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Most days, our bodies are just there—mundane vessels we inhabit on autopilot. We wake up, get on with our routines, eat, sleep, repeat. But the moment you actually stop and think about what’s happening beneath your skin? It gets weird. Fascinatingly, beautifully weird.

That’s exactly what happened when one Redditor asked users to share medical facts that sound completely fake but are actually true. People delivered with some genuinely strange and interesting stuff, and we’ve pulled together the best responses below. Scroll down and see which ones surprise you.

#1

Group of people surrounding a sick man in bed illustrating medical facts that sound made up but are true. Terminal lucidity.

A very ill comatose or unresponsive patient who suddenly becomes awake, alert and talk interactive. Some will even be able to carry on conversations. It can last minutes to hours.

Inexperienced providers and family members often mistake this as "bouncing back" but instead is a sign of imminent death.

What's really interesting is we have no idea how or why this happens.

Euphorbch:

I had a super cool chat with an Alzheimer's patient very close to the end of his life where he was entirely lucid, and it remains one of the most intense?? incredible?? Moments of my life more than a decade later.
He used to cry for his (passed way) wife and call me Florence, and one night he'd called for his wife and I popped the lamp on and chatted to him for a minute to see if he wanted water etc, and then he said "oh, stay with me, I'm here, I'm here and usually I'm not, I know (wife) is [passed away] and I know your name is not Florence and I NEED you to stay with me while I'm here, please please please" and so we chatted about my life a little and his life and wife and kids a lot, and then about two hours later he told me he was going again and went back to how he usually was. He passed pretty shortly after. I cried the entire conversation and for about three days after it, and it will still make me cry if I think about it too hard. It was really awesome.

Styphonthal2 , Biblioteca de la Facultad de Derecho y Ciencias del Trabajo Universidad de Sevilla Report

Littlemiss
Community Member
Premium
3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I've seen this first hand, its a final hooray. I got to hear my Dad say give me loves and kisses, one last time.

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    #2

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True I can't believe this one needs to be said out loud, but vaccines do NOT in fact, cause autism.

    Puzzleheaded_Ask1816:

    I wasn't vaccinated until I was in my teens and I was autistic long before that. Checkmate antivaxxers.

    LankyGuitar6528:

    My anti-vaxx parents didn't get me "done". Instead I got all the diseases those shots would have prevented - Mumps, Measles, Chickenpox and lord knows what else. I think I avoided polio but it's actually asymptomatic in the majority of people so who knows. I'm 65 and decided I didn't want to bring anything home to the new grandbaby...so I went in for my shots last fall. The doc said "what are you here for?" I said "same as these guys..." (pointing to a room full of babies). I asked the doctor "So is adult onset autism a thing?" He didn't laugh. I thought that was a brilliant joke. I guess half his day is spent telling people vaccines don't cause autism.

    JPMoney81 , Tubagus Andri Maulana Report

    CP
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Anti vaxxer feelings don't care about facts.

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    #3

    Surgeons in colorful caps performing surgery in a sterile operating room showcasing medical facts in practice. Nobody has mentioned the one that always shows up on these threads:

    When doctors operate on intestinal stuff, they just jam everything back in. The intestines writhe and wiggle around by themselves until they are back into place correctly.

    Fearlessleader85:

    Apparently, my great, great aunt was born premature "with her guts hanging out", which i believe would refer to omphalocele, but this happened in the very early 1900s in the extremely rural inland PNW, and doctors were not common, nor were cars. Her mom thought she was going to pass away, so she didn't really want anything to do with her, but her dad didn't want to give up. So he just stuffed her organs inside her as best he could and wrapped a cloth around her belly kinda tight and then carried her around in some type of small box. He took her everywhere, the fields, hunting, everywhere. And surprisingly, she lived. And she was none the worse for wear, her abdomen closed up and her "guts" stayed in and she lived a very long and normal life.
    It wasn't until she was in like her late 60s when she was having some sort of relatively minor procedure, might have been a colonoscopy or maybe she got appendicitis or something, but they realized nothing was quite where it was supposed to be. Her liver wasnt quite the right shape and stuff was all jumbled up.
    I think she passed away in her mid 90s. So, apparently, yeah, those organs don't really need to be in a specific orientation.

    globster222 , Navy Medicine Report

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    #4

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True Chiropractic is bunk science. It is not regarded as a mainstream branch of medicine. The origins of chriopractic is wild. The fact that you can earn a doctorate in it is because of powerful lobbying.

