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Anyone has heard that you can kill a normal person, with no heart problems with a carotid massage?
Anyone has heard that you can kill a normal person, with no heart problems with a carotid massage?
Maybe you could kill someone but if that were the case the Chuck Norris move wouldn't be "death hold grip" it'd be "neck rub of death"![]()
I dont know, maybe no diagnosed (but still underlying?) heart problems. You can also break loose a carotid plaque and cause an arrythmia, but not typically in a person with a totally normal heart (just perhaps in someone with an undiagnosed medical condition).
If you dislodge a carotid plaque it won't cause an arrhythmia, it will cause a stroke - especially in those small terminal vessels (perforated substance). In cardiophys we were told that's what could kill a person.
Anyone has heard that you can kill a normal person, with no heart problems with a carotid massage?
This is one of the closely guarded secrets in osteopathic manipulation.... 😀
We got some old people that roll around with us too. One guy that started training a couple months ago is 57 years old! 😱 Is it safe for people this old to start training and get choked?I think that were talking about people who are fifty plus and with atherosclerotic risk factors having plaque dislodged. Not younger, healthy atheletes.
-Mike
We got some old people that roll around with us too. One guy that started training a couple months ago is 57 years old! 😱 Is it safe for people this old to start training and get choked?
Erm. He's talking about "rolling", i.e., practicing jui-jitsu--not attending medical school.
With the supposed shortage in physicians over the coming decades, is it necessarily a good idea to accept someone who is already halfway to the century mark and has at best 13-15 years to practice over someone who is under 30 and will have at least double that time?
Thoughts???
The incidence of stroke following cervical spine manipulation is actually very low. Yes, it can happen but I have found that Neuro's like to blow this out of proportion. If this was such an epidemic then why aren't we seeing daily reports on the news of people stroking out at the hands of a chiropractor?
Ah yes, the fabled Dim mok. Not many people know that A.T. Still was also a 8th degree black belt in ninjitsu.This is one of the closely guarded secrets in osteopathic manipulation.... 😀
Are you sure that those cases were embolic strokes from plaque and not due to damage to or occlusion of the vertebrals?Well, I've seen it happen THREE TIMES, and I reported what I consider to have been the most egregious case. I'm sure it's occurence "very low," but that is small consolation to the three young and previously vigorous patients who suffered devastating strokes after having their necks "cracked."🙁
Sincerely,
Nick
With the supposed shortage in physicians over the coming decades, is it necessarily a good idea to accept someone who is already halfway to the century mark and has at best 13-15 years to practice over someone who is under 30 and will have at least double that time?
Thoughts???
This is a matter of whether you want quality or quantity. Yes, there may be a shortage but then again, you don't want substandard people providing healthcare
Yes, I meant grappling. "Rolling" refers to sparring for grappling. In any case, in regard to the older med school student thing, we got a couple of guys in my class that are up there in age as part of the emigre physician program; one guy from India said he graduated medical school over there in 1973! 😱Good point, but can you really tell how good of a doc someone is going ot be from a 30 min interview? With the ridiculous pace of DO schools popping up it seems the obvious answer for many is quantity.
Stewie lover,
Good to see you've had your weekly helping of bitter soup. I apologize for not being up on the current lingo of martial arts. I also made the mistake of thinking this was a thread about Medical school and clinical rotations, but clearly it is about jui-jitsu and making assumptions about people you've never met because they don't read every single post on a chat thread.
I broke my damn foot at Arnold's a few years ago trying a flying triangle choke. Stupid showboating.
Yes. Example vid: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ipb899h3w54Flying?!?! is that like jumping at the other guy crotch first to start the hold?
I can't help but wonder about whether or not it is worth it for people of that age to occupy a spot in a med school class. I have no doubts about their ability to become great doctors, but if they start med school at say 50, they graduate at 54, finish a 3 year FP residency at 57, best case scenario they practice until 70 and have 13 years of practice.
