Patrick Weix, MD, PhD

1.4K posts

Patrick Weix, MD, PhD

Patrick Weix, MD, PhD

@patrickweixmd

#UTSW #MIGS #vNOTES #GynRobotics Compulsive reader. Cooking nut. Another vegan MD. Is that bread baking... Comments/retweets my own.

Las Colinas, TX Присоединился Ekim 2010
409 Подписки270 Подписчики
Patrick Weix, MD, PhD ретвитнул
Howard Luks MD
Howard Luks MD@hjluks·
7 Things This 62-Year-Old Orthopedic Surgeon Would Tell His 30-Year-Old Self I turned 62 this year. That's 32 years of orthopedic practice, thousands of patients, and enough pattern recognition to see who ends up on my surgical schedule at 60 and who's still hiking at 80. If I could go back, here's what I'd tell my 30-year-old self: 1. Your joints have a finite number of hard efforts—budget them wisely The runners you see at 75 aren't the ones who went hard every day at 30. Tissue capacity is a resource you spend, not a limitless well. Recovery isn't weakness, it's a strategy. 2. Muscle mass in your 30s is cognitive insurance for your 60s The muscle (myokine)-brain axis isn't theoretical—you'll see it in your patients. Building capacity now means maintaining function later. Your central nervous system adapts faster at 30 than it ever will again. Use that window. 3. The patients who age well aren't optimizers—they're maintainers Consistency beats intensity over 30 years. The boring habits compound. Your healthiest 75-year-olds never had perfect programming. They had sustainable habits that didn't require heroic willpower or constant optimization. 4. Learn to train around injuries now, not through them Your ego at 30 creates your limitations at 60. Every tissue has a breaking point—inflammation doesn't make you tougher. The guys who "pushed through" are often the ones on your surgical schedule. 5. Metabolic health is invisible until it isn't Your fasting glucose at 80 feels the same as 105—until it doesn't. Insulin resistance is silent for years before diagnosis. The lifestyle choices you make now about walking, eating, and moving determine whether your 60s are spent managing diabetes or staying off medications. 6. Horizontal movement > vertical achievement The status you're chasing at 30 won't matter at 60. But your ability to hike, cycle, and play with grandkids? That matters immensely. Train for capacity, not PRs. 7. The injuries you ignore at 30 become chronic pain at 60 That shoulder twinge you're training through will limit your ability to lift your grandkid. Scar tissue doesn't heal like young tissue—it compensates. See the physical therapist now. You'll wish you had when you're sitting in my clinic.
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True Vanguard
True Vanguard@TheTrueVanguard·
Prove to me you’re an old gamer in one sentence. I’ll drop a like if I’m convinced.
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UTSW_ObGyn
UTSW_ObGyn@UTSW_ObGyn·
UT Southwestern is proud to be ranked by @usnews as the No. 1 hospital in DFW for the ninth straight year, as well as one of the nation’s top centers for obstetric and gynecologic care.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
What game?
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Howard Luks MD
Howard Luks MD@hjluks·
A concept we are going to discuss a lot @simplavida… this will build on one of our recent podcasts along the same line. “Enough” For athletes whose goal isn’t to break records but to break through the barriers of aging: consistency over intensity, and sustainability over extremes should further into focus. Strong enough to carry the weight of life—and maybe a few grocery bags for a neighbor. Fast enough to outrun the creeping effects of time and stay playful with the next generation. VO2 good enough to enjoy hikes, bike rides, or simply chasing the sunrise. When longevity is the goal, performance takes on a different definition. We train not for a podium finish but for the long game: to stay active, avoid injuries, and live a life filled with movement, purpose, and vitality. It’s not about how much you can push in a single session—it’s about showing up tomorrow, next week, and next decade. Enough isn’t settling. It’s the art of balance: just the right dose of strength, speed, and endurance to keep going. Train for enough. Because when you’re in it for the long haul, “enough” is everything.
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Secretary Deb Haaland
Secretary Deb Haaland@SecDebHaaland·
This incredible milestone, decades in the making, will permanently protect an essential wildlife migration corridor and treasured landscape within Grand Teton National Park! doi.gov/pressreleases/…
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Surgical Ergonomics
Surgical Ergonomics@SurgErgonomics·
A huge milestone at the @AAGL 2024 conference to give a special lecture and well as having a booth with new logo and branding! The journey of a thousand miles indeed begins with the first step (or a painful neck and jaw in my case)! 💕🙏🏽 @SocSurgErgo @GeetaLalMD @acog
