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#werners syndrome
raekiez · 4 months
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why did it take make so long to realize the reason they made snakes nipples always hard in mgs4 was because he's wearing a compression shirt for chronic pain
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deusvervewrites · 7 months
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Given that we have the real life Werner syndrome, which causes accelerated aging, is caused by genetics and could be the reason why Higake(4th user) to die young at 40. It is equally likely that due to his Quirk likely giving him extreme stress when it is used, he just aged faster and didn’t see a mirror for 20 years due to living in the woods.
The real question is why the Nomus have big brains but then it makes perfect sense that Garaki is a sadistic doctor and he intentionally made them look monstrous on purpose and easy to control for AFO. Because we have Kurogiri, who also is a Nomu with multiple Quirks fused together, Garaki intentionally made the rest of the Noumu bad.
Now for the issue on OFA itself, if someone else other than Izuku was the ninth user or if Izuku gave it to a tenth user, All Might is correct that the user needs a lot of strength and endurance to survive the backlash that OFA will inflict. The body would need to be conditioned to even withstand the power, as it will also make the user original Quirk(should is exist) even more powerful
I know that the Noumus being mindless is a feature not a bug, meant to create mindlessly subservient minions and mooks to throw at the Heroes, but we've seen two instances (flashback during All Might's explanation, Spinner) of people having their brains shut down from the strain and neither of them needed the brains exposed so I still don't get what that's about other than aesthetics. We can also infer that Kurogiri was the first Noumu based on the timeline and Vigilantes. Presumably, multiple Quirks being spliced into a single Quirk gets around the brain-destroying issue.
I've actually seen several metas and fics with the premise that One For All is simply too powerful for Midoriya to ever pass it on again, well before the ""reveal"" about it killing Quirked users. I mean, after what it did to Midoriya the first times, and considering it will only ever be stronger than that...
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horatiosroom · 1 year
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Some brother Guy thoughts/questions…
(very mild spoilers maybe?)
I wonder if Guy feels jealous of Andreas and Piero’s relationship. Like I’m sure he’d be just as much of an asshole even if he wasn’t, but it seems like he wants to be included among the other artists and he can’t have that same relationship with Aedoc. He’s been in the scriptorium longer than Andreas and yet this rando is the one who gets all the praise and attention. I don’t think Guy has an inferiority complex or imposter syndrome like Werner does, but I do think he still wants to be recognized and appreciated.
What’s Guy’s deal with The Mirror of Simple Souls? Andreas mentions that Guy is protective of it, but I don’t think we ever learn why. I’m curious about how he feels when the book goes missing from his desk, and how he would react to it being destroyed or being returned to him.
Does he have brown eyes? I think he has brown eyes
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practically-an-x-man · 2 months
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uteri ??? plural ??? two ?????? my condolences man what
Yep! One of my many (groovy) mutations
I'll spare you the full explanation but I started having severe abdominal pain when I was 12 (when my mutation manifested itself like any other X-Man, obviously /j). When I say severe, I mean I couldn't eat or sleep and spent a lot of time locked in the bathroom or curled up with a heating pad. My parents, teachers, other adults in my life didn't believe me and thought I was faking to get out of responsibilities, so I went a year without being diagnosed at all, followed by another year of repeat misdiagnoses since the condition is rare (they assumed it was either endometriosis or some kind of gastro issue).
Long story short, finally got a good doc, got diagnosed with Herlyn-Werner-Wunderlicht Syndrome, had surgery to correct the blockage that had formed (one of the uteri formed blocked and was filling up with fluid, which was causing the pain. it's a good thing the uterus lining is flexible bc otherwise it could have burst and gone septic. as it was the doc said my pain was likely as severe as labor pains.). I'm fine now but I still have two uteri
Oh and only one kidney. and extra ribs. and mandibular tori. and missing wisdom teeth. and hypermobility/suspected hEDs. and that's not even counting the mental health/neurodivergency side of things.
