Added: 5 years ago
From: camiguz
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  • una k k

  • No one even got up to help him ;(

  • No one even botherd to see if his okay..

  • I have this condition to, but for some reason when I pass out, I convulse

  • It is more psychological than people may think. Things fester in my mind and at any givin moment ill start thinking about it again, but you cant tell yourself to stop thinking about it because that itself is thinking about it and will cause me to "fuzz out". upon waking up , my pupils are enlarged and im soaked in sweat along with a yellow tinge to my skin.

  • ive had this since i was 11, im now 22 and still have this. It is a very scary thing although this kids case doesnt seem as intense as mine. I cannot just stand right up after passing out, I have extreme auditory hallucinations in this time period that im out, which feels like forever but i know only a few seconds. For me it doesnt have to be the sight of blood, but if i am talking to someone about something awful, such as certain viral videos or operations.

  • @VoltzCartoons I had one of these today and I remembered everything. It's like I spontaneously fell asleep for 5 seconds

  • lol i love it how the kid carries on and no one even helps him

  • How does no one make a comment about him getting the frickin' word right?!? Tha2t was AMAZING! He had some stage fright and passed out....who cares? Strange that no one helped him out but I wouldn't trust any of these spelling dorks in any type of social situation let alone an emergency!! Leave the heart attacks to 80 year olds with syncope. just cause you read it on the intraweb doesn't make you a doc

  • this was obviously neurogenic syncope....you can see it in his face he was experiencing something before he went out. With neurogenic syncope one usually experiences racing heart, sweating, lightheadedness, weakness. I wouldn't think heart attack at his age...but there is a condition known as hypertropic cardiomyopathy but usually fainting occurs with activity. With heart attacks people usually faint due to an irregular beating heart.

  • Someone was down there to help if you look close, no one left him to die, its a televised show help was given discretely. And all those moaning about heart attacks and strokes need to get a grip, he was down for 2 seconds and was back up again. Give the folks a chance to breathe.

  • @triskaidekaphobe13 exactly, and there's a chance that the restoration process to be a failure. I know cases of brain damage and even death (school mate) due to the same.

  • @triskaidekaphobe13 dude, i suffer from the same. vasovagal syncope and seizures are entirely different.

  • @Pilotpatty It would've been nice if someone had attempted to help him up! He had to do it all on his own. Poor sweet boy!

  • thats a 40 year old mans voice in a 10 year olds body :o

  • i get it when i get my blood taken or feel pain

  • My blood pressure completely bottoms out to 90/50 I can not hold my head up, ringing in the ears, cannot focus to make out faces (see flutters floating around , stand or I will pass back out. I feel totally exhausted very weak. I will give updates when I start taking the Thermotabs.

  • my trigger is heat and seeing blood. happened last night i was stumbling around and my roommate just thought i was really drunk until i just collapsed haha. poor kid

  • eek Ive never fainted but sometime after a bowel movement I feel a bit wiped out for like a cpl hours...

  • then thats because you are straining too hard when youre crapping. by straining to trigger the vagus nerve and that can cause a drop in blood pressure. Dont be afraid, just let it come out :)

  • this happened to me at my sophomore orientation and while i was at warped tour. it really sucked.

  • I get such episodes too when I am exposed to blood or get blood drawn. I start sweating profusely, and often throw up. After throwing up, I feel much better.

  • yeah i had blood taken today and i remember watching the nurse try to find my vein which was stubborn and quite deep and when she finally gave up and took it out i felt dizzy and collapsed but my mom said that first i flushed red and my fists clenched and my entire body went rigid and i fell to the table where they elevated my feet to get blood flow to my brain

  • i have this too.

    ive had it for 15 years and im only 16 years old :/

    i cant drive because the public safety office is afraid im gonna have an episode and pass out at the wheel

  • can you trigger one from making a bowl movement

    no offense but thattts kind of funny

  • yes..

  • 0:02

    look at his eyes lol

  • man thats no funny, thats really bad...

  • Poor kid. My trigger is cold fluids. Sucks when I'm out biking or doing exercise cause I can pass out and not even be ready.

