For the non-Americans in the audience: The scene with JD and his kid and the coffee machine is a parody of an infamous anti-drug PSA from the 1980s, right down to JD's moustache
@brandi3981
2 жыл бұрын
Oh my God I was born in 81 and I oddly very very much remember that commercial I felt like it was in the 90s
@matthewcrome5835
2 жыл бұрын
Is it the "I learned it from you!" PSA?
@kfp227081956
Жыл бұрын
I remember the PSA very well. I would imagine that it made a lot of people finally think about what they were doing.
@BEdwardStover
11 ай бұрын
100% interchangeable for any moustache from any porn film from the 70s or 80s.
@Gadeberg90
2 жыл бұрын
I never understand how John C. McGinley (Dr. Cox) hasn't won some mayor acting awards like Emmys or Golden Globes, for this role.
@JamailvanWestering
2 жыл бұрын
He did win 1 for Cox maybe not big ones but he still won
@Gadeberg90
2 жыл бұрын
@@JamailvanWestering Yeah, but I specifically mentioned a big award. The one he has won, could aswell have been a kids choice award.
@lawlietriver8869
Жыл бұрын
Comedies aren't viewed as "sexy" in those terms. Awards are all about the optics. Like Rami Malek winning an Oscar for Bohemian Rapsody. Not saying he did a bad job or anything, but it was obvious from day one that if the lead did even just a decent job, they would be winning an Oscar. Oppenheimer is coming out this year and I think we can all expect that movie to win a massive amount of awards. Artsy type of projects gets all the awards. Or if they have actors that meet various diversity quotas. They do pick shows and movies that are doing well and thus are well received, but then they also need to have something else that makes them a good "symbol" for the industry. This is why a show like Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia never wins or even gets nominated for anything. Obviously there are going to be some exceptions to this rule, but when guessing who is getting awards this is a good rule of thumb.
@chrispbacon5313
2 жыл бұрын
*Nectarine Cocktail Recipe:* Puree nectarine and simple syrup in blender. Strain through a fine mesh strainer, pressing with a spatula to get all the juice out of the pulp. You should have about 2 ounces. Reserve puree juice and throw out the remaining pulp. You can skip the straining if you don’t mind the pulp in your cocktail. Add puree to cocktail shaker with ice. Add gin or vodka, St. Germain, lime juice, and club soda. Shake well and strain into martini glass. Garnish with sprig of thyme.🦁
@matthewcrome5835
2 жыл бұрын
I read this before I got to the "nectarini" part of the video and I was completely confused
@chrispbacon5313
2 жыл бұрын
@@matthewcrome5835 😁😁
@darkhoursofday6250
2 жыл бұрын
Awesome. Thanks!
@tayloroliva9403
2 жыл бұрын
Please don’t add soda before shaking, it will explode! Omit for a martini or shake everything else first then top with soda water and garnish
@TheOrpheus1999
2 жыл бұрын
A neat thing that fits into the episode's theme of repeating incidents is the decision that Cox had to make: whether or not to put his patient on Blood Thinners. Because way back in the first season, one of Eliot's early character moments was her own indecision when it came to patient care, specifically whether or not to put her Lupus patient on Blood Thinners. She ultimately lost her patient (and so do Turk and JD), but a point is made that she learned to be more decisive in picking treatment plans from that case.
@PrimeroJinJusuke
2 жыл бұрын
The Deja Vu episode works best if you remember the previous episodes. Basically if you’re binge-watching the series.
@wfly81
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, this is a very self-referential episode, so it's not a great one for people who haven't seen the episodes that it's referencing.
@212mochaman
2 жыл бұрын
@@wfly81 to be fair it's kind of a greatest hits of previous gags. They just crammed em all into 24 mins of episode
@wfly81
2 жыл бұрын
@@212mochaman Yeah, it is. And that's what I'm saying. It's a lot of inside jokes, so it's not a good episode for someone who isn't inside.
@212mochaman
2 жыл бұрын
@@wfly81 maybe. We all laughed or smiled at them the first time. This is just dr syl's first time seeing most of em
@k.s.k.7721
Жыл бұрын
Here's a factoid about the show -- it was filmed at a real hospital. The producers found a vacant hospital for sale and used it for 100% of the interior scenes. The offices for production teams and all the various apartments for the characters, etc, were filmed in this one building. It originally did not have an ICU, so they did redesign that for their needs, but they were very happy to have all their pre & post production staff in one building, a working cafeteria and parking lot, and did not have to build authentic hospital scenery from scratch.
@HG_Budde
Жыл бұрын
Exactly, that's actually the reason the hospital looks a bit run down at times (missing ceiling tiles, flaking-off paint on the walls and so on)
@kmjc1213
2 жыл бұрын
Watching Syl completely not understand American currency is entertaining. Also this episode is much more enjoyable if you've seen most of the previous episodes, since a lot of the small jokes (like JD's bicycle and the coin riddle, Kelso's butt tattoo story, the 'analgesic' joke) are all from previous episodes. Actually I think every time JD mentions deja vu it's directly before or after something we've seen before.
