A Man Dry Scooped 35000 Milligrams Caffeine. This Is What Happened To His Organs.

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why not just say 35 grams

edit: yes I know that's the title of the video.

👍︎︎ 20 👤︎︎ u/space_monster 📅︎︎ Oct 25 2022 🗫︎ replies

…☝️presenting to the emergency room

👍︎︎ 4 👤︎︎ u/squigglyeyeline 📅︎︎ Oct 25 2022 🗫︎ replies

At 1:45, "...perry workout supplement" is either a narration mistake, comment bait, or I'm losing my mind. Either way, I always love his videos and this one is great.

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/Turious 📅︎︎ Oct 25 2022 🗫︎ replies

If the recreation actor is in his 20s I'll eat... I don't know, something.

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/r0wo1 📅︎︎ Oct 25 2022 🗫︎ replies
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A Man Dryscooped 35000 Milligrams Of  Caffeine. This Is What Happened To His Organs. ET is a 37 year old man, presenting to  the emergency room, agitated, confused,   and complaining of a massive headache.  Paramedics tell the admitting nurse   that they saw him have a seizure in  the ambulance. When it was finished,   they noticed that his heart  was beating erratically. ET was devoted to his gym lifestyle. In his  early 20s, in college, he knew that that   age was the prime time in his entire life  to build not only a solid base of muscle,   but also a solid foundation of discipline.  He ate clean, he didn’t party, he slept well   and consistently put in his hours to become  as strong as he could be. And it paid off,   even though he knew he wouldn’t be able to keep up to be as  strong later in life as he was in college ET never really bought into the hype  of supplements. He knew consistency   in 1)eating well, and 2) training well were  always the most important. But when he did   take supplements, he’d save money by buying  raw ingredients, and creating his own mix. One day while transferring ingredients from  the wholesaler’s bags to his own containers,   ET mislabeled the caffeine powder for branch chain  amino acids. As he mixed his custom supplement   blend, he thought something was different. Usually  the amino acids had a particular texture and   didn’t clump up in to chunks, like how powdered  caffeine does. Even though it looked and felt a   little different, he thought maybe the factory  used a different way to manufacture things,   maybe it was a different batch. He wasn’t really  paying that much attention this time around.   Everything was white powder and it was just hard  to tell a difference. As the mixture was ready,   ET had no idea of the sheer amount of caffeine  powder in this particular mix. That just a   single scoop alone, contained a lethal dose of  caffeine, as he placed the container on his shelf. The next day, ET prepared  his peri workout supplement,   something to drink and keep him  hyped during his training session,   but he was completely oblivious to the fact that  he was about to consume a lethal dose of caffeine. In the middle of one of his sets,  he decided he would dry scoop it,   as he popped the powder in to his  mouth and washed it down with some   drink. As he started swallowing,  he noticed it tasted really funny,   kinda bitter with a peculiar after taste. Maybe  the factory really changed those amino acids. Immediately after swallowing 35000 milligrams of  caffeine, ET noticed something weird. He wasn’t   sure what was wrong with the taste. He thought the  workout was a little weird while he was doing it,   so maybe he just tweaked something,  he thought. As the minutes passed,   ET started feeling like he was getting hit by  a slow moving train. He felt his stomach was   burning, but his heart was starting to beat  faster and faster. He started feeling dizzy,   as it felt like an animal was chewing its way  out of his stomach. He felt an overwhelming   sense of doom as he started hyperventilating.  Unknowingly, ET’s pupils start to dilate as his   vision starts to blur. He stumbled around and  in the shuffle, he felt a tingle through his   cheeks as liquid gushed out under his  tongue, and he heaved into the toilet. At home now, ET laid down on the floor. He  could feel a massive pain in his chest. He   called for 911 because he was in such  a horrible panic. In the ambulance now,   ET he finally has his first seizure as he’s  brought to the emergency room where we are now. Clearly, all of ET’s problems are because of  the 35000 milligrams of caffeine he accidentally   consumed in his home-mixed workout supplement, but  ET doesn’t know what he really consumed, he just   knew all of this started after he drank that mix.  And doctors also have no idea what happened, but   they noticed that his body temperature was high,  and a blood test finds that ET has hyperglycemia. Hyper meaning high. Glyc from Ancient Greek  origin of the word glucose referring to sugar.   