Joined April 2020
150 Photos and videos
Loki Skylizard retweeted
Spotter A patient on antihypertensive medications. What is the culprits and how will you manage it? #MedTwitter #MedX #FOAMed #PharmTwitter @IhabFathiSulima @MEmwanta @dokitawaa
5
5
14
1,865
Loki Skylizard retweeted
Gabriel against PSG last night, head up!

1
10
44
7,130
Loki Skylizard retweeted
Absolutely immense season. Champions of England. Didnt lose a single UCL game in full time. Rivals waited until the last kick of the season. Never been a better time to support Arsenal. He is staying. He is hungry. He will fix the roof while the sun is shining. Arsenal FC ❤️
583
5,052
33,129
388,033
Loki Skylizard retweeted
May 27
We went We saw and We conquered 😌💯 IELTS ✅ PLAB 1 ✅ PLAB 2✅ So Grateful to God🙏
11 Jul 2025
Next Phase Activated 🩺 Medical Officer🥼
105
86
1,466
116,070
Loki Skylizard retweeted
DO YOU KNOW WHO THIS IS? I would bet 9 out of 10 Catholics have never heard his name. This man voluntarily walked into a Nazi concentration camp. He was not arrested. Not forced. Not captured. He chose to enter. When the Nazis questioned him, he answered: “I am a priest. I go where my people go.” For 3 years inside Dachau, Father Jean Bernard ministered to prisoners surrounded by death. He heard confessions in secret. He gave last rites to the dying. He buried the dead with his bare hands. The guards beat him for praying out loud. He never stopped. While millions know the names of dictators and murderers, almost nobody knows the priest who walked willingly into hell just to stay beside suffering souls. His name was Father Jean Bernard. And every Catholic school should know it. Drop ✝️ if you think this priest’s courage should never be forgotten.
414
1,795
7,384
116,554
Loki Skylizard retweeted
A patient develops tinnitus after taking high doses of medication. Which drug is MOST likely responsible? A. Aspirin B. Penicillin C. Metformin D. Loratadine #MedTwitter #MedX #FOAMed #PharmTwitter @dokitawaa @IhabFathiSulima @daoo100
7
3
13
1,765
Loki Skylizard retweeted
🚨Name this clinical sign
30
13
190
49,431
Loki Skylizard retweeted
What medication is causing this ? A patient presenting with dry cough,progressive shortness of breath and this facial discoloration. #MedX #MedTwitter #FOAMed @IhabFathiSulima @albertoortegana @elidyynwa @daoo100 @dokitawaa @simplify_drugs
9
11
46
4,278
Loki Skylizard retweeted
A patient on treatment for bacteria infection. What is the likely diagnosis? Management ? #MedTwitter #MedX #PharmTwitter #FOAMed @albertoortegana @dokitawaa @MEmwanta @daoo100 @DocPriyamMD @IhabFathiSulima
5
3
12
1,122
Loki Skylizard retweeted
In the year 304 AD, during the brutal persecution of Christians under Emperor Diocletian, a noble Christian widow named St. Julitta fled from Iconium with her three-year-old son St. Quiricus. They were captured in Tarsus and brought before the governor. He ordered Julitta to renounce Jesus Christ and offer sacrifice to pagan gods. She stood firm and declared: “I am a Christian. I worship the true God and will not sacrifice to demons.” As soldiers tortured her, stretching her on the rack and tearing her flesh with iron hooks, her little boy watched. The governor tried to break her by taking the child onto his lap, but three-year-old Quiricus struggled free and boldly shouted: “I too am a Christian! Let me go to my mother!” Furious, the governor seized the toddler by the foot and hurled him down the stone steps of the tribunal. The boy struck his head and died instantly, a martyr at only three years old. Instead of breaking, Julitta thanked God aloud that her son had received the martyr’s crown. Strengthened by this grace, she endured even greater tortures and was finally beheaded. Mother and child entered Heaven together that day. For more than 1,700 years, St. Julitta and St. Quiricus (feast day June 16) have been venerated in the Catholic Church as powerful witnesses of faith. Their story challenges us today: Will we raise our children to love Jesus more than comfort or safety? Will we ourselves refuse to deny our Catholic Faith when the world pressures us to compromise? “Be faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life.” (Revelation 2:10) St. Julitta & St. Quiricus, pray for us! 🙏
16
230
887
9,508
Loki Skylizard retweeted
There was this baba I saw in the clinic. “Baba, what’s your complaint today?” Baba pulled out a paper containing a complete clerking. He said his daughter wrote everything down and asked him to give it to the doctor attending to him. Omo, complete clerking 😭😂 The daughter is a medical student. He said she had gone back to school the previous day; otherwise, she would have followed him to the clinic herself. I was genuinely impressed. Her diagnosis aligned with mine perfectly. I even sent kudos to her because, honestly, I never expected something like that.
