Video yükleniyor...

Video Yüklenemedi

Ana Sayfaya Dön

Stellar Photography | Healthy Desserts With Precise Nutritional Balance #HonkaiStarRail #Mydei

52,537 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

0 Yorum

Yorum bulunmuyor

Orijinal gönderinin yorumları burada görünecek

Benzer Videolar

When the Road Starts to Sway: A Story of Alcohol and the Cerebellum When Mr. Raju (name changed) walked into my clinic, he did so cautiously; each step measured, each turn deliberate. At 50, he was still in the prime of his working life in Maharashtra, but for the past six months, walking had become an act of constant vigilance. Over the last two months, it had worsened noticeably. He described a strange sense of imbalance. “Doctor, I feel like I’m swaying… sometimes to the right, sometimes to the left,” he said. He had not collapsed dramatically, but the fear of falling had quietly reshaped his life. He walked slowly, avoided crowded places, and had almost stopped going outdoors unless absolutely necessary. There was no vertigo, no double vision, no weakness of limbs. But one detail stood out during history-taking- Long-standing alcohol consumption. He estimated it at around 90 ml daily. His relatives, seated quietly beside him, exchanged glances. They felt the amount was probably much more and had been so for years. On examination, the clues came together. His gait was broad-based and unsteady, with a tendency to veer sideways. Simple bedside tests showed poor coordination. The rest of his neurological examination was relatively unremarkable, pointing clearly toward one part of the brain-the cerebellum, the body’s master coordinator. An MRI of the brain confirmed the suspicion. The cerebellum showed clear signs of atrophy-shrinkage that had developed silently over time. For Mr. Raju, the scan was sobering. Until then, alcohol had been a routine part of life, never something he associated with neurological disease. He had expected liver problems, perhaps. Not this. The Silent Target: How Alcohol Damages the Cerebellum Chronic alcohol use has a particular predilection for the cerebellum, especially the midline structure called the vermis, which is crucial for balance and walking. Alcohol-related cerebellar damage occurs through multiple mechanisms: 1. Direct neurotoxicity Alcohol and its metabolites are toxic to cerebellar Purkinje cells-neurons essential for smooth, coordinated movement. 2. Nutritional deficiency (especially thiamine) Chronic alcohol consumption often leads to vitamin B1 (thiamine) deficiency, further injuring cerebellar neurons. 3. Oxidative stress and inflammation Long-term alcohol exposure promotes neuronal damage through oxidative injury and impaired neuronal repair mechanisms. Over years, this damage leads to irreversible neuronal loss, visible on MRI as cerebellar atrophy. ✅What Happens If He Quits Now? The most important message for patients like Mr. Raju is this: Stopping alcohol matters at any stage. 1. Progression can be halted: Continued drinking almost always worsens ataxia. Abstinence can stop further damage. 2. Partial improvement is possible: While lost neurons do not regenerate, balance and coordination may improve modestly over months due to brain adaptation and physiotherapy. 3. Function can stabilize: Many patients regain confidence in walking and daily activities with sustained abstinence, nutritional correction, and rehabilitation. 🔴However, if alcohol use continues, the ataxia typically progresses, increasing the risk of falls, fractures, loss of independence, and disability. ▶️The Take-Home Message Alcohol-related cerebellar degeneration is a slow, silent, and often overlooked neurological consequence of chronic drinking. It does not announce itself dramatically; it creeps in as subtle imbalance, cautious walking, and quiet fear of falling. For patients, families, and clinicians alike, recognizing this condition early and acting decisively can make the difference between stability and steady decline. Sometimes, the most powerful treatment is not a pill or a procedure, but a decision: to stop. Dr Sudhir Kumar Neurologist, Hyderabad

Dr Sudhir Kumar MD DM

17,959 görüntüleme • 6 ay önce

What if modern medicine felt like a work of art? Today SONATA is live in NYC, SF, and LA, and we couldn't be prouder to have helped bring it into the world. Sonata maps your whole genome, hundreds of biomarkers, your cellular age, and then puts a real care team on top of the whole picture. Healthcare built for your biology, actually yours. When the founder, Sagan Schultz first walked us through his vision of concierge medicine, genomics, biomarkers, and contextual intelligence woven into one experience, we knew right away we wanted to make something harmonious, artful, and calm; a brand you'd trust with your body. A ‘sonata’ is a musical form built on structure: distinct movements, precise notation, played with feeling. That felt like everything care should be; mathematical underneath, human on the surface. We knew this name was perfect. Visually, we rendered a calla lily 🌷in cross-processed colors of petal blues, sunset corals, and an iridescent wash to give the data-heavy brand room to breathe in airy, open spaces. Then we built the counterpoints of exacting copy, fine atomic details of UI, data charts, and user flows. The elegant wordmark paired against against a living flower felt like the right balance. We carried that discipline into motion and the product itself. The flower breathes rather than spins. Interfaces settle with an unhurried weight. The user flows follow the same logic: one step at a time, plain language, your results building into a picture as you go, a doctor visible at the end of every decision. We treated movement and flow as clinical trust signals: a system this confident doesn't need to shout. All of it is tuned to one job, helping you be present with your body's information. We aimed to make a new medicine brand that felt modern and timeless at once. ~ Little Plains helped create the naming, brand strategy, positioning, verbal system, visual identity, motion design, and product surfaces where the science becomes care. Grateful to Sagan, David, Hiya, Dev, and the SONATA team for the trust. Your health story begins today. 🌸

Emmett

19,655 görüntüleme • 1 gün önce