Dr Syl

Dr Syl

Welcome to the Dr Syl KZread Channel





** The information in this channel is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor/health professional **

Dr. Syl REACTS TO "'Mansion" by NF

Dr. Syl REACTS TO "'Mansion" by NF

Dr Syl's PULL Workout

Dr Syl's PULL Workout

Dr Syl's PUSH workout

Dr Syl's PUSH workout

A little life update

A little life update

Пікірлер

  • @timinri1989
    @timinri198941 минут бұрын

    Dear Dr. Please refrain from starting with your diagnostic understanding of the complexity of psychosis. Open with an outspoken representative patient activist who can speak to the complexities.

  • @serenitywintirs2773
    @serenitywintirs2773Сағат бұрын

    Thank you for reacting to Ren. He is the best musical artist of my lifetime and everyone needs to hear him.

  • @jodyhowells1518
    @jodyhowells1518Сағат бұрын

    Thank you, Dr. syl I am a community nurse, and this helps me greatly in understanding the people i care for

  • @thedefender1064
    @thedefender10643 сағат бұрын

    Is it possible that high prolactin can cause premature ejaculation too? I've had premature ejactulation all my life and recently had a blood test and my prolactin levels were high. Could cabergoline also help with this?

  • @hanos4082
    @hanos40824 сағат бұрын

    The forward posture in a person with drug induced parkinsonism is not from stiffness, but from another EPS symptom called 'camptocormia'. It a selective weakness in the back muscles, leading to a forward posture. Interesting extra subject for another small vid?

  • @TheFolkes1
    @TheFolkes14 сағат бұрын

    min 4:30 scared the sht out of me dude wtf

  • @jacquelineyang7940
    @jacquelineyang79405 сағат бұрын

    love the driving videos

  • @Marstheplantguy
    @Marstheplantguy5 сағат бұрын

    My brother developed akathisia while hospitalized and given two 1st gen antipsychotics which were used off label for either a cluster headache or a migraine. He was at tremendous risk for suicide and the worst thing about it was that whenever he went to the hospital for the extreme anxiety and depression and agitation they gave him one of the meds again!! It wasn’t taken seriously at all by doctors and he was treated like an agitated psych patient. It lasted on and off for weeks. We could have lost him and I think the doctor’s refusal to take it seriously was negligent. We could have lost him. thankfully he was able to make a recovery but the mental aspect of it is not well understood by ER doctors I think.

  • @citizenxxxxx
    @citizenxxxxx6 сағат бұрын

    I went to a mental hospital suicidal and needing help after multiple traumas that were happening in unison. They had to sedate me. They put me in this huge room for 24 hours that had recliners and a few tables. I later learned that they had us all under surveillance to judge our behavior. The next day the psychiatrist came in and sat me at the table. I told him I was suicidal and needed to be admitted. He said I wasn’t depressed enough. Why you say? Because I thanked the nurse who gave me my meds. I was in shock. I told him I don’t feel safe. He said tough and sent me home where part of the trauma was occurring. I also had BPD, quiet type which was diagnosed a few years later. I no longer meet the criteria, but I still have fear of abandonment and (greatly improved) emotional regulation. That doctor sent home a suicidal person because of some crackpot observation. I had moved to Portland OR, and called my prior therapist of eight years in Illinois. I had no one to turn to. I just needed her to tell me where to get help. She ghosted me. I tried to OD later, but thankfully failed. Every inpatient hospital or mental facility I’ve been to treated the patients like they were circus freaks, and there was never any help. Just harm. I will never go to one again. If it weren’t for one VA therapist, Leah, who diagnosed me and kept me grounded I would have had no hope. She had to move out of state, and I miss her. Mental health is not accepted by society. I’ve seen it. We are still considered ‘less than’ and are treated like we aren’t human. It only adds to the despair.

  • @citizenxxxxx
    @citizenxxxxx7 сағат бұрын

    I love watching your reaction videos. Especially when it’s Ren! Side Note:: Not to sound creepy but you have a really kind face. You are laid back and honest. You will be an exceptional psychiatrist! Your warm demeanor and care for those with mental illness is obvious. Thank you for entering a profession that needs more people like you. ❤

  • @consumedbyai
    @consumedbyai8 сағат бұрын

    It seems to me like he is either faking it or highly exaggerated, idk man my bullshiz detector was going off lol

  • @Mayu-2024
    @Mayu-20249 сағат бұрын

    Long live you doctor❤,,thank you for let me aware that i have a disease 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

  • @Mayu-2024
    @Mayu-20249 сағат бұрын

    Long live you doctor❤,,thank you for let me aware that i have a disease 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

  • @bether2game797
    @bether2game7979 сағат бұрын

    Country is: Portland, Oregon USA

  • @Faded_Glory-zc3im
    @Faded_Glory-zc3im10 сағат бұрын

    A boy too feminine for his macho father, abused into a catatonic state as a child, declared mentally ill in his teens, which he became after being abused, that's the story he's telling, it's not hard to see that.

