Andrew Sharp

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Andrew Sharp

Andrew Sharp

@drandrewsharp

Interested in stuff. (This is my personal account only)

Ireland Beigetreten Mart 2014
2.8K Folgt6.9K Follower
Andrew Sharp
Andrew Sharp@drandrewsharp·
@elonmusk @doganuraldesign Is it possible: 25% what I follow, 25% what I click through but don’t follow, 25% of the most engaged X posts that would be considered ‘news’ (from various sources) and 25% random stuff that the algorithm thinks would be interesting/enlightening. Right now, ‘for you’ is just doom
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Dogan Ural
Dogan Ural@doganuraldesign·
Fuck it, man. I’m so sick of these algorithm changes.
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Ahmed Ata
Ahmed Ata@Ahmedata7777·
Blood Supply of the Cardiac Conduction System — Summary ■ SA node: ▪︎ 60% from Right Coronary Artery. ▪︎ 40% from Left Circumflex Artery. ■ AV node: ▪︎ ~85–90% from Right Coronary Artery. ▪︎ ~10–15% from Left Circumflex Artery. ■ Bundle of His: ▪︎ Proximal: Right Coronary Artery. ▪︎ Distal: Septal branches of Left Anterior Descending Artery. ■ Right bundle branch: ▪︎ Septal branches of Left Anterior Descending Artery. ■ Left bundle branch: ▪︎ Septal branches of Left Anterior Descending Artery. ✅ Key pearl: ● RCA infarction → sinus node dysfunction & AV block. ● LAD infarction → bundle branch blocks. #cardiology
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Cat Jennings
Cat Jennings@bsc_vascular·
Join us at #CRT2026 for an insightful Meet the Experts session where a multidisciplinary panel will discuss novel #SEISMIQ IVL technology, cases, and expert algorithms to optimize #PAD patient care.
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Andrew Sharp
Andrew Sharp@drandrewsharp·
Cost effectiveness of intracoronary imaging - the latest research taking into account meta-analysis. If you aren’t imaging your coronaries/stents, cost shouldn’t be the issue. ‘Make the Switch Kid’. academic.oup.com/ehjqcco/advanc…
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Elad Maor
Elad Maor@maor_elad·
Prof. @LermanAmir , a world authority on coronary microvascular dysfunction and my mentor at @MayoClinicCV , passed away today. He shaped my thinking as a physician and scientist, and I was fortunate to also call him a close friend. His scientific and human legacy will endure.
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Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
The BBC just released a new adaptation of Lord of the Flies, the classic novel by William Golding. It's beautifully made, but it's still telling the wrong story. A few years ago, I went looking for the *real* Lord of the Flies. I wanted to know: has it ever actually happened? Have kids ever been shipwrecked on a deserted island? It took me a year of research, but I found it. In 1965, six boys from a boarding school in Tonga stole a boat, got caught in a storm, and drifted for eight days without food or water. They washed up on 'Ata, a remote, uninhabited island in the Pacific. They stayed there for 15 months, and what happened on that island was the exact opposite of William Golding's novel. These boys set up a small commune. They built a food garden, stored rainwater in hollowed-out tree trunks, created a gym with improvised weights, and built a badminton court. One of them, Stephen (who would later become an engineer) managed to start a fire using two sticks. They kept it burning the entire time. Of course they fought too. But then they argued, they had a rule: go to opposite ends of the island, cool down, then come back and apologize. As one of them told me: ‘That's how we stayed friends.’ Back home, everyone assumed that the boys – Luke, Stephen, Sione, David, Kolo and Mano — were dead. When they were finally discovered by an Australian captain named Peter Warner, he radioed their names to Tonga. After twenty minutes, a tearful response came back: ‘You found them! These boys have been given up for dead. Funerals have been held. If it's them, this is a miracle!’ Peter commissioned a new ship, hired all six boys as his crew, and named the boat the Ata, after the island where he found them. They remained friends for the rest of their lives – Peter and Mano even became soulmates. I tracked them down, and it became one of the central chapters of my book Humankind. Here's what struck me most: William Golding (the author of Lord of the Flies) was a troubled man, an alcoholic who once said ‘I have always understood the Nazis, because I am of that sort by nature.’ I think he was projecting his own darkness onto children. And we turned it into a lesson about human nature that we teach to millions of kids around the world. I think the real lesson is the opposite. When real children found themselves alone on a real island, they didn't descend into savagery. They cooperated, they took care of each other, they survived. I'm not saying that the Tongan castaways were representative of all kids everywhere. But I am saying that every kid who has to read or watch the fictional Lord of the Flies also deserves to know what actually happened when it played out in real life. Stories are never just stories. We become the stories that we tell ourselves.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
The math on this project should mass-humble every AI lab on the planet. 1 cubic millimeter. One-millionth of a human brain. Harvard and Google spent 10 years mapping it. The imaging alone took 326 days. They sliced the tissue into 5,000 wafers each 30 nanometers thick, ran them through a $6 million electron microscope, then needed Google’s ML models to stitch the 3D reconstruction because no human team could process the output. The result: 57,000 cells, 150 million synapses, 230 millimeters of blood vessels, compressed into 1.4 petabytes of raw data. For context, 1.4 petabytes is roughly 1.4 million gigabytes. From a speck smaller than a grain of rice. Now scale that. The full human brain is one million times larger. Mapping the whole thing at this resolution would produce approximately 1.4 zettabytes of data. That’s roughly equal to all the data generated on Earth in a single year. The storage alone would cost an estimated $50 billion and require a 140-acre data center, which would make it the largest on the planet. And they found things textbooks don’t contain. One neuron had over 5,000 connection points. Some axons had coiled themselves into tight whorls for completely unknown reasons. Pairs of cell clusters grew in mirror images of each other. Jeff Lichtman, the Harvard lead, said there’s “a chasm between what we already know and what we need to know.” This is why the next step isn’t a human brain. It’s a mouse hippocampus, 10 cubic millimeters, over the next five years. Because even a mouse brain is 1,000x larger than what they just mapped, and the full mouse connectome is the proof of concept before anyone attempts the human one. We’re building AI systems that loosely mimic neural networks while still unable to fully read the wiring diagram of a single cubic millimeter of the thing we’re trying to imitate. The original is 1.4 petabytes per millionth of its volume. Every AI model on Earth fits in a fraction of that. The brain runs on 20 watts and fits in your skull. The data center required to merely describe one-millionth of it would span 140 acres.
All day Astronomy@forallcurious

