Patient Comes in For Diabetes, Ends Up Dying From Cancer | Chicago Med | MD TV
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- čas přidán 7. 02. 2023
- A young patient is admitted to the hospital after suffering a hypoglycemic episode but when doctors discover cancer, he never makes it home.
From Chicago Med Season 2 Episode 9 'Uncharted Territory' - Dr. Charles is tasked with evaluating a patient as a possible heart recipient; Jeff makes a confession to Dr. Manning; two MMA fighters arrive at Chicago Med in bad shape; Dr. Stohl returns from his sabbatical.
Chicago Med (2015) The doctors and nurses who work at the emergency ward of the Gaffney Chicago Medical Center strive to save the lives of their patients while dealing with personal and interpersonal issues.
Watch all seasons of Chicago Med here: www.justwatch.com/uk/tv-serie...
Welcome to MD TV! A channel dedicated to your favourite medical dramas! Featuring iconic moments from House M.D., Chicago Med and more. Follow the professional and personal lives of the hospital staff, as you go a journey right from the very first doctor's call to the E.R and beyond. MD TV is packed full of drama, intrigue, and plenty of medical emergencies!
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That walk out of the hospital afterward is hardest thing to do and the strangest feeling… that poor father.
My dad went though that with his dad, several years before I was born. Walked out with a small box of his effects he had in the hospital. 25 years later he found that box in his basement storage bin. The two of us went through it. His wallet had receipts, a little cash, and old credit cards in it. Felt very strange and eerie.
Yes, it is, I watched a child die on a ward, nothing they could do, and then left at 3am in the morning, to get some rest before having to go back up and bring their wheelchair, their items and the pyjamas they were wearing when they died home.
It was 5 months ago next week and I still can't hold it together when I think about it, and see him lying there.
God, it's horrific and you feel so empty.
@@Zulisian I sympathize, that sounds unequivocally horrible. Try talking about it with people who really know you and whom you trust. Get some good comfort food, try to be around people who can get you grounded. Also, getting outside on a nice day can work wonders. The worlds full of horrors that go down every day all over the world. Don't let them into your world.
Yes it is.. I walked out of the hospital without my eldest daughter.. I went home..she went to the morgue..
@@kms7527 I’m so sorry to hear that. I lost my mom. The ties between a child and a parent are so precious. No parent should have to outlive their child. My condolences to your sweet daughter and may she rest in paradise. I’m sure she is always with you ❤️
Seeing the dad walk out of the hospital broke my heart
Mine too❤
I came on to say the exact same thing 😢
knowing this actor passed away, watching this is actually sad.
RIP Joey, you seemed like a great actor
He died in real life too?
@@catherinep2034 Yeah. The actor, Joey Morgan, died in November of 2021. This episode first aired back in Jan 2017. I do not believe they discoled the cause.
@@zango7607 aw man, poor guy
That is so sad. Poor guy R.I.P
@@zango7607 oh, that is sad
Damn, I came to comment on how good this dude was as an actor. I had no idea he had passed. RIP my dude
His Last words ……“ let’s do this”💔😢
-Then *Pop* 💢
No you can’t put him in there there’s gotta be another way ! “ LETS DO IT “ - high on life
I suffer from pre diabetes but I’m working on losing weight and I don’t wanna end up like him 🥺🥺🥺
You got this I send you all my love ❤️
You got this❤️
Don't worry.
Yes you go my dear ❤️❤️❤️❤️ dont give up ❤️❤️❤️❤️ just know you dont need to look "perfect" to be healthy ok?
Just cuz you have more weith it doesnt mean you arent healthy ok?! Please do it safley and take your time, and eat healthy ok?
Stay strong even on bad days, oh and one more thing you can have a bit of sweets everyday it helps so you dont have days where you just eat sweet things. I went on a diet and so did my freinds and if you have something small like that you will be motived more to keep going ❤️ and talk to doctors lots ❤️
His cancer had no prevention.
this actor was fantastic. that’s exactly how a normal person would react in this situation. he makes the doctors seem plastic and fake by comparison.
Yeah he seemed like a real person...
He unfortunately also died a few years later. Great loss
Such a great actor, it was very sad to see him go so soon :(
What’s his name?
