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Beyond Inflammation: Chronic Rheumatic Pain as a Stable Pathological Functional System

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The contemporary discussion of chronic rheumatic pain has begun to move beyond a narrow inflammatory model. Recent reporting from EULAR 2026 emphasized that a substantial proportion of patients continue to experience severe or unacceptable pain years after diagnosis, even in the context of anti-inflammatory treatment, and proposed several important contributors to this persistent burden, including nociplastic pain, poor sleep, psychological distress, and kinesiophobia. This shift is important because it recognizes that pain persistence cannot always be explained by active inflammation alone.  Yet the findings may support an even deeper interpretation. Rather than viewing these variables as separate complicating factors layered onto inflammatory disease, it may be more accurate to understand them as elements of a unified pathological organization. In this view, chronic rheumatic pain can evolve into a relatively stable pathological functional system, one in which altered nociceptive...

The wellspan protocol and the defense of the self

   The ultimate aim of medicine should not be limited to the prolongation of survival, but should include the maximization of wellspan , defined as the proportion of life lived with preserved cognitive coherence, agency, purpose, and continuity of identity, irrespective of the presence or absence of formally diagnosed disease. Achieving this objective requires a clinical framework oriented not only toward the management of pathology, but also toward the preservation of the functional conditions necessary for personhood over time. The wellspan protocol is proposed as such a framework. It is designed to address a central challenge of aging: the progressive uncoupling of biological survival from the preservation of the conscious self. Uncoupling and identity loss A major vulnerability in advanced aging is the phenomenon of uncoupling, in which basic physiological and metabolic processes remain operational while higher-order cognitive and integrative functions progressively dete...

🏆 Your Health Survival Guide for the 2026 World Cup

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  The 2026 FIFA World Cup is unlike anything before it.  Sixteen cities. Three countries. Scorching heat, thin mountain air, violent storms, and a journey that can flip your body clock upside down. Whether you're a player, coach, or fan traveling to matches, your body will face five health threats that have never appeared together in a single tournament.  The good news? Every single one of them is manageable — if you prepare. 🌡️ Danger #1: Dangerous Heat Almost Everywhere What's happening:  Most host cities are dangerously hot. FIFA's own safety threshold will be exceeded in 14 out of 16 venues. This isn't just uncomfortable — it's a medical risk for everyone outdoors.  What it does to your body: Drains energy and strength fast — performance can drop 20–30% Causes cramps, joint pain, and a higher chance of injury In serious cases, heat exhaustion can turn into  life-threatening heatstroke Triggers breathing problems for people with asthma or heart disease ...

Nature Is Our Home: Why We Must Serve Its Healing Forces Before We Distort Them Everywhere

We have forgotten something fundamental: nature is not a resource to exploit, but  our home —the very source of our healing forces. Every day, we distort nature’s rhythms with artificial lighting, indoor confinement, and sleepless nights, yet we expect modern medicine to repair the damage. The groundbreaking study on daytime light exposure and dementia risk reveals what we already know intuitively: nature’s healing forces work when we support them, not when we override them. The Distortion of Nature’s Healing Power Hongliang Feng ’s research shows that daytime light exposure above 1,000 lux—equivalent to an overcast day outdoors—reduces dementia risk by 16%, while 42 minutes of bright light (5,000 lux) reduces it by 17%. This protective effect was most pronounced in high-risk groups, reaching up to 41% risk reduction. Yet, instead of embracing this zero-cost, low-risk intervention, we continue to distort nature’s healing forces. We live indoors under LED lights, expose ourselves t...

The Illusion of Suboptimality: Reconciling Selye and Davidovsky on the Human Defense Mechanism

In the annals of medical philosophy, two voices— H. Selye and I. Davidovsky —appear to speak in tongues, yet both address the same fundamental reality: the body’s innate defense mechanism. Selye, in his seminal work  Stress Without Distress , posits that nature’s defenses, shaped by natural selection , are not universally optimal. He argues that we can often “improve on nature” by suppressing protective reactions that are no longer useful in modern contexts. For Selye, the immune and stress responses are evolutionary artifacts that may require human intervention to be corrected or even overridden. Davidovsky, in  General Pathology of Man , offers a contrasting yet complementary perspective. He asserts that while inflammation is biologically appropriate as a spontaneous, natural action, it is not always appropriate in every individual condition. Davidovsky does not view the mechanism as suboptimal by design; rather, he sees it as potentially  disturbed  by specific...

The Disease Optimality Principle: A New Lens for Clinical Medicine

As we enter the third decade of the 21st century, medicine stands at a critical juncture. The rapid acceleration of scientific discovery and technological innovation is reshaping healthcare, yet in the midst of this progress a deeper question emerges:  Along what path should we guide health and disease?  The Disease Optimality Principle offers a powerful answer. The Disease Optimality Principle is not just another step forward in medicine, but a foundational lens through which past, present, and future advances can be viewed and evaluated. It proposes a shift in how we conceptualize health, disease, and the role of medical intervention itself. At its core, the Disease Optimality Principle asserts that for every disease progression there exists an optimal course along which the costs of recovery are minimized and outcomes are most favorable. This perspective challenges the traditional reflex toward maximal, continuous intervention. Instead, it calls for a nuanced understanding ...

From Textbooks to Platforms: Why Medical Publishing Now Needs Common Rules

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Professional medical books are no longer produced only by venerable publishers and quietly catalogued in library systems. Today, they appear on Amazon and Google Play Books , circulate as PDFs and e‑books shared through ResearchGate , and coexist with classic titles in institutional collections. This is not a marginal change. It is a structural shift that affects how we create, distribute, index, and judge medical knowledge. In this new real‑virtual ecosystem, the old and new worlds of publishing are tightly entangled. The same underlying pressures and diseases—competition, metric obsession, and manipulation—now surface across traditional journals, commercial e‑book platforms, and academic social networks. That is why we need common rules and shared standards that apply to all channels, not just to one platform or one segment of the industry. 1. From classic gatekeepers to platform ecologies For most of the 20th century, established medical and academic publishers combined two functio...