vicodincrutch: (donnie darko moment)
Dr. Greg House, MD ([personal profile] vicodincrutch) wrote2010-06-29 03:33 am

100 Diagnosis

To hell with it. No doom so far. And if it happens, I know who to blame. Or if reason has any weight in this ridiculousness, since this is a later challenge there could be time to prepare, call in bribes. Whatever means necessary.

Growth hold obvious relevance in the medical world. From the time we are born to the age of two our craniums are measured regularly to check growth progress. Abnormal numbers above or below the norm could be a sign of one or more of the following:
  • Chronic disease
  • Emotional (psychosocial) health
  • Genetics
  • Infection
  • Poor nutrition
Life is still in the equation. Big or small headed people alike can tell you that. Look around you. With the aid of hormones and with a possibility of a close to normal life outside of the circus or the next Austin Powers movie. Dramatic differences on the other hand leave the door open for other issue possibilities gastrointestinal problems that prompt a slow or stunted growth due to digestive enzymes, cerebral palsy to throw out a few rockstars of the category. And all of this is possible within the first leg of life. Makes you wonder by what miracle or luck of the draw this many people pass through the first round of the real Real World.

And we continually grow. We get older, our capacity for learning becomes more complicated with critical thinking, memorization, and any kind of social upbringing. These are all dependent on were we go from the start. Genes get blamed, it's the genetics passed down from our parents and their parents. Health is more than possible in early life. Then comes that oh so sudden decline of aging, ready willing and able to put it's hand into the grab bag of genetic issues that your Grandma's cousin first removed had.

Growth usually has such a positive connotation. You grow ill. You grow weary. Growth can also mean progression. Tumors for one thing. Flesh eating viruses grow.  Or Joseph Merrick experienced growth and then some. Who said it was a happy subject?

There.

Give me my prize.

[identity profile] idomore.livejournal.com 2010-06-30 06:42 am (UTC)(link)
I didn't understand most of the words. Basically, something makes the skin rot? And if it isn't bad it's bruised and hurts?

[identity profile] vicodincrutch.livejournal.com 2010-06-30 08:08 am (UTC)(link)
The bottom most layer of skin starts to die and special enzymes are secreted with this happens. If there's an infection, the tissue starts to come apart but also spread out and kill itself. It's not as bad if it's bruised and hurting quickly. Flesh eating virus is bad news over all.

[identity profile] idomore.livejournal.com 2010-06-30 09:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow. That sounds awful.

[Remembering this to tell his 13 yr-old not-girlfriend]