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Secretary Deb Haaland
Secretary Deb Haaland@SecDebHaaland·
.@POTUS' Bipartisan Infrastructure Law has delivered for our nation, and today's new report confirms that. @Interior’s implementation of the law has supported over 28,000 jobs & added $3.3 billion to the economy. This is Investing in America. ow.ly/H8Hf50U8efP
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Protect Kamala Harris ✊
Protect Kamala Harris ✊@DisavowTrump20·
Dr. Fauci is an American hero who helped lead our country through the pandemic and saved lives. RETWEET if you are thankful for Dr. Fauci!
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The Editorial Board
The Editorial Board@johnastoehr·
11. The answer is the rightwing media apparatus. It is huge. It is everywhere. It is dominant. And the Democrats have no counter to it.
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Applied Medical GYN
Applied Medical GYN@AppliedMed_GYN·
🎺Jazz up your calendar for #AAGL24 by joining our Product Theater on Mon, Nov 18 at 1 pm! 🎷 Watch how leading experts manage complexities with #vNOTES - the latest innovation to advance GYN surgery.
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Timothy Snyder
Timothy Snyder@TimothyDSnyder·
Lesson 1: Do not obey in advance. Thread of lessons from my book #OnTyranny. Written in 2016.
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Secretary Deb Haaland
Secretary Deb Haaland@SecDebHaaland·
Access to the outdoors is something that everyone deserves. Read about how we’ve leveraged tools like the Outdoor Recreation Legacy Partnership program to expand access in states like Florida in @AsstSecEstenoz and my opinion piece. ow.ly/rZFn50U3Ixn
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Howard Luks MD
Howard Luks MD@hjluks·
We get health-related risk calculations all wrong. We fear injury from weight training. We fear getting arthritis from running. But--- we don't fear the risks of inactivity and the slow, relentless, gradual decay and decline that ensues. The actual risks of being injured by working out properly are very low. Running doesn't cause osteoarthritis, and it doesn't make it worse. The decline that occurs from being sedentary creeps up on us. We don't see the gradual decline in our health or function; we normalize the changes. You can't put your socks on while standing... you should be able to. You can't dry your feet without sitting down when you leave the shower. You stumble forward more often and catch your feet on objects more often. Most people think we should be short of breath on stairs. Or perhaps your doctor has told you you're prediabetic... or your blood pressure is 130/80. That doesn't sound high, right? Well, these are flashing red lights. A systolic BP above 130 renders a 4x higher risk of stroke. That's high. An elevated A1c might not qualify you as a diabetic... but it will, soon enough--- and all the nasty consequences that follow will alter your life dramatically. The fear is real... I agree. However, the only way to overcome that fear is by proving to yourself and your brain that you won't be injured by pursuing healthier lifestyle choices such as weight training. Many of us, left to our own devices, will initiate a program that is too hard... and we will injure ourselves. That's why we should work with trained professionals or follow online guidance that suits our current condition. Then, you can build towards intensity if that's what you crave. And you'll soon notice that the fear is gone.
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Jocelyn J. Fitzgerald MD
Jocelyn J. Fitzgerald MD@jjfitzgeraldMD·
It does not make sense to have issues affecting medical care or basic human rights be different state to state.
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Frank Conniff
Frank Conniff@FrankConniff·
Yes, please, by all means political pundits who are always wrong about everything, tell us why the election went the way it did and what it all means.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
The town of Hay-on-Wye in Wales is completely dedicated to books and has 26 bookshops but only 2000 residents. That’s one bookshop per 77 people. [📹 happyenchantedhome]
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Barack Obama
Barack Obama@BarackObama·
It took several days to count every ballot in 2020, and it’s very likely we won’t know the outcome tonight either. So please keep a few things in mind as you make your voice heard today: – Thousands of election workers around the country are working hard today. Respect them. Thank them.  – Don’t share things before checking your sources.  – Let the process run its course. It takes time to count every ballot.
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