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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20150517:16:34:00

call to respond and get to the hospital. this accident happened around a major hospital and many hospitals. they all responded extremely fast, and the mechanism to reach the sickest patient first was critical, and it worked really well. obviously a lot of injuries. happened to the head trauma and spinal injuries but you also worry about a lot of organs. liver lalacerations, bladder perforations, but they were able to save a lot of people. eight people died. you're right that an accident like this, when it happened, passengers become a moving target, and they can hit themselves around to the cabin and also a lot of suitcases and other things can affect them. so from cuts and bruises to fractures of the ribs, punctures of the lungs, we're all waiting in emergency rooms when the

Mechanism , Accident , Hospital , Hospitals , Call , Patient-first , Lot , Injuries , Head-trauma , Organs , People , Passengers

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20150513:09:18:00

situation like this with so many hurt. mark seigel is here to answer just that. we heard reports of broken bones and loss of consciousness and lacerations. how do you begin the triage? >> you have to start with what you think are the most life threatening injuries. when you heard abdominal pain you worry one of the major organs were hit. you geoff them intravenous lines to replace all blood that may have been lost. you get them right to the hospital for surgery if needed. you think about head injuries. p people flying around the cars like this you could end up with blood in the head you could end up with head trauma or spinal injuries. on the scene emergency workers will take people who they think may have damaged their spine and literally tape them down to hard boards so they can't move and get them right to the hospital. everybody at a scene like this

Situation , Consciousness , Triage , Broken-bones , Loss , Lacerations , Mark-seigel , Hurt , Injuries , Lines , Life , Organs

CNN Special Report-20150510-03:16:00

all the organs were transplanted. and all the recipients contracted rabies. >> only later did doctors realize the donor had all the symptoms of rabies from the beginning and they never should have used his organs. >> there's thousands and thousands of potential pathogens out there that organ donors could be infected with. rabies is so uncommon, the screening tests for rabies are not universally available. >> in the u.s. more than 100 people have been victims of similar toxic transplants. after a transplant if you get sicker instead of better, ask if the other recipients from the same donor are also sick. early treatment could save your life. at number 18, dumb discharge. james absden undergoes brain surgery. he goes back to the hospital for more testing. the staples are still fresh in his head when the staff packs him off alone in a taxi cab. >> most patients who are being

Doctors , Rabies , Symptoms , Donor , Organs , Recipients , Beginning , Tests , Us , Donors , Thousands , Pathogens

CNN Special Report-20150510-03:30:00

blake oliver feels sharp pain in his stomach. he goes to the hospital. he needs surgery and a blood transfusion. the new blood has to match his blood. >> some people are o type blood. some people are a type blood. some people are b type blood. you can't transfuse the different types of blood into each other because your body interprets it as an invading bacteria. >> to know blake's blood type his blood needs to be drawn and tested. instead a mistake is made and all that testing is done on blake's hospital roommate. >> the roommate's blood being a-positive was labeled blake oliver and given to him transfused. >> the a-type blood mixes with blake's o-type blood. >> it can cause the blood cells to rupture. and when they rupture they can clog up your organs. it can cause kidney failure. it's called the hemolytic reaction. >> that new blood kills blake.

Hospital , Pain , Blood , People , Surgery , O-type-blood , Blake-oliver , Stomach , Type-blood , Blood-transfusion , Mistake , Body

Anderson Cooper 360-20150509-00:58:00

>> it is a big drinking town. >> it is a big drinking town. so we shot in glasgow and tried in the best we could to try to convey what it is about that town that i love and why people should go there. >> what about the food though? i mean scottish food. haggis. what is haggis exactly? >> it is the lungs, throat and other organs of a sheep cooks in its stomach. the glorious gushing sack as robert burns called it. >> glorious gushing sack. i'm not sure we can say that on cable. >> the food is fantastic. great game. extraordinary seafood. the traditional seafood is great. the modern chefs get better and better every day.