    The reason why people like going to a chiropractor is because getting your back c*****d feels good. It's also why they crack your back no matter what you are there for. You may feel better temporarily, but you are only treating the symptoms, not the cause like a physical therapist would do. And if you listen to the founder of chiropractic, joint manipulation can cure diseases, which is absurd.

    CaptainAwesome06 , Edward Muntinga Report

    CP
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    People get angry when you inform them of this.

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    #5

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True I've said it before, I'll say it again. Antibiotics DOES NOT CURE common cold or general flu. Antibiotics only work against bacteria, NOT VIRUS.

    Enough-Researcher-36:

    And taking antibiotics excessively or unnecessarily can cause C. Diff, which is highly contagious and gives you extreme, severe, painful, unstoppable diarrhea.
    That being said if you are given antibiotics, finish the entire course even if you feel better. The chances of you actually getting C. Diff off one course of abx every now and again is pretty low.

    my108centsss , Getty Images Report

    PandaGoPanda
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Anti microbial resistance is commonly referred to as ‘the next pandemic’. And research into new antibiotics is at least a decade behind where we need it to be.

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    #6

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True Voluntarily making a rumbling noise on my ears when I want to and it drowns most external noise. My family and friends did not believe me. Almost gaslit me into thinking its not real and that its just in my head. Years later I found a reddit community of other people being able to do it too. That was also when I found out that not everyone can control a certain muscle in the ear that causes the rumbling sound. Its very useful when people doesn't wanna shut up. I call it my built in noise cancelling.

    Candid_Reading_7267:

    I can do it too. It happens when I close my eyes really tightly.

    AightlmmaHead0ut , Sharon Waldron Report

    UnclePanda
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I mentioned that I can pop my ears at anytime online once and someone immediately said, "You're probably an ear rumbler too." I am.

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    #7

    MRI scan of a human brain showing detailed structures, illustrating medical facts that sound made up but are true. Your brain can literally convince your body it’s sick just because it’s bored and anxious.

    Olealicat:

    As someone with an autoimmune issue. This hits.
    Random hives for just thinking about hives.

    FriendshipCute1524:

    I've learned if you say "I'm fine" enough your brain can sometimes go "Ohh, Word?" And you just don't get sick. Like when you get those "I'm getting sick" chills and feels, Just say I'm fine. Sometimes it just works.

    Diamond_thoughts , reddit Report

    Christina Dutta
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Even guinea pigs can do this. They mixed an allergen with wintergreen, and repeatedly exposed the guinea pigs so they reacted. Eventually the guinea pigs would react to the wintergreen only.

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    #8

    Woman in white robe looking concerned while holding a pregnancy test, illustrating surprising medical facts. Mittelschmerz.

    Some women can feel the exact moment our follicle explodes and releases the egg during ovulation. Mine feels pretty painful but others just feel a pop 🍾.

    cc_bcc:

    I get this. Mines more of a deep ache vs a cork pop. Its annoyingly painful and uncomfortable, but also a useful data point to know where I'm at in my cycle.

    blueridge97 , Getty Images Report

    Marianne
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Are you kidding? Are you telling me that you have a German leanword for that? :D

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    #9

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True I’m an EMT on the 911 side working with a medic, and I’ve witnessed a few things that sound straight up like fiction. I’ve had a couple patients who were in asystole (no heartbeat at all) suddenly get ROSC (return of spontaneous circulation).


    In one case we worked the patient all the way to the hospital. We pushed epi and other meds en route, the ER team took over, ran lines, bagged them, did everything by the book… and nothing worked. Eventually the ER stopped, called time of death, and everyone stood down.

    Then, minutes later, the patient had a heartbeat.
    No shocks. No new meds. Nothing changed. They were dead, and then they weren’t.

    It’s completely baffling to watch. No one in the room had a good explanation for it, and from what I understand, medicine doesn’t really have one either. It’s one of those things you see in this job that messes with your head, because it shouldn’t happen, but it absolutely does.

    notThuhPolice15 , Corey Willett Report

    Lila Allen
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    And this is why you ask for an EEG at 3 minutes and again at 30 minutes before you let them wheel someone off to autopsy.

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    #10

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True When surgeons cut part of the skull away to relieve brain swelling, they 'store' the piece of skull in the abdomen to keep it sterile. The skull fragment will be returned to its original place when the swelling has gone down.

    My lecturer told us this yesterday and I find it amazing.

    SpaceTrash42069:

    Operating Room nurse here. It can also be placed in a sterile container and is taken to “the bone bank” where it’s kept in a temperature controlled environment until it can be put back on the person’s skull.

