I’m sure she could further clarify if her heart was racist.
I’m sure she could further clarify if her heart was racist.
Wolf Blitzer is a ridiculous name.
I love persimmons too
Those rolls are made of heaven
I will follow both of those pieces of advice
Tater tots rule, as does soup
Hope it went well!
So, what did you have for dinner? I fried fish, and I don’t fry stuff often.
There are also reports they paid people to come to the event: https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/candace-owens-blexit-group-pays-attendees-travel-trumps/story?id=73531036
Don’t forget they’re avenues for appropriate mating and marriage among 1%ers coming of age.
I think its an issue of nuance of terminology. The more medical a source gets, the more likely they are to refer to the follicle at ovulation as a functional cyst, one that usually goes away with ovulation.
And no, torsions are not from forceful rupture. They are usually from a large cyst that rotates the ovary and cuts off the circulation to the ovary, which is very painful and can result in losing the ovary if not surgically corrected immediately.
Nope, a cyst just means fluid filled. Follicular cysts form, and the dominant follicle ruptures and thats called ovulation.
I am a board certified physician. I am completely correct in this case.
It’s literally called a follicular cyst.
The article is written poorly and its difficult to tell. Once a cyst is ruptured there isn’t much any surgeon can do about it. The ovary itself won’t rupture but significant cysts can ruin the architecture of an ovary. An ovarian torsion is a surgical emergency, but nothing ruptures in that scenario.
A ruptured ovarian cyst may indeed be painful in some cases but is not a medical emergency.
Endometrial carcinoma is a type of uterine cancer and does not appear in the ovaries (unless it metastasizes), and that would not ever be described as an ovarian cyst.
Malignant means cancerous. I do not think that term is being used correctly here. Ovarian cysts are rarely malignant, and one does not survive untreated ovarian cancer, commonly.
Thank you, I was going to go hunt down the link because I remember reading it.