@@tasha3939 Joey Morgan
They can bring him back in a dream sequence
@@magnumpi28he past away in real life
@@lolcompany4u They can use AI
This is exactly why I chose to work in a laboratory, and not the ER. I don’t think anybody will ever know how horrible it feels to have to tell a family their loved one is dead, because there was nothing you could do to save them, no matter how hard you tried, it just was not possible. I lasted two years in the ER before I went back to university to teach for a while, and then went to the laboratory, I couldn’t live with telling people such horrific news on my soul. I felt like it was my fault, no matter what the circumstances were, despite us being taught professional detachment, I never could fully put my emotions aside. I would literally go into the office area, close the door, and bawl my eyes out like a child. When I realized it begin to affect my life, whether I was at work or not, I knew I had to leave, because you can’t take it with you, and if you’re not able to do that, you have no place being in the ER. I have a passion for helping others, I always have, I always knew I wanted to be a doctor, but I had no idea of how hard it would be to stand before a family and tell them they will never see their loved one again. I felt like such a failure, and to some extent I still do, I just don’t have what it takes to work in emergency medicine, and I greatly admire those who do. But I also love working in the lab, we have found new treatments and new cures never before seen. It’s a lengthy and timely process, but DEEPLY fulfilling when you know that something you created is saving lives, I just wish I wasn’t so damn emotional!
You never let anyone go - always remember that. Death comes for us all one day, and on that day you made it fight tooth and nail until the last drop of blood to take them from you.
@@metaphysicalretardation thank you
what a heartfelt account of your experiences in the ER, thank you for sharing. I myself work in laboratories on the clinical trial side and I absolutely love it, but part of me has always wondered about how I'd fare in the ER as a doctor. Still considering it but I suppose there is a reason why doctors have among the highest rates of suicide, you need an extremely high mental fortitude.
🇨🇦. I am a patient with a long, long history of surgeries, radiation, complications, had a DNR at one point, etc and I just want to say thank you! It doesn’t matter what area of medicine you are in. So many helped me. I’m at home now able to enjoy my garden and all the outdoors. I was not afraid of death then or now. Live life with no regrets and a sense of wonder. It’s over for all of us very quickly. Take care.
This is also a major reason I am in the labs. The job does the detachment for me.
House woulda saved him, hands down
Yeah, but he would have killed him first 🤣
@@food_and_dreams better than killing him last tho
@@Hascienda27 Yeah, but this kid is gonna live with the trauma of house 😂
Me trying to imagine both House and Manning working together. Both have such different personalities but go to major extremes. House’s extremes almost always save the patient, manning’s kills them 50% of the time
And diagnosed him as soon as he saw him
Such a sad case here. Sadder still that Joey Morgan, who played this young man, passed away shortly thereafter. Rest In Peace Joey.😢
Dr manning just ignored the fluid in morrison's pouch on ultrasound @1:02 XD (not to mention she diagnosed gallstones without a formal gallbladder view, although you can probably still see the gallbladder+stones on a RUQ scan)
In watching these shows; most of the doctors and nurses would have been fired in real life.
@@hilaryc3203bingo
My whole family has had gallstones. You can have them for years before they cause a huge issue. I have to watch what I eat, because if I eat too much of something (salt, sugar, whatever) I will be in for a rough time. Other than that, I am average health.
I got my gallbladder removed.
Everyone in my family had them too, my sister and I had the gallbladder removed, and yes we all have obesity. I quit smoking and the weight just piled on but I also know it's because I eat normally and I can't eat that way anymore. When you get older there's a certain way you have to eat and it's hard to break the habits
I had my gall bladder out and doing the surgery i got severe nerve pain. I suffered in pain for 2 years.
This is why it is so so important to take care of your health
YESSSSSSSSS TRUE.
True, but cancer like this had no prevention.
Why I agree with what u are saying but u have to understand diabetes can be genetic. U can either be born with it or get it later. That's what happened to me. I wasn't born with diabetes but I ended up getting it now. I was very healthy akd athletic grow8ng up I dis put on weight after hugh school but it doesn't always after u can be the healthiest person. I have an aunt who was very careful with her health she took very good care of herself and health and she still got diabetes it runs in my family as well as cancer. So please don't judge those who don't
Cancer isnt always a choice mate my cousin died from testicular cancer at 20 and that kind is rare for a young man but his dad had it and survived but his great grandfather had had it so it was a genetic thing.
