy everyday, gotta be grateful of what you got and have control over. Hell I'm about about to get a nice pumpkin spice latte to celebrate another week almost done.
@chaoscontagion32082 ай бұрын
@@nsv-pd9bd That's a good idea. I'm gonna get me one, too now. As a white girl, I think I'm legally obligated to drink them, but I'd have to check the statutes. 😂😉💙
@chaoscontagion32082 ай бұрын
@@nsv-pd9bd I got that latte. It was wonderful. Thanks again! 😁
@cosmickitteh2 ай бұрын
It only gets worse as you get older and smarter; Ignorance really is bliss, I wish I could have it back because I think it all crippled me in more ways than one.
@Moon_x_sun2 ай бұрын
In Denmark a politician recently had one happen during a political event for his party while he was Holding a speech. He ended up passing away, but because of it, it made several people reasearch what to do if it happens to a person.
@noonespecial92332 ай бұрын
Damn. That's a hell of a Public Service Announcement. hope his loved ones are coping well.
@cricketandgraham8644Ай бұрын
spn pfp??
@Moon_x_sunАй бұрын
@@cricketandgraham8644 yes :)
@rayshagames3792 ай бұрын
Lost my mother in November of 2022, intracranial brain Hemmorage. Hospital dropped the ball on her. She stated symptoms but was told it was solely high blood pressure and just needed to only rest. Several hours later I woke up to her screaming stating she heard something pop in her ear and immediately dropped to the floor. This is such an awful way to go. Wish I could of known
@koneeche2 ай бұрын
It wasn't your fault, the doctors did not take her seriously like they should have. You did what you could.
@Only1Othello2 ай бұрын
I’m sorry to hear this. I wish you and your family the best in your healing
@mertc80502 ай бұрын
Bruh it looks like doctors were right after all. You cant stop a weak blood vessel its a timebomb if you have a weak vessel in brain. I believe there is no way to treat it anyway just prevent it by living healthy.
@hispanica3162 ай бұрын
You could have sued the hospital for this
@rayshagames3792 ай бұрын
@@hispanica316 We took the steps to but the law firm dropped the case last minute, supposedly the individual handling it was let go. At the time it was dropped it was 6 months too close to the statue. So unfortunately the doctor accountable for his recklessness gets off Scott free.
@Cmon-Man2 ай бұрын
I had a Intracerebral Aneurism a year ago this month, actually on the 21st 2023. Slight headache, stiffness in the neck not real bad but what worried me was blurred vision. I do have heart disease so I’m always concerned about that, blood pressure etc…. I got my friend to get me to the hospital asap. It didn’t rupture so it wasn’t a “hemorrhage.” It caused a hemorrhage in a vessel in my left eye. Had to wear a patch for a few months to keep from blinking, very irritating. I now have a stent in my grey matter just above my left ear. Intracranial Angioplasty and Stenting. I got to the hospital very quickly and because of my health history they had me in surgery in minutes. I’m good. No restrictions. Walk everyday, play with the grandkids, swim. Crazy. Interesting video for me. Funny how it popped up this month, within days of the surgery. ✌️
@barbaralamson74502 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story. 😊
@ActualHumanPerson2 ай бұрын
I bet you looked great in an eyepatch though
@BullCricket752 ай бұрын
Holy cow Batman! Im so glad that you are still here to enjoy you grandbabies❤
@Cmon-Man2 ай бұрын
@@barbaralamson7450 Welcome. I find it fascinating. The making of and the metallurgy of the materials used.
@Cmon-Man2 ай бұрын
@@ActualHumanPerson I did get a lot of funny looks. Still have to put it on for the grandkids. It’s fun
@HayTatsuko2 ай бұрын
About 10 years ago, a close friend of mine died from a ruptured aneurysm -- except his was an abdominal aortic one. It happened at his home, and it was so massive there was no chance of his surviving. It was a painful, hellish end for a good person who survived brain cancer and went on to pursue a career making folks happy with his baking skills.
@alphatonic14812 ай бұрын
Watching this made me a little nauseous. My uncle had an aneurysm a while ago and thankfully survived it but he had to relearn to speak. The words were in his head but he had difficulties speaking them. This stuff is scarier than any fictional horror story with some random monster.
@ReaIHuman2 ай бұрын
I was kinda hoping you'd explain how they treated a popped vessel
@HowDoYouTurnThisOn_2 ай бұрын
He'll probably do another video about that anyway
@nightmarehound2 ай бұрын
There isn't really a specific treatment to it; a lot of the time the hospital will render clotting agents, relieve the blood pressure and give more oxygen to prevent damage as they wait for the vessel to close on its own. Only in extreme cases will they use surgery to seal off the vein or open the skull to relieve pressure.
@EsimurWrought2 ай бұрын
While I would be interested in something like that, the videos here on this type of subject tend to be more about what it is, what are it's effects, what to look for, and what to do.
