WHEN I got a MRI I don't remember them giving me any drugs or anything and also they were cracking jocks at me for the whole3 hours and I got to watch a movie while getting the MRI Scary but FUN
Eileen and the world to me to 9th to 6th and 6th to me to be the 6th to get to know the people who were not be the 6th to get to know you better not be the 6th to get to know you better not be the 6th to get to know the people who were in the9 for the world to me to be the 6th to get to know the people who were in the9 for the world to me to be the 6th to get to know the author of you better not be the 6th to get to know the people who were in the9 for the world to me to 9th to 6th and 6th to
I felt like crying when they carried him away. It had to be the scariest feeling for his mom and dad. I hope everything went well and he made a full recovery!
Little man I understand what that rush of fear is like. Anesthesia crawls through your face and shocks you into a state of derealization. When he screamed for his dad I felt so bad, when you feel like that you feel your own brain trying to escape quite literally you feel something inside you trying to get away cause you cant handle your current reality. what a little trouper tho. Wish him and his family well
Wait di y'all know what an mri is right why would you need anesthesia for it the only thing it is is a scan when you go under a tube and they scan your body with cameras it doesn't hurt it anything so why would you need it
@@sadem1045 Same. The doctor said “Get up” and I got up. Then she injected me with something then said “You can lay down now” so I lay back down. When I started to feel the effects, I still didn’t realize I had been sedated, since I’d always imagined that being sedated would feel just like getting tired and taking a nap. I went into panic and they had to handcuff me to the bed, which made me panic even more. Only when I regained consciousness in the morning did I realize I had been sedated.
I've been put under twice. They give me the "cocktail" before heading into the OR..that stuff is something. You literally feel like your head is floating off your body as the room starts spinning.
I had surgery 2 years ago for a Baha cochlear implant and the nurse anesthetist gave me something as I was getting wheeled to the or it knocked me totally out
Yeah ikr! I've been put under 18 times and you never get used to that feeling, it's a very speciall one! It feels like my head gets hot and I feel drunk. And then I go "🥴...😴"
yeah, I had to get my tonsils about when I was about 5, when they put the gas mask on my mouth, I kept my eyes open, I actually blacked out WITH MY EYES OPEN, pretty weird experience
@@WelshKyle He was more than likely given one of two options: A) ketamine or B) Versed [midazolam]. Both of these meds have a longer duration of action that probably gives them relatively comfortable time margins but they don't have to dart in like they're Dash from The Incredibles. That's the case for the likes of propofol.
I love that the person giving the anesthesia was so closely monitoring the dosage so that only as much as was needed was given and nothing more. Love the dad, too. Diane in NC
He bolused the other half right after the laid him down. He gave the whole thing, they measure that stop to the T based on patient weight and dose-appropriate age.
When I went under 2 time they where super nice and cracking jokes for me. This man didn’t help this kid at all. Don’t talk to just the parents talk with the kid.
@@user-tq6fx7tl7e The kid was clearly afraid, youa re supposed to help patients with that. For comparison look at this: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-0ON7rARjK2Q.html or this: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-nH1826L8eJs.html Also the way he instantly picked him up and carried him away without one look at the parents..
@@vloplob Ya but like... homie was probably told before it was harmless. Kids are always afraid, especially in sight of needles. So there's no real reason to diss the poor dude doing his job.
Awwww omg my heart dropped to my stomach when he cried for his mommy & daddy awwwww omg pooe thing he's such a sweet little angel, he's so scared awwwwww
I definitely understand what that kid is going through I was diagnosed with inflammatory bowel disease when I was nine and every once a year I had to be put under for a colonoscopy and you fight so hard to just stay awake and then they give you the anesthesia and you just fall asleep.
I went under 2 for an endoscopy and one time the anesthesiology said to me, you know what the difference is between boogers and broccoli? Children like boogers. I then fell asleep and only remembered that part.
The reason he was able to fight it for so long is because his body has been put under many times before so it takes more of the drug to have the same effects then for someone who has never had it before
@@sarahswailes4690 Do you know what kind of condition he has? I work with a child now who needs annual MRI scans to monitor brain aneurysms and moyamoya disease; both related to MOPD2.
@@xcalabur18 you cant fight it, you will fall a sleep. I recently got surgery to, and was put to sleep with a anesthesia mask. I asked for this way to put me a sleep. When they put the mask on your face, after a few minutes you start to notice the effects, and smell it and that smell is a little bad, but for me not hat bad. When you bread that gas true the mask you will float more to sleep, as the gas makes you with each breath more sleepy, and after a few minutes you will be a sleep. I liked it a little, a nice and chill feeling!