    TheElusivePurpleCat Report

    Robert T
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    When they put it back, do they put a little catch on it, like in the photo? ;-)

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    #11

    Hockey player in green and white gear taking a powerful shot on ice, illustrating surprising medical facts. Commotio Cordis.
    During normal heart rhythm there’s a 40 millisecond window (during the t wave) where a sudden physical impact to the chest can cause v-fib, cardiac arrest and death.
    Happens to about 20 people per year, mostly in sports (ie. Baseball or hockey puck to the chest at exactly the wrong moment)

    TabsAZ:

    Was a famous incident of this a few years back with the NFL player Damar Hamlin of the Buffalo Bills who went into cardiac arrest after being hit in just the right spot making a tackle during a game. He recovered over the subsequent year and was able to continue his career.

    jocax188723 , Gerhard Crous Report

    Luke || Kira (he/she)
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Now I wanna write a character: a martial artist who's learned to exploit these windows perfectly and k**l people with one punch. Not like Saitama, more like John Wick with instakill.

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    #12

    Medical professional wearing gloves checking patient's blood sugar level as part of medical facts that sound made up. Assuming proper treatment, most doctors would prefer to get HIV than become diabetic.

    Bolognahole_Vers2:

    HIV is more easily treatable, and causes less complications these days, than diabetes.

    icydragon_12 , Getty Images Report

    David Paterson
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    In the year 2024, around 630 000 people died from HIV-related illnesses worldwide. It's not a competition.

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    #13

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True Anyone, after any sickness, has the ability to develop Guillain Barre syndrome. Your immune system attacks sick cells and then keeps right on going destroying your healthy cells until you can’t use your limbs or lungs anymore. And then you can die.

    HamHockShortDock:

    We are starting to find connections between viruses and immune disease or other conditions. We are now pretty sure there is a connection between Mononucleosis/Glandular Fever and Multiple Sclerosis. There has been an uptick of T1 diabetes after Covid infections. Mylagic Encephalomyelitis is nearly proven to be a post viral condition and new hyper detailed MRIs have shown brain discrepancies in diagnosed patients. This condition was previously treated more like mental illness!

    Netflxnschill , De Wood, Pooley, USDA, ARS, EMU Report

    David Jeffery
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yes, you can die but Guillain Barre syndrome is fully recoverable. Source? My wife was an ICU nurse who managed several of these patients over the years, none of whom died. And you can get GB without being sick previously. No one knows why it happens or why you recover.

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    #14

    Elderly man with visual impairment sitting on stairs with guide dog, illustrating medical facts about blindness and assistance. Nobody who was born blind has ever gotten schizophrenia. Scientists aren’t sure why.

    PLUMPUFFI:

    I vaguely recall there is a condition that whilst not schizophrenia, born blind people can hallucinate seeing, and often quite well, think its double barrelled and begins with L, but will have to look....

    birthdaycheesecake9:

    I think they’d maybe track down someone who was already diagnosed with schizophrenia and then lost their vision.
    I imagine the manner in which they lost their vision would matter a lot (e.g., injury to the visual cortex vs to the eye, trauma vs a disease or syndrome).

    awildkylaappeared:

    Hello, resident psychiatrist here. Anecdotal, but I had a patient with schizophrenia who took a firearm shot wound to the eye, then infection took the other eye out (brain unscathed). Sure enough, not being able to see made his paranoia worse. Though he had a small amount of insight into his hallucinations before the injury (hear a voice, see that nobody is in the room -> question the hallucination), without sight he could no longer even begin to differentiate what was reality and what was not. No matter how much we optimized his meds he just couldn't come back from it. He was terrified.

    baco_wonkey , Getty Images Report

    Debby Keir
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Think that the phrasing 'no one BORN blind' is the critical point, rather that no blind person ever had schizophrenia.

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    #15

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True Ignaz Semmelweis was a Hungarian doctor who managed to reduce the mortality of women after birth from 12,3% to 1,27% simply by disinfecting hands and tools. 

    And now comes the twist: people *hated* him for this. Some doctors managed to get him out of business in austria and it is even a theory that his death was a conspiracy.

    FullMoonMooon:

    Just to add to the Semmelweis lore, he was working in a location where the doctors went between the birthing ward and the autopsy room. The doctors hated hearing that they should wash their hands between handling the deceased, and assisting childbirth.

    Cute_Measurement1124 , Kristine Wook Report

    marianne eliza
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Doctors were considered "gentlemen" and no gentleman would have anything nasty on his hands. So they took the very idea of dirty hands as a personal slight against their character.

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    #16

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True The Placebo effect usually has a therapeutic effect on disease, even when the disease is entirely physiological, and even when you know the medication is a placebo.