@phydeux
2 жыл бұрын
As to flip phones doing emails, you betcha! Although they were strictly limited to text and no attachments. Nickels are 5 cents, dimes 10, quarters 25. And you seem to have missed the joke at 9:06. JD says "they come three to a can" but that applies to tennis balls, not basketballs. And the March of Dimes is a charitable foundation that funds research to prevent birth defects. Thus they publish a lot of info for mothers to know what not to ingest. 🦁
@Toxicity1987
2 жыл бұрын
Yes, flip phones had internet way long before your Touchsceen phones came around. It was just very expensive. Also JDs Phone is an Motorola Razr V3, and I had the same one, it has an email program build in.
@StarWarsMoments
2 жыл бұрын
I love that the patient Dr Cox was having a problem with had the same problem as Elliot's, involved Elliott, and was played by the same actress that died taking thrombolytics.
@zifnab
2 жыл бұрын
I realized only now that the decision that paralyzed Dr. Cox in this episode is the same decision that paralyzed Elliot back in S1 (the use of Trombolitics)
@Reqqles
2 жыл бұрын
So here's what bugs me about Elliot saying Dr Cox was nothing but an unsupportive bastard to her: not only is that not true, in the last episode of season 2 Dr Cox stands up to Dr Kelso on Elliot's behalf and knocks him out. Sure Dr Cox does seem to play favorites with JD, but between the ribbing whenever it counted he has supported her in his own way, from telling her she made the right call in My Old Lady to warning her not to get on Kelso's bad side in My Best Friend's Mistake.
@Andrew.Grabowski
2 жыл бұрын
A nickel is 5 cents actually. Seeing you figure it out is funny.
@__TK___
2 жыл бұрын
So it’s a quarter and a nickel?
@WouldntULikeToKnow.
2 жыл бұрын
@@__TK___ yep
@alexfielding7191
2 жыл бұрын
@@__TK___ Yeah the riddle is one of them isn't a nickel but the other one is.
@TheNaturalGamer1
2 жыл бұрын
@@alexfielding7191 that doesn't make sense
@alexfielding7191
2 жыл бұрын
@@TheNaturalGamer1 Yes it does. It's a riddle, it's how they work.
@crispychrissy
4 ай бұрын
I had a kidney stone blocking my ureter, and can confirm it was one of the most painful things I've ever experienced. More painful at a constant level than a broken bone. It felt like someone was rubbing a rusty cheese grater inside my body.
@williameldridge9382
2 жыл бұрын
The Deja Vu thing was because he pulled the same riddle in one of the earlier seasons on those two characters to get them to leave him alone, at the end, they smashed up his bike (pre-scooter). So, when they did it again, after getting mad over the same riddle, it reminded him what happened to his original bike.
@spacetiger5076
2 жыл бұрын
At the end when you said you thought JD had a scooter - you’re right, he did. But if you remember back, he used to have a bike. He had just bought this one. JD was also thinking that the riddle scenario with the janitor seemed like he’d been there before. At the end, he realized that this was the second time they’d destroyed his bike over the exact same riddle. The janitor even says he feels like this is familiar. It is. It’s happened before.
@robtech341
2 жыл бұрын
You totally missed "They come 3 to a can" referring to tennis balls as JD is clueless when it comes to sports. Great video
@dannykent6190
2 жыл бұрын
I know you watch these out of order so you may not have picked up on the fact that a lot of the dialogue in this episode is either straight out of previous episodes or slightly tweaked versions of them. So if you're watching future past episodes and feel like you've already seen parts of them, this is very likely the reason why
@OtherSideStories
2 жыл бұрын
I remember crying in my doctor's office because I was drinking "so much" coffee. I told her that I know I'm not supposed to drink coffee while pregnant but it's the only thing that keeps my morning sickness down. And she said, "This is about coffee? I have patients that tell me that it's their right to do crack while pregnant, and you need my permission to drink coffee? Drink all the coffee you want." P.s. my babies are kids now and the coffee didn't do them any harm.
@watsername
Жыл бұрын
Having had 2 miscarriages and an ectopic (that did try to miscarry but got stuck resulting in surgery) in a row, I'm definitely minimising my caffeine intake (currently hoping for 4th time lucky but v early days yet...) but its not a huge risk in the grand scheme of things, and I think only really effects first trimester really, but yeah morning sickness vs coffee? No question especially as sickness can be pretty bad for baby too, gotta keep nutrients down! And guessing you definitely need the coffee now with kids! Nothing like a bit of me time with a nice coffee 😇
@mrjayoareyes
Жыл бұрын
I really love that you actually watch the full episodes while reacting... Most medical show reactions skip so many important parts...
@bradshuby
2 жыл бұрын
I love this series so much, watching a real doctor react to my favorite doctor themed show. Can't wait to watch more!
