Dr Ra 𓂀

154 posts

Dr Ra 𓂀 banner
Dr Ra 𓂀

Dr Ra 𓂀

@thelasthazel

Sic Parvis Magna

At Science 参加日 Ağustos 2022
262 フォロー中27 フォロワー
Ramy.
Ramy.@VamyRellawy·
You got the money? stable? supported enough? go to USMLE straightforward don’t ask about neither UK nor Canada that’s it, simple as that.
English
7
46
626
48.1K
Dr Ra 𓂀 がリツイート
JP
JP@pathphamwarrior·
This is how I use Gemini to prepare for MCQs—for free: 1) I upload the study material to Gemini and use a prompt (in the CS) to generate MCQs directly from the content. 2) I create a dedicated folder on Google Drive, open a Google Doc, and copy the generated questions into it 🧵
JP tweet mediaJP tweet media
English
27
90
554
31.6K
Toby
Toby@oluwat0by·
Dr Odunaike 🇳🇬🇬🇧
Toby tweet mediaToby tweet mediaToby tweet media
Indonesia
411
445
8.9K
252.6K
Dr Ra 𓂀
Dr Ra 𓂀@thelasthazel·
@DrJanviL Hi Janvi, I just wanted to send u message but couldn’t. Id like to ask u some qn if u don’t mind?
English
0
0
0
10
Dr Janvi Lalchandani
Dr Janvi Lalchandani@DrJanviL·
I have recommended this book for MSRA multiple times in the past. The author has kindly offered me a 50% discount code for any of you who may want to purchase it If you would like this code, feel free to send me a DM/comment on this and I'll send it to you Not sponsored :)
Dr Janvi Lalchandani@DrJanviL

- I used this textbook amzn.eu/d/dQrLUjR which covers the Anatomy, Physiology, Pharmacology, Disease Pathology and Treatment of most basic subjects, in an extremely concise manner. Its written by a Cambridge graduate for medical students/ junior doctors and really helped me

English
3
0
10
3.3K
Dr Ra 𓂀 がリツイート
۟
۟@prdkyu·
it’ll all be worth it in the end it’ll all be worth it in the end it’ll all be worth it in the end it’ll all be worth it in the end
۟ tweet media
English
26
4.8K
29.4K
312.9K
Jaseja
Jaseja@PJaseja·
Famous X ray sign- What it mimics? #MedTwitter
Jaseja tweet media
English
22
27
225
51.8K
Dr Ra 𓂀
Dr Ra 𓂀@thelasthazel·
OH MY GOODNESS
DocXus@docxusofficial

A rare case where a surgeon accidentally developed his patient’s cancer Cancer is not considered contagious. If cancer cells from another person enter your body, your immune system is supposed to destroy them. But in very rare situations, biology doesn’t follow the rules. A 32-year-old man underwent emergency surgery for an aggressive soft-tissue cancer called malignant fibrous histiocytoma. Sadly, he died shortly after the operation due to complications. During the surgery, the 53-year-old surgeon accidentally injured the palm of his left hand while placing a drain. The wound was small, immediately cleaned, and properly dressed. No one thought much of it. Five months later, the surgeon noticed a hard lump growing at the exact spot where his hand had been injured. It slowly enlarged to about 3 cm, roughly the size of a large coin. The lump was surgically removed. The diagnosis was shocking. It was malignant fibrous histiocytoma, the same rare cancer the patient had. The surgeon was otherwise healthy. Tests showed no immune deficiency. So how could this happen? The DNA answered the question Pathologists compared both tumors under the microscope and found them to be identical in appearance. But the real proof came from DNA testing. Using genetic markers and HLA typing (a way of identifying tissue origin), doctors showed that the tumor in the surgeon’s hand carried genetic material from the patient. This meant only one thing: 👉 The cancer had been accidentally transplanted from patient to surgeon during surgery. Cancer cells likely entered through the small hand injury and managed to survive long enough to form a tumor. Fortunately, the tumor was completely removed. At two-year follow-up, the surgeon was healthy, with no recurrence and no spread. Why this case is so remarkable: This case does not mean cancer spreads through touch or casual contact. It shows that direct implantation of living cancer cells, under very specific conditions, can rarely lead to tumor growth, even in a healthy person. It’s a rare exception that reminds us: - Cancer isn’t contagious, but biology has loopholes - The immune system is powerful, not perfect - Medicine still encounters situations that challenge long-held beliefs

English
0
0
1
17
Dr Ra 𓂀
Dr Ra 𓂀@thelasthazel·
@DrSharandeep @cannula_service @ImperialNHS It is what a smart dr what could tell about but not exactly NHS expected. They’re expecting a superhero doc. I wonder is their system the same with their expectations?
English
0
0
0
24
Balazs (🦋cannulaservice.hibalazs.net)
"three week training programme" + "150 hours supervised clinical practice" = manage patients independently + deliver "autonomous care" Surely this is stretching the bounds of being called "advanced practice"? What do you even learn in such little time? @ImperialNHS
Balazs (🦋cannulaservice.hibalazs.net) tweet media
English
32
147
350
108.2K
Dr Ra 𓂀 がリツイート
Oren Gottfried, MD
Oren Gottfried, MD@OGdukeneurosurg·
Abdominal X-ray Signs by Robert Mariasi
Oren Gottfried, MD tweet media
English
3
820
2.6K
123.5K
Dr Ra 𓂀
Dr Ra 𓂀@thelasthazel·
So redhead Dolores
English
0
0
0
80
Dr Ra 𓂀
Dr Ra 𓂀@thelasthazel·
@SeeFisch How rude. You lose nothing by being kind.
English
0
0
0
45
Conrad Fischer
Conrad Fischer@SeeFisch·
I wrote 70 letters of recommendation for medical students only one single person connected with me to tell me where they matched
English
133
178
3.9K
363.6K
Tom
Tom@dr_tomparrott·
I’m a PGY2/FY2 doctor in Australia and currently earn a pre-tax salary of £71,150. There’s pros of cons of working here, but one upside is that your work is valued. The NHS does not want you.
English
19
65
507
52.6K