    NoRequirement3066:

    I have a vague suspicion that the reason healthcare involved so much arbitrary mysticism for so much of human history before practical medicine took over is less about it taking a long time to develop science and more to do with the fact that “wizard shaman guy casts a spell to make you feel better” actually just does make you feel better.

    NoRequirement3066 , FDA graphic by Michael J. Ermarth Report

    UnclePanda
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    When regular placebo isn't enough, get yourself some Placebo Plus+!

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    #17

    Illustration showing the use of a leg prosthesis with arrows indicating movement, related to medical facts. Rotationplasty. In some scenarios where above the knee amputation is required, rather than simply c*****g off the whole limb, surgeons can reattach your foot to your thigh, backwards, so that your ankle joint can replace your knee and it will be easier to use a prosthetic leg.

    Impossible_Bowler923:

    How does it work with bending the foot down to the prosthetic like that? I mean, I'm sure any type of amputation surgery feels terrible and takes a lot of recovery, but the diagram I saw looks crazy, like. The foot can do that???

    Toasterferret:

    Yeah, the neurovascular bundle is kept intact, and the tendons/muscles from the front of the foot/shin get hooked up to the hamstrings, and the Achilles gets hooked up to the quads. So they have dorsiflexion still which is what gives them the ability to use the ankle as a pseudo-knee.

    rafters- , Hariadhi Report

    Littlemiss
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Watched several documentaries on the procedure. It looks really strange, but is helping people regain the ability to walk and function again. Absolutely amazing.

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    #18

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True COVID causes vascular, immune, and neurological injury. It’s not just a cold.

    WorldnewsModsBlowMe:

    Calling COVID a "respiratory disease" really did a huge disservice.
    It's an endothelial disease. It affects tissues lining the insides of hollow organs, which is why you get gastrointestinal, cardiac, pulmonary, and other systemic damage.

    thesaltedradish:

    Covid gave me heart issues while I had it. Scary stuff. I've never felt my heart beat that fast before.

    Cardigan_Gal:

    Covid gave my husband heart failure and a permanent left bundle branch block. Before covid he was a fit 40 something guy in training for a triathlon. He's never been overweight or smoked or drank his whole life. He also has massive amounts of calcification in his coronary arteries now and he's not even 50. No family history. And no, he did not get mrna vaccinated. He got the J & J shot.
    Covid gave me the trifecta: vascular damage, neurological issues and multiple autoimmune diseases. Lucky me.

    B33fboy , Alan Tennyson Report

    CP
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This was the problem with just counting death statistics as well. People have problems long after.

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    #19

    Close-up of a person touching their neck near the ear, illustrating medical facts about the human body. You have a tiny itty bitty crystal in your ear called otolith. It's in a pool of gelatine substance, and surrounded by sensory hair cells. It is responsible for managing your balance, vertigo, detecting your head tilt, acceleration etc.

    Sometimes it can move and "get stuck", making you feel dizzy weirdly e.g. only when laying on a bed.

    It's also extremely easy to cure its misalignment, you can literally watch an instructional video and do it with a help of a friend.

    chandrian7:

    When my grandmother called me from the ER to tell me that my grandpa needed the crystals in his head realigned, I assumed she had talked to someone in the waiting room about it and I told her to just wait until the doctor tells them what’s wrong. She corrected me that it had been the doctor who told her this and, before googling, I thought that her doctor might be insane. Crazy stuff, bodies. 

    sztrzask , aruk Tokluoğlu Report

    Littlemiss
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Epley maneuver is the name of it.

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    #20

    Patient receiving intravenous treatment and a person expressing intense stress, illustrating medical facts that sound made up. One of the symptoms of receiving the wrong blood type in a transfusion is an impending sense of doom.

    SnowedAndStowed:

    Angor Animi is the medical term for a sense of impending doom. It’s most strongly associated with pulmonary embolisms but can be from a variety of things including transfusion reactions.

    hgravesc , Olga Kononenko Report

    Saddest_Lion
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There's also the medicine that temporarily stops your heart- I've been administered that on a few occasions and the only way I can describe the feeling is that everything just feels overwhelmingly, inexplicably "wrong."

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    #21

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True Fatal Familial Insomnia. In this genetic disease you literally lose the ability to sleep until you die.

    It starts with just normal sleeplessness but gets worse until your brain physically can't enter deep sleep anymore. You end up hallucinating and having dementia like symptoms before passing away within a few months to a year. It is caused by prions which are misfolded proteins kind of like Mad Cow Disease but for humans.