@tomato93492 ай бұрын
@@nightmarehound interesting! I would assume they would, in the case shown at the beginning, that they would drill a hole in the skull to relief the pressure
@normalmanbruh2 ай бұрын
That would be a great Chubbyemu video
@MichellePocket2 ай бұрын
When my mom was having a stroke the hospital told her she just had a headache and sent her driving herself home. My dad (they’re separated) found her walking in circles in her home. Hospital tried to send her home AGAIN. Only when I asked for help dressing her because she couldn’t stand did the hospital change their demeanor and immediately shipped her off to a bigger hospital an hour away. By then the bleed in her brain was the size of a golf ball. She also had another rare condition with it where her brain was contracting so going in surgically wasn’t an option because she would just bleed out. They gave her medication and monitored her in the ICU for a few weeks. Followed by relearning how to walk and use the right side of her body again. Crazy experience.. especially since she knew something was wrong and did go to the right place to get help.. just to be told she was fine. She could have gotten into an accident driving home and got killed or killed someone else on the road.
@DUxMORTEM2 ай бұрын
As a man who woke up to his wife, cuddled up to me and completely stuff from rigor mortis due to dying of an aneurysm, I feel their pain. Hers was exacerbated by the fact she had Myostatin related muscle hypertrophy, so her blood pressure was naturally a bit higher. She gave me three daughters, triplets, who all are spitting images of their mom and started highschool this year.
@pale_n_tired2 ай бұрын
holy shit im so sorry
@simeonanderson24372 ай бұрын
🙏🏿
@logicss2893Ай бұрын
Damn that's traumatic
@agorl48982 ай бұрын
Oh boy, time for my nightly incomprehensible dread caused by incredibly rare situations!
@EsimurWrought2 ай бұрын
Incredibly rare...yeah.
@BeyBattleBoy2 ай бұрын
1/50 isn't incredibly rare.
@ActualHumanPerson2 ай бұрын
Shhhh let them live in peace😂
@aliciaf47442 ай бұрын
It's not even very rare which is mortifying 😭
@reggiep752 ай бұрын
It's not really that rare but it's important to know things and get an understanding of them.
@Chris066602 ай бұрын
the anxiety i get from watching this makes me feel like i have an increased risk of getting an aneurysm
@GrundlewaldАй бұрын
Same bro. I absolutely hate even hearing the word aneurysm because i think itll make me have one.
@tupakkaonhyvaaАй бұрын
I'm not scared at all. I'm positive nothing like this will happen to me unless I live to old age by some miracle, but instead my heart will give out, maybe in the the next 10 years.
@necrotafeio18 күн бұрын
@@tupakkaonhyvaa if you smoke and eat unhealthily or you are a women its much likelier to happen
@pierrefromwiisports21282 ай бұрын
I also had a stroke this year, it was while I was at university. I was in the bathroom at the time, and outta nowhere I felt a complete loss of sensation and control in the right side of my body. It felt like my right arm and leg were just suddenly dangling and lifeless. I managed to limp back all the way to my room to thankfully find my roommate still there! Was immediately rushed to the hospital and found out I had AVM, which is like a tangle of blood vessels in the brain, and it had just ruptured inside my brain. Apparently I was born with it and I had no idea! It’s like being born with a ticking time bomb inside your brain, only a matter of time before it goes boom! Had to get surgery to get the AVM removed. After months of rehab and therapy I’m getting back to normal life now. Was definitely the scariest experience of my life, but I’m doing better now. Craziest part is it happened to me at 20!
@aadtap2 ай бұрын
The exact same thing had happened to me last year where I was in an arcade. With an AVM theres a higher risk of it happening at any age. I was ‘lucky’ this happened at 19 because its easier for the body to heal. Did you have any vision problems? I hope you’re doing well and recovering steadily.
@pierrefromwiisports21282 ай бұрын
@@aadtap I appreciate it man, To answer your question, no I did not have any vision problems. How is the recovery for you after one year? Are you fully recovered from it?
@aadtap2 ай бұрын
@@pierrefromwiisports2128 I'm still recovering. I'm generally fine, but the main issue is that I just can't see the right peripheral area (both eyes). It'll take years to fix but even then I won't get a hundred percent of vision. So it's just frustrating.
@pierrefromwiisports21282 ай бұрын
@@aadtap yeah it’s just a matter of time bro. I still have residual numbness on my right side but ik with time it’ll be gone, but ur right it can be hella frustrating at times. You’ll be 100% eventually bro, just gotta trust the process and stay positive 😎🤝.
@aadtap2 ай бұрын
@@pierrefromwiisports2128 true, thanks for that.
@twistedyogert2 ай бұрын
I thought a cerebral hemorrhage would be instant death. So, one minute, someone is going about their business, and the next minute, the Grim-Reaper pulls their plug.
