![]() ![]() Many illnesses can throw off the balance between albumin and globulin in your blood. ![]() A plus sign next to the number “” means that the information is found within the full scientific study rather than the abstract. If you feel that any of our content is inaccurate, out-of-date, or otherwise questionable, please leave a comment or contact us at that each number in parentheses is a clickable link to peer-reviewed scientific studies. Our goal is to not have a single piece of inaccurate information on this website. They are continually monitored by our internal peer-review process and if we see anyone making material science errors, we don't let them write for us again. Our science team must pass long technical science tests, difficult logical reasoning and reading comprehension tests. Our science team is put through the strictest vetting process in the health industry and we often reject applicants who have written articles for many of the largest health websites that are deemed trustworthy. Our team comprises of trained MDs, PhDs, pharmacists, qualified scientists, and certified health and wellness specialists.Īll of our content is written by scientists and people with a strong science background. We are dedicated to providing the most scientifically valid, unbiased, and comprehensive information on any given topic. We believe that the most accurate information is found directly in the scientific source. If someone were to lit igate against you, you would probably feel that it was an ex igent or urgent situation, that is, it must be attended to at once and be thoroughly “done.” And hopefully the lawyer who is defending you wouldn’t be amb iguous about the whole legal matter, thereby being “done” or “acted” on in “both” directions, that is, she would not come down on one side or the other, but rather leave room for multiple interpretations as to who was in the right.SelfDecode has the strictest sourcing guidelines in the health industry and we almost exclusively link to medically peer-reviewed studies, usually on PubMed. What other things are “done” that have this root ig in them? When someone lit igates, she has a lawyer “do” a lawsuit against another person for the purpose of cast igating another, hence “doing” a form of punishment. ![]() For instance, let’s take the word “nav igate.” It would sound silly if this word were spelled “nav agate!” And of course, when a helmsman nav igates a ship, he “does” the wheel, hence “driving” the ship in the desired direction. Sometimes the root ag changes to ig so that the word sounds better. Speaking of agents, the agents in your blood that cause it to co agulate or be “driven” together to “do” clotting are your platelets, little “doers” who keep a cut from bleeding for too long. Agents often “do” the work that agitates others, for those details can be troublesome in the “doing.” It takes a great deal of mental agility to be able to “do” the necessary things to get published, and so authors will often leave that sort of work to the agile agents, who skillfully work their way through all the things that need “doing,” from contacting publishers to working out contracts. Authors have so many things to “do” when writing that they often employ agents, who “do” many things for them to help them get their books published. It seems like we always have things to be “done” which are on our daily agenda. ![]() The Latin root ag and its variant ig mean “do.” This podcast’s agenda will be to nav igate our way through these two roots. ![]()
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