As opposed to someone who like myself went straight from college to med school, I'll graduate at 25, if I do a 3 year residency I'm done at 28/29 (summer birthday) and even if I retire at 60 I will have 31 years in practice, more than likely I will work until 65 or so putting me at around 36 years.
With the supposed shortage in physicians over the coming decades, is it necessarily a good idea to accept someone who is already halfway to the century mark and has at best 13-15 years to practice over someone who is under 30 and will have at least double that time?
Thoughts???
It could also be a myth--who knows?
Good point, but can you really tell how good of a doc someone is going ot be from a 30 min interview? With the ridiculous pace of DO schools popping up it seems the obvious answer for many is quantity.
Ah yes, the fabled Dim mok. Not many people know that A.T. Still was also a 8th degree black belt in ninjitsu.![]()
Actually, my school has thought of a plan to include selected students for the interview process, it's currently being tested out for the pharmacy students.
Perhaps, students are able to tell amongst themselves who are the ones who should be weeded out, but this can be open to abuse ie. a male student interviewer might let in the hot females and vice versa
But from personal experience, all my juniors whom I thought would be kicked out by the end of MS1, were kicked out..some just looked like thugs
DMU has that in place already. 3 interviewers; a clinician, a prof and a current student. All get equal vote and more often than not the student pulls more weight in the discussion.
I would say for the most part the students can smell a rat a lot better than the other 2.
I don't believe the hot girl getting in with a male interviewer is much of a problem, at least not in any cases I have heard of.
How about having a computer and checking out the interviewee's myspace/ friendster profile(without their knowledge)? Does that tell you how someone is really like?
You bet it does! Don't forget facebook and eHarmony.com. If they're not compatible with me according to my EHarmony Dr Phill report, they are sooo not in.
Exactly..people can cheat and lie their way through in an interview, but what you put up on your pages and blogs tell hell alot more about yourself!😀
But does this violate any right? If word gets out that he/she was not accepted because of "clashes of online and real life personality," will this be grounds for a law suit?
Anyone has heard that you can kill a normal person, with no heart problems with a carotid massage?
I ran into a doc the other day who told me about a patient on whom he was palpating their carotid and ended up stroking out and dying.
So, it can happen.
How delicate can the carotids be? I've heard of some plaque being able to break loose, etc. If anyone has done jui-jitsu or grappling, we apply blood chokes(pressure to both carotids) ALL the time. Everytime you train, it's very likely you'll apply chokes to others and/r be choked yourself. I've never seen or heard of anyone having problems from being choked during training. It's not a gentle choke either, sometimes the guy will be struggling and you'll have your legs wrapped around his neck (triangle choke) trying to squeeze the life out of him before he'll tap. Once you apply good pressure to both carotids though, if the guy doesn't tap, should only take 8 seconds or so to knock him out. But you have to get both carotids; if you only apply pressure to one, it may tire him, but he won't get choked out.
I ran a ring at a submission grappling tournament once where one of the fighters actually choked out his opponent; dude was too stubborn to tap out. It was a lot quicker than 8 seconds. I was watching the match, someone asked me a question and I answered, turned back and the dude was limp. The guy was totally useless afterwards, almost in a stupor for several minutes.
you have to listen for a carotid bruit before doing massage, because if they have a plaque, you could break part of it off and cause a stroke, or dammage the intima and cause a clot to start. This is why nurses are not allowed to do carotid massage... its out of their scope of practice because I guess their not trained to detect a bruit!
Maybe when you posted this it wasn't within an RN's scope of practice to detect a bruit (although I doubt it). However, I just recently graduated from a BSN program and we were taught how, and were expected to perform this on any patient who's S/S warranted such an assessment. So it is most definitely within our scope. I also thought it was interesting that you would even mention anything about a nurses role in conducting a carotid massage. You strike me as the type of doctor that truly believes he/she is somehow more important than the nurses he/she works with . . .