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Why Atherosclerosis Must Be Rewritten

The problem is not ignorance Medicine does not usually fail because it knows too little. It more often fails because it knows something well enough to stop asking. The history of atherosclerosis is a precise example of this dynamic. Over the second half of the twentieth century, clinical lipidology built a coherent and useful story. Large populations were followed. Serum cholesterol was measured. Risk gradients were documented. Statins were developed, tested in randomized trials, and shown to reduce cardiovascular events with a consistency that few drug classes have matched. The science was real. The clinical gains were real. The epidemiological framework was robust. And yet, two patients can sit in the same clinic, present nearly identical lipid panels, report similar diets, and carry similar cardiovascular risk scores—yet one will have advanced, rupture‑prone disease while the other will not. One will have a myocardial infarction in middle age. The other will reach late life w...

When Everything Has Been Drained: Living With Exhaustion in a Long War

If you have been living under the weight of prolonged war — the sirens, the grief, the uncertainty that never fully lifts — exhaustion is not a sign of weakness. It is what happens when a human nervous system is asked to hold too much, for too long, without enough rest or safety. You are not broken. You are overloaded. What Exhaustion Actually Looks Like This is not ordinary tiredness. This is waking up already depleted. It may look like struggling to get out of bed, losing interest in things that once mattered, feeling a fog settle over your thoughts so thickly that even simple decisions become difficult. Everything irritates — sounds, messages, other people's voices. And underneath all of it, a quiet, cruel thought:  others are managing, and I am not. These are not signs of personal failure. They are predictable responses of a nervous system that has been cycling through the same loop — alert, mobilize, hold on — without a real break. Under prolonged traumatic stress, the body...

Complex Continuous Traumatic Stress Disorder: Beyond the “Post‑” Paradigm

  The established architecture of clinical psychiatry still relies heavily on a linear, historicized premise. Within standard diagnostic classification systems, the conceptual framing of stress and trauma assumes a clear boundary between the event and its aftermath. In active, unceasing war zones where front line and “rear” are indistinguishable and external security cannot be reliably located, this premise encounters a structural limit. The universally deployed term Post‑Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) presupposes a retrospective vantage point that often does not exist in continuous conflict. In response, clinicians and researchers are beginning to outline a dedicated, still‑developing framework—often termed Complex Continuous Traumatic Stress Disorder (CCTSD)—to better describe and treat populations living under prolonged existential threat. The structural strain on the post‑traumatic model Standard PTSD criteria are philosophically and operationally built around a closed‑loop t...

The Uncharted Architecture of Atherosclerosis: Beyond Lipid Panels — Functional Subspecies, Risk Stratification, and Targeted Therapy

  Prefatory Note — On Levels of Resolution This note serves as the conceptual introduction to the book. It explains the levels of resolution through which the reader will move and how they fit together into a single architecture of disease . Every mature science passes through the same turning point. It begins by measuring what it can see, and only later discovers that the decisive structure lies beneath the surface of those measurements. Chemistry measured atomic weights and valence long before it understood electron shells. Blood pressure was a useful number in medicine decades before arterial wall biology was understood. In lipid medicine , we have measured total cholesterol, LDL‑C, HDL‑C, and triglycerides for generations, yet have known remarkably little about what these numbers actually contain in structural and functional terms. This book is written at that turning point. From surface numbers to hidden structure The conventional lipid panel is not wrong. It is a nec...