@AndrewAHynd
2 жыл бұрын
Its an interesting one to chose, its a great episode, but a lot of the jokes will be missed, especially those that are repeaters (Deja Vu) have you not seen the previous episodes. That being said, enjoying the jokes as they are for the first time is still great. Love you reactions and content. Keep up the great work. Cheers. Lion emoji here.
@Nami655
2 жыл бұрын
Happy New Year🦁! I really love this series you're doing, reacting to one of my favourite shows of all time :) I'd love for you to watch S2E15 if you get around to it. It dives deeper into Dr. Cox's psyche, making it one of my favourite episodes!
@DrSyl
2 жыл бұрын
Sure! Gimme a couple weeks!
@BadBatchArmada99
2 жыл бұрын
🦁, Happy new year! What a great way to start the year with a scrubs reaction. Keep up the great work. I hope you have a great year.
@alexdejong2
2 жыл бұрын
4 oz Nectarine nectar, about 2 to 3 nectarines juiced 4 oz Gin 4 oz Thyme infused simple syrup 2 oz fresh lime juice 2 Thyme sprigs for garnish Splash of sparkling water Splash of St. Germain Handful of ice for shaker
@TheLoos3Goos33
2 жыл бұрын
That advice about caffeine seems like it could apply to everyone, not just pregnant women. Basically seems like the study is just saying don't abuse caffeine if 2 cups a day is fine.
@DinoFacce
8 ай бұрын
🦁Dr. Cox is my favorite character from this show. The depth of his personality, his growth, and how he handles the many tough situations he faces always made me look up to him.
@flowerlight
5 ай бұрын
Thankyou for a great reaction ✨🦁✨
@Trilingualeks
2 жыл бұрын
In some countries, hospitals give enemas at a certain point during labour, it's not so much for not pooping during labour, it's to give the mother about a week of not needing to poop afterwards so that she can heal. I had an episiotomy and I was soooo grateful to not need to poop for days after. 🦁
@heathergarnham9555
2 жыл бұрын
The thrombotic story line is a flashback to a season 1 episode where Elliott was struggling with the same thing.
@TheNihonjin
2 жыл бұрын
Aw Syl, I feel like you gotta do more reading on Musk from someone who doesn't have an interest in hyping for him. I mean, technically he is an engineer, but really his success is largely an artifact of his familial wealth combined with the opportunities afforded by said wealth. Also, Musk's companies are world famous for being terrible places to work, particularly the lowest wage workers in SpaceX and Tesla (long hours, unsafe working conditions, arguably illegal union busting tactics). Love your vids mate. Recommend further reading, I feel like maybe the info you have is 🦁
@smaakjeks
2 жыл бұрын
"I mean, technically he is an engineer" No, he is not.
@TheNihonjin
2 жыл бұрын
I should clarify, he's a software engineer. His engineering expertise has nothing to do with electric vehicles or rockets.
@smaakjeks
2 жыл бұрын
@@TheNihonjin He has practiced software engineering (poorly).
@ExactFlamingo
2 ай бұрын
Yea hearing him praise that bloke so much made me wince pretty hard, not a good take
@EmilyMae
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for doing another scrubs reaction, it made me so happy when I saw that you'd uploaded this. Couldn't wait till I got to watch it 😀
@colonelb
2 жыл бұрын
A nickel is a 5 cent piece (with a 100 cents equal to a dollar): The US Coin denominations are: Penny (1) Nickel (5) Dime (10) Quarter (25) Half Dollar (50) (not common) Silver Dollar (100) (not common) The riddle is "two coins add up to 30 cents and one of them is not a nickel"
@tjmetalhead33
7 ай бұрын
The other one is
@TheLibermania
2 жыл бұрын
Just a little side thing about Deja Vus. I feel like i have a Deja Vu everytime i'm close to an epileptic seizure. I have no idea if that's something official, but i have it.
@suz7341
2 жыл бұрын
You are the human equivalent of a golden retriever... You are so nice and enthusiastic about the things. I would love to be your friend.
@wol_ves
2 жыл бұрын
🦁 At the time this show was made, there were a ton of pregnancy myths floating around that have been around for who knows how long. And pregnancy myths can be super hard to dispel because there's so much caution and relatively little study available--this is apparent when you look at the drugs approved for use with pregnant women. Thank you for another great video Dr Syl! I'm a student from the US enrolled in the Doctor of Medicine program at UQ, and I've been in Sydney the last 2 weeks because of Queensland's entry rules. I absolutely love Sydney, I'd love to stay if I could but got to head off to Brisbane soon. It has been really awesome to watch your videos, and thank you again so much for all the hard work you've put in!
@thesedays99
2 жыл бұрын
🦁 Another fun reaction. Thanks and you have a happy new year Dr.
@nmcnea771
2 жыл бұрын
My only question from the previous scrubs reactions is what kind of mental health support do doctors get? I get emotional watching the show, I can't imagine what it would be like when cox loses 3 patients or someone going out during a routine surgery. I would assume there's a therapy period or at least a psychologist interview. What is the real world for this?