@@tonyajones1463 but this guy in the show says he only eats fast food and he drinks. He’s not doing anything to help himself or prevent it.
Joey Morgan
August 11, 1993 - November 21, 2021
* For those of you that don’t know, that was the actor who played this young patient. Yes, he unfortunately died in real life at age 28.
Rip mr morgan
Did they ever end up releasing a CoD on it? I know that early on none was given, just not sure if something was finally said.
What happened?
Overexplained. Birth and death dates give us all we needed to know (though it had already been covered in many earlier comments)
RIP 🪦 💔 🥀
Joey is so cool. His voice (at least to me!) doesn't match his body (he feels ten years older and has such a mature voice!), but he has such grace. One of my favorite 'patients' from Chicago Med series
I thought the “voice “ wasn’t his for the first few minutes as well … interesting
I had that thought when he spoke too lol 😆
My mother went in for a routine test. Three days later she died from a infection.
The amount of times I've witnessed someone go into diabetic seizures and almost go into full coma is ridiculous.
Here's your sign to change your life and diet. It's extremely traumatic to watch people almost die multiple times, all for something treatable.
Can that happen to type 1s? I'm scared now
@BaileyBear2017 I've only seen type 2 go into them, I assume type 1s usually have insulin pumps and constant monitoring, but it's always possible because it due to excess amounts of insulin or sugars. You'd have to ignore your symptoms for awhile before it would become critical
@@CheyD33 ok ty I was like oop. Yh it makes sense because I get to like 15 and I feel pretty ill so hopefully it should be ok
*For type 2
@@leaving.. Wait, get to 15 what??
Oml he looks so young! I thought someone else was speaking I'm in awe, I really do love his voice its really soothing
Would love for the show to follow the patient to see them dealing with the hospital bill afterward.
Most of the patients die from seeing the bill sadly, that’s why they don’t show it 😢
I feel sad for his death at the age of 21. 😭😭
He was 28 when he died
He sounded so relaxed for a pain level 12, especially if it was sudden at pressure 😅
That’s how you know it’s a 4 lol
Eileen Snow yep. Anything at 6 or above on pain scale I can't talk cause I can't concentrate. Actually if its at 3 I can't concentrate
if it's chronic pain you get used to it.
@@SjofnBM1989 guess that's true
It really depends on the person. When my gallbladder burst it took a few hours before anyone could actually see me, most of which I spent trying not to move and occasionally involuntarily moaning quietly if the pain flared. The ER doc who finally saw me looked at my test numbers, looked at me, and said "I have NEVER seen anyone come into my ER with numbers this high who wasn't screaming in pain. I don't know how you aren't. Seriously, you should brag about this."
Reminds me of 'Patient comes in for anemia, ends up dying from cancer' from House
if it was at my hospital. i would still be in the waiting room.
How sad that his fear was correct. Make a wrong decision and end up dead. Tragic.
This poor kid was doomed either way. There was an equal chance that the fluid around his heart could have gotten worse and he would have had immediate heart failure.
My mother had fluid build up around her heart and they told us after her emergency surgery that we were lucky that someone caught 'the signs' when they did that day. She was at her chemo appointment and one of the nurses was concerned because she seemed to struggle walking/breathing, and called for an xray. If they hadn't have acted within minutes, she would have died that morning sitting in her treatment chair. (Her surgery bought us an extra 5 months before her cancer metastasized. I'm grateful that I got the time with her.)
😢😢😢made me sad. He was so young. We just never know. Have to appreciate life❤
My M&D lost our youngest sibling at age 4, in 1970, post-op complications following newly invented remedial heart surgery for “blue baby syndrome”… they were never the same post that but still had 6 children at home that needed their M&D… even on his last day living, my Dad was thinking about our brother and seeing him in the hereafter…. Thank you M&D, for the strength you found to carry on
That was the fastest ultrasound that I've ever seen, and gallbladder was nowhere near she was investigating
Tumor lysis is more common in patients with kidney disease as is common with diabetes. An oncologist will review history and treatment to determine if risk reducing treatment may be necessary (IV fluids, medication to prevent uric acid buildup, etc.). I wish medical dramas were more medically accurate sometimes
Gallstones are not a heavier people’s problem. Before the problem I weighed like 130lbs then started losing weight rapidly. Eventually I weighed only 116lbs and had a BMI of 17.5 when I had my gallbladder removed. I eventually went back up to around 125lbs after the surgery.