  • @SegunLawal
    @SegunLawal13 сағат бұрын

    "JUST DON'T"

  • @vasanthipremarathna6804
    @vasanthipremarathna680413 сағат бұрын

    Now only i am going to study the background of the song.Thanks for the interesting insight about the lyrics and giving cue to his other songs!

  • @HJ-pm2dx
    @HJ-pm2dx15 сағат бұрын

    I think this man went to high school with my (now deceased) uncle. His godfather's name is the same as my uncle's step father. He grew up in the area, the accent is dead on, and he went to the same college during the same years... I'm...just wow. Wasn't expecting that from a 5 am youtube rabbit hole. It's so heartbreaking to watch this man. The pandemic really changed the way I understood the (medical) significance of alcoholism. Was working at the state alcohol control at the time and was classified as essential. I received genuine thanks from (mostly ER) medical providers because as dangerous as alcoholism is, had the spirits dried up overnight the hospitals would have even more critically ill people needing help.

  • @123________
    @123________15 сағат бұрын

    It took you a whole year to do the side effects from 😮

  • @HJ-pm2dx
    @HJ-pm2dx18 сағат бұрын

    I have episodic laryngeal dystonia and diaphragmic dystonia resulting from neurologically involved Lyme's disease. It's painful and terrifying. One cool 'side effect' is that after a bout of it is over, my voice drops an octave for a few hours. Kinda nice to hear that rich baritone smokers rasp. 😅

  • @HJ-pm2dx
    @HJ-pm2dx18 сағат бұрын

    26:15 "Actually we don't really know why it happens." Honest truth many neurochemical effect - prescribed or otherwise occurs. Love it. signed, yours truly, a neuropsy geek

  • @dogpoofairy2517
    @dogpoofairy251719 сағат бұрын

    Who gave him the diagnosis? He seems to be able to switch it on and off as he pleases. We know for a fact he's a compulsive liar, so could well be lying about the diagnosis. Or just maybe he got the diagnosis from a private psychiatrist, and I would never trust the diagnosis of one of them.

  • @sunrises3806
    @sunrises380619 сағат бұрын

    As crazy as this sounds, smoking cigarettes while withdrawing will help you feel normal. The nicotine competetively agonizes the NMDA receptor, and prevents glutamine (because benzo withdrawal is essentially glutamine excitotoxicity) from binding to the NMDA receptor. Also if you can get a psychiatrist to prescribe it, memantine is an alosteric modulator of the NMDA receptor and will similarly prevent glutamine from binding to NMDA receptor sites.

  • @Necrowafer
    @Necrowafer20 сағат бұрын

    The first comparison I thought of in distinguishing auditory hallucinations from "psuedohallucinations" is the concept of diegetic and non-diegetic sound in movies. In sound design, diegetic sound is what should be able to be heard by the characters in a movie and is taking place within the narrative, like dialogue or someone turning on the car radio. Non-diegetic is sound originating outside the world of the narrative, such as a voiceover narration or score music. I don't know if it's offensive to compare hallucinations as a result of psychosis to constructs of a fictional narrative. I just wondered if it would have any resonance with anyone who experiences it or is watching this video trying to comprehend what it must be like.

  • @HJ-pm2dx
    @HJ-pm2dx20 сағат бұрын

    I'm impressed by his rationality. He understood his way of sitting and standing made others uncomfortable and 'dislike' him. He understood that if his answers were considered 'wrong' he could find himself in a worse environment. What sticks out is this - he tells the truth. No doctor explained why he is in a hospital, because in what world does sitting and standing differently from others mean you are institutionalized? Even a diagnosis of catatonic schizophrenia given to you does not explain why the way he sits and stands makes people dislike him - it's completely illogical to him (and I get it). Just heartbreaking and so informative.

  • @RaynmanPlays
    @RaynmanPlays20 сағат бұрын

    My girlfriend loves the idea of taking my last name when we get married. Far too often, people treat marriage like a roommate arrangement with sex and they wonder why they're unhappy. On the flip side, I hear about men and women finding someone who loves them with their whole heart and just discarding that person because they're bored or they think they can do "better." People talk about love, but so few people seem to feel it at all, much less understand it. I think it's a very rare marriage where they aren't willing to share a last name, but will _also_ lead to happiness. You have to love with your whole heart, and once you do, you'll understand why married couples share a name. Unfortunately, it seems like few people are willing to do that these days.

  • @Jenn_MHEquestrian
    @Jenn_MHEquestrian21 сағат бұрын

    Akathisia is really miserable. When I was an ER nurse patients who got promethazine or Metoclopramide would get it. Both can be administered IV over a certain number of minutes but in the ER- nurses get busy and sometimes push it faster. Metoclopramide was common for migraine patients- something I found: IV push from a syringe was most likely to cause it… I’d put it in their fluid bag and that was interesting because it wouldn’t be have any effect until the bag was empty. It seemed like it floated to the top and pt got a rapid dose as the very end of the bag. Best thing was to put it in 50 ml NS bag or even better, a syringe pump over 10+ minutes- fewer patients had the movement urge, their migraine and/or nausea was better faster. I Really wish someone would test these delivery methods to get real data. Its just my anecdotal experience and practices/orders vary between places/providers/nurses. Akathisia in some patients is associated with suicide because it’s such a desperate feeling. I got it once after promethazine for vomiting and needed an ultrasound. No way could I just lay there and not shift around every few seconds. It wore off pretty quick and I slept through most of that night- I cannot imagine what patients must go thru if it’s any more severe.