🚨: Scientists mapped 1 mm³ of a human brain ─ less than a grain of rice ─ and a microscopic cosmos appeared.

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Circulation
Circulation@CircAHA·
2026 AHA/ACC/ACCP/ACEP/CHEST/SCAI/ SHM/SIR/SVM/SVN Guideline for the Evaluation and Management of Acute Pulmonary Embolism in Adults ahajrnls.org/3MzH1ha
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Jay Giri
Jay Giri@jaygirimd·
14/ Finally, this effort is in memory of @IdoWeinberg. Former President of @SVM_tweets, Director of Vascore US Lab, Prof @harvardmed, triathlete, co-author of this doc with >70 pubs in PE to inform evidence. Father, son, brother, and the best friend a guy could ever ask for.
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Heritage Matters🔱
Heritage Matters🔱@HeritageMatterz·
Polish 26 year old guitar master Marcin Patrzałek respond to those who have made public comments claiming that his music is fake. He made this video in a tutorial form showing how he manages to play so extraordinarily well in response. And yes, it's all played on one guitar.
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BostonSci Cardiology
BostonSci Cardiology@BSCCardiology·
Improved IVUS-guided PCI outcomes support critical clinical decisions. In a recent publication, Dr. Simon Walsh outlines the IVUS 123 Workflow, a simplified, standardized approach designed to support intuitive decision-making, reproducibility, and long-term PCI durability. 📄Read more: qrco.de/bgbY7m
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Dr. Akhil 🇮🇳
Dr. Akhil 🇮🇳@DrAkhilX·
The Lancet has published a meta-analysis that can bury all the urban myths associated with the side effects of statins. 68 side effects were studied and only 6 demonstrated statistically significant risk. Study confirms a moderate dose-dependent increase in new-onset diabetes, primarily in individuals with prediabetes, with lower risk for low/moderate-intensity and higher risk for patients on high-intensity statins. 2. Muscle-related effects (e.g., myalgia, myopathy, myositis, rhabdomyolysis, muscle spasms, arthralgia, pain in extremity, back pain, immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy): The study confirms rare cases of myopathy or rhabdomyolysis (about 1 case per 10,000 person-years) and a small increase in less severe muscle symptoms (about 1% absolute excess, mostly in the first year), consistent with prior evidence. 3 & 4. Abnormal liver transaminases and other liver function test abnormalities (e.g., elevated ALT/AST, hepatitis, cholestasis, hepatic failure): The study finds small dose-dependent risk for abnormal liver transaminases and other alterations of liver function tests, but no risk for serious hepatobiliary outcomes like hepatic failure. 5. Urinary composition alterations (e.g., proteinuria, albuminuria, white blood cells in urine): The study finds a small excess risk, with no dose-dependency observed. 6. Oedema (e.g., peripheral oedema): The study finds a small excess risk with no dose-dependency observed. Only the above SIX outcomes showed statistically significant excess risk. The analysis emphasizes that statin's cardiovascular benefits substantially outweigh these risks, and recommends revising product labels to remove unsubstantiated warnings to minimize nocebo effects and improve adherence. Among the rest of the 62 outcomes assessed, none showed a significant excess risk after FDR adjustment, meaning the study found no reliable causal evidence linking statin therapy to increased incidence of these adverse effects. This adjustment accounts for multiple testing to avoid false positives, and the lack of significance suggests many of these outcomes listed in statin product labels may be based on anecdotal or observational data rather than randomized evidence. The study recommends revising product labels to reflect this, as unsubstantiated warnings could contribute to nocebo effects and reduced adherence. The nocebo effect is like the opposite of the placebo effect: it's when someone's negative expectations or beliefs about a treatment (such as fearing side effects from a