    It is super rare and only runs in about 70 families worldwide but it is honestly the scariest medical thing I have ever read about.

    ynvoid:

    Oh man, as someone who has had insomnia from birth and only gets about 10- 20 hours sleep a week. This is my worst nightmare. The insomnia is literally destroying me just not as fast as FFI.

    ebonsiren , Megan te Boekhorst Report

    BrownEyedGrrl
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I've had insomnia for years; no sleep for 4 to 5 days. My doctor put me on Doxepin. It's not a narcotic; a very mild antidepressant. It doesn't work if I take it every day, but every 2-3 days I get really good sleep.

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    #22

    Hands performing CPR on a medical training mannequin demonstrating life-saving medical facts and techniques. Extremely rarely during chest compressions a patient can regain consciousness, only to lose consciousness as soon as the compressions stop. It's due to good perfusion from h**h quality compressions.

    So imagine you're doing CPR, your patient starts clawing at your arms and trying to verbalize but you have no choice but to keep going.

    May I never encounter this situation.

    WranglerBrief8039:

    Unfortunately, I’ve been the one on the chest for this. The sheer terror on the woman’s face was something else. Family finally let her go after 40 minutes.

    Puzzleheaded_Ask1816 , Curated Lifestyle Report

    Debby Keir
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I too have seen this - and becuse he kept 'waking' they continued for hours. (Diabetic ketocidosis, down for a day or so before found)

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    #23

    Two babies being held outdoors, illustrating unique medical facts about human development and health. The kids of identical twins are genetically half siblings.

    wibblywobbly420:

    If identical boys and identical girls both have kids together, their kids are genetically full siblings.

    Proud-Biscotti-6194 , Brooke Balentine Report

    Stardust she/her
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I like the onesie design in the picture

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    #24

    Lots of people have extra bits inside them, or sometime missing bits, that they never know about and do them no harm until they have medical treatment that spots the 'error'. FYI I have two renal arteries because i am a greedy git.

    RoutineFeature9 Report

    Huddo's sister
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have a bone spur on my knee that I found out about from an xray I had when I was having knee pain. The specialist I saw was adamant this wasn't causing the pain though.

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    #25

    3D medical illustration of female reproductive system highlighting fallopian tube, related to medical facts concept. Your Fallopian tubes aren’t fixed in place and may swap sides and attach to the corresponding ovary.

    cherrycocoakoala:

    True, plus they're not physically attached to the ovary at all, they float near it and the ovary shoots out an egg into the gap, the egg is shot into the tube. People with one fallopian tube can still get pregnant from either ovary, the tube can move between them each month.

    colourhive , Manu5 Report

    Nay Wilson
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Can confirm this is true. My sister got pregnant with fraternal twin girls 5 years after the ectopic pregnancy that ended with her losing one of her fallopian tubes

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    #26

    Nurse wearing gloves drawing blood from a patient’s arm in a clinical setting showing medical facts that sound made up. If your veins are calcified enough, they will crunch like terracotta tubes being punctured when you get blood drawn.
    No one prepares you for crunchy veins...

    pinupcthulhu:

    I'm going to regret asking this, but ... What causes calcified veins?? 

    haw35ome:

    The obvious like h**h calcium, but also (and more commonly) h**h phosphorus in your blood. Unfortunately it’s in everything, but dark colored sodas & dairy have h**h levels of it. Healthy people can go about their lives just fine, just don’t have a diet of pure coke and cheese or something lol
    Source: me, a dialysis patient - we need to watch out for this accumulating in our blood system (among many other levels, like potassium)

    Mercurial_Morals , Getty Images Report

    #27

    CT scan of the pelvic region showing detailed bone and tissue structures illustrating medical facts that sound made up Theres a nerve that loops thru your hip and connects to your genitals. Its in a really safe spot but on the rare chance it gets damaged the best way to reach it is to cut your buttcheek off and then sew it back on.
    The pudendal nerve. There are only 5 surgeon in all of north america that perform the surgery. So if you need your buttcheeks cut off and sewn back on you gottta wait a while and travel to do it. Good luck traveling back to where ya came from with that cheek.

    Shinjitsu-:

    We are so used to modern medicine we forget, our bodies are built to NOT be opened or come apart. The way humans have found ways to access the deepest parts of us is nuts. Like there's a procedure to reach the base of the brain that cuts the top mandible clean off and splits the face bone in half, and they keep track of it all and reattach it after. 