  • I saw someone have a syncope yesterday...

  • man, I feel really badly for this guy. I had some serious medical problems in the past - I had a large germ cell tumour in my chest that I had to do chemotherapy, radiation, and two surgeries to get removed.

    I constantly felt like I was going to pass out and had all the symptoms of fainting for years after the surgery. But exercise, losing weight and in particular building muscle in my arms solved it. It doesn't work for everybody, but I feel cured (after a lot of hard work and discouragement

  • Heh I think I have mild Orthostatic Hypotension- passed out like six times last summer, but it's not as bad anymore.

    I don't sit or lie down, I stand up and feel the blood leaving my head, so I just prepare for a fall :P

    Never really got hurt from it, the worst that ever happened to me was I fell in between a wall and a dresser and made a lot of noise ;)

  • If I'm predisposed for some physical reason, something emotionally upsetting can trigger one, but it's almost always physical for me. I have some tips. Sit down against a wall (falling out of a chair is bad.) Get someone to grab you some food/drink. If you're going to a medical procedure that might trigger one, eat and drink plenty before it. Bring a drink, too. If you get really hot, hold an icepack on the back of your neck. Don't stand up until you're sure you're okay. Stand up slowly.

  • vasovagal reactions SUCK. The first time, I was in a DOCTOR'S office and everyone but my mom just sort of froze. there are so many triggers...pain, low blood pressure, being a little dehyrdated or overly hungry, the list goes on. I have had at least one in response to having blood drawn, but I have absolutely no issues with needles. I get allergy shots, so I'm totally okay with needles. Local anesthesia (like novacaine for tooth extraction) has caused a few. I'll finish this in another post.

  • that kids one tough dude way to go on finishing the word....also you would have thought that with all those people there someone might have grabbed him before he hit the floor??

  • I just give the kid props for getting back up and spelling that word. I would have run away.

  • Aw poor guy.

  • thats good :) I still need to get medication for my Vasovagal Syncope.

  • oh, you must of had something stuck in your head, even if you weren't thinking about it, that made you get the reaction. If that ever happens again, lie down on the ground, or on a bed or something, and stick your feet in the air so blood can move to your heart and head which will end the reaction... then sit up for a while before you begin to walk/ move.

    yeah it is scary, I hate them. The only nice thing about them, if really any, is that if you vomit during the reaction you can't feet it.

  • well the causes normally for Vasovagal reactions

    are because of being nervous, pain, exhausted, blood pressure too low, up set stomach, really bad head ech, over heated, etc. The after/ during in some cases affects are normally, pins-and-needles feeling, vomiting, head ech, sleepy, pain, etc. Vasovagal Syncope is all in your mind, and normally the way to fix it is to have good times/ memories about what is causing the reaction.

  • well after a Vasovagal Syncope you can remember things like, where you are, what you ate for lunch, etc, but for most cases you cannot remember what happened DURING the fainting; like if you vomited it's very hard, if not impossible, to remember that you did.

  • yes, I have had it three times, even today while getting a blood draw, and after it you totally forgot what happened.

  • i love how the woman said "stop the clock". like thats that most important thing to do at that time

  • This is call vasovagal syncope or common faint. This video has educational pourposes. I am a physician from Canada and We used this kind of videos to teach patients about their conditions. It is not stroke or heart attack. It is just a sudden decrease in blood pressure.

  • @camiguz That is not the point! Nobody helped him!!! I'm sure you know now that it's syncope, but did anybody know then? And even so, maybe he hit himself or whatever! SOMEBODY REACT PLEASE! My God! What a crowd of idiots!

  • @camiguz you are a physician and dont know that after one faints due to vasovagal syncope there's a chance of a heart attack ? What if he was physically injured from the fall, its natural human response to help another human when he's in trouble and i dont see any one in the place willing to do it. They dont want an indian to win the stupid spelling contest so they just waited to let him die.

  • no entiendo porque nadie lo ayudo, en ves de quedarse como lelos viendo y grabando

  • i think noone helped him because he got up so fast

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