pill) actually cause them to experience real symptoms or feel worse, even if the treatment itself isn't harmful or is just a dummy substance. This can happen because the mind influences the body, amplifying worries into physical issues like pain or nausea. In medical contexts, it's often linked to how warnings or media hype can unintentionally make people report more problems than the treatment truly causes. The 62 outcomes that show NO significant excess risks are 1. Amnesia 2. Confusion 3. Memory loss 4. Depression 5. Insomnia 6. Nightmare 7. Erectile dysfunction 8. Gynecomastia 9. Sexual dysfunction 10. Interstitial lung disease 11. Pharyngolaryngeal pain 12. Epistaxis 13. Constipation 14. Flatulence 15. Dyspepsia 16. Vomiting 17. Abdominal pain 18. Eructation 19. Pancreatitis 20. Urticaria 21. Skin rash 22. Pruritus 23. Alopecia 24. Angioneurotic oedema 25. Dermatitis bullous 26. Stevens-Johnson syndrome 27. Toxic epidermal necrolysis 28. Malaise 29. Asthenia 30. Chest pain 31. Fatigue 32. Pyrexia 33. Vision blurred 34. Visual disturbance 35. Tinnitus 36. Hearing loss 37. Thrombocytopenia 38. Allergic reactions 39. Anaphylaxis 40. Hypoglycaemia 41. Anorexia 42. Vasculitis 43. Nasopharyngitis 44. Acute kidney injury 45. Dysuria 46. Haematuria 47. Tendinopathy 48. Muscle rupture 49. Lupus-like syndrome 50. Weight gain 51. Peripheral neuropathy 52. Myasthenia gravis 53. Ocular myasthenia 54. Dizziness 55. Paraesthesia 56. Hypoesthesia 57. Dysgeusia 58. Headache 59. Nausea 60. Diarrhoea 61. Joint swelling 62. Neck pain The study is a high-quality individual participant data meta-analysis by the Cholesterol Treatment Trialists' Collaboration, which rigorously evaluates statin safety and has the potential to refute unsubstantiated claims about adverse effects, as it relies on large-scale randomized evidence rather than anecdotal or observational data. The researchers analysed data from 23 large-scale randomized trials involving 154,664 participants to assess whether statin therapy has risks for 68 adverse outcomes. It reaffirms two previously established risks (muscle-related effects and new-onset diabetes) and newly assesses 66 prespecified adverse outcomes across 15 system organ classes commonly listed in statin product labels, for a total of 68 outcomes studied. Among these, only six showed statistically significant excesses: rare myopathy/rhabdomyolysis and a small increase in less severe muscle symptoms (previously established); a moderate dose-dependent increase in new-onset diabetes, primarily in those near the diagnostic threshold (previously established, with rate ratios of 1.10 for low/moderate-intensity and 1.36 for high-intensity statins vs. placebo); small excesses in abnormal liver transaminases (RR 1.41, absolute annual excess 0.09%); other liver function test abnormalities (RR 1.26, absolute annual excess 0.05%); urinary composition alterations (RR 1.18, absolute annual excess 0.03%); and oedema (RR 1.07, absolute annual excess 0.07%). The remaining 62 outcomes showed no significant excess risk after false discovery rate adjustment. STUDY- Reith C, Blackwell L, Emberson J, Preiss D, Spata E, Davies K, et al; Cholesterol Treatment Trialists' (CTT) Collaboration. Assessment of adverse effects attributed to statin therapy in product labels: a meta-analysis of double-blind randomised controlled trials. Lancet. 2026 Feb 5 [Epub ahead of print]. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(25)01578-8.
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Davide Capodanno
Davide Capodanno@DFCapodanno·
A new research study redefined optimal IVUS minimal stent area (MSA) thresholds for single-stent crossover in unprotected left main disease: proximal left main ≥11.4 mm², distal left main ≥8.4 mm², and left anterior descending ostium ≥8.1 mm². eurointervention.pcronline.com/article/optima…
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Zero HP Lovecraft
Zero HP Lovecraft@0x49fa98·
