Everything We've Learned About Cancer | Compilation

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SciShow

SciShow

Күн бұрын

SciShow has done a lot of videos about cancer lately, which is not entirely a coincidence. When Hank Green was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma last year, we all wanted to learn more about the disease. This compilation explores cancer from every angle-testing, treatment, causes, and prevention.
Hosted by: Hank Green (he/him)
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Image Sources:
www.gettyimages.com/detail/vi...
www.eurekalert.org/multimedia...
Original Episodes:
1:03-8:58 • Chemo Sucks. Science I...
8:59-15:19 • This Simple Test Could...
15:20-20:44 • The Rarest Cancer on E...
20:45-26:48 • Why Doctors Are Microw...
26:49-33:19 • The WHO Says Diet Soda...
33:20-38:27 • Lower Your Risk of Can...
38:28-42:03 • Mr. Frosty, the Cancer...
42:04-47:32 • Breast Cancer gets Wor...
47:33-51:26 • Targeting Iron to Figh...
51:27-58:20 • How PET Scans See Cancer
58:21-1:03:32 • Seeing Like Mantis Shr...
1:03:32-1:06:38 • Personalized Cancer Tr...
1:06:39-1:13:49 • The Truth About the Si...

Пікірлер: 431
@katieh40077
@katieh40077 2 ай бұрын
I have a Ph.D. in Cancer Biology. You guys did a great job at explaining all of this. I can tell that it was a lot of hard and thorough work.
@Kitties3eva
@Kitties3eva 2 ай бұрын
I can't wait to be just like you when I grow up! :) - a molecular biology undergrad who has been dreaming about doing cancer research since I was like 10
@FoodNerds
@FoodNerds 2 ай бұрын
Wow! That’s amazing. I just did a thesis on Terrorism. It’s not exciting and rather depressing.
@FoodNerds
@FoodNerds 2 ай бұрын
@@Kitties3evaWell that is very exciting and aspirational!
@rissabiagi1570
@rissabiagi1570 2 ай бұрын
@@FoodNerdsmaybe not exciting and definitely depressing but yours is a much needed brain in our current world. What are you thinking for future work?
@FoodNerds
@FoodNerds 2 ай бұрын
@@rissabiagi1570 Hi I’m not sure. Do you need people who studied terrorism?
@bloomnights
@bloomnights 2 ай бұрын
Saying "I found it conforting, I promise" about reading a lot of books about cancer after being diagnosed with it is such a Hank Green Thing TM. Very on brand.
@kelseamensh5863
@kelseamensh5863 2 ай бұрын
I am an oncology nurse who gives these medications every day and will definitely be stealing some of these explanations! You are so gifted in explaining such complex topics. I’ve been watching your videos for many years now, from college to nursing school, now years into my career as a chemo nurse and still learning with you. Sending love from DC!
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm 19 күн бұрын
The medical field is about torturing animals with toxic chemicals and disease 😡😔. Curing disease isn't worth mad Science experiments that's worse than disease. Stop curing disease!
@AdelynSchmidt
@AdelynSchmidt 2 ай бұрын
My brother probably has osteosarcoma (he's 9 yrs old) and it's been a scary week. Learning more about the scary shit helps calm my anxiety so thank you for this extra-long video! 🙏❤
@northstarjakobs
@northstarjakobs 2 ай бұрын
Here's hoping for a swift diagnosis and treatment as well as nothing but the best for him and your family. The KZfaqr and TikToker Alex1Leg has had osteosarcoma and his videos could also be of some comfort.
@cheekycrab.
@cheekycrab. 2 ай бұрын
if it helps i have leukemia and made a friend with osteosarcoma and he made it through treatment quicker than he thought ❤️
@socrabe
@socrabe 2 ай бұрын
My thoughts are with you and you family ❤️
@DudeWhoSaysDeez
@DudeWhoSaysDeez 2 ай бұрын
I hope you find peace throughout this experience
@Fido-vm9zi
@Fido-vm9zi 2 ай бұрын
We are living in a time of knowledge, technology & breakthroughs. There are many stories of young people overcoming cancer. Best wishes.
@Nighthawkinlight
@Nighthawkinlight 2 ай бұрын
I remember reading about how PET scans work maybe 5 years ago and my mind was blown. You're pumped full of an isotope that decays into a pair of positrons (actual antimatter!) that shoot out exactly 180° from each other. When the machine detects two positron impacts exactly opposite from one another it knows that was from an isotope decay instead of just random noise, and with incredibly precise time signatures it can map the particle impacts back to an origin point within the body. In that way it can "see" where the injected isotope has concentrated in 3D space. That's nuts.