43
503
6,159
198,415
Loki Skylizard retweeted
Bedside teaching remains the heartbeat of medical training. Ward rounds & procedures transform theory into clinical wisdom. Here, Dr. Ian Beeton, our visiting Consultant Cardiologist from UK, guides our Interns through ECG & Cardiac Echo interpretation in a patient with Afib 2⁰ to RHD
6
35
340
20,209
Loki Skylizard retweeted
SURVIVING SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL FATHERS As of April 2025, there are four surviving Bishops who participated in the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965), often referred to as “Council Fathers.” These individuals are among the last living witnesses to one of the most significant events in modern Catholic history. 1. Cardinal Francis Arinze (Nigeria) • Born: November 1, 1932 (age 92) • Role at Vatican II: Attended the final session in 1965 as coadjutor bishop of Onitsha. • Notable Facts: At age 32, he was the youngest Catholic Bishop in the world at the time. Consecrated Bishop in 1965 by Archbishop Charles Heerey. Made a Cardinal in 1985 by Pope Johnpaul II and later served as Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments. 2. Archbishop Victorinus Youn Kong-hi (South Korea) • Born: November 8, 1924 (age 100) • Role at Vatican II: Attended the second, third, and fourth sessions as Bishop of Suwon. • Notable Facts: He later became Archbishop of Gwangju and served as president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Korea. 3. Bishop José de Jesús Sahagún de la Parra (Mexico) • Born: January 1, 1922 (age 103) • Role at Vatican II: Attended the first, second, and fourth sessions as Bishop of Tula. • Notable Facts: He is the only surviving council father from the Americas. 4. Bishop Daniel Alphonse Omer Verstraete, O.M.I. (Belgium/South Africa) • Born: July 31, 1924 (age 100) • Role at Vatican II: Attended the final session in 1965 as prefect of the Apostolic Prefecture of Western Transvaal. • Notable Facts: He served as Bishop of Klerksdorp in South Africa. These four Bishops represent the final living links to the Second Vatican Council, which brought significant reforms to the Catholic Church, including the promotion of the vernacular in the Liturgy, enhanced engagement with the modern world, and a renewed emphasis on ecumenism. #catholic SR J.🤍
5
48
340
22,466
Loki Skylizard retweeted
My British friend saw my wife’s maternity pics on my WhatsApp status the other day and she was like “OMG so cute, so happy for you guys. When is her EDD”. I said EDD as how? Pikin wey don dey chop eba already. “Where I come from, we don’t announce pregnancy o. We announce birth”
46
492
5,118
204,380
Loki Skylizard retweeted
May 13
In 1942, in Nazi-occupied Tunisia—the only Arab country to suffer direct German occupation—a drunken officer bragged at dinner about the Jewish woman he planned to seize from a forced brothel. He named her. Across the table sat Khaled Abdul-Wahab, a 31-year-old wealthy Muslim Tunisian who had studied art and architecture in New York, spoke fluent German, and was trusted by the Nazis. They invited him to their tables. He smiled, poured the wine, finished the meal… then raced through the night. He pounded on the door of the woman’s family at midnight. “Pack nothing. Come now.” He gathered 25 terrified Jews—mothers, fathers, children, cousins—and drove them nearly 20 miles to his family farm. For four agonizing months, he hid them in the olive press, stables, and storage sheds. He fed them as supplies ran desperately low. He kept crying babies silent. When German soldiers came to count Jews, the hidden families pinned on their yellow stars, stood motionless, then tore them off the moment the danger passed. One terrifying night, a drunk soldier stumbled upon them and threatened to kill everyone. An 11-year-old girl, hiding under a bed, watched in horror—until Khaled appeared like a guardian angel. He calmly disarmed the soldier and sent him away. No one on that farm died. In May 1943, the British liberated Tunisia. The 25 returned home alive. Khaled went back to his quiet life—painting, raising daughters, serving his country—and never spoke of it again. Not to his wife. Not to his children. He died in 1997 at 86. His secret died with him. A decade later, his daughter Faiza sat in a Paris café reading a newspaper. An American historian was describing a Tunisian Arab who had hidden 25 Jews. He named her father. She was 45 years old and hearing the story for the first time. “I rediscovered my father,” she said. Khaled was nominated to be the first Arab recognized as Righteous Among the Nations—Israel’s highest honor for those who saved Jews. The committee declined. Today, those 25 souls have hundreds of descendants living in Israel, France, America, and Tunisia. The little girl under the bed grew up, built a family in Paris. None of them would exist if Khaled had looked away that night. He had everything to lose. He acted anyway. Then he carried the silence for the rest of his life. The world almost forgot him twice. Now you know his name: Khaled Abdul-Wahab. A true hero. A Muslim who stood against evil when it mattered most. Colorized image of black and white photo poster by Israel the Jewish State.