@duaineturvey1783
2 жыл бұрын
There was a very small amount of singing in this one with welcome back coxer, you need to react to “my musical” if u haven’t seen in already. But in saying this I think it would be awesome if you do the whole serious. Such iconic moments throughout this series.
@wfly81
2 жыл бұрын
A flip phone can do emails, but it's a real pain. Although expecting mothers can have caffeine, you know first-time mothers can be. So I'm thinking Carla decided not to have any caffeine at all for the health of the baby, and therefore...no caffeine for Turk. I get what you mean about childbirth. There's a Cronenberg-esque aspect to it...like body horror. It's a Saw movie IRL.
@hellfish2309
2 жыл бұрын
6:27 the medicine of House MD might feel like a contrivance to you, but there’s an excellent episode where his team is forced to consider the opportunity costs of running tests w/ a limited mass of biopsy sample; narratively great contrived drama, but still the virtue of refining diagnostics and what tools to use when
@Hanmacx
2 жыл бұрын
There is another saying in dr house: "when you hear hooves, think about horses, not zebras" The twist is that Dr House mostly has only Zebra cases, and sometimes you need to think about okapi. (Tiny giraffes that look like zebras)
@undertakernumberone1
2 жыл бұрын
@@Hanmacx And sometimes they look for Zebras, think they found an okapi but instead it actually was a mule.
@circleofleaves2676
2 жыл бұрын
I remember that episode. It was great.
@circleofleaves2676
2 жыл бұрын
@@Hanmacx That isn't just a House saying. It's a very common dictum in medicine that has been taught to medical students for a long time. It is mentioned in Scrubs as well. Dr Cox says to JD "When you hear hoofbeats, you just go ahead and think horsies, not zebras... mmm-kay mister silly-bear? I happen to be a 'zebra' several times over. I have multiple rare diseases.
@TheHobgoblyn
2 жыл бұрын
Ingredients: Nectarines: 3 Chilled prosecco: 70ml ... Directions: 1. Peel nectarines, cut them up and, using a fine mesh sieve, push through all the liquid. Do this for all nectarines until you end up with a bowl of finely sieved nectarine puree. 2. Using a spoon, spoon a big dollop into the bottom of your glass so it should be 1/3 nectarine puree and 2/3 prosecco. 3. Carefully top with prosecco making sure it doesn’t over fizz. 4. Sieving the nectarines through a fine mesh is the most important part, in order to get the freshest puree which makes the Nectarini so delicious.
@scott91575
2 жыл бұрын
Yes, flip phones could send emails. They could even get really rudimentary web pages.
@tomwheeler2012
Жыл бұрын
Now I know why I find you so magnetically attractive. I cant stop watching you and your reactions. Answer. Its your mannerisms. Your mannerisms speak volumes about what you think, how you feel and your reaction toward whatever your watching yet your reactions are also very subtle like you can see when your thinking and you can mask your reaction or you can express your reaction. Then it clicked when you sang the theme song "Im no superman" and there it was right there in front o me. You have the personality of Clark Kent mild mannered every-man....and then superman emerges in times of crisis. What makes you magnetically attractive? Answer: its reading your mannerisms. Thats what makes your reaction videos so magnetic. The head movements, the eyebrow movements, etc. I watch some people do these reaction videos and their reactions are pretty straight forward and you can tell that sometimes they are even forcing their emotions and their expressions/mannerisms to add drama and interest but in reality their reactions are pretty shallow, superficial, one dimensional. Im not belittling them...thats just how some people digest the world. You, however, I can read in your face and your mannerisms that your thinking thru what your watching from multiple angles...your interpreting the emotions, your thinking through the medical problem, your observing the social dynamic, your trying to understand american humor and our american words/references that might not translate in Australia....but there is more going on watching you than others who do reaction videos. If you want my advise...after a few more years of medicine...offer your medical knowledge to local TV because you would play really well as one of those people who give routine medical advise or explanations to the general public....and same with kids...you have a personality that would be very receptive to kids and parents.
@johnnys.3465
2 жыл бұрын
In late 19. century there were 20 cent coins (also called double dimes), which are still legal tender. Add another dime and you have 30 cents, no second nickel is even needed.
@maxm.d4174
2 жыл бұрын
I am a junior medical officer from Rwanda, working in maternity at the moment, we are used to perform many c/s on a daily basis...have u ever performed one yet? Nice video🙄
Жыл бұрын
Dr Cox is my favourite character. And the Janitor 🤭
@JamailvanWestering
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for reacting to the episode I recommended
@AprilTheRockStar
Жыл бұрын
19:35 I was in the room with my cousin when she had her first kid. I did *not* want to be in there, but I kind of got stuck 😂 She wanted it filmed, and like... ALL of it filmed, and I got stuck with the camera. Her epidural was obviously working well, because mid-push, she looked at me and said, "Doesn't this make you want to have one?" I told her she wasn't seeing the horror show I was seeing, but afterward, I did tell her it's the coolest thing I've ever seen, and I don't ever want to see it again 😂 Her son's 14 now, and I still don't have kids 🙅🏼♀️
@scott91575
2 жыл бұрын
"I thought he had a scooter." It burned up at the start of the show when he did the ring of fire.