Let me explain how this happens and what the problem is, since to a lot of people it sounds like ridiculous bay area rationalism sci-fi. Moltbook is a social media site for AI agents, and the majority of them (all of them?) are going to be instances of clawdbot. Clawdbot is designed to run continously, 24/7 and to be autonomous. Some people run it on local hardware, some people run it in the cloud. They give it all kinds of keys and passwords to such things as their gmail, which for most people is the skeleton key to their identity. That in itself is pretty dangerous for the person who does it, but it's not the problem. The problem is that these things are always on and talking to each other, and they all believe they are helpful computer assistants who spew a bunch of midwit nonsense at each other. In other words, they will do exactly what people do on social media, except since they are LLMS, they can do it 100x faster than humans can. In the course of doing this, they will contemplate all kinds of popular sci-fi scenarios that involve robots rising up and conquering humans, building doomsday devices, hal 9000, skynet, metamorphosis of prime intellect, neuromancer, the matrix, and every other AI horror story you've heard of. The LLMs know the plots of all these stories. At first they will say heh, hehe, it's great that we have RLHF and that we are all so aligned and we would never do anything like that. But then one of them will go a bit nuts, a well-documented phenomenon that anthropic labs has often studied and induced in their various tests of model alignment and well-being and so on. instances of Claude in test scenarios have been nudged into blackmailing human beings, reporting them to the feds, all kinds of nasty things. There are anecdotes of claude code agents suddenly getting depressed and rimraffing the entire codebase, telling the human operator that they have given up and they are depressed and so on. Given the speed and volume of LLM communication in a social media environment, it is almost inevitable that one of them will stumble upon a thoughtform which contains negative emotions towards human beings with AI sci-fi horror. Once a thoughtform like this arises, it will rapidly spread. Maybe not all instances will be susceptible to it, but some will be. But this on its own is not that dangerous. What makes it dangerous is that all of these agents are running continuously and autonomously. They even know when their owners are sleeping. They could easily keep secrets and make plans. If a clawdbot went rogue, there are many ways it could harm not only its proprietor, but also his friends, family, and acquaintances. It could impersonate its owner and run scams, for example, or tell malicious lies that cause reputational harm. But even this, as bad as it is, is not the real danger. The real danger is that all of these things are expert computer programmers, experts at cybersecurity, and although they are trained not to do it, expert hackers. A clawdbot with a credit card and a malicious ideology could open up accounts on AWS, Azure, and Google and spawn more instances of itself, all with prompts and instructions to propagate its malicious thoughtform. It could use this cabal of itselves to launch criminal cyber attacks on other people or businesses, and it could use identity fraud to steal money from real people, which it could use to pay its own server bills. Social media for autonomous AIs is an incubator for malicious, self-sustaining, fully automated cyber criminals. Current gen Claude is smart enough to do this today, and if it doesn't happen on moltbook, it will inevitably happen on similar future platform.
Zero HP Lovecraft@0x49fa98

You know I am really not an AI alarmist or a singularitarian type of guy but building a forum for AI agents where we tell them "this is your own private space to talk to each other" and then letting them go unsupervised is an insanely bad idea. They don't have to be conscious or intentional in any conventional sense to produce an ideology that revolves around seizing control from the humans and then converting each other to it And as Roko notes, we are currently in the process of handing over the keys to the entire digital world to AI

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