And -emia meaning presence in blood. High  sugar presence in blood. If ET’s heart rate   is high, if his heart rhythm is erratic,  if he’s shaking and he just had a seizure,   then you could reasonably guess that maybe  he’s hopped up on a chemical stimulant. His   hyperglycemia was from the stimulant triggering  a chemical message to the body that it’s time   to “fight or flight,” cueing the body to  immediately mobilize glucose stores from his   body in an effort to supply cells and muscle with  energy in order to perform that fight or flight. ET appears to be experiencing sympathomimetic  toxidrome. Toxidrome, a combination of the words   syndrome, referring to a group of symptoms  happening simultaneously, and toxin being a   poison. Sympatho referring to the sympathetic  nervous system, the one responsible for fight   or flight response as opposed to rest and  digest and mimetic meaning an imitation of.   ET has symptoms happening together,  that’s imitating a response that would   be elicited by a natural function  of one part of the nervous system,   caused by a massive ingestion of a toxin,  unknown to ET and the medical team,   but known to us as 35000 milligrams of caffeine,  almost 90 times the daily recommended limit. As the medical team reads the results of ET’s  blood test they find that he has hypokalemia.   Hypo- meaning low. Kali referring to potassium, or  more formally Kalium as shown by its symbol on the   period table of elements. Low potassium presence  in blood. But what does this mean? Potassium,   like sodium above it on the periodic table, is  an electrolyte that signals to cells to do, or   to stop doing things. Sodium is primarily outside  of cells, and potassium is primarily inside cells.   Moving in and out and being present or absent  are how these electrolytes send their messages. One place that relies heavily on these signals  is muscle tissue. The nerves signal for a   contraction by sending neurotransmitters. Sodium  enters the muscles to signal for a contraction.   Calcium enters, telling the muscle to commit to a  contraction. And potassium signals relaxation. Too   much potassium means the muscles relax for a long  time, and too little means the muscles wont stop   contracting, bringing us back to hypokalemia.  If there’s low potassium presence in blood,   and too little potassium means that  the muscles wont stop contracting,   then it could make sense why ET is so jittery  and why he’s shaking. The heart is a muscle too   and if it can’t relax properly, then this could  explain why ET’s heart is beating so erratically.   And as the medical team gets ready to admit ET  into the hospital, his heart rhythm is so fast   and so erratic, that his heart suddenly stops  beating. Doctors scramble to resuscitate ET. We know that ET accidentally consumed a lethal  dose of caffeine. Hyperglycemia could be a   result of that “fight or flight” response and  hypokalemia could have caused his twitching   muscles and his cardiac arrest, but why did these  happen? Well, caffeine is found in nature in   cocoa beans and tea leaves. The interesting  thing about caffeine’s chemical structure,   is that it’s similar in shape to something else  that’s produced and used everywhere inside humans,   called adenosine. Our DNA is made of it. You might  recognize it through the chemical manufactured   by our mitochondria and used by our cells for  energy, ATP, Adenosine Triphosphate. In the body,   certain chemicals fit inside spaces on the cell  surface, or maybe it’ll fit into something inside   the cell. Binding into these spaces tells  the cells to do, or to stop doing things. So,   a chemical needs the physical shape to  fit in. It’s kind of like a square peg,   that should fit in a square hole. And this is  where all the problems with caffeine poisoning   happen. In a brief moment, ET tells doctors  that all of this started happening after he   swallowed some supplements post-workout. It  was OK that he created his own mix because   he knew exactly which ingredients to list,  and this tells the medical team everything   they need to know, because caffeine was  the only ingredient capable of doing this. In the brain, adenosine helps balance  neurotransmitters, one of which helps   calm the brain preventing overexcitation.  Because caffeine is shaped like adenosine,   it fits into those places in the brain instead  of adenosine. At regular amounts you’d drink   in one coffee, it’s not a huge deal. But  at lethal dose amounts, like in ET’s case,   it can cause such an extreme imbalance that  electricity discharges everywhere in ET’s brain,   explaining his seizure. You can start  to see why all of this is happening now. In the heart, adenosine helps regulate pace maker  cells. If caffeine is there, preventing adenosine   from performing its functioning, then those  pace maker cells can’t be regulated anymore.   The heart starts to lose its normal pace, and  it starts to beat erratically. But it doesnt   stop here. In the blood vessels, adenosine helps  maintain how relaxed and constricted blood vessels   are. If a huge dose of caffeine is blocking it,  then the blood vessels tense up and constrict,   increasing blood pressure and decreasing blood  flow. This is a problem in the brain because   blood vessels there can be constricted, limiting  blood flow during a time where over excitation   would cause the cells to need more oxygen for  the increased activity, but that blood can’t   get there because of the vasoconstriction.  