@ALA9E2 ай бұрын
Can be like that if too much trauma done
@DDT-lr3zz2 ай бұрын
Sometimes it can happen, like how people died suddenly from "Hollywood heart attack" I heard about a 64 years old woman in 2002 who collapsed at her home and she was hospitalized. She never regained consciousness and she died 2 days later from a hemorrhagic stroke
@coltafanan2 ай бұрын
There’s also a thing called fatal insomnia. You suddenly lose the ability to sleep, then you die
@somethingwithbungalows2 ай бұрын
@@DDT-lr3zz did a sniper get you or something at the end of your comment ? From a what…? lol
@HuiYingHong-b8q2 ай бұрын
What if u have BOTH brain aneurysm AND brain bleeding (ie blood couldn't clot properly) at the same time?
@plesscm55842 ай бұрын
I suffered a hemorrhagic stroke earlier this year. I don’t remember much, except for the thunderclap headache. Even worse, when the first responders arrived, they put me in restraints, and I not really being in my right mind at the time, tried to fight them off, putting even more strain on my head. I’m lucky I survived, and that I got to a doctor who knew what was going on.
@kordygaffaney80782 ай бұрын
My dad died from a brain aneurysm rupturing in his sleep. He was in a coma and not responsive when we woke up in the morning. He always was very stressed and had a lot he was always dealing with. Stress kills
@kevinsolano55962 ай бұрын
im so sorry 🙏
@jeffrey_thecatcat2 ай бұрын
If stress kills im dead.
@roamorayАй бұрын
my dad died the same way back in 2015 :( my condolences to you
@fai1t0liv32 ай бұрын
Suffered an ascending aortic aneurysm. Found it only because I need a physical every year for my job. Cardiologist said I was maybe 3-6 months from dropping dead based on how fast it formed. Needed open heart, a new valve, and a graft. I'm on blood thinners for the rest of my life, but I'm alive.
@seanwink23792 ай бұрын
I’m a paramedic. I once responded to a woman having seizures at a mall. When I got to her she was confused, but conscious. The last thing she said to me before going into a full seizure for ten minutes was “my head hurts”. She never became conscious again as I had to give her medicine to stop her seizures. She died days later unfortunately She had a massive aneurysm.
@DTS24-DJT242 ай бұрын
An old classmate of mine suffered a brain aneurysm yesterday on 9/24/24. He was flown to a hospital 3 hours away, and is currently fighting for his life. Brain aneurysms are nothing to play with.
@FesteringRatSub2 ай бұрын
@@DTS24-DJT24 Good luck, I hope he is OK.
@BelleXJ92 ай бұрын
Update us
@ShiLofi1012 ай бұрын
Is he okay???
@Tadesan2 ай бұрын
I bet he had many romantic partners in his life. Good riddance
@GramGramGenX-ln5sc2 ай бұрын
Prayer is for your friend
@Chilos492 ай бұрын
My mom died of this. The night before she made dinner and went to bed like any other night. The next morning she went into a violet convulsion, into a coma, and passed away a few days later. She was 42.
@phyllis2982 ай бұрын
Mine did pass away just like this but she had a seizure at work after complaining of the worst headache of her life
@hithere99752 ай бұрын
Live every day like it’s you’re last
@ChandanMishra-ql1bi2 ай бұрын
😢
@Shadoww-OwO2 ай бұрын
This is what took my best friend away from me. 4 days ago he was working his normal shifts but then suddenly he started having intense headaches, so he went to rest area to take some rest, unfortunately nobody was there to attend him and soon his brain's nerve brust and he went into comma. 1 hr later, when people started to come by, they thought maybe he was sleppy, so they left, and after 2 hours, when he didn't respond to any questions, people realised what might have happened and took him to the hospital and what followed after was a bad news.
@MkazPr1m32 ай бұрын
Damn... I'm sorry for your loss, may he rest well
@TheAwesomeOne6852 ай бұрын
So crazy that this video gets reccomended to me when someone i work with just died last week from a brain aneurysm
@noonespecial92332 ай бұрын
That's wild. Sorry for your loss
@jsbfe93952 ай бұрын
This is not a coincidence. You probably googled it and that's how it then gets in your YT feed.
@shenaedwards20672 ай бұрын
@@jsbfe9395shut your lame ass up
@NoctiiNАй бұрын
My father had aneurysm in his head, back in Summer 2021. He died while waiting for an ambulance, but was resuscitated. After that he fell into coma for a month and woke up with massive brain damage unable to speak and move. Every doctor we talked to was shocked how he survived that, pointing out that he must have had a strong heart. For 1 year he was bed ridden before his inevitable death. That was a very traumatic and challenging year for our whole family. I often question myself why did he have to go through this. I am doing better now to whoever may wonder. Sending my thoughts and prayer to people who may face aneurysm in their lives. Please do your yearly MRI checkups if you have hypertension or someone in your family had aneurysm as there may be genetic predisposition to it. There is a chance to "catch it" before it's too late.