@tiegerzahn717
@tiegerzahn717 2 ай бұрын
Well, it's actually only one positron, which, when it encounters an electron, annihilates with the electron (matter-antimatter annihilation) and that produces two photons back-to-back. And it's them that get detected by the PET machine. What stroke me most, years after learning about the PET scan itself, is the WHY this works. Why do tumours take up that much glucose for us to detect them in a PET scan? Yes, they need a lot of energy, but that's not even explaining the order of magnitude. What can, is the Warburg Effect (Nobel Prize 1931): tumor cells cannot use the regular mechanism to generate ATP from fuels, but totally has to rely on fermentation, which is inferior with respect to energy production. And it cannot use fats for this, only glucose and glutamine. In essence, what unites all tumours/cancers is, that their mitochondria are broken. Absolutely fascinating! What I'm still waiting for is, that oncologists stop feeding patients lots of sugary crap, because that's what cancer feeds on - almost exclusively.
@archerelms
@archerelms 2 ай бұрын
​@@tiegerzahn717except that, as Hank said in the video, you can't just avoid sugar and starve out the cancer. If anything, if you could starve any cells of glucose it would be the healthy ones because the cancer would hog it. Oncologists still shouldn't give out or encourage too much sugary stuff but in the end it doesn't make that big of a difference and comfort is in short supply for cancer patients so I don't see why they can't indulge sometimes. The only link between cancer and sugar intake I can find is that sugar intake can cause you to be overweight, which is a risk factor. So just don't make the cancer patients gain weight from all the sugar and you didn't really do any harm.
@tiegerzahn717
@tiegerzahn717 2 ай бұрын
@@archerelms perhaps you have a look at the work of Dr Thomas Seyfried. He gets extraordinarily good results, considering he is working with glioblastoma patients. Therapeutic carbohydrate restriction, for example via fasting, is already part of SOC. In some cases this is already sufficient to send patients into remission, but he's also using pulsed glutamine uptake inhibitors, which gives stunning results. Biggest problem: patents for these have long expired, so there's no money to be made.
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm 19 күн бұрын
Ya and to produce this medical crap they torture animals with toxic chemicals and disease. I'd much rather have disease in the world than to have mad science experiments in the world.
@ivandjurdjevic7463
@ivandjurdjevic7463 2 ай бұрын
Glad to see you recovering, Hank!
@abramisme
@abramisme 2 ай бұрын
Recovered?
@LittleRadicalThinker
@LittleRadicalThinker 2 ай бұрын
Don’t worry, Hank is not recovering. You don’t cure a metabolic disease without metabolic therapy. It will come back sooner or later.
@ivandjurdjevic7463
@ivandjurdjevic7463 2 ай бұрын
@@LittleRadicalThinker I thought he had cancer and he treated it, no?
@LittleRadicalThinker
@LittleRadicalThinker 2 ай бұрын
​@@ivandjurdjevic7463 Yes, he had cancer and he treated it and likely he still has it. Unfortunately cancer is not something dirty, you can't just say treat it then it's forever gone. There are countless failures of treating cancers, there are countless examples of cancer got treated then come back. There is a paradigm shift ongoing likely takes decades at learning what cancer really is and how to properly treat it.
@ArthropodJay
@ArthropodJay 2 ай бұрын
@@LittleRadicalThinker sometimes cancer NEVER comes back dont be so negattive
@anjulikamins6420
@anjulikamins6420 2 ай бұрын
Clicked immediately. My mother passed from cancer in the 90s and I hope and pray every day other kids don't have to experience the fear I had back then.
@ETa-tg8vc
@ETa-tg8vc Ай бұрын
Damn sorry
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm 19 күн бұрын
Something worse than cancer : mad Science experiments torturing animals with toxic chemicals and disease. Cancer research is WORSE than cancer itself. Mad Science experiments are far worse than any disease.
@darleenross710
@darleenross710 2 ай бұрын
having been cured of 3 different types of cancers (so far) and with two siblings who died of cancer, I am eager to learn all I can about it, I found this to be the best video you've done. You have such a great team and I appreciate all of you.
