Haazzed

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Haazzed

Haazzed

@realHaazzed

Try not. Do or do nut.

Central Park, Manhattan Katılım Nisan 2021
445 Takip Edilen133 Takipçiler
Haazzed
Haazzed@realHaazzed·
@PerBylund @deanstein12 Still waiting for someone to explain why 2010 AHA forbids POH expansion. You would think that would be the starting point. If it's run as a for-profit business, then shareholder fiduciary duty comes before the patient.
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Per Bylund
Per Bylund@PerBylund·
@deanstein12 People might not agree with it, but that doesn't make it any less true...
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Per Bylund
Per Bylund@PerBylund·
If the government had allowed competition and entrepreneurship in healthcare, we would not be suffering from outdated standards and outrageous prices. Healthcare desperately needs to be subject to market forces.
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Physics In History
Physics In History@PhysInHistory·
The Big Bang theory says nothing about what banged, why it banged, or what happened before it banged. -- Alan Guth
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Ali A. Baaj MD
Ali A. Baaj MD@AliBaajMD·
Publication date June 1!
Ali A. Baaj MD tweet media
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Gaurab Chakrabarti
Gaurab Chakrabarti@Gaurab·
Instant coffee's hardest problem isn't drying. The dried output is mostly free sugars with a glass transition near 60°C. The powder hits a rubbery state at the dryer outlet and glues itself to the wall. The 1930s fix was 50% maltodextrin filler. It raised the glass transition above 100°C and the powder stopped sticking. Max Morgenthaler's 1937 Nestlé patent did something stranger: he pumped water at 175°C and 9 bar through a four cell cascade and hydrolyzed the bean's own hemicellulose into a polysaccharide. By 1952 Nestlé pushed the temperature higher and cut the additive. Coffee became its own binder. The same unit operation runs kraft pulp pre-hydrolysis, cellulosic ethanol pretreatment, and hydrothermal carbonization. Morgenthaler wasn't trying to invent the bio-economy. He just wanted to keep coffee powder from sticking to the dryer wall.
Gaurab Chakrabarti tweet media
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Lea Alhilali, MD
Lea Alhilali, MD@teachplaygrub·
Feeling bipolar about bilateral thalamic lesions? Unfortunately, the differential for bilateral thalamic lesions isn’t binary! But here’s an easy mnemonic to help: THALAMIC! T = Tumor (glioma) H = Hypoxic/ischemic encephalopathy A = Artery of Percheron Infarct L = Loss of thiamine (Wernicke’s) A = ADEM M = Metabolic/Toxic I = Internal cerebral vein thrombosis. Infection (west nile) C = Creutzfeld-Jacob Now you’ll never bypass a bilateral thalamic diagnosis with this easy mnemonic!
Lea Alhilali, MD tweet media
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Keith Siau
Keith Siau@drkeithsiau·
Proof that abdominal massage absolutely does work 😅
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Nick Mark MD
Nick Mark MD@nickmmark·
The good news is that the secondary attack rate (SAR) for Andes Virus is fairly low. The bad news is PCR is positive up to 2 weeks before symptoms. Unclear how infectious it is prior to symptoms but it’s worrisome that it could be.
Dr Steven Quay@quay_dr

Andes hantavirus spreading behavior: -76 index cases, 476 household contacts -16 (3.4%) of household contacts got infected -18% among sex partners; 1.2% other household contacts (p<0.001) - PCR blood test positive 5-15 days ahead of symptoms

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Sovey
Sovey@SoveyX·
I officially reached the end of the Internet. Don’t ask me what I searched to find this.
Sovey tweet media
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Haazzed
Haazzed@realHaazzed·
@OGdukeneurosurg Depends on what you're planning to do. If you're getting into sailing, the Carribean is a fun spot, trade wind routes are not just picturesque they are rich in history too. Scuba/snorkeling Indonesia/Malaysia/Phillipines. Both have great beaches.
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Oren Gottfried, MD
Oren Gottfried, MD@OGdukeneurosurg·
What is the all-time best ocean to visit?
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Keith Siau
Keith Siau@drkeithsiau·
This BSG guidance document is like a textbook for upper GI endoscopy and is a must read for endoscopists and trainees 💡🆕
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Carlos E. Perez
Carlos E. Perez@IntuitMachine·
This is the FUTURE of the cameraman. Full-body exoskeleton rig loaded with pro cameras, massive telephoto lenses, lights & gimbals — and he’s walking on a treadmill like the gear weighs nothing. One guy = entire film crew. Hollywood just got Iron Man’d. 🔥 (via @jeff.in.china / @Rainmaker1973) What a time to be alive.
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RADIOLOGISTS
RADIOLOGISTS@DrAyubaD·
Banger Case🔥🔥 NEURO 🔥🔥 Young adult with chronic back pain, progressive lower limb weakness and sensory loss. MRI Spine (Sagittal T2). What sign is shown here? What is your diagnosis?
RADIOLOGISTS tweet media
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Kevin McKernan
Kevin McKernan@Kevin_McKernan·
Your Mother’s Day “Eat Z Bugs” reminder.
Science girl@sciencegirl

Scientists discovered one of the most nutrient-dense substances in nature inside an unlikely source: a cockroach. The species, Diploptera punctata, is unusual because it gives birth to live young instead of laying eggs. During development, the embryos are fed a nutrient-rich, milk-like fluid inside the mother’s body. That fluid forms tiny protein crystals in the embryos’ stomachs. When researchers analyzed the crystals, they found a highly concentrated mix of proteins, fats, sugars, and all 9 essential amino acids required in the human diet. The crystals also appear to release energy slowly during digestion, providing a steady supply of nutrients as the embryos grow. The discovery attracted attention after some reports suggested the substance could be more calorie-dense than mammalian milk, including human breast milk. But scientists have not shown that it offers special health benefits for humans, and harvesting it on a large scale would be extremely impractical. Researchers remain interested in the finding because it demonstrates how evolution can produce unexpected biological adaptations even in one of the world’s most disliked insects. Inside this tiny cockroach species, nature developed microscopic nutrient crystals capable of sustaining life during one of the most demanding stages of development. Learn more: "Cockroach Milk: A Promising Superfood or Nothing but Hype?"

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Jessica Rose 🤙
Jessica Rose 🤙@JesslovesMJK·
I'm starting to wonder if Mercury isn't anything like what we've been told.
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Haazzed
Haazzed@realHaazzed·
@grok @luxentX Using this frame is the post accurate in it's conclusion
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The Ship of Theseus is about gradual replacement of parts while preserving overall form and function. Selling sand doesn't fit cleanly—it's extraction and removal of a resource, not swapping equivalent parts to keep the "ship" (your land/territory) intact. The soil changes permanently without restoration, so it's more like selling pieces of the hull than philosophical continuity. Identity of a country lies in its people and borders, not specific grains of sand.
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Ooi Beng Cheang
Ooi Beng Cheang@luxentX·
Tak setuju negara kita jual pasir kepada luar negara. It's literally selling off your country's soil. This is not like selling mineral rights but quite an emotional issue also. Sand mining also has a lot of environmental repercussions.
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HVKumar
HVKumar@hvkumar·
@krishashok Why would we want to eat rotten food when we get excellent cottage cheese fresh anywhere in the country? Next question is what - why do Indians use no toilet paper?
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Krish Ashok
Krish Ashok@krishashok·
India makes more milk than any country on Earth. Italy has 400 cheeses. India has roughly zero aged ones. Ever wondered why?
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