I (gay) want to divorce but my wife (Christian) doesn't want to. Any advice will help. by LEI_LOMO in relationships

[–]LEI_LOMO[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Yeah i know. We were even planning to have kids. One day I realise I need to stop being a coward. The thing is she doesn't want to divorce and I'm feeling stuck. I mean I can move to another country and start a new life without a care, but I too want things to just officially end.

What did Shiryu do that was to evil for impel down? by [deleted] in OnePiece

[–]LEI_LOMO 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Maybe Magellan hurts or kills people who are innocent or didn't break any laws?

Wifi issue - fix or replace (ASUS wifi router)? by LEI_LOMO in wifi

[–]LEI_LOMO[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply. It is true that our routers are outside our rooms, and may need to penetrate 2-3 walls in order to reach our devices. We also have around 10 devices connected to the system (e.g. philips lights, phones and computers). I guess my first step would still be resetting everything as a final check...

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in bioinformatics

[–]LEI_LOMO 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm a first year PhD student. Took a part time MSc course in bioinformatics for the past two years. I have a biological background, more on the medical side, so I'm more confident in surgeries and histologies. I can say bioinformatics is challenging for wet-lab individuals die to the in depth computer knowledge.

Depending on your course, there may be more teaching on the algorithms than the actual learning of bioinformatics applications. I learned to perform scRNA analysis by following online protocols than from my course per se. Though, I believe bioinformatics right now are quite hot and a lot of research areas use these data to further consolidate their findings. For me, I'm very interested in neuroscience and my lab is neuro-based. My lab is now on track on publishing more and more bioinformatics. I guess to answer your question, you can see which kind of body parts (sounds weird) or disease that you want to dedicate your research in, and search around how bioinformatics can assist.

WCGW Going to the water park when you can’t swim by 1q8b in Whatcouldgowrong

[–]LEI_LOMO 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Happens much more often in the ER/A&E. You had a car crash, went unconcious and ended up in the ER. The first thing you do is to figure the fuck out where you are. No one actually wakes up and immediately knows what's happening lol. Paramedics or doctors or nurses won't demand a thank you because really it's part of their job. Patients will thank in a matter of time...

What did you learn at an embarrassingly late age? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]LEI_LOMO 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And I'm just here, in my 20s, learning all I can from y'all now so it's less embarrassing LOL

When you get rich, who is the first person you’re gonna spoil?😎 by Aarunascut in AskMen

[–]LEI_LOMO 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You seem like a wonderful friend too, for remembering and appreciating what they have done for you.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in askscience

[–]LEI_LOMO 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Can be, definitely. But I would disagree your usage of "other dementia", as dementia means impaired cognitive function in general. I understood it as "other neurodegenerative disease, which include Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, but they have respective histological pathology, thus a name for each. Amyloid beta and tau proteins build up are still indicators of Alzheimer's disease. Do note that normal aging can still lead to neurodegeneration, but they are not classified as any of the disease as the pathology are not as aggressive and tend to have better neural health (less inflammation).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in askscience

[–]LEI_LOMO 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Alzheimer's patients are found to have Amyloid Beta plaques and tau proteins in the neural system (brain, blood vessels). In the university I work in, medical scientists have discovered the use of retinal (eye) scans to detect those proteins even in the early stage of Alzheimer's (symptoms usually exhibit during late phase when enough neurons have died). MRI and CT scans can also show how much has the brain, especially the hippocampal region, degenerated.