21 Shocking Patient Stories Where Doctors Sensed Danger Before Symptoms Appeared
Ever wonder how “normal” sometimes makes healthcare pros do a double-take? Like, when a family insists their kiddo sleeping for hours after anesthesia is just par for the course—not a red flag waving wildly in the ER. It’s wild how what one family deems everyday can have doctors scratching their heads, diving deeper, and, honestly, questioning their entire medical training. From hallucinatory puberty tales to forgotten limbs and mysterious post-op symptoms, these stories reveal moments when “normal” isn’t quite what the dictionary—or the doctor—would suggest. Buckle up for a bizarre trip through the peculiar side of patient encounters, where the ordinary suddenly turns extraordinary. LEARN MORE
Sometimes what patients or their families consider “normal” can catch healthcare professionals completely off guard. Take the case of today’s Original Poster (OP), whose patient’s family believed their child’s prolonged sleeping after being in anesthesia was normal, not knowing there was something deeper at play.
The OP then prompted netizens to share their most surprising experiences with patients insisting that unusual or alarming symptoms were perfectly normal. The stories range from shocking medical reactions to situations that left staff questioning how certain behaviors were ever considered ordinary. Together, they provide a fascinating look at the moments when “normal” is anything but.
More info: Reddit
Had a young lady brought in for new onset hallucinations while at a friend’s house and parents were *furious* that we wanted to admit her to the inpatient psychiatric unit. They said she’d just started menstruating and “that’s just what happens when girls hit puberty”. Our MD was quick to point out that hallucinations were not, in fact, a normal part of puberty…
Turns out, there was a family history of acute intermittent porphyria, which can in fact cause hallucinations with hormonal changes! So, in their family, hallucinations were a normal part of puberty!
RN here- I was discussing morning care with an elderly patient and offered to get her a toothbrush and toothpaste. Sure thing. Then she very casually remarked that “even after all these years, she still hasn’t gotten used to the itchy numbness and moderate lips and tongue swelling that happens (and has been happening her whole life) whenever she brushes her teeth.”
I kinda thought she was being a little dramatic about the peppermint taste of the toothpaste until she straight up had angioedema before she even finished brushing. She had great dental hygiene though. It’s [annoying] having to silently deal with something you don’t even know is a thing. We called her husband and sent him out to buy her some natural toothpaste and all was right again on the unit.
Someone complained of shoulder pain, but didnt mention anywhere on the paper work they LOST THEIR ARM and had it reattached in a farming accident 20 years ago. I saw the scar and that triggered additional questions from me that prompted him to mention this casually.
Mine was from my daughter. She thought it was normal to get dizzy and grey out for a few seconds when standing. After puberty, she started completely passing out and falling, and commented that it was weird because she usually just blacks out. Um… what?!? Once we started monitoring it, her BP was 50s/30s during some of her “normal” episodes when she didn’t lose consciousness and just became dizzy with vision loss. She said she’d been doing that for several years.
Not quite the same, but we had a kiddo with really profound craniofacial abnormalities whose eyeballs would pop out of her sockets every time she sneezed. Mom was totally unfazed by this- would just wash her hands and pop em back in. Obviously mom knew it wasn’t objectively normal, but it was amazing how it was very obviously this family’s normal.
I asked a patient if she had any urinary trouble during a postpartum visit. She replied, “Nope! I set alarms to make sure I pee before my bladder gets too full and I pee myself, but I know that happens after having a baby so it’s all good!”
I gently informed her that it was not all good and we discussed pelvic floor PT, which she was thrilled about!
I slept for an additional 6hr after having what should have been an abbreviated outpatient procedure….When the nurses kept checking on me, all concerned, my husband just said, “Let her sleep. She works nights and takes care of our 3 kids when she’s not working.” God bless him. ❤️.
Not a patient experience, but from my wife. She has a severe nut allergy and was hospitalized a few times. When she had pine nuts on accident when she was a teen, she went mostly deaf and had tunnel vision and swelling throat as part of anaphylaxis. She was just talking to the EMTs like in a normal conversation. No panic, no nothing. Just trying to tell them what happened all calm-like but can’t hear or see or make intelligible sounds.
They were just floored that she was so calm.
The amount of adult children who thought it perfectly acceptable their demented parents “take care of each other” with zero assistance was a good reason why I left the ER. Pretty sure one of my coworkers called APS on a case like that it was so bad.
A mom slept for 2 days not feeling well. Family wasn’t worried until she wouldn’t wake up to any stimuli. Blood sugar 1734.
I’m the opposite problem but I always make sure I let everyone taking care of me know that whatever anesthesia you think is going to keep me out will probably only keep me out for about half or less of your planned time. I woke up during my gallbladder removal and my first colonoscopy, but only because they didn’t really listen to me when I told them before the second one…
poor kid though, must be rough if everything knocks you out for a thousand times longer because your body can’t process it quickly.















Post Comment