Drinking-town , Glasgow , Best , People , Town , Food , Lungs , Haggis , Throat , It , Gushing-sack , Stomach

Anderson Cooper 360-20150506-03:45:00

could be enough for him to lose a massive amount of blood. >> and the authorities said the death was called by severe blood loss and hypobulimic shock. >> it means you don't have enough fluid in your blood vessels for the heart to pump blood to the rest of your or began organs. >> because you lost so much blood, your heart can no longer start pumping. >> and your organs start to die off because they're not getting the blood and oxygen they need. >> is it possible that someone would collapse for some other reason and then hit their head? >> it's very possible. you could have an arrhythmia a heart attack but they are calling it an accident which suggests that after the autopsy, they didn't find evidence of heart disease or a stroke or something else that happened prior to the fall. >> one of the things i was reading is that was sort of treadmills are becoming more and more sophisticated, with more electronic things more things to kind of divert one's attention, actually it's led to an increase in accidents, because people have -- are

Sudden-death , Amount , Blood , Rest , Heart , Blood-vessels , Authorities , Blood-loss , Shock , Hypobulimic , Organs , Someone

Anderson Cooper 360-20150506-00:45:00

and your heart can no longer keep pumping. >> correct. and your organs can die off because they don't get the blood they need. >> is it possible somebody could collapse for some other reason and hit their head? >> it is very possible. you could have an arrythmia or heart attack and they are calling it an accident and so after the autopsy they did not find evidence of a heart disease or a stroke prior to the fall. >> and i was reading because treadmills are becoming more sophisticated with more electronics to divert your attention it has created accidents because people are multi-tasking or watching television and not paying attention. >> and this is a reminder and of course we won't tell people not to go on a treadmill and he was on a vacation which most don't do but if you are using a new machine and you don't understand

Somebody , Heart , Blood , Organs , Keep-pumping , Reason , Correct , Head , Heart-attack , Evidence , Autopsy , Treadmills

Anderson Cooper 360-20150506-00:44:00

combination of events. and there are injuries due to treadmills and tens of thousands go to the e.r. they are sprains or leg injuries. if you fall the wrong way at the wrong angle you can severely impact your head and there your brain has a lot of blood vessels and if you hit it the wrong way you can have bleeding and he was unconscious and he a deep cut, three centimeters, and if he had someone. >> if he had someone there. >> and to bleed for three hours could be enough for him to loose a massive amount of blood. >> and it was hypo boleemic shock, what does that mean. >> your heart cannot pump blood to the rest of your organs. >> and you can go into shock.

Way , Treadmills , Injuries , Tens-of-thousands , Combination , Events , Leg , Angle , Sprains , Er- , Lot , Head

Legal View With Ashleigh Banfield-20150504-16:32:00

all of this. how about whether they can be convicted. let's talk about the case against the officers with scientist larry coblinski a member of the casey anthony defense team and joining me paul callan. as forensic guy the first person i thought about when it came to the report and the speed at which it was determined, those things usually take 60 to 90 days, we're talking about a matter of fewer than two weeks, and it takes a lot to get a report, not just the science and the doctors who are performing it, all the situational information that comes to them from the investigation, but it seems as though that m.e. may have only had time to read the statements. >> that's right. the autopsy itself takes only about four hours. it is a medical legal investigation of the body from head to toe, right to left, front to back, looking at organs and various systems and looking at the pathology, but that's

Officers , Member , Al-l , Case , Defense-team , Talk , Larry-coblinski , Casey-anthony , Let , Person , Things , Report

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20150422:14:08:00

for a while here and it's completely typical. as a defense attorney sometimes you wait for the autopsy results because, jose they perform the autopsies, the doctors and not only do they submit certain parts of the organs but they also have to submit certain bodily fluids for further testing, so usually the delay is because the medical examiners are waiting for the results on those initial tests, which could go directly to the injury of the dead -- of the deceased. >> what do you mean by that? they take out certain -- explain that a little bit. >> sure, sure sure. when you conduct an autopsy, they have to remove the organs, and sometimes depending on the complaint, the doctor will actually take parts of an organ a heart a lung, et cetera. in addition, they take bodily fluids like, for instance in this case they could have examined the bile, the blood, if there's semen and get further

Doctors , Results , Parts , Organs , Defense-attorney , Autopsies , Injury , Delay , Testing , Tests , Examiners , Bodily-fluids