@bplup6419
2 жыл бұрын
Don't forget the lovecraftian nightmare that is a baby's first poo
@ArturoGonzalez-bu5pi
2 жыл бұрын
Great stuff as always. 🦁
@TheLEEC
2 жыл бұрын
Happy new year! Great reaction with a lot of interesting info as usual! This episode is packed full of references to all previous episodes. Huge fan service but the story is a bit sparse as a stand-alone.
@tbmin3d
11 ай бұрын
20 years as a bartender, third generation, a nectarini doesn't exist, but with a trip to a supermarket and/or liquor store I could certainly invent it.
@Hilariumosis
2 жыл бұрын
Isn't that old lady the same spanish lady who couldn't understand english in an earlier episode I think?🦁
@mikemaltsev730
2 жыл бұрын
Just wanna hug you all. Everything is going to be alright
@DefaultName-du3kr
2 жыл бұрын
I remember flip phones were able to send emails, but it was a pain. Getting a blackberry back in the day was a godsend.
@TheLoos3Goos33
2 жыл бұрын
Flip phones could technically do email. The interface was just horrible for sending any emails. Wasn't horrible if you were just reading them though.
@wraithflaire1639
2 жыл бұрын
I have seen this one before and I still couldn't solve the riddle.😮💨😆😆😆
@julianleischner3700
Жыл бұрын
JD calls his scooter "Sasha" so when he said at the beginning of the episode that "Sasha was in the shop" and therefore he rode to the hospital on his bike it meant his scooter was currently out of commission. So you are correct, he had a scooter at that point in the series but unless you've seen the episodes recently or just watched them a lot you might miss that detail ;)
@scott91575
2 жыл бұрын
The US has 4 major coins (there are others but not often used). 1) The penny, 1 cent, from the old English penig meaning coin and a term you probably know. 2) The nickel, 5 cents, and comes from the name of the metal it was made of, cupronickel (25% nickel and 75% copper). 3) The dime, 10 cents, from the old French disme which means "10th part" and 4) the quarter, 25 cents, with an obvious reasoning since quarter is still a term we use for 1/4 and 25 cents is 1/4 of a dollar. We also still predominantly use paper for all whole dollars and above. There have been many attempts to have a dollar coin catch on but they never have.
@SuperMegaImbaLord
2 жыл бұрын
18:30 i thought it's pretty common for pregnants to not drink coffee, because the coffein can make the baby hyperactive. but that's just the random knowledge and it was quiet logic for me so i never doubt that. but ofc im not familiar with medicine in any way so it might still be wrong. :D
@drew.168
2 жыл бұрын
I Don't know about regular childbirth as my son was delivered via cesarian, but there is something unsettling about going to hold the baby and looking over and seeing your spouse's guts pulled back and out lol
@f0rth3l0v30fchr15t
2 жыл бұрын
19:19 a friend of mine from university did a postgrad course to train as a midwife; to use their words, "I suture vaginas for a living".
@joshbautista6892
2 жыл бұрын
American change for Australians abroad, a quarter is 25 cents, a dime is 10 cents and a nickel is 5 cents and a penny is 1 cent. Back in the day we had half dollars which were 50 cents but they were big and were discontinued in 1972 then we have full dollar coins which still exist today but you can find them in banks if you ask or laundry mats from the machine that exchanges bills for coins for the machine
@marvinh4893
2 жыл бұрын
Happy new year. I love your reactions to my favorite show and evven the best episodes ! 🦁
@Longlius
2 жыл бұрын
Flip phones could actually do email. There was a protocol called WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) that could be used to provide limited services like basic web browsing and email for less powerful devices over early cellular data connections. It was never super popular in the US due to the extra costs providers would charge (you can tell JD is relatively well-off and single just by him being able to afford such a service). Japan had their own competitor to WAP called i-mode which was much more popular to the point where few people used SMS or MMS for text messaging and instead did all their texting via mobile email. Until recently, WAP and its successors were actually quite popular in the developing world in places without access to smartphones. A lot of countries in subsaharran africa, for example, did the bulk of their consumer banking via WAP-style applications.
@chrisblanc663
Жыл бұрын
I think I remember the riddle. (Before I see the end of the episode). One isn’t a nickel, the other one is. Means you can use a nickel to get the correct change.
@jenhalbert3001
2 жыл бұрын
I don't have a lion emoji, but i think elon musk is probably a psychopath. He isn't that popular in the states. I can never think of episode titles, but know that prettymuch every episode of scrubs is fantastic, so you can't fail with it.
