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#spleens
spleens-screenshots · 10 months
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Spleens from GrayStillPlays's playthrough of Sims 4
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acerodons · 1 year
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jacobitajoe · 10 months
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Spleens the cat from GrayStillPlay’s Sims 4 YouTube series. a demon. a creature. a little guy
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dante-crowley · 2 months
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my YouTube suggestions be like-
several videos of sad stories, music, animals, gaming… then a random video about this guy shows up- (tends to be after sad videos as well-)
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fleurdusoir · 2 years
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[...] et je tombe dans des spleens de miel et de roses qui n'en sont pas moins des spleens.
George Sand, A Gustave Flaubert, 9 mai 1869
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bpod-bpod · 11 months
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Directing Traffic
Chemical messengers called chemokines are the traffic police of your body, telling cells on the move where to go via a chemokine concentration gradient. Atypical chemokine receptors (ACKRs) on certain cells help create these gradients by binding and engulfing specific chemokines. Three called GPR182, ACKR3 and ACKR4 are located in lymph and blood vessels, and research suggests may be found together in certain microenvironments within organs. However, there’s no comprehensive map of where they are. Researchers now genetically engineer mice with fluorescently-tagged GPR182, ACKR3, ACKR4 and ACKR-specific chemokines to locate them. Fluorescence microscopy revealed unique and shared distribution patterns of these ACKRs in a variety of organs, including the spleen (pictured, ACKR4 in green, GPR182 in red). Meanwhile, fluorescently-tagged chemokines revealed distinct activity zones for ACKR4 and GPR182 in the liver. These mouse models, therefore, provide a useful tool to probe ACKRs in different organs and microenvironments.
Written by Lux Fatimathas
Image from work by Serena Melgrati and colleagues
Institute for Research in Biomedicine, Università della Svizzera italiana, Bellinzona, Switzerland
Image originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Published in PLOS Biology, May 2023
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spleenscat · 2 years
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"Yes, my child, good."
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Me and Spleens wip cuz why not
She's my favorite graystillplays sims character :3 ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
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I used this picrew as a ref for my hair and ears btw-
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Bye-bye
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spleens-screenshots · 10 months
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sophiathefallen · 2 years
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The world we're stuck in is a worse GrayStillPlays video
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acerodons · 9 months
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STOP SCROLLING
have you seen her??
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NOW YOU HAVE!
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dragon-queen21 · 1 year
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pridewishes · 2 years
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florida icons of spleens(graystillplays sims)
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ok
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Can we just talk about SPLEENS??
I feel like when it comes to organ whump we really only focus on the appendix, which makes sense. It’s a pretty standard procedure, and the organ isn’t vital or anything. But today I present to you: The spleen. A non-vital organ, the spleen aids greatly in our immunity, meaning your immune system’s a little screwed if it’s removed. It sits right behind the rib cage, but it’s surprisingly easy to remove. If it’s ruptured, you’re going to experience a WHOLE lot of internal bleeding. As someone who loves pretty severe whump and wholeheartedly adores torturing characters, this is actually amazing. Not only do you have the initial injury and the impact of having an organ removed, but now your character has next to no defense against common illnesses, and they’re going to get sick a LOOOOT. Just… just think about it. The spleen is absolutely perfect for all your whumpy needs.
I rest my case.
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gendersnatcher · 2 years
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I started thinking and now I’m sad
TW: talks of depression, mental health, olden day treatments for mental health 
so Tim in arguably the worst time in his life, lost his spleen. In Shakespeareian times they believed that mental health problems were attached to organs.
Deep depression was was attached to the spleen, 
To “fix” the persons mental health one of the things they’d do is get rid of some their blood in that area, because they believed this would get rid of some of the depression.
Tim lost his spleen.
this obviously didn’t help their mental health, but this was Shakespeareian times so bad mental health was looked at like it was instanity. And I can’t imagine the process of “curing” their mental health wasn’t painful. So most people would fake not having mental health issues.
I can’t be the only one seeing these parallels 
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