Edit: clarified measurements since not everyone uses lbs
they're still exacerbated by nutrition though aren't they? a person with an average BMI will still be at higher risk of gallstones if they eat a lot of processed and fried foods?
True. My godmother had gallstones and she is of a small weight and frame and eats an extremely healthy lifestyle. Gallstones CAN happen randomly.
They never said it was JUST a "fat people problem " she clarified it can be caused by obesity. That doesn't mean it can't be caused by other things in people who are smaller
They didnt say it was. The actor asked and they rebuffed that it is more common in obese patients which it is. Cancer is more common amongst heavier people as well and yet skinny people get dx every single day. Fat people can be hypo not hyper but are more likely to be hyper. More likely doesnt mean only
you’re right! i was only 15 and 105lbs when i had to have mine taken out because it was so full of stones. i also gained some healthy weight badk after my surgery as well!
How is it possible tho him coming with diabetes and passing away from cancer? But, he's also a great actor ❤😢
-He Really Died From The Treatment/Radiation ☢️
This clip actually explains all of it - you have to watch it:)
There's a time when you dont want to burst a balloon, but it burst... You're not at fault!
Everyone in my family had their gall bladder removed-but I was the only heavy person
I had my gallbladder removed at 16, I've always been at a good weight (I was 115 lbs. at the time ) . In fact it took them forever to diagnose me because I WASN'T overweight and didn't fit their "textbook criteria". Meanwhile I was having gallbladder attacks and vomiting so much that I was losing weight, and was in and out of the hospital for IVs.
The entire time, my mother (who used to work as an RN) kept asking "could it be her gallbladder?". Doctors didn't listen and kept saying it wasn't.
Eventually they did a HIDA scan and it turned out I had a non-functioning gallbladder.
Docs probably could have saved me from a lot of BS (including one ER doc telling me my symptoms were "due to stress"), DEFINITELY could have saved me from a lot of emotional trauma; if they had just freaking listened (or at least CONSIDERED it) in the first place.
I swear, too many doctors are wildly narrow-minded, they only do their patients a disservice, by having a small mind and a huge ego.
House would have said 'small cell lung cancer'? He'll be dead in 6 months . It happened to Cindy, the girl who came in with a cough, and Cameron went through the 5 stages of grief because she had to tell her she had 6 months left.
He's so ready to change but then..... he dies
This breaks my heart :(
This is why it's important for doctors to look past a person's weight and stop focusing on what they can see with their eyes. Health issues don't revolve around whether or not you're at an "ideal" weight and medical professionals need to step up and recognize that.
Right when I was living with my inlaws in a third world country, every time my MIL would go to the hospital sick, they would tell her that she needs to go and eat more food. The poor woman was severely underweight and always sick, and it wasn't because of her diet. She ended up dying in her 40s from heart problems.
found the healthy at any size death propagandist
@@toomanyaccounts They're not saying that being overweight is healthy, but that overweight people can have other health problems that aren't related to weight, so doctors should investigate more rather than just blowing everything off.
@@tgbluewolf anyone that uses the words fatphobic or fatshaming does indeed think being morbidly obese is healthy. the individual was being killed due to obesity
Being overweight doesn’t help and being in denial about it doesn’t help either. My sister is obese and has the same talk the woman is diabetic and pushing 40 she limps yet she remains in denial about her weight being a problem I hate using this word but it’s getting to be “toxic”
The Good Dr brought him back to life..
So heartbreaking💔 may he rest in peace💔✝️
It’s a tv show not a real person. He’s not actually dead. 🙄
@ihatemondays63 if I remember correctly the actor is actually dead as well.
@@DayquanDamas source?
Joey Morgan. Died 2021.
@@charliebruhh5673 thankyou for his name.