  • @ebethlouise2201
    @ebethlouise220122 сағат бұрын

    So I went off my antipsychotic when I had the first sign of TD per doctors advice but the front desk did not understand that getting an appointment to get on something else was urgent. It was so frustrating! I ultimately lost my job. Now over 60 I have twitches and clenches. I’m getting relief from propranolol (US)

  • @xXxcryingeyesxXx
    @xXxcryingeyesxXx23 сағат бұрын

    Please react to Save Me by Jelly Roll!

  • @foolishlyfoolhardy6004
    @foolishlyfoolhardy6004Күн бұрын

    Got a severe case of TD (whole body and face, really big movements), some days I couldn't even walk. It started 3 months after I began the medication (SSRI 🥲), so I didn't initially make the connection, and lasted a couple of months after coming off - now I have a tic disorder, I think an FND type thing, when stressed or when I see someone with tourettes or something, this video may set me off for a couple of weeks. Thankfully, it's not as bad as the TD. I remember being upset about the facial movements which lasted well after the body movements stopped. I was scowling, grimacing and sneering alot, and I was worried it would last forever and I wouldn't be able to get a job or work because I couldn't contol my face. I was on valium for a little bit too, which didn't help with the movements but at least I was relaxed about it.

  • @rveino2978
    @rveino2978Күн бұрын

    Great reaction

  • @rveino2978
    @rveino2978Күн бұрын

    REN put out a story from when he got sick it’s called missing it’s on he’s other channel Renmakestuff.This I think you would like peace

  • @rveino2978
    @rveino2978Күн бұрын

    ❤️🔥❤️

  • @Mike-lx9qn
    @Mike-lx9qnКүн бұрын

    Whatever is said... The creep adult's demon eyes in the beginning... U see it

  • @rveino2978
    @rveino2978Күн бұрын

    ❤️🔥❤️

  • @KatJ3st
    @KatJ3stКүн бұрын

    He's not taking his meds Doc. Trust me. Not legal ones anyways

  • @rveino2978
    @rveino2978Күн бұрын

    ❤️❤️❤️

  • @KatJ3st
    @KatJ3stКүн бұрын

    No Dr Syl she did drugs and alcohol to dance as a stripper. And it pays better than retail!!!

  • @rveino2978
    @rveino2978Күн бұрын

    🔥❤️🔥

  • @oliviasawrey4335
    @oliviasawrey4335Күн бұрын

    I had akathisia for months. I didn’t know what it was. Waiting to see a psychiatrist and then eventually experimenting with new drugs took a very long time. I'm glad I stuck it out because we eventually found a drug with no akathisia.

  • @BelleSheriff
    @BelleSheriffКүн бұрын

    I had dystonia from taking latuda and rexulti. I couldn’t put my tongue back in my mouth and it was so uncomfortable and scary. They gave me benztropine in the emergency room and it went away quickly. I’ve taken other antipsychotics that didn’t cause dystonia, but a lot of them caused weight gain. I’m on lybalvi now and that has been weight neutral and hasn’t caused dystonia.

  • @wisedred
    @wisedredКүн бұрын

    23:30 i have to point that out, as a french person, it's the first time i hear someone who's not french talk without any accent like that. it's making me wonder if you're not actually an undercover french fella

  • @KatJ3st
    @KatJ3stКүн бұрын

    Wow! Amazing. Reminiscent of Tom Waits.

  • @kibeast
    @kibeastКүн бұрын

    I experienced akathisia going through opiate/opioid withdrawal, it's the symptom I fear the most!

  • @W4ll_fl0w3r
    @W4ll_fl0w3rКүн бұрын

    I developed an EPSE during an attempted med switch to abilify about 15yrs ago... was basically like having a pseudo torrets... all these yrs later and I still stim constantly to help cover the twitch and the stutter never fully left

  • @sarahcunniffe4678
    @sarahcunniffe4678Күн бұрын

    I need to watch this another time. I work with people with learning disabilities and seen too much of these sign. Diagnostic overshadowing. There is a time and a place for this medication.

  • @snowgirl2412
    @snowgirl2412Күн бұрын

    The way you laughed at him at the end of the video shows what kind of fake doctor you are,selfish ,judgmental with now empathy, how’s the KZread revenue buddy?

  • @seraphimvalkyrin4543
    @seraphimvalkyrin4543Күн 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.

  • @Trichylady
    @TrichyladyКүн бұрын

    I have had trich since I was 10! I am 34!

  • @annipsy2185
    @annipsy2185Күн бұрын

    i didnt catch what drug she took though and was the overdose killing her?