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kiersau · 1 year
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can you IMAGINE if we got to hear werner's confession in the church after the bonfire? i would kill to know what he says! my guess is something to do with his pride + envy of others (but then again i wonder if he's actually that self-aware)
klsdjflskdjf i was gonna say, is he that self-aware? but i think he is, actually. i also think he might confess impostor syndrome or the feeling of being a fraud since it's hinted/implied that he's kind of afraid of blood/bodies.
but werner is my poor little meow meow and i think he's a great doctor lol
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kunosoura · 2 years
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I think BCS works fairly well as a post-“second golden age of TV”/“prestige drama” style show... unlike the violent catharsis of breaking bad with gus/tuco/the neonazis, violence in BCS only seems to drive home a hollowness. Lalo dies, and Gus can relax his guard a bit, but he realizes that he’s stuck forever in a dangerous life that he can’t possibly share with anyone in any meaningful way. Nacho dies, and it means nothing to anyone except for his father who loved and will grieve for him, and Mike, to whom it proves his hypocrisy utterly. Howard dies for no good reason. Werner dies for a perfectly logical reason that tarnishes everyone involved.
Breaking Bad was sort of satirizing Walter White’s incredible main character syndrome, where he gets his cancer diagnosis and decides he’s going to “make everything right” in his life, but it still follows a lot of the trends of its contemporaries. Tuco dies when he’s at his most dangerous. Gus dies at the height of his feud with Walt. The neonazis are slaughtered in a final act of violent repentance. Walt himself dies shortly thereafter. There’s a suggestion of narrative justice behind all the violence, like matters are resolved or at least transformed. Like, realistically Walt would have died a dozen times, even with Saul’s help, but the narrative saves that for last - as an act of closure. And there’s always a logic of narrative justice to who dies
I can’t help but think about Twin Peaks: The Return again, where the antagonist is killed by a random guy with a stupid green glove. Like a piss-take on the idea of violence resolving the complex problems BOB represented. Better Call Saul hits on a similar note, reflecting how it also is in conversation with the genre that shaped it. Violence in Better Call Saul never solves anything; it might stop a threat, but it doesn’t do anything about the fundamentally dangerous lives the characters lead, and the aftermath of violence is less catharsis and more people taking an inventory of the damage and sweeping up the rubble.
When Walter confessed to Skylar, killed the Neonazis, and freed Jesse, he did penance and redeemed himself - if not by any sane ethical framework, then narratively, owning his actions and undoing some of his harm. When Jimmy came to that Albequerque courtroom to engineer the perfect audience for his confession (the people he hurt, the legal system he wants to make a monkey of one last time, the ex-wife he wants nothing more than to be seen by again), he isn’t narratively redeeming himself at all. The wildly varying prison sentences waved around him are laughably disconnected from the harm his actions caused (especially the final one, 81 years, condemning him to effectively die in prison, doing society arguably less good than had he never been caught), and while his confession crucially has him confronting grief he’s been bottling for years, it otherwise doesn’t serve to make anything right, or undo any harm. It gets the attention of the woman he loves, and that’s it.
I think one of the reasons the final seasons of Game of Thrones were so unpopular was not that the deaths were “random” compared to the “logic” earlier seasons, but that the way the consequences characters faced was openly dictated by the narrative ruined the illusion the much better written early seasons worked to create to hide that fact. Like, Ned didn’t die because he was a naive politician, he died because the narrative needed to decisively set the stakes for the rest of the story. Joffrey didn’t die because some mass of mistakes finally outweighed his being-alive momentum on a cosmic scale; he died to demonstrate that the story is willing to kill off both protagonists and antagonists, because the audience would cheer to see the little prick choke, and because it was necessary to move the plot forward.