    JP-0360 , Bill Graham Report

    Luke || Kira (he/she)
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Let's ask these surgeons if they have a way to remove the a$$hole in the White House 😆

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    #28

    Your mind will "fill in the blanks" if it's missing sensory input. For example, if you lose your hearing, your brain might tell you that you hear music. My grandmother lost her hearing, but was always asking if we were playing organ music. Nope. Her brain just decided that silence was icky, and switched over to the traditional church hymns station.

    ca77ywumpus Report

    Stardust she/her
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This allows me to have intense audio hallucinations at night, sometimes I hear people fighting and sometimes I hear music

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    #29

    Nobody really knows how anesthesia works. Only that it works.

    alwaysmiling89 Report

    CP
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That is true of a few things. Tylenol is one as well. They have repeatable outcomes.

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    #30

    After a traumatic event you can lower the chance of PTSD by playing Tetris.

    d4m4s74 Report

    Debby Keir
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A very basic form of EMDR (Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing)

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    #31

    Illustration of human urinary system with kidneys and bladder, showing medical facts that sound made up but are true. When you get a kidney transplant, they leave the old one in there and stick the new one in your pelvis. There are people walking around with three or four kidneys.

    Jennacyde153:

    My colleague’s dad just got 2 new ones so now he has 4. My kid only has 1 kidney but it’s as big as an adult kidney.

    common_sensei , kamaronn Report

    Lino
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "Nice to meet you, I have 3 kidneys, only 1 of them works though"

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    #32

    Woman wearing sunglasses and a beanie in snowy mountains, illustrating unusual medical facts that sound made up but are true. Your body can survive being cooled to 56.7°F (13.7°C), the lowest recorded human body temp, and make a near full recovery (Anna Bågenholm's 1999 skiing accident case). Fun fact, doctors literally can't declare someone [passed away] from hypothermia until they're warmed to normal temp first.

    FullMoonMooon:

    You’re more likely to survive a drowning related cardiac arrest if it happens in cold water compared to warmer water. Submerging your face in water stimulates the mammalian diving reflex, which lowers your heart rate, and decreases your oxygen requirement —> less hypoxic brain and heart damage.
    This is also useful for anxiety attacks. If you’re able to dunk your face in a bucket of cold water, it can help “reset” your hyperventilation. This can also be used to revert SVT (supraventricular tachycardia)

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    Ace
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "You're not dead until you're warm and dead".

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    #33

    Redheads need more anesthesia and Novocain.

    Head_Trick_9932 Report

    Laura Gillette
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yeah, and it s***s when they don't believe you and don't give you enough. "I can still feel. it! It hurts!" "No you can't, stop whining." 🙄

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    #34

    Illustration of a fetus inside the womb connected to the placenta showing medical facts that sound made up. The external lining of the placenta (the part that makes the contact with the mother's uterus) is a single giant cell with surface area of more than 10 m².

    It's a syncytium (a cell formed by the fusion of cells) formed by a protein that was incorporated in the mammalian genome from a retrovirus.

    So 2 facts for one! Before we are born, we a have a cell big enough to cover a car and it is only possible because one of our ancestors had a viral infection that mutated one of it's reproductive cells!

    Pale_Alternative_537:

    Is this also the case in other mammals?

    no-more-throws:

    Yes and no... Wildly enough rats, cats, cows have entirely different synctin proteins from entirely different ancient retroviral infections... It's a magnificent case of convergent evolution.. Early mammals needed mechanisms to keep the embryo and the mother separated while having near seamless but controlled nutrient transfer, and many some half dozen viruses raised hands saying 'say no more bud, I got just the right toolkit!'

    wi11forgetusername Report

    #35

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True Statistically speaking, people on average die more than once.

    LogicBalm:

    I've casually referred to my father's motorcycle accident as "the first time my dad died". It usually glides through the conversation pretty effortlessly. No one questions it. It happens.

    utterlyuncool , Harley-Davidson Report

    Aileen Grist
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    We were told when learning cpr, that we didn't need to worry about being sued as the heart had stopped so, therefore, the patient was dead.

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    #36

    Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) is a medical procedure that uses healthy donor stool to restore a patient's gut microbiome.

    Also, being a victim of Total Locked in Syndrome sounds horrifying.

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    Otto Katz
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I want the orange monster in the white house to suffer Total Locked-in Syndrome, imagine, he can see everyone, can see Melanoma dating her secret service dude, can see the kids wasting all his money, and can't do a darn thing about it? Glorious!

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    #37

    Humans literally glow (biologically), but our eyes can’t see it
    Every cell in your body produces energy through chemical reactions involving oxygen. During these reactions, tiny amounts of light are released when excited molecules (especially from free radicals) return to a lower energy state. This phenomenon is called ultraweak visible light emission.
    The light is real visible light, not heat or radiation.
    It’s about 1,000 times weaker than what human eyes can detect.
    Special ultra-sensitive cameras have photographed glowing human bodies in complete darkness.
    Why it sounds fake:
    We associate glowing with fireflies or sci-fi. But biologically, it’s just chemistry.
    Why it’s true:
    It’s a measurable byproduct of cellular metabolism and oxidative stress.