@Elmermavi
@Elmermavi Ай бұрын
Please look up Thomas Seyfried of the Boston school of medicine his twenty years of research might be life saving for you he can prove to you things that you'll never learn from the American medical association
@k.h.6991
@k.h.6991 21 күн бұрын
You may want to look into WFPB eating. It will reduce your risk of getting cancer. Not to zero, but still.
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm 19 күн бұрын
That's sad but what's sadder is cancer research it's mad Science experiments giving animals cancer and testing toxic chemicals on them. That's far worse than cancer itself. I don't blame cancer patients for accepting treatment but I blame all doctors and scientists they're all sickos. Alternative to animal testing is cancer. It's better for cancer not to be cured sorry.
@Kelly-ui5zm
@Kelly-ui5zm 2 ай бұрын
I have the BRCA -2 gene and had ovarian cancer 5 years ago. As well as many family members who have died from cancer (mostly the same kind). Thank you for taking the mystery and the fear out. The cancer genetic doctor I go to has encouraged me that we are indeed learning more and more recently about cancer. I really appreciate you sharing what is new on the horizon.
@henryTech720
@henryTech720 2 ай бұрын
Cancer genetic doctor?? If anyone wanted to go see one, what specialty would they Google etc to find one in there area.
@hungryluma27
@hungryluma27 2 ай бұрын
I am getting my pancreas removed mostly because I have a very high risk of cancer due to damage from chronic pancreatitis, which I’ve had since 14 due to a genetic condition. I’m super nervous but I want you guys to know that SciShow is always the best thing to watch to calm me down and distract me :)
@cosmoplakat9549
@cosmoplakat9549 2 ай бұрын
Best of luck to you! Pancreatic cancer is one of the least treatable bc of its location behind the stomach, its delicacy as an organ, and its tendency to grow a large blood supply, all making cancer surgery difficult at best. And, as with many cancers, it doesn't always have a lot of early symptoms, so chemo isn't always successful. I think you're doing the right thing, my friend.
@markedis5902
@markedis5902 2 ай бұрын
Thank you Hank for speaking up about Cancer. People fear what they don’t know so hopefully by educating people it will take away some of the mystery and fear of cancer
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm 19 күн бұрын
Cancer research is worse than cancer they give animals cancer and chemo times ten. That's mad science experiments it's far worse than cancer itself. They should stop curing cancer. I'm sorry for anyone with cancer but mad Science experiments are far worse.
@tlou34
@tlou34 2 ай бұрын
My closest friend passed away due to cancer on 6th of March. I just find the free time to watch this video. Watching this will be like paying homage. I couldn't stay with him when he needed me the most. I feel sorry for this. I should be with him every second and go with him until the last breath.
@MaryAnnNytowl
@MaryAnnNytowl 2 ай бұрын
We can't always be where we feel like we should be. We aren't perfect beings with perfect timing, or any other perfect ability. I know that from experience. My own closest friend back when I was about 12 years old onward passed away at 28 from ovarian cancer, one of the most difficult cancers to identify before it's so far advanced that it's just a death sentence. I was working nights, and had 2 kids who I needed to spend time with, at the time. That meant I couldn't visit her so often like I wanted to do. Not only that, it meant I couldn't I call to talk to her like I wanted, because I was awake mostly when she (and nearly all the rest of the world, too) was sleeping, and when she might be awake, she could've been taking treatments or otherwise doing something to help her health. So I waited for calls from her. Then she and her S.O. moved away - she told me to be near an oncology specialist that wanted to try a new treatment on her. That meant visits were right out, so I waited for her calls. Which basically stopped. Turns out she knew she was about to go, and didn't want to hurt me by forcing me to go through that. And her SO, who didn't like me, never bothered to tell me until it was too late to say goodbye. So don't beat yourself up because you weren't where you thought you should be.
@celestef9727
@celestef9727 Ай бұрын
Before I start, I want to clarify that none of my words are meant to replace or minimize anything that you feel. Grieve and understand there's no right or wrong way and you never stop, you just learn with the pain. Now...please remember you WERE there for your friend even if not at the last moment, you were their friend and you added to the quality of their life. You might even have been in the reel of their life that flashed before their eyes before they died. Take time to feel and grieve but remember to direct your thoughts during the sad and painful times to the joy and beautiful moments you had with them. Live for them. Tell their story. Do the things that mattered to them. Do the activities you did with your friend do with your loved ones and their loved ones and tell them about how you did it with your friend. Blend their memory with your life. You can mourn missing their death or you can keep them alive in yours. I hope you can forgive yourself. I'm sure your friend did. If you want to be haunted, live but make them a beautiful ghost. You're their immortality now.