@bialyteamtv
9 ай бұрын
I wonder if in the opening JDs was the only one able to put the xray correctly into the showing light
@ElizabethThompson-tj7qw
Жыл бұрын
🦁 a lion for the courage Dr C had to have to let Elliott in finally
@circleofleaves2676
2 жыл бұрын
Dr Cox is such a convincing crier/verge of tears guy.
@evowarrior5
2 жыл бұрын
I'd really love for you to react to Season 5 Episode 4, "My Jiggly Ball". It's got some good comedy and it really shines a light on a different main character you haven't seen much depth from yet!
@seraphimvalkyrin4543
4 ай бұрын
I watched these videos when they came out but now that I am rewatching them I realized I found out I had a kidney stone a couple months after this. Unfortunately the stone was too big to pass so for a couple months I had to deal with the pain of having the stone blocking the ureter. Not to mention I had issues during the first medical procedure so I had to have a stent placed and had to wait another month to finally remove the stone. But I can attest to the "never being able to get comfortable" part. I actually had to sleep in the spare bedroom because the tossing and turning would keep my wife up, plus I found sleeping upright was the most comfortable. The one thing I eventually found out that helped was taking a bath. I guess the hot water helped relax my muscles and in turn eased up the pressure on the ureter. But man, I wish they would have given me some of that indomethacin medication because yeah, having a kidney stone was probably the most painful thing I have ever had to deal with.
@PerthScienceClinic
Жыл бұрын
As a mathematician, I have never heard of angry calculus.
@drakeloki4214
Жыл бұрын
the thing is when Elliot says Cox has always been an unsupportive bastard it ignores things like when Cox jeopardized his career by punching out Kelso when he was tearing into Elliot after witch Cox told her she was doing a good job.
@marinorapdo6635
2 жыл бұрын
Happy new year 🎉 ✨ Doctor Syl
@randomalex0_0
2 жыл бұрын
that cox joke took you a while haha
@stormageddon2223
Жыл бұрын
Clearly a year late seeing this, but a laboratory use for Indomethacin is as a differentiation factor to drive Mesenchymal Stem Cells into adipocytes rather than osteoblasts. Just interesting that prolonged use of Indomethacin for pain relief could contribute to increased marrow or possibly even subcutaneous (MSCs in non marrow depots) adipogenesis/fat gain.
@evilpacman9696
2 жыл бұрын
Happy New Year! And a couple other great episodes that might make for good reactions could be My Lucky Day & My New Coat. Have a wonderful year!🦁
@VelkanAngels
2 жыл бұрын
Yes, many (if not most) flip phones could do e-mails. I even had some electronic calendar thingy that could send e-mails, if you managed to get it to connect to the internet... which I didn't... Back then was when e-mail was all the rage, after all. When you could only get a Gmail account, if you were invited by someone else who already had it, only for Gmail to become one of the worst e-mails you can have... I'm bored.
@kordimandius9103
2 жыл бұрын
U.S. coins: 1 cent = penny 5 cents = nickel 10 cents = dime 25 cents = quarter 50 cents = half dollar 1 dollar = silver dollar The $.50 and $1 coins are fairly rare and generally not available at most registers.
@GG-mi3bu
2 жыл бұрын
Im surprised you haven't noticed that the x ray in the opening credits is flipped around backwards.
@F1rstWorldNomaD
2 жыл бұрын
Some later model flip phones could actually send emails. I never once did but I, clear as day, recall my pink flip phone Samsung had an "E-mails" menu.
@richieordeanidc536
2 жыл бұрын
id love to see you react to 6.14 (my no good reason) and 6.15 (my goodbye), fair warning tho they're both sad episodes
@weepingscorpion8739
2 жыл бұрын
🦁 Closest experience I've had to anything in this episode was a kidney stone. Just got some "oral"-gesic tablets for it. 😎
@jonnywilson4408
Жыл бұрын
17:09 when I was in the marines I got a stone so bad that when I tried to pee I passed out and fell backwards into the mirror in my barracks room bathroom they gave me a shot of Opana. Worst pain I’ve ever felt in my life and I’ve been shot.