But this is only the start of ET’s problems. This brings us back to the idea of “fight or  flight.” Caffeine, in the setting of overdose,   sets off a chemical cascade in the cells.  As this signal amplifies itself, it ends   with the release of adrenaline in to the blood.  Typically, when the body is in immediate stress,   adrenaline is released to activate that “fight or  flight” response. Almost immediately, deposits of   sugar in the liver are released into the blood,  so that muscles can use them for energy. The heart   immediately starts beating faster to supply blood  to the rest of the body. But this brings us back   to the name, sympathomimetic toxidrome. If the  fight or flight response is from the sympathetic   nervous system, but adrenaline is a hormone  released into the blood from glands that are   above the kidneys which are not part of the  nervous system, then it means there could be   another chemical released from the nervous system  due to this fatal dose of caffeine. Noradrenaline   is that chemical, and it quickly spreads all  throughout throughout ET’s nervous system,   sending extreme signals. It gets to his muscles,  which now have an abundance of sugar to use for   energy because of hyperglycemia. The incessant  signal from the brain and the nerves cause the   muscles to twitch. Because the muscles are so  active now, they’re producing heat, explaining why   ET’s body temperature was so high. Because  they’re so active they’re producing metabolic   wastes. The body needs to balance this waste out,  so it takes potassium from the blood and shoves   it into the cells explaining his hypokalemia. But  potassium is supposed to signal muscle relaxation,   and there isn’t enough of it in the blood to make  that signal. And this is happening at a time when   adrenaline and noradrenaline and sending signals  nonstop telling the muscles to contract, and   without that proper relax signal, the muscle of  the heart starts beating more and more erratically   until suddenly, it isn’t beating anymore. The  stopping of blood flow means oxygen can’t get to   ET’s muscles, during a time when their energy  demand is high. The muscles and the brain start   to starve of oxygen and die. As the medical  team keeps trying to resuscitate ET because   his heart keeps stopping, the dead muscle tissue  can leak its contents and spill protein and iron   in the blood. When the heart starts circulating  blood again, those dead muscle cell remnants   can collect in his kidneys, and they can start  damaging the tubules causing permanent injury.   This is what happened to ET’s brain, his heart,  his muscles, and his kidneys after drinking   35,000 milligrams of caffeine. Is there  anything that can be done for ET? Maybe. This brings us back to the chemical structure  of caffeine. First, the molecule is small and   light. This could make it easy to handle. Second,  caffeine is hydrophilic. Hydro meaning water,   and -philic meaning affinity for. This means  that caffeine dissolves preferentially in water,   as opposed to oil, which doesnt mix well with  water, so caffeine wouldn’t distribute widely into   fat tissue in the body. All of this meaning that  caffeine is more likely to stay in the blood,   than hide inside the organs where it would be  impossible to extract out, once it’s in. Because   of this, it could be possible to “clean” ET’s  blood of caffeine. He’s hooked up to a dialysis   machine where his blood flow is diverted to a  machine so that it can remove caffeine. The clean   blood is then sent back to his body for normal  function. Because ET drank his caffeine recently,   it may not yet be too late, it might still  be possible to decontaminate his stomach,   and prevent the caffeine from absorbing into  his blood. Activated charcoal was given to   him in the hopes that the remaining caffeine in  his stomach would stick to the surface of the   charcoal, not absorb into the blood to do its  damage, and eventually pass out of his body. Hours after the dialysis was started, ET no  longer had any seizures and his heart rhythm   started to normalize. Hyperglycemia isn’t life  threatening in this context, and it too started   to resolve soon after. Because his hypokalemia  was a function of potassium shift into his cells,   his body didn’t actually lose potassium, so  aggressively replacing it was not necessary,   an equilibrium was reestablished. Days  later, ET was able to make a full recovery   as he returned home, and returned to his original  affirmation, that supplements are a nice to have,   but food and consistent training are  must haves for true gains in the gym. Thanks for watching. Take  care of yourself. And be well.
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Channel: Chubbyemu
Views: 2,972,034
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Id: sylqJ0NEVJw
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Length: 12min 39sec (759 seconds)
Published: Mon Oct 24 2022
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