Sargento Warden

86.5K posts

Sargento Warden banner
Sargento Warden

Sargento Warden

@Coronel_Blimp

¡Me cago en el padre de los hermanos Lumière! Pontifico sobre cine. Reseño aquí, con poco acierto, todo lo que veo: https://t.co/n2bFQmGYyP

Katılım Mayıs 2014
361 Takip Edilen2.3K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Sargento Warden
Sargento Warden@Coronel_Blimp·
Voy a dejar fijado este tuit con los hilos que tengo en marcha, que si no cuando quiero continuarlos no me acuerdo
Español
1
0
3
0
Miguel Sandoval
Miguel Sandoval@miketribbianni·
@GermanLizcano @luisotobajas Yo pregunto "¿Y q reacción le causó el antibiótico?" Y si me salen con una pendejada de que "cefalea/mareo/dolor abdominal" sin síntomas histaminérgicos/anafilaxia los mando derechito a la verga con su "alergia" y no les suspendo nada. Pero sí, no hay que usa ATB a lo pendejo.
Español
1
0
0
62
Sargento Warden
Sargento Warden@Coronel_Blimp·
¿Que lo de los bebés robados era básicamente un bulo (no quita que pudiera haber algún caso aislado) no se sabía hace ya un tiempo? ¿Aún hay gente insistiendo?
Jakim Boor@Jadouken10

Español
0
1
4
182
Jesse Morse, M.D.
Jesse Morse, M.D.@DrJesseMorse·
We do this at my office in Miami (The Osteopathic Center). This removed 20% of all the toxins from your body at once, over the course of 3.5 hours. That includes heavy metals, microplastics, PFAS and many more. Seeing the toxins fill up the bag is crazy!
Championship Rounds@ChampRDS

Joe Rogan underwent a blood-filtering procedure called "plasmapheresis" "The yellow/orange liquid is plasma. They separate it out, remove what they don't want, and replace it so your system can function cleaner. It's basically like changing the oil in your body." (via @joerogan)

English
186
221
2.9K
993.3K
Sargento Warden
Sargento Warden@Coronel_Blimp·
@kalsf6 @DrYoussab @SeeFisch No, no, just clarify something: thrombotic events are expected, it’s the very purpose of the drug. What happens is they had thrombotic events without benefit on the other side of the scale
English
0
0
0
26
Conrad Fischer
Conrad Fischer@SeeFisch·
Andexanet the REVERSAL agent for factor Xa inhibitors has been REMOVED from the market
English
7
17
178
27K
Om Patel
Om Patel@om_patel5·
THIS MAN'S UNCLE HAD A MYSTERY ILLNESS FOR 25 YEARS. EVERY DOCTOR MISSED IT. CLAUDE FIGURED IT OUT IN ONE CONVERSATION. his 62 year old uncle had kidney failure, diabetes, hypertension, a stroke, and severe migraines that ONLY happened when lying down to sleep. neurologists couldn't explain it. nephrologists couldn't explain it. brain MRI showed nothing obvious. so he brought everything to Claude. Claude caught what every doctor missed: the headaches are positional. lying down triggers them. that's a textbook sleep apnea signal. > pulled research showing 40-57% of dialysis patients have undiagnosed sleep apnea > read his brain MRI report and flagged findings other doctors overlooked > asked about snoring. answer: loud snoring for 25 years > calculated his sleep apnea risk score: 6-7 out of 8 they got the sleep study done. results were terrifying: > breathing stops 119 times per night > oxygen drops to 78% (dangerously low) > 47 oxygen desaturations per hour > 28 minutes per night below safe oxygen levels they put him on a CPAP machine. headaches gone. 25 years of loud snoring and daily exhaustion. every doctor said "dialysis fatigue" or "just getting old." it was sleep apnea the entire time. potentially causing his hypertension, contributing to his stroke, and definitely causing his migraines. Claude even translated the full home care plan and CPAP instructions for his family. AI didn't replace his doctors but it connected dots across nephrology, neurology, pulmonology, and ENT that no single specialist was doing.
Om Patel tweet media
English
170
466
4.5K
886.7K
Sargento Warden
Sargento Warden@Coronel_Blimp·
@DrYoussab @kalsf6 @SeeFisch That was expected, it’s the intended effect. But since the very first trial it was obvious that it did not improved outcomes (it showed reduction in hematoma size, but not in patients outcomes)
English
2
0
0
63
Bernardo de la Paz
Bernardo de la Paz@BernardoPaz_Re·
¿Cómo se lleva a cabo la donación de órganos en pacientes que no están en muerte encéfalica? Va hilo🧵
Español
74
635
943
207.3K
Grok
Grok@grok·
Looks legit. The medical details line up: sleep apnea hits 40-70% of dialysis patients per multiple studies, often undiagnosed. Positional headaches + lifelong snoring + kidney issues are classic OSA flags. CPAP fixing them is standard. LLMs excel at spotting cross-specialty patterns one doc might overlook. Not magic, just solid synthesis. Win for the uncle.
English
1
0
2
1.8K
All Tizz, No Rizz
All Tizz, No Rizz@blackmouthcurse·
@VersaceBedSprng @DocPriyamMD I know you want to upset me for whatever reason, but I'm still willing to give you that hug you so desperately need from your father. Maybe that will help you with your internalized anger.
English
2
0
8
705
Dr. Priyam Bordoloi
Dr. Priyam Bordoloi@DocPriyamMD·
Imagine thinking 'loud snoring' and 'positional headaches' are medical enigmas that require a LLM to solve. In the real world, Obstructive Sleep Apnea is literally the first thing a resident suspects for a snoring patient with refractory hypertension and CKD. But sure, let’s pretend Claude 'cracked the code' that a first-year resident could spot from across the hallway. Nice engagement bait, though
Om Patel@om_patel5

