Do You Really Need Them? Organs You Can Live Without

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Jonathan from the Institute of Human Anatomy discusses 5 organs/structures that human beings can live without.

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Video Timeline:

00:00 - 00:24 Intro
00:25 - 03:36 #5 - The Largest Lymphatic Organ!
03:37 - 06:31 #4 - Who Needs Kids!?
06:32 - 09:03 #3 - How Do You Live Without This!?
09:04 - 11:48 #2 - You Actually Have 3 Of These!
11:49 - 17:11 #1 - Constant Diarrhea?
17:12 - 17:58 There Are More Than Five!

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#InstituteOfHumanAnatomy
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I had Colon Cancer in 2016, the Doctor said he removed 8 inches of my large intestine and said my cancer never spread to my lymph nodes, I have been doing great and it was good to see how they do this as it was never explained to me!

spitfirered
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In college during my biology class, my professor asked if anyone had had their gallbladder removed and I raised my hand. He said, “Well, now all of you know that you can live without it.” 😂

moonbunny
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Alternative title:
“Top 5 Organs you could Sell to buy a Gaming PC”.

mohamadaboualfa
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My grandpa actually had lung cancer so he got surgery and got his left lung removed. He was very unhealthy because of way too much smoking and horrible diet (high fat which caused him to have 5 heart attacks when he was 40 and more after). He lived without his lung for about 9 years and then his lung started “eating itself” until he was left with only a third of a lung and he still held on to dear life for a year. He died at 78 and survived all the way. He was so so optimistic even though he had 10s of surgeries (major ones), he was a truly good person and the doctors said it was a miracle that he lived so long. Rest In Peace dear grandpa we still love you and think of you and how you were such an inspiration to the world and your attitude literally gave you so many extra years to live.

tomerschannel
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HUGE RESPECT for those who donate their body to science

Aercryptic
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My 8 year old cat had a total colectomy when he was 3 years old due to Megacolon an irreversible condition, he is living his best life now!

catsscratch
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I love all my organs equally, even if I can live without them. 😁

Vivaswaan.
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I am not in the medical field nor have I ever wanted to be but I find these videos very informative and fascinating. Thank you for making them!!!

christinastrunk-olivier
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I love how this guy separates education and personal stuff. He says what he needs to say you know like the funny words, but, he makes it completely smooth and interesting. I wish my teachers were like this in high school.

theofficialsock
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I'm a stage 4 cancer survivor. I had my colon removed to the sigmoid. I'm happy to be reattached and no more bag troubles. I have sensitive skin so my ileostomy was not a pleasant time for me.

jenniferbronson
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Let me pray for whoever is the owner of the bodies used for knowledge, they're the real heroes. May their soul rest in peace

unbeatabel
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My adenoids grew back after removal. "I've had the same organ removed twice" is my go-to fact whenever I'm in one of those "Let's go around the room & say something interesting about yourself" scenarios.

CynraeDrakar
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Me, pitching the channel to friends:
*HEY KIDS WANNA SEE A DEAD BODY!?*
- they do, they get an education -
*Excellent...*

Celere
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Jonathan - "here's a testicle split open"

Me - wincing at everything he says

md
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Sitting here eating a bag of chips “Oh wow.. really!?” *crunch crunch*

SRNTY
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I found this channel from the tattoo on skin video and it's just so informational and also 'not boring'. And by that I mean that this could be someone else saying the same thing but this guy seems so interested in what he's doing it makes me interested

B-RaDD
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"Who needs to be having kids all the time" Savage.

raymondleggs
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My entire colon and rectum were removed almost 20 years ago. Some people go 3 times a day and others go 10-15 times a day. I was one of the unlucky ones who goes anywhere from 8 to 20 times a day and it's especially bad when trying to sleep at night. The surgeon never told me my anus would eventually stricture and start to close up, so I've been dealing with that for a few years now. I had an ileostomy bag for 8 months and the depression from it was so bad I ended up in the psych ward from suicide attempt a few times.

Seargent_Scraps
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I have disabled twins. One has a cecostomy. He has had it for 23 years. We are thankful for this procedure as it has improved his quality of life. I'm amazed the same stoma has lasted 23 years and continues to be viable. The twin had 18" of intestines removed. He has daily suppositories, miralax, etc for bowel function; however, he no longer suffers such severe pain. Especially at night when the intestines were flipping. Watching this video on a cadaver as opposed to photos is quite fascinating.

Nanaandme
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I no longer have a gallbladder, ovaries, uterus, cervix, AND a small portion of my small intestines.

My doctor doesn't want to give me estrogen because I was already past menopause when I got uterine and ovarian cancer. (Both had different cancer cells as well as the small bowel at the same time. ) I'm still recovering as it has been in the last few weeks.

My gallbladder wasn't cancer. It was acute cholecystitis/cholecystitis that was first.

barbaramatthews