@jasonpratt3970
Жыл бұрын
🦁 I’d love more scrubs reactions. I really need to get checked. So medically anxious I’m letting things just pile up
@BuzzLightyear9999
2 жыл бұрын
Your comment at 6:15 deserves to be explored in greater depth. I am an Aussie and have had the misfortune to require emergency hospitalisation in both Australian and American hospitals. I know my case is only a single data point, but my experience of Australian hospitals is that diagnostic knowledge and practice is sharper and American doctors ‘tend to’ fall back on ordering lots of tests. My supposition is that there is an unconscious leaning toward ‘over-testing’ in the USA because it is important to be able to bill health insurance for insured patients for as much as possible… I have found Australian doctors spend more focus in the initial gathering of patient history and early diagnostics prior to tests being ordered and as a result, fewer and more-targeted tests are ordered (i.e. Aussie doctors tend to order the endocrine panel of bloodwork and the Americans order just about everything possible…). …I’d be interested for American doctors to weigh-in as my supposition may be thoroughly incorrect. (For the record, in all instances, I’ve been hospitalised for adrenal crisis due to being hypo-pituitary - potentially life-threatening, but treatment requires relatively simple and straightforward IV cortisone. In all cases, I’ve presented with a medic-alert bracelet identifying adrenal insufficiency. Americans lean toward testing broadly in the first instance and Australian doctors lean toward questioning in greater detail prior to ordering tests - each approach has pros and cons, but I found it a curious difference. I’d be interested if there are any doctors who have trained in one country and moved to the other to work/study and observed cultural differences in the way medicine is practiced and what the implications are…)
@circleofleaves2676
2 жыл бұрын
That's interesting to hear of your experience as a patient in both countries. I'm an Aussie too, living in Australia. I wonder how different it is for non-insured patients in American hospitals, if the doctors can't fall back on so many tests? We're so fortunate in Australia that if we land in a public hospital, they can do what is needed (most of the time) and we won't get sent a bill (again, most of the time. When in public hospital with a rare life-threatening adverse event, one of my endocrine blood tests needed to be sent away down south for testing at my expense, but I was told about this upfront).
@BuzzLightyear9999
2 жыл бұрын
@@circleofleaves2676 My experience is only one person’s experience if I’m being fair… I WAS quite shocked when they billed my insurance $19,000 for essentially confirming I needed about $75-worth of saline and cortisone…🤷♂️ Endocrine stuff is notoriously fiddly and adrenal crisis is unusual… it’s not something I’d expect anyone to figure out immediately, but the Aussie ED doctors tend to question a little more thoroughly and had a much more detailed picture to brief the endocrinology registrar whereas the USA, they went nuts on bloodwork tests the moment my insurance was confirmed and didn’t probe much further than me murmuring the words ‘hypo pituitary’ …also keep in mind - I was in the midst of an adrenal crisis in all instances so not exactly the most reliable of witnesses!😉 I’m sure there are exceptionally good doctors in America and by the same token some less-than-stellar ones in Aus, but I do feel insurance vs uninsured in USA changes the nature of their approach even if it is to relax and rely on a slew of test results once you know the patient can afford it - it is definitely slightly different in each of the two countries…🤷♂️ [edit] I’m surprised an Australian hospital charged you for an endocrinology test… the only one I’ve ever had sent interstate was a BP3 test that could only be done up in Queensland at that time (quite a few years back)… and that was 100% Medicare. Do you mind if I ask what test wasn’t covered by Medicare…? That’s the first I’ve ever heard of…
@circleofleaves2676
2 жыл бұрын
@@BuzzLightyear9999 Sure, I don't mind at all. The test was FGF23, which is a hormone that is one of the major regulators of phosphate homeostasis in the body. It's a test that is not commonly run. I'm in Brisbane, and it had to be sent to an endocrinology lab in NSW, and took a few months to come back. The professor of endocrinology in the ED at the PA hospital was so savvy. I'm so grateful to him. I had a life-threatening adverse event to Ferinject (ferric carboxymaltose), a form of iron infusion. The adverse event was FGF23-mediated severe hypophosphataemia. Hypophosphataemia is actually quite common following this form of iron infusion, but it's usually subclinical; patients are usually asymptomatic and the levels regulate with no or very little intervention (just oral phosphate is sufficient). I was down at the very pointy end. For reference, phosphate reference range: 0.8 - 1.6. Hyphosphosphataemia levels - mild: 0.6 - 0.8, moderate: 0.4 - 0.6 (but anything below 0.5 is significant), severe: below 0.4, life-threatening: below 0.32. I was at 0.16. The whole endocrinology team and any doctor I've spoken to since says they've never seen a phosphate that low, from anything. I think I was lucky to not have a worse outcome, considering that level. Oh and the context for the test is, certain forms of iron infusion, but mainly ferric carboxymaltose, inhibits FGF23 from breaking down, causing phosphate wasting. It put me in hospital for a week on back to back phosphate and calcium infusions, discharged on huge oral dose, bloods every few days, someone from the endocrinology team calling me weekly with results and to adjust levels up and down. Took 14 weeks for the levels to be stable. I forget how much the test was, maybe $120,, but it was fine, especially since I was asked upfront, and considering everything else that was done for me - for free - over that time. I've had a couple of other tests that were only partially covered or not covered by medicare, such gene rearrangement studies, and my very first myositis line immunoassay (privately, through Sonic, not through the public hospital labs). I have an absolute slew of rare diseases (I mean, a monster of a list of diseases), and I think I'd be screwed if I lived in the US. It's interesting to look online at my medicare and see all the tests that just roll through for free. Very grateful.