@sarahkoplin3150
@sarahkoplin3150 2 ай бұрын
Hank, your vieos helped me walk through my cancer and its treatment and aftereffects of the same. You, and the messages you carry, are truly necessary. Not wanting to swell your head, but the world is a better place because you are in it.
@PlumBerryDelicious
@PlumBerryDelicious 2 ай бұрын
My lab does research into the microbiome and it's effects on adjuvant immunotherapies in certain cancer lines. I've kept your plight in my heart. 💜
@FoodNerds
@FoodNerds 2 ай бұрын
Wow! That sounds exciting!
@medman4309
@medman4309 2 ай бұрын
Nice! My thesis is on the interaction between betten PPIs and ICIs which is thought to be mediated by the microbiome.
@isaachoward5302
@isaachoward5302 24 күн бұрын
@@medman4309what have you found so far? i have GERD so i'm curious
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm 19 күн бұрын
You're a professional animal torturer. Curing disease isn't worth torturing animals sicko that's the same as torturing them for fun. Stop curing disease dr.mengele.
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm 19 күн бұрын
Your thesis is on torturing animals with toxic chemicals and disease. Curing disease isn't worth torture, stop curing it.
@RelaxedPuppy
@RelaxedPuppy 6 күн бұрын
Thank you for the wonderful explanation. I lost my wife to lung cancer in 2016. This video will be helpful to many people.❤
@emmahauck7795
@emmahauck7795 2 ай бұрын
As a newly licensed pharmacy technician in a cancer care centre, I loved this entire thing. Understanding the drugs I mix and the diseases we treat is super rad! Wish Hank could explain to me in layman’s terms what every single chemo agent does in the body, but that video would probably last years LOL
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm
@JamesFrancis-xj6xm 19 күн бұрын
Pharmacy is about torturing animals with toxic chemicals. Medicine isn't worth torture, they should stop making medicine. Saving people's lives isn't worth mad Science experiments.
@kylebarry138
@kylebarry138 2 ай бұрын
Hey! My grandma was in the clinical trials for parp inhibitors! She ended up having the breast cancer come back a total of 19 times and eventually succumbed to it, but she fought it all the way out
@ld4028
@ld4028 Ай бұрын
19 times? That’s crazy. I’m sorry she went through that but also so thankful for women like her who have come before me - her participation in clinical trials has helped so many of us! Your grandmother is a hero! You should be proud ❤
@horizonbrave1533
@horizonbrave1533 2 ай бұрын
Dude I'm so happy you're on teh rebound and back up on your feet. You look great sir, and the fact that you just dipped out for a short period of time relatively.. but just dove back in as soon as you could....applause worthy...
@alexandragrace8164
@alexandragrace8164 2 ай бұрын
Thanks, Hank. I’m watching this from the hospital and awaiting my PET scan!!
@sarahblack9333
@sarahblack9333 2 ай бұрын
Good luck and well wishes! 🍀
@mugetsusaki2822
@mugetsusaki2822 2 ай бұрын
I just lost my Uncle to lung cancer. And his funeral is this week Saturday.. this vid would let me understand some of the stuff he went through
@NickHammer99
@NickHammer99 2 ай бұрын
Got diagnosed with stage 3 testicular cancer in 2022 and it sparked a crazy facination in me too. Im super grateful for modern medicine.
@AAAsn888s
@AAAsn888s 2 ай бұрын
Glad you are in remission. Continued prayers.
@sueerickson9988
@sueerickson9988 2 ай бұрын
In 2004, I had T2 possibly T3 bladder cancer. I only had 2 surgeries, 1st one was so remove the necrotic tumors inside the bladder infused with medication to slow the tumors growth [usually done with a T1 tumor]. The 2nd surgery lasted 10 hours & removed everything non essential. I have been cancer free since without chemo or radiation. The side effects (neuropathy, the sciatic nerve died in the back of my knee) was worth saving my life. I have had many friends & family die from cancer. I get survivor’s guilt if they lose their cancer battle. ❤
@Horticarter41
@Horticarter41 2 ай бұрын
My mom's mom, and her mom before her, both got cancer. My great grandmother was was diagnosed with advanced colon cancer at 92, I met her once when I was a baby, she died 2 months later, my grandmother, so mom's mom, had and beat breast cancer not once, not twice, but three times, and is now 95, and still in remission . Nothing yet from my mom's doctor, and other than chronic pain through a back injury, she is doing ok. I'm very proud of my mama. She is queen badass of the world.