Like, when the later seasons make it obvious that Jaime doesn’t die in a suicidal charge on a dragon because there’s still another season and a half of audience interest to wring out of his character, or when Cersei survives doing nothing until the last episode because there’s no good narrative tension in killing her now, all that is doing is gracelessly making obvious what better writers work hard to conceal - that all narratives are contrivances and all “logic”, consequence”, and “realism” in a story is sleight of hand. And I think there’s an ugly sort of artistically compelling meat in that - in a formerly beloved show ending just a bit too long after the era that shaped it itself ended, and accidentally showing the man behind the curtain of that entire artistic era. 
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tench · 1 year
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The way Pathfinder won't allow me to take into my party the sad ex-demonfucker dwarf is breaking my combo of "Humiliated and Insulted" with my halforc judge, thiefling and fantasy werner syndrome. And it's kinda rude >:(
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chuckschmalzried · 4 months
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Champion Gymnast With Down Syndrome Becomes A Model Paving The Way For Others Like Her
Champion Gymnast With Down Syndrome Becomes A Model, Paving The Way For Others Like Her https://theheartysoul.com/champion-gymnast-with-down-syndrome-becomes-a-model-paving-the-way-for-others-like-her/ Everyone is born with their unique striking beauty. 25-year-old Chelsea Werner from Danville, California was born with Down syndrome, the most common chromosomal defect (1 in 700 babies) that delays physiological and intellectual development. Chelsea was introduced to gymnastics at the age of four to help her develop strong muscles because most people with Down […] The post Champion Gymnast With Down Syndrome Becomes A Model, Paving The Way For Others Like Her appeared first on The Hearty Soul. via The Hearty Soul https://theheartysoul.com/ December 21, 2023 at 10:20AM
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whitesinhistory · 8 months
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Meet 31-year-old Chelsea Werner, a two-time gymnastics world champion who is preparing to head to her third Down Syndrome International World Championships.
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raekiez · 4 months
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Oldsnake chronic pain hcs anyone? I have So Many
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ubaid214 · 9 months
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Tension and Time: How Contemporary Residing Plays a role in Early Aging
What is Rapid Aging?
Rapid ageing identifies the accelerated rate at which a lot of people display the signs of ageing, compared to the convention due to their chronological age. This is visible through wrinkles, great lines, age locations, and also health problems generally related to older age.
Reasons for Early Ageing
Numerous facets, equally intrinsic and extrinsic, subscribe to premature aging:
Genetics: Some people are genetically predisposed to age faster. This is because of familial qualities or unique problems like Werner syndrome or Hutchinson-Gilford progeria, nevertheless such syndromes are rare.
Sunlight Coverage: Prolonged and unprotected exposure to the sun's UV rays can cause photoaging. That is known with a wrinkled texture, creases, and discoloration of the skin. neotonics review
Smoking: Beyond their multitude different health risks, smoking accelerates skin aging. It reduces body movement to skin and breaks down the skin's collagen, resulting in wrinkles.
Pressure: Persistent pressure may accelerate mobile ageing, possibly due to its adverse effects on telomeres, the protective lids on the stops of chromosomes.
Poor Diet: A diet lacking in important vitamins and antioxidants may expedite the ageing process.
Environmental Pollutants: Pollutants and toxins could cause oxidative stress, ultimately causing cellular damage and rapid aging.
Effects of Early Aging
Beyond the visible signs on your skin, premature aging can have significant emotional and wellness implications:
Intellectual Wellness: Looking more than one's colleagues may lead to reduced self-esteem, anxiety, and also depression.
Bodily Wellness: Aging is not just skin deep. Premature ageing also can hint at main wellness situations or improve the chance for age-associated illnesses.
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ilovewhiteroses · 9 months
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Give me your top 5 ship pairings and top five favourite actors and their characters that gave you brainrot!!