Looks like a kid sounds like an adult
Thats college
I've never been in a hospital where something happens that fast lol. It would take HOURS just to get a chest x-ray.
They can do it stat
Not in everyone case it depends on the person status
Poor Boy so Sad Seeing Them Go 💔💔😫
He was was funny as Augie on a scouts guide to a zombie apocalypse 😂❤
I’m not a radiologist but the CT definitely looks backwards (left is right and right is left). And the “mass” on the CT just looks like the top of the liver… AND CT doesn’t have location, patient name, date, time… gotta love TV
The mass is within the right lower lobe and isn’t very big . The left side had a pleural effusion. There is no pericardial effusion . And that is the scan of a woman’s chest - the breast tissue is too glandular even for an obese male. Cheers
Such a loss of a young life.
Do they even know what tumor lysis syndrome is??? It's not that uncommon.
You don't do CPR on asystole, you just call it? Remind me not to go to that hospital.
It’s not real !!
Doctor is amazing
If this guy did in fact die in real life, shame on the poster of this video for using a clickbait title, saying how good MDTV is without a single mention of the actor who passed especially as this was posted after death.
Oh man. While I was celebrating my birthday, an amazing actor died. Rest in peace, Joey. You were awesome at what you did :)
Lost my mom to Doctor error in scheduling red blood cell vs blood plasma infusions while she was very sick with cancer. We had chosen to simply bring her home so she could pass in her bed and he wanted to give her whatever he felt would help get here there.
Doctors don't see everything and they don't have god-like perception or control but they try very hard for their patients. I've blamed the entire universe but never the doctor.
"It wasn't there before".. Plot twist: The hospital gave him cancer.
😂
lmao i wish Xrays came back that fast. . lol
They do. It's all "on screen" now, literally within seconds.
Xrays are fast. Doctors are slow. 😜
They are fast. Doctors are slooow
I’m balling my eyes out
Bawling
The title alone is insane.
The actor has an interesting voice, he should go into radio or something.
Sadly, he passed away in 2021
@@superwhizz114 whats his name
@@superwhizz114 😢
@@rdgloveshouse Joey Morgan
@@superwhizz114 found it... weird no news about cause of death
I am a Diabetic Type 1 on Insulin.I was
very heavy when I got Diabetes.I have
been a Diabetic for 52 years.
My old man type 2 on insulin. He is 79 born in Malaysia came to Canada in the 70s diagnosed in the 90s. Though I think he has had diabetes way longer than that. Diabetes seems to run in his side of the family. You using the FreeStyle Libre to monitor your glucose?
Poor kid 💔 jeez
when its your time, its time
Doctors should not blame gall stones on obesity. I had a full on gall bladder attack at 25 yrs old and never had any prior problems. I also never weighed over a 120 lbs in my whole life but my gall bladder was full of stones when they removed it.
Yup, I weighed 115 lbs, and was 16 at the time. "No couldn't be her gallbladder, she's too young and skinny for that".
I too was having gallbladder attacks, took those morons a long time to diagnose me because they wouldn't listen. Finally ran the correct test, and found out I had a non-functioning gallbladder. Had it removed, no problems since.
The sheer stupidity is mind boggling sometimes.
Yes. If you’re fat and healthy they stress you out about weight until you become sick, if you’re thin and sick they say it’s in your head until you are dead on a slab. But they still hit the golf course either way.
@@Panda72021
I’m nearly 21 and I almost died from SPA syndrome which is you get filled with fluid and I threw up everything. Mummy called Woody.EXE immediately and he carried me to the hospital because I’ve collapsed by 72 hours. Woody.EXE basically saved my life and haven’t had issues since. I’m alive today because of him
I love 💗 watching Chicago fire and Chicago pd and Chicago med on the CZcams channel app
Such An Amazing Actor I Hated To See Him Pass 💔🙏🙏🙏
The most sad part that now he passed away
There’s no way those soft and gentle compressions were going to impact that kid.