@PxNxWxGxW2 ай бұрын
I had a friend back in High School die by this. She picked her friend up early in the morning on their way to school. She pulled over and asked her friend to drive the rest of the way cos she felt tired. She passed out in the passinger seat and never woke up. She was 17 yrs old. RIP Nikki ❤
@1833-j4g2 ай бұрын
I’m glad to hear that guy recovered. 💜🙏
@Wolf_Ghost2 ай бұрын
When I was in middle school in the 90s, I lived in St. Petersburg, FL. One of my schoolmates went to Busch Gardens to ride the Kumba, a new Rollercoaster. She was dead before the ride was over. The autopsy showed she had an aneurysm. Our yearbook had a big thing dedicated to her. I personally didn't know her. I was undiagnosed autistic and was just bullied by literally everyone and made sure to avoid people --even the teachers wouldn't protect me. I still felt bad for her family. Now, I think "the last thing she remembered was probably having fun". I hope so, at least. The Rollercoaster nor Busch Gardens caused any fault to her death. It would have happened if she were there or just sitting on a porch and knitting. Life is strange like that. I just hope I go painless, in my sleep, with someone who loves me nearby(if I ever meet that person).
@TheUltimatewan2 ай бұрын
Best to archive this video, before it gets taken down…a lingering trait for this channel.
@ItsJustMe05852 ай бұрын
:'( truth
@UUII122 ай бұрын
I already downloaded the video and even its thumbnail.
@Un_Pour_Tous2 ай бұрын
No one is going to take this down. Stop fearmongering.
@UUII122 ай бұрын
@@Un_Pour_Tous youtube does these kind of stuff bro. i once saw a youtuber who makes tech videos almost get terminated, because youtube removed 2 videos made by him. his name is Endermanch and he even made a rant about youtube's stupid censorship.
@glowingone17742 ай бұрын
@@Un_Pour_Tous archive everything you fool
@ardy58462 ай бұрын
like my professor said who is a doctor, "aneurysm is a time ticking bomb, it'll eventually just happen" and that's scary because we don't know when will it occur
@mkp38242 ай бұрын
My dad had an aneurysm and stroke while I was at home. His blood pressure was horrible. To this day, I wish I had forced him to go to the hosputal earlier that day.
@oneperspective86012 ай бұрын
Please tell me he made it
@mkp38242 ай бұрын
@@oneperspective8601 he did, but spent his last 6 years in a nursing home. Paralyzed on one side, unable to form words. He was still "there," but his quality of life was gone.
@duckling43932 ай бұрын
My wife was 38 when it happened and is living in a nursing home for 10 years now...just like that in a snap of a finger, our lives have changed forever.
@mkp38242 ай бұрын
@@duckling4393 it's awful. I'm sorry to hear that.
@amberbush19992 ай бұрын
In 95 my mother had two Brain aneurysms one popped while she was in the gym on the treadmill. She survived the night so did an operation and clamped off the other one. Cut to three years ago doctors found 3 more and clamped those off too. So in total my mom has had Brain aneurysms, one popped and she's still here. If she had died back in 95 I wouldn't be here since I was born in 99.
@oneperspective86012 ай бұрын
Wow interesting! How is your mom now?
@amberbush19992 ай бұрын
@@oneperspective8601 she's as grumpy as ever, and her internal epilepsy she makes her feel like she run a mile in her sleep sometimes. But she's doing just fine though the election has her stressing but she's great and the best mom in the world. She managed to raise me without my dad's help alongside her issues so to me she's fantastic and I love her more than anything in the world!
@TheLuismafer122 ай бұрын
@@amberbush1999 God bless your mom bro
@otdsdf55012 ай бұрын
When i was in fifth grade kid from my school died from ruptured aneurysm. No one knew he had one, it was just one moment he is alive and the other not anymore. Few weeks later, unrelated to his death, we found out my mother has not one but two in her head. Years later i still get terrified when she gets even mild headache
@jeron9272Ай бұрын
My dog had what I believe was a brain aneurysm 2 days ago. He appeared fine and then within 40 seconds he was limp, his heart stopped beating, and he stopped breathing. Rest in peace, Cinji :-,(
@blahbleh56712 ай бұрын
how to avoid and maintain flexibility in your vessels: good diet and cardio
@SulthanRrafi2 ай бұрын
sometimes you get the shit genetic lottery too lol but all we can try to do is to reduce the risk
@warbler19848 күн бұрын
30 year old thin females rarely have enough time with hypertension to develop this collagen change as a result of bad lifestyles. It's mostly genetic. But otherwise I'd of course endorse health living
@ItsJustMe05852 ай бұрын
Just in time for bed! Let's get that sleep paralysis demon going until my brain bleeds.
@raeraebadfingers2 ай бұрын
Not sure if that is something you truly deal with, if it's a detriment to you, or if you enjoy it. Just felt like sharing, at a time of turmoil in my life I had sleep paralysis happen frequently and when shadow people appeared, I told them to fuck off (in my head obviously cuz sleep paralysis) and I just never ever saw the again
@unknownman50902 ай бұрын
@@raeraebadfingers I felt like I was floating on water when I had sleep paralysis and cannot open my eye
@raeraebadfingers2 ай бұрын
@@unknownman5090 that's super interesting! For some reason, I've noticed I've only ever noticed sleep paralysis when my hand was resting on my chest. In my head it was like Kill Bill. "Wiggle your fingers.. nope.. go back to sleep dummy" I mean that's nowhere near the scene but I can pretend
@unknownman50902 ай бұрын
@@raeraebadfingers I know how that feel. I once intent for a quick nap but then I try to wake up. I cant! I try move my finger, open my eye, move my feet. I can only feel my Eyeball moving. Everything else is stationary. I thought I was dead at that time. That is kinda good. the worse I ever felt is when I sleep on the car and my head tilted down on the floor from the seat. It so awful. Like it super uncomfortable and I know it but the best I can do is just accept it. I rarely been hit by Sleep Paralysis these day tho.
@YourLocalCuboidShape2 ай бұрын
@@raeraebadfingersI see a fully black shadow stalking me, "it" disappears when I see "it" Changes: 2023 - "it" was just a shadow. 2024 - HOLY S*** "IT" HAS A F****** MASK
@nhitc68322 ай бұрын
I work in a medical device company that produces endovascular coils that treat aneurysm. The range from 1mm to 24mm in diameter. Pretry amazing stuffs
@ALA9E2 ай бұрын
My husband had a mid basal burst aneurism at 38 years. Dreadful headache then he walked unsteadily around for 3 days even tried to play basketball, before going to docs again when his legs went fuzzy. It was already clotting over, blood right down the spinal fluid. He was coiled, even though it was huge, but it worked after some major scares. He is left side deficient but can do everything but run. Praise God
@sourav88132 ай бұрын
I had a brain AVM (abnormal blood vessels formation) that ruptured when i was 13. Worst pain of my life. Thankfully it was successfully removed by surgery and I am healthy now at 23.
@mohammadmehdi-m5oАй бұрын
do u know the doctor still ? any email from him ?
@perfectdivot25832 ай бұрын
But "slight headache and neck stiffness" couldnt also be having a normal headache while having some kind of cervical problem? How can i distinguish a harmless pain from a life threatening one? What are the differences here?
@squidnipendleton37652 ай бұрын
You have to know your body. If you're just sitting around and get a stiff neck and mild headache, if the pain don't go away after taking your usual pain meds, I'd say err on the side of caution and go to the hospital after a few hours if it doesn't get better or go away. If you have hit your head, twisted your neck weirdly, have "the most painful headache in your life", blindness/blind spots in your eyes, nerve pain on other places, nausea/vomiting, loss of sensations like smell/taste/touch/hearing, then that's more like the bleeding scenario that should definitely get seen asap. If you have a slight headache and also genetic conditions that affect blood vessels, diabetes, hypertension, or heart arrhythmias already diagnosed, that's another thing.
@GonzoPandora694202 ай бұрын
My biological family has a history of aneurysms and fatalities from them. I learned this when i was 25. I've been grateful for every day since. I believe with every fiber of my being that an aneurysm will take me out one day, out of nowhere.
@barrypoland85892 ай бұрын
I had a bloody nose for 5 days. On my third trip to the ER, they finally flew me to Medford. I had almost bled to death.
@warbler19848 күн бұрын
Maybe...
@gregritferdjr2 ай бұрын
This is how my sister died
@Maphisto862 ай бұрын
My condolences to you and your family. A loss like that can hurt no matter how much time passes. ❤
@dtaylor10chuckufarle2 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry...
@phoebecara43612 ай бұрын
Possibly how my grandmother went too
@Ivy-oq6ph2 ай бұрын
i’m so sorry
@Techtalk20302 ай бұрын
Sorry bro
@awangtaiepalat73082 ай бұрын
Iv experienced it first hand last month. Let me share you how it feels. Firstly it feels like a normal headache. Mine is at the side of my right head. Then u feel it a throbbing pain like having a tooth ache. I tot i have a rotten molar but there were no sensitivity pain in my mouth. Suddenly everything looks bright. I have never experienced a migraine before so i was telling myself i could be having one so i lie down on my bed and switches off the lights and close the curtain. This happens almost mid noon. I tried getting a nap but the pain worsens and it did not go away like a normal headache would. Then my left hand was feeling numb n my toes as well. This is when my alarm bell went ringing. I was convinced m having a stroke but my face was not twisted one side, i recite the ABC and pronounce correctly and both of my hand was not weak. Just my left side was numb. But i called my nephew to send me to the emergency room. So after they did an x-ray and found nothing but the Dr noticed i have a bloodshot eye. So they wheeled me to CT scan room and boom! they found a minor tear in one of the blood vessels in my brain. It was not a burst but it was leaking and the Dr said if i did and heavy lifting or stressing myself it would have burst and would have more complication or even death. I am a fit 47 year old man, goes to the gym 3-4 times per week and cardio at least once a week. The Dr told me luckily i was fit and recovered well in two weeks time. However the Dr told me to stop lifting heavy for 3 months and just do light cardio. Oh btw there were no surgery needed for my case. I was just given medication but stayed in the hospital for 5 days for monitoring. So it was minor but the symptoms were scary.
@warsmith12942 ай бұрын
I hate how a headache can either be the indication for something extremely minor, like a little dehydration/over-stimulation, or extremely major like a brain aneurysm. Would make identifying when you need to call 911 way more easier if headaches only happened if something was very wrong. Also super fucking scary to think about this, even though I'm young and not in the expected demographic, I live relatively in a high-stress environment. I could just one day get a headache and fucking die. Man I wish we could all just hook up pressure regulators for our spinal fluid and blood to ourselves so we wouldn't need to worry about high blood pressure and high spinal fluid pressure. "From the weakness I understood the weakness of my fless, it disgusted me" type shit lmao.
@SlfCstrtin2 ай бұрын
ong
@ronaldvargas9622 ай бұрын
The thing with aneurysm headache is that is often described as dibilitating and the worst headache of your life, if you ask me if I ever feel something like that I would run to the ER
@Bobby.2k12 ай бұрын
@ronaldvargas962 My 2 cents, the headache for me wasn't that bad. My main symptoms was My right leg was paralyzed, I had extreme light sensitivity, sweating, delerious, and couldn't stop vomiting. Had mine at 22 years old. You never know when it could happen and you can't trust that a minor headache is a minor issue. The best thing you can do is to live a healthy, fulfilling life and hope for the best.
@3Runner952 ай бұрын
Aneurysm and aortic dissection give me existential crisis
@FesteringRatSub2 ай бұрын
Just be thankful u don't have a rare genetic disease that increases the chances
@SQUAREHEADSAM19122 ай бұрын
@@FesteringRatSubI have that tho… (Marfans, at least my doctors HEAVILY suspect it) though I wouldn’t call it a disease, more of a genetic disorder.
@ghost-fs7th2 ай бұрын
@FesteringRatSub I have a connective tissue disorder, and currently have 2 aneurysms forming in my aorta, and have a brain angiography scheduled. I'm 26. My parents should not have bred. My sister also has the same disorder. We will not live a long life.
@3Runner952 ай бұрын
@@ghost-fs7th o7
@SQUAREHEADSAM19122 ай бұрын
@@ghost-fs7th which disorder?
@morebaklavapls36372 ай бұрын
My mom had this on 12th of may at night while on a vacation in addis ababa, during the day she complained about a headache . at 2 am all i could see was her throwing her body aggressively. We rushed her to the ICU and moments later she suffered a cardiac arrest. She survived that but was basically braindead . She lived on machines for a week and later died at age of 49. Its the most painful thing i have noticed and the scariest situation ive ever been.
@nathanielaromin23862 ай бұрын
Condolences and prayers for your family 😢
@morebaklavapls36372 ай бұрын
@@nathanielaromin2386 thank you so much i appreciate it !
@nathanielaromin23862 ай бұрын
@@morebaklavapls3637 I remember my father also died just like yours. We cannot imagine how he came to that situation because. He also maintain his body weight and drink some medicines, always having an exercise. I think one of the reasons was also stress. When the Dr said the he has a 3%of survival rate. I was shock and cried.
@morebaklavapls36372 ай бұрын
@@nathanielaromin2386 yeah even being healthy doesn’t matter. My mothers family has a history of diabetes so we had no sugar in the house . She was healthy and did blood tests regularly. Funny thing about life nothing is guaranteed. But I do think she was stressed and that’s why we went on a vacation. But her dea th helped me understand life more and all running after money or riches isn’t so important but family matters
@ChrisandKnight2 ай бұрын
this is one of my greatest fears, because its so sudden, random, and takes you out. I literally have tried to watch this video twice now and I get so uncomfortable I cant finish it. Since I live alone this can happen and that'll be it lol
@benmcreynolds85812 ай бұрын
Oh man idk, if i hyper fixate on my circulation system, heart, blood vessels. It just really wig's me out. It's crazy these systems work in our bodies in the first place
@AH-lw2bj2 ай бұрын
Yeah there's about a billion things going on inside each of our bodies at every moment...