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    #38

    Wart magic. Pediatricians would sometimes tell a child they had a magic pen and would draw a circle around the wart and the wart would die. It is believed the power of suggestion worked due to children's strong imagination.

    crimsongrayson Report

    Victor De Cenzo
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Had a large wart on the back of my heel that was annoying but not painful. But it kept getting bigger to the point of making a dress shoe not fit well. Bought a wart removal kit but the wart fell off a week or two after this even though I didn't use it.

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    #39

    "Sickle Cell" anemia is a condition where your blood cells form a crescent instead of a donut shape. It's a very painful disease and no known universal cure.

    But if you have sickle cell, you're immune to malaria.

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    Ace
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's much more common in sub-Saharan Africa, notably in regions where malaria is endemics, as it actually give a slight survival advantage. Doesn't give immunity but means that malaria symptoms are much less severe so survival is higher.

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    #40

    Most people don’t realize you can still get sun damage through glass. Windows block most UVB, but a lot of UVA gets through, which is the stuff that ages skin and can contribute to skin cancer risk.

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    LillieMean
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yes! No one seems to believe me when I say I got sunburn on the bus. I got some really bad blisters on my arms on a five-hour bus ride on a sunny day. These days I put on sunscreen before I go out and reapply before I get on the bus, then reapply again before I go out. Oh, go away with those stakes, I'm human! hiss!

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    #41

    Man submerged in water, eyes closed, illustrating unusual medical facts that sound made up but are true. The "need to breathe" you feel when holding you breath is from an overabundance of CO2 in your lungs, not a lack of oxygen. In fact, your body has no way to tell you you're not getting enough oxygen. Hypoxia is a thing, yes, but your ability to think and act is heavily impacted by that point.

    tokke:

    That's why hyperventilating can be dangerous. It removes to much CO2 from your blood, but doesn't provide enough oxygen to balance out. So after hyperventilating, if you would hold your breath you wouldn't feel the need to breath until it might be to late. One of the dangers if you are freediving.

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    CP
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    People can easily die in 100% nitrogen environments and never gasp for air.

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    #42

    62 Weird Medical Facts That Turned Out To Be True Your lower eye lids have a little visible hole on the inside area that touches the bottom of the eye. This hole drains directly into the sinuses, and is the reason why sometimes when you messy cry your nose runs too.

    Geek_King , Mary Borozdina Report

    Stardust she/her
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Had a blocked punctum once. Bad times

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    #43

    You can in fact die from literally drinking too much water in a short amount of time. Its called **Hyponatremia or water intoxication.** It usually affects high or extreme performance athletes who are unaware that they've taken in too much during their race (like triathlons etc).

    szu Report

    Otto Katz
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    she died https://abcnews.go.com/GMA/jury-rules-radio-station-jennifer-strange-water-drinking/story?id=8970712

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    #44

    Scientist in a lab examining samples under a microscope alongside a graphic of a vaccine capsule representing medical facts. The mitochondria (powerhouse of the cell) are almost certainly other organisms that integrated into our own cells during our evolutionary history, and have their own genome.

    megabeano:

    And isn't mitochondrial dna only passed down from mothers? So we can trace matrilineal geneology very accurately by looking at that dna instead of what's in your nuclei. It would be very very similar since I assume the only differences would come from mutations.

    OP:

    Correct; s***m have mitochondria, but very little mitochondrial DNA and what mtDNA it does have is largely degraded after fertilization, meaning that mtDNA is solely inherited from the egg.

    mS0hungry:

    Is this related to the shrinkage and potential loss of the Y-chromosome?

    OP:

    Not really. Remember that s***m are roughly 50% X and 50% Y chromosomes, so anything Y-chromosome specific wouldn't be related. Current theory is that because the mitochondria in s***m are specialized to provide movement for the s***m and are relatively unprotected from outside forces, there would be a higher risk of mtDNA damage, and therefore it was evolutionarily advantageous for the s***m's mtDNA to degrade rapidly after fertilization.

    platinumarks , argzombies Report

    Stardust she/her
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Through tracing the mitochondria over multiple generations, you’ll eventually find that everyone alive today is part of the lineage of a woman who lived some million years ago back in Africa. We call her ‘Mitochondrial Eve’ as she’s the ancestor of all living humans today. Even though other humans obviously lived during her time, all their lineages ended up dying out.

