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Game Thread | Game #9 | Cavs @ Lakers | Nov. 6, 2022

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Lakers are so trash I wasn't even worried when Westbrick was going hot. You could sense that there's only one good team on the floor and eventually the good team would outlast the bad team.
It looked like the Lakers broke down the defense on all but a couple possessions in the first half and the Cavs we're only sticking with them because they were shooting so we'll. That changed second half
 
One of my buddies is an opthalmologist that has some experience in eyelid repair and I talked to him about this.

He said one option would be to remove his eye and replace it with a glass eye while the lid heals. You would just keep his original eye suspended in a milk solution until it’s ready. You would just need to change the milk out regularly to ensure it doesn’t curdle.

The eyeball being out would promote faster healing, because believe it or not, eyeballs actually fight against the healing of eyelids. The blinking, drying, and sleeping process constantly reinjure the eyelid. The glass eyeball would not require rewetting, so Darius could be taught to blink with one eye during the healing process.

Once the eyelid is healed, you would put the eyeball back in. So long as it connects properly to the optic nerve, and it should, vision is likely to be restored within 8-10 weeks. At which point he could return to basketball activities with a patch over the eye.
 
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Ofcourse it's gonna heal man
He might not be far off.

My opthalmologist buddy said that eyelids are a lot like hair and teeth.

Every day pieces of them fall out and regrow.

Thing is that your brain does not expect trauma to the inside of the eyelid, so it has to take time to wire a nerve system out to the eyelid from the brain to regrow the eyelid.

That’s how he explained it to me.
 
If not for the jet lag that affected them in the first half this probably was a 25-point blowout.
 
He might not be far off.

My opthalmologist buddy said that eyelids are a lot like hair and teeth.

Every day pieces of them fall out and regrow.

Thing is that your brain does not expect trauma to the inside of the eyelid, so it has to take time to wire a nerve system out to the eyelid from the brain to regrow the eyelid.

That’s how he explained it to me.
Does your opthalmologist do lasik surgery on himself? Or only brain surgery?
 
One of my buddies is an opthalmologist that has some experience in eyelid repair and I talked to him about this.

He said one option would be to remove his eye and replace it with a glass eye while the lid heals. You would just keep his original eye suspended in a milk solution until it’s ready. You would just need to change the milk out regularly to ensure it doesn’t curdle.

The eyeball being out would promote faster healing, because believe it or not, eyeballs actually fight against the healing of eyelids. The blinking, drying, and sleeping process constantly reinjure the eyelid. The glass eyeball would not require rewetting, so Darius could be taught to blink with one eye during the healing process.

Once the eyelid is healed, you would put the eyeball back in. So long as it connects properly to the optic nerve, and it should, vision is likely to be restored within 8-10 weeks. At which point he could return to basketball activities with a patch over the eye.
What kind of milk? Whole milk, 2%, skim, goat's or breast?
 
One of my buddies is an opthalmologist that has some experience in eyelid repair and I talked to him about this.

He said one option would be to remove his eye and replace it with a glass eye while the lid heals. You would just keep his original eye suspended in a milk solution until it’s ready. You would just need to change the milk out regularly to ensure it doesn’t curdle.

The eyeball being out would promote faster healing, because believe it or not, eyeballs actually fight against the healing of eyelids. The blinking, drying, and sleeping process constantly reinjure the eyelid. The glass eyeball would not require rewetting, so Darius could be taught to blink with one eye during the healing process.

Once the eyelid is healed, you would put the eyeball back in. So long as it connects properly to the optic nerve, and it should, vision is likely to be restored within 8-10 weeks. At which point he could return to basketball activities with a patch over the eye.
would that be whole milk or skim ?
 
One of my buddies is an opthalmologist that has some experience in eyelid repair and I talked to him about this.

He said one option would be to remove his eye and replace it with a glass eye while the lid heals. You would just keep his original eye suspended in a milk solution until it’s ready. You would just need to change the milk out regularly to ensure it doesn’t curdle.

The eyeball being out would promote faster healing, because believe it or not, eyeballs actually fight against the healing of eyelids. The blinking, drying, and sleeping process constantly reinjure the eyelid. The glass eyeball would not require rewetting, so Darius could be taught to blink with one eye during the healing process.

Once the eyelid is healed, you would put the eyeball back in. So long as it connects properly to the optic nerve, and it should, vision is likely to be restored within 8-10 weeks. At which point he could return to basketball activities with a patch over the eye.
I think we should definitely try this approach. Maybe if you put the eye on ICE milk, or ICE CREAM, it would keep better? Then you can lock off the eyeball, like that one guy in Pirates of the Caribbean, and pop it back in.
 

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