@asrmoore2 ай бұрын
My aunt passed away from a brain aneurysm...RIP aunt D , we love and miss you so much . ❤️🩹🕊️
@skiysilver99032 ай бұрын
As someone who has health anxiety, knows how living things can die by literally anything and has panic attacks at any strange sensation in my body, surely will enjoy watching your channel 😎😎 good videos
@rouellaparalejas23202 ай бұрын
Its traumatizing me💀 we're not the same
@MKMC_2 ай бұрын
my great uncle who was an army mechanic had a brain aneurysms 10 years ago he was in a coma for 3 weeks with a 3% survival rate he survived and can function but has brain damage and cant do practical tasks and has memory problems as well as a change in personality but he lives a fairly normal life
@batbatowskyy9419Ай бұрын
i got a headache just by watching this, great video keep it up
@snakemgr122 ай бұрын
I get migraines and while the thought of one of them ending me is scary, I've grown accustomed to the feeling of it building and the pain. Based off of Thomas' response i can comfortably say it will be a whole different experience. Thanks for the informative video 👍
@peter_fbx2 ай бұрын
About 1 year ago I had a thunderclap headache. It was the most excruciating and terrifying thing that has ever happened to me. As fast as it came though it went away, it lasted 5-10 minutes and I was just exhausted afterwards. Everyone told me I was overreacting but this was no normal headache, I had blurred vision and was even throwing up. 3 days later my primary care doctor scheduled me for an immediate brain scan that was approved then denied by my insurance. Because of this I never found the reason for it. I did research for awhile and of course the internet told me all sorts of crazy things. Maybe I was really lucky, maybe I am just crazy. But to anyone who ever gets one of these headaches, you’ll know if it’s a normal headache or not. Go to a hospital, it’s not worth letting it pass and risking your life.
@michu67772 ай бұрын
Even a year later you should still fight to get a CT done. It would show if you previously did have a stroke, as well as the presence of aneurisms or stenosis that would cause a future stroke
@JaredGoofball2 ай бұрын
This is a very common thing if you use Twitter/X daily
@Frdrck2.02 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@mmors2 ай бұрын
Had this happen to a family friend she had a bad headache so she left work early to try to sleep it off, she never woke up 😢
@Ed-dy6blАй бұрын
Please make a video on brain bleeding and types of injuries involved
@Roo311732 ай бұрын
By far my favorite Science channel.
@SparrettCrow2 ай бұрын
This is the best way of teaching, by introducing a real world scenario and dissecting what has led to this unfortunate event because now there's a reason to learning a topic versus just learning it because it "may" come in handy, or not. Education fails to introduce this sense of need when learning a topic. Seeing as there was a real world incident involving a near fatal or fatal event, the seriousness of the topic increases and attention span should naturally increase. Knowing that this sort of cranial issue threatened someone's life, I took great interest in learning how this sort of thing occurs, and learn to avoid it by simply not putting too much strain on your body, such as not stressing over unnecessary thing and to calm down before reaching a high stress situation. *And* to also wear head protection during a task that risks head injury.
@nightmarehound2 ай бұрын
I think it would have been a good thing to add to the video the difference between brain bleed and infarction, since they are often mixed up, and the latter is even more time-sensitive.
@stizzy70782 ай бұрын
Oh boy ... There's that posturing. Your video about it gave me a sleepless night that thing. Glad I understood these things.
@giariley31982 ай бұрын
My great grandmother had a pretty major brain aneurysm in the 1950s and spent a couple months in the Mayo Clinic, after going home my grandmother had to teach her how to talk, eat, walk, basically everything. She was pretty much a miracle and proceeded to live until 2008.
@jansi7557Ай бұрын
My mum died from it. She just went to the bathroom, collapsed, had seizures. When she woke back up, she cried in agony from the pain. Emergency doc put her in a coma right there in the ER car, she never woke up from it. She was 48.
@Thph793Ай бұрын
Thx for letting me know that at any time I have a 2% chance of just randomly dying and there is almost nothing I can do against it! 😘
@teodor1812 ай бұрын
1:09 Plenty of reasons why they rupture,generally hiperemia,high blood pressure caused by various causes,including but not limited to aterosclerosis and stress. Theres also thrombosis which has plenty of causes on its own. Reas the Virchow triad for thrombi. Theres issues with the blood cells,the vessels and another factor that i forgot. But theres much more to it. Edit: i remember,acidosis also raises blood flow causing hypertension and contributing to hypertension
@Uranuss1002 ай бұрын
A friend of my Mom had this she succumb to coma and died. It's so sad she's a hardworking mother to her children and grand children 😢
@phosphoricarrots8656Ай бұрын
MY MIND IS BLOWN
@Clkr3Ай бұрын
My dad suffered a cerebral hemorrhage. He came home from work, having tea, watching TV and talking about some test results saying all was ok. He took a shower, said he had a headache and lied down. Then he starts vomiting real bad, lost consciousness and was rushed to the hospital.