@Tortoisepower01
@Tortoisepower01 2 ай бұрын
Really amazing video Hank! One minor comment, at 06:31 while talking about mAb trastuzumab/Herceptin, you actually showed the diagram and MoA for the ADC trastuzumab deruxtecan/Enhertu. While both Herceptin and Enhertu certainly target HER2 (the antibody is the same), the mechanism for ADCs is a little different than mAbs in that Enhertu deposits a super cytotoxic chemo-like payload to HER2-expressing cancer cells, while Herceptin simply blocks HER2 signaling to slow cancer growth (as you described). Specifically, the yellow star in the diagram at 06:31 depicts the ADC's payload (which is deruxtecan/"Dxd" here, a topo 1 inhibitor similar to the doxorubicin topo 2 inhibitor chemo that you mentioned you took to treat your lymphoma), and the payload/ADC gets endocytosed where it directly interferes with DNA synthesis in the cell and kills the cancer (like a targeted form of chemo).
@MrVoods
@MrVoods 2 ай бұрын
One of the most informative (and hopeful) videos on cancer that I've ever seen. Oncology is such a complicated field and is incredibly dense for the lay person to understand. This video had excellent breadth, and sufficient depth. Well done Hank and team.
@KhesedBE
@KhesedBE 2 ай бұрын
42:18 I worked in the medical lab of a pediatric hospital and woof yes we do have a cancer season. Thanksgiving through New Years is ‘new leuk’ season, where we notice a spike of new leukemia diagnoses. We hypothesize it’s because the symptoms of cancer can set on gradually, so parents might not notice their kids’ decline. But around the holidays, family comes around and notice that the child is sickly, leading to a doctor visit and the cancer being diagnosed.
@jasmynmadison5984
@jasmynmadison5984 8 күн бұрын
Wow. That is fascinating!
@blessedveteran
@blessedveteran 2 ай бұрын
Im so grateful you are still here, my friend 💜
@elleryseadust458
@elleryseadust458 2 ай бұрын
AN HOUR??? Hell yea!!!
@uss_04
@uss_04 2 ай бұрын
Had a family member recently diagnosed with cancer. The research in the last few daces provide hope
@TheOGPlatypus
@TheOGPlatypus 2 ай бұрын
I found a book a few years back that was a 60’s textbook on cancer treatments. It was really interesting seeing how many cancer treatments have evolved, how new some cancer treatments were comparatively, and how old others were! Side note: It also had pictures, which I wasnt prepared for and that caused me some about of distress when I saw a cancerous eyeball being operated on 🙃
@Xethyl
@Xethyl 2 ай бұрын
You look great Hank! Congratulations on your recovery ☺️
@Familyman-lh6gi
@Familyman-lh6gi 15 күн бұрын
My son is fighting a cancer and u hank have helped me understand more about how cancer is attacked with medicine thank you I hope u r doing well keep up the fight with the knowledge you pass through ur work
@FutureAIDev2015
@FutureAIDev2015 2 ай бұрын
Hodgkin's was actually what I battled back in high school myself, Hank! It really does suck, especially when you have to deal with insurance not understanding you half the time. 😅
@selfcensorship1
@selfcensorship1 2 ай бұрын
SciShow may be the first channel I subscribed to. Even if not, it is one of the first channels which I subscribed to and that has been making KZfaq better ever since a few months after I joined it, because I seem to have joined before it existed, which surprised me.
@everfluctuating
@everfluctuating Ай бұрын
my mom died from pancreatic cancer in 2017, 3 years after diagnosis. it is somewhat comforting to learn more about it.
@smartchoices2000
@smartchoices2000 2 ай бұрын
I’m happy to see your health improved!😊 Health is truly something that is commonly ignored by many people!
@009SOUNDSYSTEM1
@009SOUNDSYSTEM1 2 ай бұрын
You're looking great Hank ❤
@christiana1218
@christiana1218 2 ай бұрын
I found out my dad has cancer literally yesterday, and having followed these videos for the last year honestly has helped me process these feelings maybe just a bit easier. Thanks, guys.
@jasmynmadison5984
@jasmynmadison5984 8 күн бұрын
Sending good thoughts! Hope your dad is doing well.
@Martinroque77
@Martinroque77 2 ай бұрын
I'm so happy to hear you, Hank. May you live 100 hundred years.
@nikkiewhite476
@nikkiewhite476 2 ай бұрын
Wonderful compilation! It is wonderful to see how fast the treatment of cancer is growing (ba-dum tish). Thank you
@memyselfi726
@memyselfi726 2 ай бұрын
After being diagnosed myself a couple of years ago, i did the same. Its both comforting and terrifyng. Good news, the terrifying feeling goes away the more you understand.
@m.e.g4450
@m.e.g4450 2 ай бұрын
As someone who only knew vaguely about chemo and radio, all the nifty tricks discussed here put a smile on my face😁
@doreenbierens
@doreenbierens 2 ай бұрын
I started chemo treatment in January 1996 for Hodgkin Lymphoma, I was 23 at the time and in stage 2 going to stage 3. In may 1996 I was cancer free and luckily it never came back. Cancer runs in my family on both sides and it’s not one kind. I still have health problems because of the chemotherapy but I’m still alive and that’s what matters.
@rayflinn9580
@rayflinn9580 2 ай бұрын
Great presentation. You give us a lot of hope.
@joshuafernando8775
@joshuafernando8775 2 ай бұрын
u look much better hank cant even say u ever had cancer really happy for u and thanks for all work
@Howtosurviveamerica
@Howtosurviveamerica 2 ай бұрын
I used this to take the best nap! Fell asleep fairly quickly. Thank you HANK
@Duneli
@Duneli 2 ай бұрын
May you continue to do well with recovery, Hank!
@jacobstamm
@jacobstamm 2 ай бұрын
Everybody’s excited about Cancer: The Movie, and I’m just over here waiting for Cancer: The Lunchbox and Cancer: The Breakfast Cereal
@ATM648
@ATM648 2 ай бұрын
Cancer: The lunchbox would look good next to my Spaceballs lunchbox :)
@NoisyRooster
@NoisyRooster 2 ай бұрын
I'm still waiting for Spaceballs 2, The Search for More Money.
@SuddenSwine
@SuddenSwine 2 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you're back! I've watched your Sci shows and your crash course vids. You have taught me lots and reignited my passion to learn when I was a young man. Thanks to you I still have the passion. Once again, I am glad to see you back and thank you for being an educational teacher and doing having it out all for free
@highwind1369
@highwind1369 Ай бұрын
I hope you're healing up well. Keep up the amazing work! You're awesome, life is beautiful and so are you.
@nathanjarrell944
@nathanjarrell944 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your diagnosis
@kayflynn7851
@kayflynn7851 2 ай бұрын
Lovely to see you back, you are great at what you do.❤
@joshcampbell8594
@joshcampbell8594 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, amazing insight
@katiekorell9776
@katiekorell9776 2 ай бұрын
Hey Hank. I really am enjoying your videos. You are looking a lot better. I hope you are feeling good too. Thanx for all the info!
@EmilyJelassi
@EmilyJelassi 2 ай бұрын
Excellent and very interesting video!! I'm so glad that you're recovering Hank!!😊❤🎉
@sharonbetancourth4288
@sharonbetancourth4288 2 ай бұрын
Hank Green is a treasure. Thanks for all the great videos!
@blazelutari8675
@blazelutari8675 8 күн бұрын
Honestly, as someone who's both autistic and disabled: I get it. Sometimes Knowing about the scary thing going on with you is comforting!
@flightattendantsteven
@flightattendantsteven 2 ай бұрын
Hank, you are friggin awesome.
@Rom2Serge
@Rom2Serge Ай бұрын
Hank , my best wishes to you. Im delighted to see that you are doing better.
@GiorgiBekurashvili
@GiorgiBekurashvili Ай бұрын
The most useful video on the KZfaq
@monk607
@monk607 2 ай бұрын
I NEED TO KNOW HOW YOUR HAIR GREW BACK CURLY AFTER CHEMO TREATMENT! but congratulations, i dont know if i could live in a world without your amazing science based humorous narration
@mikezizis3725
@mikezizis3725 2 ай бұрын
Hi Hank and co! thanks a million- truly great presentation! Please please please at some future date but not too future explore cancer virology.
@arturogutierrez4689
@arturogutierrez4689 2 ай бұрын
Welcome back Hank! you are a brave guy and you are doing a nice job as teacher in the Crash courses and SciShow.