My God I wish hospitals worked that fast. "Oh you can't breath? Let me get your nurse" (30 mins later)
Love you 🎉
Those compressions that they are doing are terrible
Well duh, it’s acting. You could seriously injure someone if you genuinely went in for real compressions. That’s why there’s bent elbows ;)
Come now, they give up after not even a minute of attempting resuscitation ? On a patient so young, too ? I hope people don't take this show too seriously and think that chest compressions should only be done a few times before calling the patient a lost cause 😑
They cant show 30 40 mins of cpr. They have to cut it short. This being video clip might make it shorter even. Its just a tv show most people should not take it seriously anyway
It wouldn’t have mattered
Dr. Manning made the right call.
R.I.P.
We have to take care of ourselves!
Love ❤🎉the most ❤ and you 😢have a lot more ❤
I love watching Chicago fire and Chicago pd and Chicago med on the CZcams channel app and the peacock app
😐
“No doctor would know”
House: Are you sure about that?
8:00-8:39- Such a tragic ending to that mans life!
I haven't seen all of Chicago Med, but I hate that some of the scenes we see Dr Manning recommend a nutritionist to a patient and another scene she calls CPS
The poor dad at the end
That poor father.
Wow how sad big time!
If only things happen this quickly...
19 years in medicine now, not a doctor. I started at age 7 and had my first hands on surgical case at 17 now 34. I still remember the screams coming out when I witnessed two children die in front of me. I thought they were screaming… I was told it was me.
I didn’t begin truly believing in compassion for people and feeling their losses until I had a child of my own.
These scenes portray a very real scenario in how life shifts phases within a few hours inside a hospital and sometimes the patient can feel their death coming just doesn’t know that is what the feeling is.
rest in peace to this guy, he was a great actor judging from this
To Anthony, yes House Def would've saved that poor young boy😢😢
No parent should leave the hospital alone after losing a child yet it does happen all the time, my father-in-law being one of them when we lost his son/the father of mine, it all happened so quick out of nowhere that he didn’t even have time to tell anyone until it was over, seeing him show up at my door instead of my partner like I was expecting is still one of the most haunting images I struggle with to this day, the look on both his parents faces said it all, I knew before they even opened their mouths that he was gone. This episode did really well at capturing the disassociation like state people can go in to when faced with sudden grief, my father in law was very much the same while I was more of the animalistic screaming and vomiting whilst running in circles and periodically falling to the ground, it’s really fascinating to me how people handle these types of situations so differently and this portrayal was very much an example of one that isn’t shown often. There’s no right way to grieve.
I know that fear. I started getting sick and first it was iron deficiency anemia...and then got even sicker with vomiting and dizziness...turns out..I had a hereditary blood disorder I never ever heard of it. Beta thalassemia. I thought honestly I was gonna die
House would’ve know how to save him… but that really was a shitload of things going wrong at the same time
Felt so bad!
it’s not MD TV, it’s a television series
That's what MD TV is - it shows clips from different medical series. Serieses? Serii?
I never watched this show before... Now I am hooked lol.
Me too, I've never watched it before either until recently in the past few months. Great show! lol 💙
Chicago Med has used that lung image at around 3:00 in multiple episodes, each with different diagnoses
I was looking at the monitor behind the patient and it looks a little funky.
Is that oxygen level 92??
@@tgbluewolf It's not that bad really. Mine sits at 90 most of the time and I don't have problems breathing. If it stays at 85 or below, that's when you start noticing...
Never knew Lewis capaldi was on Chicago med
I wish it was! because Lewis Capaldi is still alive! But this Person passed away in 2021 This guy is Joey Morgan! again I wish it was him!
Yes, all us redheads are actually the same person. My secret's out...
It sounds like fire alarm goes off
Yea thats true.
That was ridiculous, only shocking the young guy 2 times!
Oh man these medical dramas are crazy
Docter look like doll ☺🤣🤣🤣
Let's do this. Last words he ever said. :(
I don't get the joke of Dr.manning, I presume.
It's a common line used in movies and TV Shows. It's a cliché line, hence the joke was the very use of the line
It is related to the famous "Dr. Livingstone I presume". I despair the today's education that you don't know that. :)
@@triplemoyagames4195 It references the famous "Dr. Livingstone I presume". Famous words spoken by Explorer Henry Stanley after Livingstone was found in darkest Africa in the 1800s.
Gallstones? She’s scanning his appendix and calling it his stomach.