@cheasmoon82132 ай бұрын
This happened to a girl from my high school she died only a few months after graduation it really deviated the town
@Endkeeper2 ай бұрын
I want to forget this video
@xotwod32542 ай бұрын
The fact that there's nothing you can do about it really makes me believe there's no such thing as free will
@pbrown08292 ай бұрын
What? That is a retarded take. There is nothing you can control about the weather or how your digestive system work.
@soyokazeė2 ай бұрын
We’ll see how our species develops technology in the next 40 years. Fixing aneurysms may not be a big issue in the future.
@DarkLord3695.Ай бұрын
You can't completely be safe from anything but you can lower the odds of this by being healthy. Have a healthy body and you will have very very slick chances of this happening to you.
@unknownman50902 ай бұрын
Ngl, I thought I got brain damage these past few weeks. I got stiffness in neck like, I do same activity but it just happen that day it make my neck super stiff. Then I got headache out of nowhere sometime. Thank you for this
@matthewkimura41432 ай бұрын
Im 15 and my grandma died today and the first thing i was told when i woke up was that she died to exactly this. Im sad
@mathieuleader86012 ай бұрын
the drastic physiological changes that come about these ruptures is disconcerting
@garnix63902 ай бұрын
My father died of an aneurysm in his thighs. my aunts from ones in their stomach arteries.
@soapygrape7772 ай бұрын
Love the video and how you explain everything in a memorable and understandable way.
@hazimirsyad76632 ай бұрын
It's always a good day when dark science uploads
@eatyourvegetables14492 ай бұрын
Here I was thinking he was gonna give us some sort of reassurance at the end that it most likely won’t happen to you. My blood ran cold when he didn’t.
@Dragnerve.2 ай бұрын
This makes my head hurts man, just the idea itself.
@sepbehroozi2 ай бұрын
You deserve millions of subscribers ❤
@reggiep752 ай бұрын
Damn, I really like this channel. There's always something good to learn about to a deeper extent. Great video!
@1833-j4g2 ай бұрын
It’s terrifying to think that a mechanism designed to protect you can actually kill you. It’s like how excessive vomiting can cause death due to dehydration. An incredibly disturbing concept.
@kennithminnich2 ай бұрын
Neighbor just had this. She survived, and is doing well. Fortunately, her husband found her early.
@kavinaderrow32692 ай бұрын
My childhood friend's grandmother recently survived an aneurysm.
@jackstakes2 ай бұрын
it would've been nice if you listed the foods we should eat to reduce the chances of experiencing aneurysms. 👍🏽
@tedarcher91202 ай бұрын
AG1 is scam btw
@navb0tactual2 ай бұрын
Yep
@bobstevenson31302 ай бұрын
I just kinda assume that about any KZbin sponsor anymore
@Prahhhd2 ай бұрын
I want to agree, but can you explain why? And if truly so, what’s the better option to stay healthy?
@bobstevenson31302 ай бұрын
@@Prahhhd AG1 is overpriced and their marketing claims are very deceptive. If you want a powdered mix of fruits and vegetables there are cheaper options out there, but even then it would still be even cheaper and way, way better for you to just eat more raw fruits and vegetables anyways.
@test_one97292 ай бұрын
3 years ago, my dear sister passed away due to this just a few weeks after delivering her first child.
@simeonanderson24372 ай бұрын
🙏🏿
@sonwig5186Ай бұрын
My dad had a brain aneurism, the ambulance people thought he was just drunk so they came over really slowly and I was really angry with them. I cry whenever I see these kinds of videos idk why.
@ShikyoGryfyn2 ай бұрын
Fun fact, my dad, and his grandpa have/had them, my dads alive but it runs in my family
@ANIATAMA2 ай бұрын
"Most cases happening between the ages 30-60" Me: turned 30 a few days ago 💀
@surfboardtrough7742Ай бұрын
How does the hospital know that they need to be urgent? In my experience, the emergency room is very non-urgent, especially if you come in with something they think sounds trivial, like a headache. If minutes matter, then I honestly don’t see how anyone survives something like this, even if it happened while they were IN a hospital.
@carlossftcb2 ай бұрын
idk why i keep wanting to know about this type shit, it just makes me even more paranoid 😭
@glasperle772 ай бұрын
my mum had one and had surgery. and after it her life got super bad with axiety attacks, forgetfullness, delusional thoughts etc. it's not so "nice and great" to just remove it and people think it's all gone.
@BaloneySandwichWithKetchup2 ай бұрын
happened to my mom. doctors said she was 1 minute from death in the ER.
@AnimeKpop52 ай бұрын
Is this anyone else? whenever I’m listening to stuff like this (or any type of damage to any part of the body) my body goes numb and I imagine feeling that happening to me (and it feels so real) like my body goes stiff and I feel sick kinda. Anyone?
@rouellaparalejas23202 ай бұрын
Blud actually told my real situation here
@AceDotBoogie2 ай бұрын
I was 23 and deployed to Iraq when I experienced mine. Thank god COL Rocco for performing surgery on me in 2007. Forever blessed