@maxpower1337
@maxpower1337 2 ай бұрын
Stay well brother glad you are doing well ❤
@matt3rodriquez
@matt3rodriquez 2 ай бұрын
Hank! Thanks for being awesome!
@georgecooke9010
@georgecooke9010 2 ай бұрын
VERY INTERESTING, GOOD JOB!
@nro337
@nro337 2 ай бұрын
Amazing content!
@varunnikam
@varunnikam 2 ай бұрын
I hope you are doing great Hank. You are my fav person on the internet.
@rayrocher6887
@rayrocher6887 2 ай бұрын
Good Man, tried to make the world cancer free, a better place. God bless you guys.
@Sindhabadforever
@Sindhabadforever 2 ай бұрын
you are very brave person may god keeps you happy always
@drrrajkumar262
@drrrajkumar262 2 ай бұрын
Great work
@someanne17mai
@someanne17mai 2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video, it is really helpful in so many ways. I was also diagnosed with Hodgkins lymphoma last year and after 6 cycles of chemo, BEACOPP in my case, i am in remission🎉. I have also read a few books on this topic, but i think it would be great if you could also add in the video description, the ones you read too. For me, at least, it would be very interesting. Great job on the video and i wish you good health!
@abhayanand9585
@abhayanand9585 Ай бұрын
Wonderful video!
@arleigh31burke-zc2om
@arleigh31burke-zc2om 2 күн бұрын
Stay strong mr Green! Godspeed
@meowmeow7796
@meowmeow7796 Ай бұрын
My aunt just died of cancer just over 48 hours ago and I feel like learning about what killed her might help
@hohurnham7583
@hohurnham7583 Ай бұрын
sorry for your loss. Take care, may she rest in peace 🕊
@LawatheMEid
@LawatheMEid 2 ай бұрын
Bless you.
@mussersbowsboatsandscience6610
@mussersbowsboatsandscience6610 2 ай бұрын
I survived non-hodgkins lymphoma, specifically atypical Burkett Lymphoma
@deleted-something
@deleted-something 2 ай бұрын
Glad to see you :)
@knowledgezavia
@knowledgezavia 2 ай бұрын
I am cancer and still waiting for my horoscope.
@shahnawazbinrashid
@shahnawazbinrashid 2 ай бұрын
Thank u Hank ❤
@thirsupitishanti9107
@thirsupitishanti9107 Ай бұрын
Thanks from thailand
@cosmoplakat9549
@cosmoplakat9549 2 ай бұрын
My doc suspected lung cancer as I was a prior smoker and had only vague symptoms (mostly fatigue). They did a chest CT scan and saw a couple very small but questionable areas, and then did a chest and abdominal PET scan, where, whoopsie! It turned out to be ovarian cancer, and a fairly large tumor at that (11cm).
@sofyagalimova4467
@sofyagalimova4467 Ай бұрын
Is there anywhere I can get the list of papers/books used in this episode? Would love to dive deeper myself!
@jyetie
@jyetie 2 ай бұрын
Perfect timing! My surgery to find out if i have ovarian cancer (and remove my basketball sized ovarian cyst) is next week Hopefully I won't need the info in this video
@Lachrymose79
@Lachrymose79 2 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you're alive .. idk what i would have done if you disappeared :'c
@AammaK
@AammaK 2 ай бұрын
You said in a podcast you visited or somewhere that asking why we haven't cured cancer yet is like asking why we haven't solved viruses yet. That really clicked something for me., Because while the question has always sounded weird to me (it's hard to tell what people mean by "cure cancer", like eradicate it or just find cures? it's not like there aren't treatments constantly created, right?), I still hadn't though of it like that before. Why is it that we've learned to talk about cancer as _a_ decease but know viruses to cause all sorts of deceases? Nobody says "he has a virus" expecting the listener to understand that as sufficient information. You might expect they're talking about a flu, but you wouldn't say that about HIV for example without specifying. I think a lot of fears and confusions can be attributed to how we talk about cancer in a way that assimilates the worst kinds to the least immediately lethal ones. It's not hard to grasp what being sick is like, but talking about cancer in itself doesn't really convey information about what it would be like and what should make one worried about a given type. We're expected to somehow get what "it's a cancer" means regardless of context, which is misleading.