Thank you, dear Bren! 🥰
Top 5 ship pairings:
Clement Mansell and Sandy Stanton (Justified: City Primeval) My current ship
Steve Murphy and Javier Peña (Narcos) I ship them but not in a romantic way, I just loved their chemistry and work relationship
Sherlock Holmes and Joan Watson (Elementary) The same as Steve and Javi
Jesse Custer and Tulip O'Hare (Preacher) They were so badass together, but I will never forgive Tulip for sleeping with Cassidy, my fictional crush at the time
Takeshi Kovacs and Kristin Ortega (Altered Carbon) It's been a while since I have seen this show, but I think Kristin was mainly with Tak, because he was wearing her boyfriend's sleeve. Regardless, they looked good together
Top five favourite actors and their characters that gave me brainrot:
Boyd Holbrook: The Corinthian (The Sandman) Clement Mansell (Justified: City Primeval) If you know me than no explanation is needed😁
Joel Kinnaman Takeshi Kovacs (Altered Carbon) He was so hot and badass, even with a pink backpack🥵
Jonny Lee Miller Sherlock Holmes (Elementary) I was surprised how many tattoos he has and they are all Jonny's, they were not fake😊
Bill Skarsgård Keith (Barbarian) He was so handsome and cute 🥰SPOILER! too bad his character died too soon😭
Max Riemelt Andi Werner (Berlin Syndrome) Wolfgang Bogdanow (Sense8) I know Andi was a psychopath, but he was so charming at times and Max looked great with dark hair🥵 I didn't really watch Sense8, only Wolfgang's scenes, but the few steamy nude scenes he had… Oh my God!🥵🥵
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docrotten · 9 months
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SHRIEK OF THE MUTILATED (1974) – Episode 194 – Decades Of Horror 1970s
“Mr. Henshaw… white meat or dark?” That depends if you’re serving chicken or pork. What else could it be? Join your faithful Grue Crew – Doc Rotten, Bill Mulligan, Chad Hunt, and Jeff Mohr – as they attend an invitation-only banquet to sample the unusual cuisine served up in Shriek of the Mutilated (1974).
Decades of Horror 1970s Episode 194 – Shriek of the Mutilated (1974)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
Decades of Horror 1970s is partnering with the WICKED HORROR TV CHANNEL (https://wickedhorrortv.com/) which now includes video episodes of 1970s and is available on Roku, AppleTV, Amazon FireTV, AndroidTV, and its online website across all OTT platforms, as well as mobile, tablet, and desktop.
A group of college students are led by their professor into the mountains in search of the Yeti. Shenanigans ensue.
  Director: Michael Findlay
Writers: Ed Adlum, Ed Kelleher
Cinematography by: Roberta Findlay (photographed by)
Editing by: Michael Findlay
Selected Cast:
Alan Brock as Dr. Ernst Prell
Jennifer Stock as Karen Hunter
Tawm Ellis as Dr. Karl Werner
Michael Harris as Keith Henshaw
Darcy Brown as Lynn Kelly
Jack Neubeck as Tom Nash
Tom Grail as Spencer Ste. Claire
Luci Brandt as April Ste. Claire
Ivan Agar as Laughing Crow
Marina Stefan as Party Hostess
Harriet McFaul as Girl at Party
Dwight Marfield as Station Attendant
Jimmy Silva as Policeman
Warren D’Oyly-Rhind as Waiter
Robert Adels as Popcorn Vendor (uncredited)
Ed Adlum as Yeti (uncredited)
Michael Findlay as Decapitation Onlooker (uncredited)
Ed Kelleher as Saturnalia Guest (uncredited)
It had to happen … eventually. The Grue-Crew cover the Santos Ellin, Jr. favorite from 1974, Shriek of the Mutilated. Oh, boy… is this a romp. Bad script, bad acting, hilariously bad dialog, the goofiest “yeti” costume ever – yeah, we had an absolute blast with this one. You knew that was coming, eh?
Check out what The Black Saint had to say about Shriek of the Mutilated here: 
Top 10 Horror Films of the 1970′s, Part 1
At the time of this writing, Shriek of the Mutilated is available to stream from Tubi, Shout TV, and PPV from Amazon. The film is also available as a Blu-ray disc from Vinegar Syndrome. 
Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror 1970s is part of the Decades of Horror two-week rotation with The Classic Era and the 1980s. In two weeks, the next episode, chosen by Chad, will be Three on a Meathook (1972), director William Girdler’s second movie. Of course, all Grue-Believers know William Girdler as The Black Saint’s favorite director. Let August now be officially declared as Black Saint Month on Decades of Horror 1970s!
We want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans: comment on the site or email the Decades of Horror 1970s podcast hosts at [email protected].
Check out this episode!
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miriel-elenna · 1 year
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Deangirl Derangement Syndrome
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lunesalsol · 1 year
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Global Journal of the Cause of Cancer
Cancer and other noncommunicable illnesses are at risk from tobacco use, alcohol usage, poor diet, physical inactivity, and air pollution. Cancer risk factors include some chronic infections, which is a problem in low- and middle-income nations.
Genetic alterations that induce unchecked cell growth and tumour formation are the root cause of cancer. The primary causes of sporadic (non-familial) malignancies are genomic instability and DNA damage. Genetic mutations that are inherited cause a small percentage of malignancies. The majority of malignancies are caused by environmental, behavioural, or lifestyle exposures. Despite the fact that oncoviruses and cancer germs can cause cancer in people, the disease is typically not communicable. Researchers studying cancer refer to anything that interacts with people outside of the body as "environmental." The environment encompasses lifestyle and behavioural influences in addition to the biophysical environment (such as exposure to elements like air pollution or sunshine).
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Genetics
Despite the fact that there are more than 50 hereditary cancers that can be distinguished, only 0.3% of people carry a genetic mutation that increases the risk of developing cancer, and these instances account for just 3–10% of all cancer cases. [3] Almost all malignancies are not inherited ("sporadic cancers"). An inherited genetic flaw is the main cause of hereditary malignancies. An inherited genetic mutation in one or more genes predisposes the affected persons to the development of cancers and may also cause the early onset of these diseases. This condition is known as a cancer syndrome or familial cancer syndrome. Cancer risk varies, even though cancer syndromes show an increased risk. Cancer is a rare side effect of some of these disorders and is not their main characteristic.
symptoms of cancer
Ataxia–telangiectasia
Bloom's disease
Fanconi anaemia due to BRCA1 and BRCA2
Adenomatous polyposis in families
ovarian and breast cancer that runs in families
Hereditary colorectal cancer without polyposis
Syndrome of Li-Fraumeni
Syndrome of nevoid basal-cell carcinoma
Disease of Von Hippel-Lindau
The Werner syndrome
Hyperpigmentation syndrome
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Physical and chemical agents
Some compounds, known as carcinogens, have been associated with particular cancer forms. 
Inhaled asbestos, certain dioxins, and cigarette smoke are typical examples of non-radioactive carcinogens. Despite the fact that most people identify carcinogenicity with synthetic chemicals, it can occur in both natural and artificial substances.
Smoking
80% of lung cancers are brought on by tobacco use, which is linked to many other types of cancer[20]. Research over many years has shown a connection between smoking and cancers of the lungs, larynx, head, neck, stomach, bladder, kidney, oesophagus, and pancreas. 
A minor but significant elevated risk of myeloid leukaemia, squamous cell sinonasal cancer, liver cancer, colorectal cancer, malignancies of the gallbladder, adrenal gland, small intestine, and numerous children cancers has been suggested by some data. There are seven chemicals in cigarette smoke that have been linked to respiratory tract cancer.
Certain toxins primarily affect cells physically, as opposed to chemically, to induce cancer. Long-term exposure to asbestos, a naturally occurring mineral fibre that is a leading cause of mesothelioma, a cancer of the serous membrane most commonly found around the lungs, is a notable example of this.
Wollastonite, attapulgite, glass wool, and rock wool are among the compounds in this category that are thought to have effects that are comparable to those of asbestos. Powdered metallic cobalt, nickel, and crystalline silica are non-fibrous particle cancer causing substances (quartz, cristobalite, and tridymite)
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