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LOOK AT YOUR NAILS RIGHT NOW! 7 Signs of Deadly Disease You Keep Ignoring

34m 20s5,272 単語861 segmentsEnglish

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Look at your hands right now. Right now,

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before you do anything else. 10 small

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plates at the tips of your fingers.

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Most people see cosmetics, maybe a

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chipped edge, a hangnail, something to

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fix before a date.

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I see diagnoses.

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15 years of clinical practice and I have

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watched lung cancer, liver cirrhosis,

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and severe anemia announce themselves on

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fingernails long before the patient felt

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a single symptom.

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In 2019, someone posted a photo of their

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nails online. Domed, convex, curving

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over the fingertip like glass. The

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comments flooded in. Genetics, take some

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vitamins, nothing to worry about. One

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comment was different. Get to an

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oncologist today.

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The person listened. Early stage lung

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cancer, surgery, alive. No blood test,

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no routine physical had caught it. The

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nails caught it a full month before any

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other symptom would have surfaced.

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That is not a feel-good story. That is a

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clinical fact and it raises a question

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you should ask yourself right now. When

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was the last time you actually looked?

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The system you rely on for your health

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is not built to keep you healthy. It is

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built to treat you when you get sick.

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There is no billing code for prevention.

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Your next appointment will not include a

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nail exam. Subscribe to Dr. Waterling

1:27

and hit like. I am telling you what they

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will not. We are on our way to 1,000

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subscribers and every single one

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matters. Before we get into specific

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signals, I need to demolish one myth

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that has been circulating since before

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your mother was born. White spots on

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nails mean you are low on calcium. You

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have heard this. Someone said it to you

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as a child pointing at a little white

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dot on your pinky. It is not true. It is

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completely, clinically, demonstrably

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false. Research published in the British

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Journal of Dermatology, one of the most

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authoritative peer-reviewed journals in

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dermatology, has definitively disproven

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any link between those white spots and

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calcium deficiency. If you have been

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believing the calcium myth, you have

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almost certainly been misreading every

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other signal your nail send. And some of

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those signals are a matter of life and

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death, literally. To understand why a

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nail is such a powerful diagnostic tool,

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you need to understand what it actually

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is. The nail plate, the hard surface you

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see, forms inside the matrix. The matrix

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is a tiny zone of living tissue tucked

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under the skin at the base of your

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finger, just beneath the cuticle. It is

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extraordinarily sensitive to everything

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happening in your body. Any disruption

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in metabolism, any nutritional

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deficiency, any inflammatory process,

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and it shows up in what the matrix

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produces. The plate changes color,

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shape, texture, and growth rate. It

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records your health history the way a

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black box records a flight. A full nail

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replacement takes 4 to 6 months on

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average. That means right now, on your

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hands, you are carrying a 6-month

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archive of what your body has been

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through. Every ridge, every spot, every

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shift in color is an entry. The only

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question is whether you know how to read

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it. 90% of the nail plate is made of

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keratin, a structural protein, the same

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one that makes up your hair. But the

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architecture is entirely different. In a

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nail, keratin fibers are stacked in

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layers like sheets of plywood, bonded

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together by sulfur bridges. Those sulfur

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bridges are what make the nail hard.

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Hair lacks them, which is why hair bends

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and nails do not. This also means sulfur

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is critical for nail integrity. If your

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diet is low in sulfur-containing foods,

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eggs, garlic, cabbage, the layers begin

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to separate. Splitting and peeling are

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the surface sign. But underneath that

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surface, the mechanism can be pointing

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to something far more serious than a

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diet problem. Between those keratin

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layers sit microscopic films of fat and

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water. They are what give a healthy nail

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its faint gloss and smooth feel. When

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the body is chronically dehydrated, and

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as we age the thirst mechanism becomes

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less reliable, meaning people routinely

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drink less than they need without

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knowing it, those films thin out. The

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surface turns dull, develops

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microcracks, loses flexibility. Most

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people blame winter or hand washing. The

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real cause is often sitting in a glass

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they are not filling often enough.

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Beneath the nail plate lies the nail

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bed, a thin layer of tissue threaded

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through with capillaries. Blood shows

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through it giving a healthy nail its

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pinkish tone. The composition of that

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blood, the oxygen level in it, the

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concentration of hemoglobin, all of it

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is visible right there on your

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fingertip. Hemoglobin drops, the pink

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fades toward white. Oxygen falls,

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blue-gray creeps in. Bilirubin rises,

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yellow appears. Bilirubin is the

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breakdown product of red blood cells and

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when it accumulates, it means the liver

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is struggling to clear it.

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10 small screens at the ends of your

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fingers are broadcasting your body's

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internal state in real time. Most people

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do not look.

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Now, back to those white spots. The

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medical term is leukonychia, white nail.

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What you are actually seeing are

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microscopic air bubbles trapped between

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keratin layers during formation. Air,

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not calcium.

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Where do the bubbles come from? Almost

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always from microtrauma. You hit your

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finger on a table edge. You push the

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cuticle back too aggressively. You

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worked in the garden without gloves.

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The matrix took a small hit. The layers

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formed unevenly. Three to four months

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later, exactly how long it takes for

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that spot to grow visible, you notice it

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and start worrying.

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The cause is long forgotten. But not all

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white marks on nails are harmless. If

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what you see is not isolated dots, but

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horizontal white bands running all the

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way across the nail and you see them on

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several fingers at once, that is a

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different story entirely. Those bands

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were first described by a 19th-century

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Italian physician named Mees' lines.

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They are called Mees' lines. They can

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indicate heavy metal poisoning, chronic

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kidney disease, or severe protein

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deficiency. The difference between a

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harmless white dot and a diagnostic

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white band is like the difference

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between on your car and a crack in the

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engine block. They look vaguely similar

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from a distance. The consequences are

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nothing alike. If the entire plate has

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turned uniformly white, milky, opaque,

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with no pink showing through at all,

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that finding is associated with serious

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liver dysfunction. When the liver is

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failing, certain proteins accumulate in

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the blood and the vascular pattern

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beneath the nail plate changes. The pink

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disappears. In clinical textbooks, this

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is described as one of the classic early

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signs of cirrhosis, the kind of sign

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that appears long before jaundice sets

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in or pain begins. The nail signals

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first. Now, look at the base of your

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nail. Do you see a white crescent? That

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is the lunula and most people ignore it

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completely. It is the visible portion of

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the matrix, the growth zone. In a

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healthy adult, it is clearly visible on

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the thumbs and faintly visible on the

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other fingers. If it has disappeared

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entirely from all of your fingers, that

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can point to anemia, low red blood cell

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count, nutritional deficiency in the

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peripheral tissues, or a thyroid

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problem. Specifically, a sluggish

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thyroid. The opposite finding, when the

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lunula takes up more than a third of the

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plate, a condition called macrolunula,

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is associated with an overactive

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thyroid. One small crescent, two

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opposite diagnoses. The same landmark

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pointing in completely different

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clinical directions depending on what

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you see. A bluish lunula is a rare but

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serious finding. It indicates excess

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