@AammaK
@AammaK 20 күн бұрын
@James-gp5cw Hello. I do not think you understood me. I’m a theologian, I’m aware. God in His infinite wisdom gave us the entire science community and medicine. There is no excuse for abandoning the logic of science for the sake of scripture. Our ever increasing knowledge and ability to help those in need IS the miracle. Our willingness to understand how our bodies and the world works and how to help people IS us extending the compassion of Christ himseld to out peers and neighbors. I was not questioning any of that in my comment, only the logic which people get wrong about _what_ cancer is. It is not a one thing to miraculously disappear from the world, it’s a name we’ve given to a multitude of things with each their own solutions in out way to the minumun suffering necessary in this world before the eternity in which His kindom is fulfilled.
@blinkingmanchannel
@blinkingmanchannel 18 күн бұрын
Just got to the polarized light thing... Now THAT'S way cool! At 1:13.36… Mind. Blown. Thank you. Wow!
@ohhhlorrd
@ohhhlorrd 2 ай бұрын
I'd love this same style of video but around auto immune research, drugs and other developments
@eliljeho
@eliljeho 2 ай бұрын
Do an episode about how having knowledge tends to reduce anxiety about a situation. I would start with Richard Nissbit and Timothy Wilson.
@nathanjarrell944
@nathanjarrell944 2 ай бұрын
This jogged my memory to the KZfaq videos "is it a good idea to microwave this?". Thank you
@weiamalmassoud5468
@weiamalmassoud5468 2 ай бұрын
Thanks alot for the rich Information can you list the books you read
2 ай бұрын
3:00 whoa, cool video, why haven't I seen anything like this before only photos and worse quality, really nice
@rookhoatzin
@rookhoatzin 2 ай бұрын
Somehow in the back of my mind I cannot help but "feel" that learning about cancer makes me more prone to get cancer. I have noticed that seeing pictures of cancer tumors makes my body ache in very specific tumor-specific areas. Reading about cancer symptoms,,, well, you get the idea.
@avlally
@avlally 2 ай бұрын
Currently waiting on test results (actually the doctor’s appointment to interpret said results cause I don’t really understand what my flow cytometry results actually mean) to find out if I have cancer or an autoimmune disease, so naturally I’ve been diving deep into the science of cancer to learn as much as possible and be prepared for my appointment next week. I hope it’s not cancer, even though I doubt an autoimmune disease would realistically be a whole lot better, but it’s very reassuring to see how much science understands now and learning all of the new ways to fight cancer now. When I was a kid cancer destroyed my grandpa’s quality of life but didn’t kill him, and I’d always thought that I likely wouldn’t bother with chemo if I got cancer. I wasn’t expecting to be facing a real possibility of having cancer in my 20s though 0.0 Thank you for this video, it’s nice to know I’m not alone in finding knowledge about an illness empowering, and reassuring.
@UlexiteTVStoneLexite
@UlexiteTVStoneLexite 2 ай бұрын
My dad has been battling with spindle cell soft tissue sarcoma since may. He just had the 12 lb tumor removed from his thigh in January and has been dealing with an infection from the surgery and will be getting two more rounds of chemotherapy at least as soon as he's done with the antibiotic. At removal the tumor was 95% dead and there have been no signs of it spreading anywhere else. This is cancer number for him and has definitely been the absolute most difficult one to deal with and cost him the most. He did lose the muscles in the back of his thigh and he is a hiker so he's going to have to really work to get back to hiking again
@Jolfgard
@Jolfgard 2 ай бұрын
Oh, an extensive case study about the dynamics between cancer researcher and pop-science outlets. Let's see how often certain types of cancer were on the brink of being eradicated throughout this video.
@EmilyJelassi
@EmilyJelassi 2 ай бұрын
I had cancer last year too. Unfortunately, they weren't able to figure out which kind it was... t was most definitely highly aggressive and malignant, and metastasized from somewhere else in my body. Due to my very wonky system, it just never showed up on ANY scan, up to and including a PET scan; .so far, im the only person in the whole world who's missing 2 out of the 4 proteins in my DNA that make up my autoimmune system. It sucks being a medical mystery and a medical zebra! I just want to experience what "normal" feels like... my doctors aren't allowed to find anything new unless it's completely fixable!!
@carolvalentine9223
@carolvalentine9223 2 ай бұрын
So what are they doing for your treatment?
@eileen7303
@eileen7303 2 ай бұрын
why is it that when Hank Green explains something it's so much easier to understand?! 🤔
@hohurnham7583
@hohurnham7583 Ай бұрын
"testing treatment causes prevention" sounds like a sentence of its own if you don't hear it in the list format
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