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This is a question DIY Surgery

Majoringram tells us: I once had a wart on my hand and went to the doc to get it frozen. It hurt, lots. Instead of having to go back for more, I got my trusty rambo knife and cut the thing off. Three years later, and not even a scar!

(, Thu 20 Jan 2011, 12:08)
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one of those 'frend of a friend' stories, but I am assured it is true
Working on a film set that's supposed to be an Accident & Emergency section of a hospital. Lots of props kicking around, and a professional medic on hand to give advice about procedure to make it all look pukka.

The scene involves one of those cardiac shock things to restart a heart, and there's a prop one ready to use. In the run up to the scene rehearsal, the 1st Assistant director has a play with the prop, in a kind of a 'look at me' moment he pretends to shock himself with it. Turns out the prop is real and charged up, cos it blasts him and stops his heart, The guy is dead. Luckily the medic is right there to shock him again to restart his heart, and attend to him til they can get him to hospital.
(, Sat 22 Jan 2011, 22:31, 8 replies)
Plausible....With old defib machines
But the newer machines won't allow you to shock,unless the heart is in Pulseless ventricular tachycardia .
(, Sat 22 Jan 2011, 23:45, closed)
thats easy for you to say

(, Sun 23 Jan 2011, 1:00, closed)
It bloody wasn't...
I had to google the spelling.
(, Sun 23 Jan 2011, 13:20, closed)
haha

(, Mon 24 Jan 2011, 10:41, closed)

I feel obliged as a so-called 'medical professional' to comment on many of these stories...

Only the automated defibrillators will not (hopefully) shock someone with a normal heart rhythm - they'll shock ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia (not necessarily pulseless though...). Manual ones are exactly that, manual, which is what you'd get in A&E, because with trained staff to use them, they're much quicker.

The story is possible, but unlikely.
(, Sun 23 Jan 2011, 13:36, closed)
Yeah...
...what suxamethonium said. I use a LifePak 12 and you're looking at shocking VF and VT. We often use them in manual mode and as suxamethonium said they are exactly that - manually operated with the joule setting and shock delivery. The story seems unlikely though, probably one of those urban myths. The current batch of automated defibrillators are pretty good and wouldn't shock someone with a normal heart rhythm.

BTW - Don't you just love those movies where they shock a patient who is 'flatlining' (asystole)?!
Does not happen in real life as it's pointless.
(, Sun 23 Jan 2011, 15:49, closed)
Shocking

(, Mon 24 Jan 2011, 10:50, closed)

Why do people always describe those who have had their heart temporarily stop as "dead"?

You aren't "dead" just becuase your heart isn't beating... yet.

Of course, you can be sat on bypass for hours and you certainly aren't dead then either.
(, Thu 27 Jan 2011, 11:44, closed)

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