I've had that done before when I had to go through a surgery once. It's not exactly what you would think, but they give it to you and at first nothing seems to happen, but then you start feeling a little heavy and depending on the person I guess you start to hear people's voices get deeper. It's no wonder why the kid started to panic, I can't say I blame him but I'm glad the father stood by him.
God Bless him. I felt for him. When I was about his age I was being diagnosed with Crohn’s disease. We had been trying to find out what was wrong for about 3 yrs. I’m 50 now but back then nobody really knew what Crohns was. Anyway the point was that I had to go thru the exact same thing numerous times. Being only 4-5 yrs old it was a terrifying ordeal. But we didn’t have MRI yet. So the only way to look inside me was the dreaded BARIUM ENEMA
Wow, that took forever! When they gave me propofol to shock my heart, I was out in like 10 seconds. Of course, I wasn't fighting it, either... I wanted to get it done and over with and get my heart back into a normal rhythm.
Vivid Dawn do you remember them injecting it? Do you even feel it starting to work or was it like wide awake one sec and then waking up the next? Any chance you could have fought it?
@@xcalabur18 for my tonsilectomy they had to put me under and all I recalled was them telling me to count backwards from 10 to 1 and I remembered getting to 7 I blinked anddddddddd surgery was over lol I didn't feel a thing nor was I aware of time going by lol
Oh my Jesus, that had to be so very hard !!! He is a strong little guy and that had to scare him. To hear him call out for his Dad that there made me cry 😥😥😥. I hope that all is well. I know that woozii woo feeling !!!
I agree but he also could have been much worse. He was still talking to him and helping him stay calm. I had a pair of nurses that did their work with zero emotion, refused to allow my mother in (even though our family had a history of bad reactions to anesthesia) and completely ignored me having a severe panic attack due to the negative reaction. Didnt even speak a word to me except to instruct me to do things like squeeze a ball. When they did talk to me it was very cold and robotic. It honestly felt like an alien abduction and that these people were getting ready to do an experiment on me. Ive heard the same from many people. I think anesthesiologist tend to get very desensitized to their job and upset children.
Conversely, nursing is a tough field, they have a lot of serious information to keep track of, administering meds and such, dealing with ensuring the safety of a human being, it's understandable that maybe the nurse was focused on doing their job properly and letting Dad comfort the child.
Poor baby. It is soooo scary having anesthesia or any sedating, mind altering substance pushed into your body. I panic every time im at the er and they benadryl in my system. The rush scares me so bad I feel like im dying... Lord help me. I cant stand having to be sedated, anesthesia, etc... Its so scary.
Omg poor little guy was scared! He really fought through that anesthesia! I teared up watching this! My little guy is gonna have to go thru this to get circumcised and I’m reconsidering it... maybe I should just let him choose to do it if he wants to when he gets older!
i remember not knowing what that strange feeling was when i was falling asleep and flipping out. even after they said it was normal i still cried... but only for a second XD
When I was his age I had the gas mask. And I hated the smell. It scared me too as I was going under, because voices got stranger sounding, and I felt buzzy. So I can relate to this boy being scared. This was in the late 60s and early 70s.
Had the same thing! I had eye crossing, and my mom is a nurse, and back in 2019, she noticed my eyes were crossing. We went to my local eye clinic wnd they rushed us to a children’s hospital to get a cat scan. That sometimes can be a possible sign of a brain tumor. Luckily, the cat scan didn’t show anything, but for more details, a month later, I had an mri. Didn’t show anything either! I was diagnosed with amblyopia, which has gotten SO much better. I had surgery in July 2020 and it disappeared. I still get scared I have some sort of cancer, and I’m also really scared if I’ll go blind because of it. :(. I have a habit of googling stuff about health related stuff and google can be false, but the stuff it tells me can freak me out. I’m just still scared. They said that won’t happen.
@@candywilson3884 If you enjoy it, it feels like you’re having a good dream. If you don’t enjoy it, it feels like you’re having a nightmare you can’t wake up from.
@@AB-zs1mc they sedated her before going to the MRI room so she is more cooperative during the IV administration etc. The anaesthetist struggled to put the IV so they ended up giving her gas through mask to make her go to sleep. Hardest thing to watch her struggle, fighting and pushing away the mask. Good thing is that she didnt remember anything after and most importantly scans came back clear which is a relief. Thanks for asking
That was literally my reaction when I was being put under for surgery at the age of 4. I did NOT want to go to sleep! And feeling sleepy freaked me out. I wish I could be put under for an MRI or even just a regular dental cleaning these days...