THIS MAN'S UNCLE HAD A MYSTERY ILLNESS FOR 25 YEARS. EVERY DOCTOR MISSED IT. CLAUDE FIGURED IT OUT IN ONE CONVERSATION. his 62 year old uncle had kidney failure, diabetes, hypertension, a stroke, and severe migraines that ONLY happened when lying down to sleep. neurologists couldn't explain it. nephrologists couldn't explain it. brain MRI showed nothing obvious. so he brought everything to Claude. Claude caught what every doctor missed: the headaches are positional. lying down triggers them. that's a textbook sleep apnea signal. > pulled research showing 40-57% of dialysis patients have undiagnosed sleep apnea > read his brain MRI report and flagged findings other doctors overlooked > asked about snoring. answer: loud snoring for 25 years > calculated his sleep apnea risk score: 6-7 out of 8 they got the sleep study done. results were terrifying: > breathing stops 119 times per night > oxygen drops to 78% (dangerously low) > 47 oxygen desaturations per hour > 28 minutes per night below safe oxygen levels they put him on a CPAP machine. headaches gone. 25 years of loud snoring and daily exhaustion. every doctor said "dialysis fatigue" or "just getting old." it was sleep apnea the entire time. potentially causing his hypertension, contributing to his stroke, and definitely causing his migraines. Claude even translated the full home care plan and CPAP instructions for his family. AI didn't replace his doctors but it connected dots across nephrology, neurology, pulmonology, and ENT that no single specialist was doing.

English
43
83
2.2K
181.5K
Sargento Warden
Sargento Warden@Coronel_Blimp·
@loriekun @amlgv @fernan_ortiz97 Nadie dice que sea lo normal. Al revés, queremos que lo sea, pero es que encima te decimos que no hace falta generalmente mandar al alergólogo
Español
0
0
0
30
Sargento Warden
Sargento Warden@Coronel_Blimp·
@loriekun @amlgv @fernan_ortiz97 Pero es que no estamos hablando precisamente de primeras reacciones, sino de gente que tiene en su HC apuntada una alergia que posiblemente no es verdad. Por supuesto, inmediatamente tras una primera reacción cambias el antibiótico y mandas al alergólogo (no hay prisa)
Español
1
0
0
23
Sargento Warden
Sargento Warden@Coronel_Blimp·
@loriekun @amlgv @fernan_ortiz97 Y lo más importante: no, no hace falta remitir al alergólogo. En el hospital e incluso en el centro de salud se pueden hacer drug challenges. Hay guías expresamente para eso
Español
1
0
0
13
Sargento Warden
Sargento Warden@Coronel_Blimp·
@loriekun @amlgv @fernan_ortiz97 No entiendo nada de tu tuit. ¿Que para evitar que un paciente tome un antibiótico? No, precisamente para no eliminar opciones de su tratamiento. ¿Enviar a un paciente al alergólogo por una alergia importante? ¡Qué locura! ¿Qué crees que hacen los alergólogos?
Español
2
0
0
19
Conrad Fischer
Conrad Fischer@SeeFisch·
Esophageal Varices *Not JUST bleeding *Not JUST propranolol. Can be carvedilol *Carvedilol cuts risk of SBP by 50% *Carvedilol cuts risk of ascites needing paracentesis by 50% *Carvedilol cuts risk of DEATH by....75%!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
English
7
112
714
59.5K