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    #45

    Your lung can just up and collapse without warning for no discernable reason. It's called a spontaneous pneumothorax.

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    UKDeek
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    and it more common in tall, slender built young adults (15-34)

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    #46

    No one actually knows how Lithium works as a medication...just that it does something sometimes for some people.

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    LillieMean
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I only had bad effects. Every day I felt sick and vomited until the afternoon and couldn't eat anything without vomiting until late at night. Later I started losing my hair and other body hair and my thyroid levels dropped so low that I wanted to stop. Good if it works for someone and a medicine worth trying. I also tried it for over half a year.

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    #47

    A “Bogota Bag”.

    A sterile plastic bag, from leftover medical supplies, can be sewn into human skin to create a temporary “skin” around abdominal wounds.

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    #48

    EMDR. The fact that moving your eyes side to side a few times can reset me after a traumatic incident feels like a cheat code.

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    otiose
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Moving MY eyes resets YOU? Magic!

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    #49

    You're somewhere between 3-7% virus DNA.

    No, not 7% of your mass is virus, but your living bodily DNA is that of a virus.

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    CatD
    Community Member
    1 week ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    See the placenta post above.

    #50

    Broken heart syndrome.

    RxR8D_ Report

    Jenni Wren
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    We had a family friend whose husband of 60 years passed away and 6 days later, the day before his funeral, she died of a broken heart. It was noted as broken heart sydrome. They were buried together just as they had spent their lives.

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    #51

    You can live without a stomach, spleen, or gallbladder.

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    CP
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Some live without a brain.

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    #52

    The brain has no pain receptors, this is how awake brain surgery is possible for certain tumors in very eloquent regions.

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    marianne eliza
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    However the sounds and smells of the doctors opening your skull by drilling or sawing, can be highly traumatic.

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    #53

    In people with auto brewery syndrome the body produces its own alcohol.

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    Debby Keir
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    And are the only people who can drink and drive.....

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    #54

    You have invisible buttcheek swirls and stripes on your skin. They're called Blaschko Lines. They're believed to be the pathing cells took when they divide and grow into the skin you're in now. Certain skin conditions follow these pathways on you body.

    Psychedelic_Stingray Report

    Nikki Sevven
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "Invisible Buttcheek Swirls" sounds like an indie experimental band.

    #55

    Sitis Inversus is a rare medical condition where your internal organs are entirely mirrored. It presents no issues whatsoever until trying to diagnose something. For example, the telltale sign of appendicitis is pain in the lower right. Someone with sitis Inversus will have their appendix in the lower right, which is usually how it's discovered.

    amanning072 Report

    Sara Frazer
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Shouldn't that be "Someone with sitis inversus will have their appendix in the lower *left*-" ?

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    #56

    Mice and giraffes have the same amount of vertebrae in their necks.

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    #57

    If you apply pressure to your eyeball, it can slow your heart rate. In extreme cases, this can cause the heart to stop (asystole). 

    The oculocardiac reflex is mediated by the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve via ciliary ganglia and the vagus nerve.

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    Unicorn
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Mine is 60 per minute. I think I'll leave my eyeballs alone, thanks.

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    #58

    Another one: While moving your eyes, you are blind, and your brain compensates so you don't notice.

    It's called saccadic masking and you can easily try it by looking at yourself in the mirror, looking at your eyes back and forth, and it will look like your eyes don't move. To compare with what it actually looks like, ask someone else to look at your eyes in the same way.

    Evil bonus: I once convinced my little sister for a brief time that she was a clone and not a real human by exploting this. I told her she could not see her eyes moving in the mirror because they where actually cameras, not real eyes.

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    J
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That's... sociopathic.

    #59

    Bones are naturally wet.

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    Unicorn
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Well, it would be surprising if they were dry, inside a body consisting of more than half water.

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    #60

    Half of all doctors were below average in medical school.

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    Peter Parker
    Community Member
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Congratulations, you found out how the average works. Must be an above average day for you.

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    #61

    Everybody has symbiotic parasites in their eyelashes.

    Demodex folliculorium

    Everyone.


    Sweet dreams.

    kenreimers Report

    Stardust she/her
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    ‘Symbiotic parasite’? If that wasn’t the most ridiculous oxymoron then I don’t know what is

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    #62

    When anesthesia was invented for surgery, anesthesia wasn't used on babies for a while due to people believing they don't feel pain.

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    Stardust she/her
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 weeks ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    God I’m so tired of this misinformation being spread, anesthesia wasn’t used on infants because they wouldnt remember the pain and mainly because it was difficult to estimate how much to use without k*****g them

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