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Understanding Endogenous Fat Production: Why the Body’s Own Lipid Machinery Matters Most

When people think about fat, they usually imagine the fats they eat. Yet the more important story begins after food enters the intestine. Dietary fats are not simply transferred unchanged into body stores. In the intestine, they are emulsified by bile acids , broken down by pancreatic and intestinal enzymes into fatty acids and monoglycerides, absorbed by enterocytes, repackaged into chylomicrons, and then delivered into circulation. From there, tissues take up, burn, remodel, store, or transform these lipid fragments according to the body’s own metabolic priorities. This is why fat biology cannot be reduced to dietary fat alone. The human body is an active lipid-producing and lipid-regulating system. It does not merely receive fats from food; it rebuilds them, synthesizes new ones, and uses them for energy storage, membrane formation, signaling, hormone production, and thermal regulation. In healthy conditions, this endogenous fat production is essential for life. In unhealthy condit...

Never Say Never: Digoxin, William Withering, and the Changing Certainties of Cardiology

In a long cardiology career, one remembers not only drugs but slogans. Few therapies have lived through more reversals than digitalis : first as a breakthrough, then as habit, then as controversy, then almost as an embarrassment, and now again as a subject of serious reconsideration. The lesson is not merely about one old drug. It is about how medicine repeatedly confuses fashion with truth, and how often certainty must be revised when physiology, evidence, and clinical context are brought back into the same frame.  The story properly begins with William Withering , whose 1785 account of foxglove transformed a traditional remedy into a recognizable medical therapy. He did more than “discover” a plant effect; he observed, classified, and disciplined its use, linking clinical benefit with careful dosing and warning against toxicity. In that sense, the digoxin story began not with therapeutic bravado but with clinical humility: an effective medicine, yes, but one requiring judgment...

Why Mitochondria Matter — and Why the Answer Is More Complex Than It Seems

For many years, mitochondria were described in simple terms as the “ powerhouses ” of the cell. That idea is useful, but it is only part of the story. Modern science shows that mitochondria differ not only in quantity, but also in quality, location, and function across tissues. Different organs do different kinds of work, so they rely on mitochondria in different ways. The heart and skeletal muscles depend on them for continuous force production, calcium handling, and high-speed ATP turnover. The brain uses them for a different kind of labor: signaling, ion pumping, membrane potential maintenance, axonal transport, and synaptic activity . The kidney and liver also have their own specialized energy demands, shaped by filtration, transport, detoxification, and metabolism. This means that the old formula — “more work means more mitochondria” — is only partly true. It is a helpful first approximation, but it does not explain the full picture. A tissue may have many mitochondria, but tho...

Understanding Atherosclerosis through the Lens of Chronic Inflammation: When Aging Becomes Disease

  Atherosclerosis is, in a very real sense, as old as humanity itself. Archaeological studies of ancient mummies have found arterial plaques in people who lived thousands of years ago, long before fast food or sedentary lifestyles. This tells us something important: the early stages of atherosclerosis are not a disease. They are a normal part of biological aging, as universal and inevitable as greying hair or slowing reflexes. From the first decade of life, small lipid deposits — fatty streaks — begin forming quietly beneath the inner lining of our arteries. These are not inert accumulations. When these deposits begin to damage the vascular intima , the body recognizes the injury and mounts an inflammatory response . Since it cannot eliminate the lipid deposits, it does the next best thing: it encapsulates them in connective tissue, forming plaques. This is the body's compensatory mechanism — isolating what it cannot remove, much like a bee colony encasing an intruding mouse in ...

A place where migraine really starts: rethinking migraine as a disorder of brain functional systems

Migraine is increasingly understood not as a purely vascular problem, but as a disorder of brain functional systems . That shift matters because it changes the question from “what causes the pain?” to “how does the brain organize, sustain, and fail to shut off the migraine state?” In other words, migraine may be less about a single vessel or isolated symptom and more about a dynamic, self-reinforcing network disturbance involving multiple brain systems at once. A useful way to frame this is through the logic of functional systems: reference point, internal model, and action-learning. The reference point is what the system treats as important or threatening. The internal model is how the brain interprets the situation, predicts what is happening, and anticipates the next step. Action-learning is the loop through which the system responds, receives feedback, and either adapts or becomes stuck. In migraine, these components may become dysregulated so that normal sensory input, stress, sle...

A Country Without a Rear and Sleepless Nights

   In a "normal" country, danger is an event. It has a beginning and an end, a place where it happened, and people whom it directly affected. Grief is permitted to follow a shape: shock, then acknowledgment, then — however slowly — something resembling return. In a country without a rear, danger turns into background. It is always present, even when, at this very moment, no one is firing. It cannot be "switched off" — it only changes form. Physical danger arrives through sirens, explosions, power cuts, the movement of military vehicles, news of new strikes. Informational danger flows through news feeds, air-raid alert channels, chats where messages about shelling and losses appear earlier than any official report. Even when the body is in a relatively safe place, the psyche lives in a mode of "anything can happen at any moment." For sleep, this means that the boundary between "day" and "night" blurs, and the night loses its ancient stat...

Longevity Escape Velocity, the Ceiling of Life, and the Priority of Healthspan and Wellspan

Longevity escape velocity is commonly described as a hypothetical point at which biomedical progress extends a person’s remaining life expectancy faster than time passes. In that model, medicine would no longer simply delay disease or death in the ordinary sense, but would begin to offset the damage of aging quickly enough that further survival continually opens the possibility of further extension. This idea has become influential in contemporary longevity discourse, but it remains a hypothesis about future medicine rather than an established scientific achievement.  One of the main reasons for caution is conceptual. The evidence most often cited in support of radical longevity usually concerns average survival rather than the verified upper boundary of human life. Over the modern era, life expectancy has risen dramatically because more people survive infection, trauma, maternal and infant mortality, and chronic disease. These gains demonstrate that medicine and public health hav...