@BuzzLightyear9999
2 жыл бұрын
@@circleofleaves2676 Very interesting. Thanks for the detail and quick response. You are right, that is a highly unusual presentation…! Next time I see the Endo team at Royal Melb I’m gonna mention this (since they’re a teaching hospital, they lap up anything different and unusual…!) I know that in some cases hospitals will foot the bill for unusual treatments or diagnostics Medicare doesn’t cover if they think there might be research publication possibilities… yours definitely sounds publishable and study-worthy…! Having said that, a single $120 expense amongst all of the other tests covered by Medicare is a relative drop in the ocean - I think you’re right that if you were in the USA it would be a very different financial proposition…😉 (P.S. you have a reputedly shit-hot-amazing endocrinology team up there in Brisbane from everything I have been told… you’re in excellent hands!)
@circleofleaves2676
2 жыл бұрын
@@BuzzLightyear9999 Oh and some added detail - when I got the FGF23 result back, it was 560 (ref range 10 - 54). Sounds like you've heard right about the endocrinology team here, at least at the PA. The whole team were great, but especially the Prof. When I spoke with my GP while in hospital, he was so pleased to hear I was under his care. He even went into bat for me recently even though I hadn't seen him for years. When I had my clinic follow-up regarding that adverse event, I happened to mention it to the nurse doing my obs and she said "That was you? We heard about you! He sat us all down in a teaching exercise about it". At least it was good for something. With the full tetany and losing seconds of consciousness etc and hearing I was in the danger zone, it didn't feel so 'worth something' at the time! Definitely a very different financial proposition indeed over there. I hear of fellow patients fighting with insurance, and it makes me very grateful. My monthly IVIg (intravenous immunoglobulin) infusions (which relies on plasma donors) is very expensive. The downside is that because it's covered here, free to the patient, it's more rationed and we use lower doses than they do in the States. But I'm very grateful to access it (not grateful to need it), my infusion nurses are a beautiful bunch of humans, and I'm grateful to the plasma donors. My partner has been donating plasma every two weeks since I've been getting it. I have PL-7 antibody positive Antisynthetase Syndrome (ASS - don't you love that acronym lol) which involves Polymyositis (rare muscle disease), polyarthritis, raynauds and Interstitial Lung Disease but fortunately ILD is the one aspect of ASS I don't yet have; Relapsing Polychondritis; Lymphoid-variant Hypereosinophilic Syndrome; gastric-parietal cell antibody positive pernicious anaemia; anti-ganglioside GM1-antibody positive neuropathy; erythromelalgia; pudendal neuralgia; vestibular dysfunction; dysautonomia; adenomyosis, chronic migraine, and a bunch of other stuff. I have a pretty big team of specialists/departments taking care of this garbage fire of a meatsuit. Between Medicare-rebatable things and the public system (I see specialists both privately and publicly) I'm looked after pretty well. The most challenging thing is pain management. I hope you are being looked after well down there in Melb. Sorry for the novella of a response!
@spikedpsycho2383
2 жыл бұрын
Nectarini: 1 part of vodka 1 part of peach schnapps 1 part of orange juice Served in a martini glass
@doubledamn2599
2 жыл бұрын
Never been clear on whether a 'Necatarini' is based on nectarine juice or nectar of some sort.
@Stovokor78
2 жыл бұрын
🦁 Another funny/educational reaction Dr Syl, Hope your Christmas/New Years wasn't too crazy with the B.1.1.529 variant running amok 🦁
@Staineless84
Жыл бұрын
A lot of the scenes in this episode were repeat scenes of things that had happened before. A lot wasn't, but about half the episode including the riddle and the outcome of his bike being destroyed were, it's why he keeps saying everything is deja vu.
@robertfanion2815
2 жыл бұрын
Hmmm I had a stone blocking my ureter but I missed out on the butt medicine… shucks lol
@runshouse
2 жыл бұрын
This episode is from Season 5 which means they are attendings now and no longer interns.
@circleofleaves2676
2 жыл бұрын
I'm just going to say "lion emoji" because the emojis table doesn't always show up on my laptop. The joy of old devices and ignoring the "install updates now" window over and over.
@citisoccer
Жыл бұрын
"2 coins add up to 30 cents, and one of them is not a nickel. What are the 2 coins?" US coinage is as follows: Penny- 1 cent Nickel- 5 cents Dime- 10 cents Quarter- 25 cents. The answer is a quarter and a nickel. Yes, one of the coins is not a nickel, but the other one is. :) Enjoyed the reaction.
@johndray2326
Жыл бұрын
A quarter (25c) and a nickel (5c). One of them is not a nickel, but the other one is!
@aerinlockeadon827
2 жыл бұрын
Nectar is basically thick juice so there's lots of recipes
@16forthecar
Жыл бұрын
Answer to the riddle: "one of them isn't a nickel" is key. One of the coins isn't a nickel, but the other one is. So it's 1 quarter and 1 nickel
@blademontane
2 жыл бұрын
My Musical: S6E6. That's a great one, it's about a woman who gets a brain problem that causes her to see everything as a musical, and there's a bunch of great musical numbers in it too.
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