.

.

Saturday, September 01, 2018

Hypothalamus, Amygdala, Pyruvic Acid, Time Risk, Emotional Dynamics Adjacent with Frontal Pupil Flatness - Lx (m8) - 1




a) Radial Furrow located at 360' extends from ciliary zone to external border of the collarette at 360' indicates hypothalamus stress. The hypothalamus is a small region of the brain. It’s located at the base of the brain, near the pituitary gland. The hypothalamus plays a crucial role in many important functions, including:
  • releasing hormones
  • regulating body temperature
  • maintaining daily physiological cycles
  • controlling appetite
  • managing of sexual behavior
  • regulating emotional response
b) Radial Furrow located at pupillary zone - 360'/0' as embryological sign indicates stress in Amygdala gland. The amygdala is part of the limbic system of the brain, which is involved with emotions and other reactions to stimuli. The amygdala is a processing center that is hooked up to receive incoming messages from our senses and our internal organs. It is highly involved with different emotional responses. People tend to choose avoiding losses over acquiring gains—a behavior known as loss-aversion. But people with damage to the amygdala—an almond-shaped part of the brain involved in emotion and decision-making—are more likely to take bigger risks with smaller potential gains. 
In short, you are stricken with fear, a strong emotion caused by the threat of danger or something unwelcome happening. The body's alarm circuit for fear lies in an almond-shaped mass of nuclei deep in the brain's temporal lobe. ... The amygdala is essential for decoding emotions, particularly threatening stimuli.
c) The radial furrow located at pupillary zone - 360' which associated with Pyruvic acid imbalance tendency to have diabetes mellitus/blood sugar imbalance and hepatic stress.
d) Emotionally relates to limbic system stress, depression, sleep disorder, fear and anger. The Frontal Pupil Flatness amplified these negative emotions...
e) The negative emotions/traumatic events can be traced by calculating the Time Risk factor, which happened at aged of 60' or during the gestation...

No comments: