Lablingo
77 posts

Lablingo
@LablingoSocials
Lablingo - Currently Available in India Only Medical Lab Report Analysis for Informational and educational purposes only. Made in INDIA with Love

@DietDrsayajirao Sir, for vegetarian which are the best source of protien ?







Indian men are going bald at 25, gaining belly fat at 28, and getting fatty liver at 32. Nobody connects the dots. - Hair thinning at 25 - Belly appearing at 28 - Fatty liver on a blood test at 32 - “Borderline sugar” by 35 - BP medication by 40 You’re treating each one like a separate problem. It’s not. It’s the same body. Same lifestyle. Different stages. 1. The hair was the first warning - He notices the hair at 25. Buys a ₹1,500 shampoo. Tries oils. Tries serums. Nobody tells him to check his stress, his sleep, his iron, his D3. It wasn’t the shampoo. It was a body running on cortisol, zero protein, and 4 hours of sleep since college. 2.He notices the belly at 28 - Joins a gym. Goes 3 weeks. Does cardio. Doesn’t change what he eats. Quits. Blames metabolism. It wasn’t metabolism. It was 5 years of Swiggy, sugary chai 4 times a day, and 12 hours of sitting. 3.He gets a blood test at 32 because his company forced it. Fatty liver. High triglycerides. Borderline sugar. Doctor says “lifestyle changes.” He nods. Moves on. Nobody told him the belly fat at 28 was already doing this - dumping fat into his liver silently for years. 4.He’s on medication by 40 and calls it “family history.” It never ran in the family. It walked there. Slowly. Through every skipped meal, every 2 AM sleep, every Swiggy order, and every blood test he postponed for 10 years. The 25-year-old losing his hair and the 40-year-old getting a stent have more in common than they think. They just met the same lifestyle at different stages. Your body doesn’t break overnight. It sends warnings for years. The hair was the first one. Most men just bought a shampoo and moved on.









A simple blood test can reveal the cause of memory problems. A 50-year-old man developed memory loss for 3 months. Naturally, he feared dementia. ▶️But a simple blood test revealed the real cause. His CBC showed: MCV = 122 fL (normal: 80–100) This means the red blood cells were abnormally large, a clue doctors call macrocytosis. ▶️That single finding prompted a test for vitamin B12. Result: Severe deficiency (70 pg/mL). ▶️The reason? He had been on a strict vegan diet, and vitamin B12 is found mainly in animal-derived foods. ✅He was started on vitamin B12 injections. Within weeks, his memory started improving. ▶️Important lessons: • Vitamin B12 deficiency can mimic dementia • It can cause memory loss, nerve damage, and anemia • A simple CBC clue (high MCV) can reveal the diagnosis • Early treatment can reverse symptoms ✅Bottom line: 🔸Not every memory problem is Alzheimer’s disease. 🔸Sometimes, the cause is a vitamin deficiency that is easily treatable. 🔸Always look for reversible causes of cognitive decline. Dr Sudhir Kumar, Neurologist @hyderabaddoctor (Note: Image is AI-generated)