210
2,621
14,426
817,407
Loki Skylizard retweeted
A correctable cause of male infertility. Diagnosis❓️
65
50
728
233,639
Loki Skylizard retweeted
An innocent man was almost killed because of a rumour. On May 12, 2026, Dr. Afolabi, a doctor who works in the United States, was dragged from his car and beaten badly by an angry mob in Ibadan. He watched as they set his Lexus RX 330 SUV on fire. He had committed no crime. There was only a misunderstanding at a checkpoint. Two young girls in his car could not speak the local language, and he could not explain himself quickly enough under pressure. That was all it took. The Oyo State Police Command arrived just in time and rescued him from a crowd that had already decided he was guilty, even though they had no verified facts. An investigation showed the full truth: Dr. Afolabi was not a kidnapper. The two girls, Deborah (15) and Rebecca (12), were legally in his care and were being taken to help his mother with chores. Their guardian, Mrs. Idowu Abimbola, confirmed this, and the girls also supported the story. An innocent man was almost lynched, and his car was burned, all because of an assumption. The police leadership, through the Commissioner of Police in Oyo State, CP Abimbola Ayodeji Olugbenga, strongly condemned the mob’s actions and ordered that everyone involved be identified and arrested immediately. Jungle justice is not justice. It is a crime. Always check the facts before reacting. Report to the police before taking any action. A man nearly lost his life because no one stopped to find out the truth.
PRESS RELEASE OYO POLICE RESCUE MEDICAL DOCTOR FROM MOB ACTION OVER FALSE KIDNAPPING ALARM IN IBADAN The Oyo State Police Command wishes to inform the general public of an unfortunate incident of mob action which occurred on Monday, 12th May 2026, at about 2:30 PM around the 2nd Powerline Area, Ologuneru, Eleyele–Ido Road, Ibadan. The incident followed a distress call received from concerned citizens alleging that a suspected kidnapper was about to be lynched and set ablaze by an angry mob. Upon receipt of the information, a combined team of Patrol and Detective Officers led by the Divisional Crime Officer Eleyele Police Station (DCO) immediately mobilized to the scene where the suspect was successfully rescued from the enraged crowd. However, before the arrival of the Police, his Lexus RX 330 SUV had already been set ablaze by the mob, while two young girls identified as Deborah, aged 15 years, and Rebecca, aged 12 years, found inside the vehicle, were equally taken into protective custody alongside the suspect for proper investigation. Preliminary investigation subsequently revealed that the victim, identified as Dr. Afolabi, is a medical doctor practicing in the United States of America and not a kidnapper as falsely alleged in several misleading social media reports currently being circulated. Further findings established that the two girls found inside the vehicle were legally taken from one Mrs. Idowu Abimbola, aged 56 years, of Eleyele Area, Ibadan, with the intention of delivering them to the victim’s mother for the purpose of assisting with household chores. In the course of investigation, Mrs. Idowu Abimbola was invited to the station where she confirmed the arrangement, while the two girls equally corroborated the account and related freely with the said woman, thereby dispelling the suspicion of abduction. Further investigation revealed that the misunderstanding which triggered the false kidnapping alarm began when Dr. Afolabi attempted to gain access through the Polytechnic gate and was stopped by a security guard for routine vehicle inspection. Upon lowering the vehicle’s window glass, the two girls were allegedly seen half-naked, a situation which immediately aroused suspicion among bystanders and security personnel. It was gathered that the victim’s inability to provide satisfactory answers to questions asked at the scene, coupled with his decision to turn away from the checkpoint, further heightened suspicion. The situation was compounded by the inability of the two girls to speak the local language or properly express themselves in English, thereby fueling the false alarm of kidnapping. The development consequently led to a mob chase and eventual interception of the victim by irate youths who reportedly ignored all explanations offered by him and descended heavily on him, inflicting severe bodily injuries before the timely intervention of the Police. The victim was immediately rushed to the Police Medical Services for urgent medical attention and is currently responding to treatment. Meanwhile, statements have been obtained from eyewitnesses, including an Okada rider allegedly hit during the ensuing confusion, while efforts are ongoing to identify and apprehend all individuals involved in the mob action and destruction of property. The Commissioner of Police, Oyo State Command, CP Abimbola Ayodeji Olugbenga, psc, mnips, has strongly condemned the act of jungle justice and the deliberate spread of false and unverified information capable of creating unnecessary tension and undermining the significant security gains recorded across the State. The CP warned that resorting to self-help, mob violence, and the circulation of misleading narratives on social media remain serious threats to public peace, law and order, and could ultimately reverse the progress made in sustaining security and public confidence within the State.
75
171
400
143,116
Loki Skylizard retweeted
Something in the eye What is this spot diagnosis Any treatment? #MedTwitter #MedX #Eye @IhabFathiSulima @albertoortegana @docakx @modernHealthMe @DocPriyamMD
5
5
18
1,826
Loki Skylizard retweeted
America has 50 states. And every single one of them operates under its own laws, courts, policing systems, and legal culture while still being bound by federal law. That is the difference. The United States understood something long ago that Nigeria still refuses to confront: You cannot effectively govern hundreds of millions of people with completely different realities from one central authority. In America, federal law handles national matters: immigration national security constitutional rights interstate crimes currency But individual states control much of what affects daily life: policing criminal justice business regulations education taxation property law civil disputes So what works in Texas does not have to be forced on California. What works in Florida does not automatically become law in New York. Each state adapts to its own people, culture, economy, crime rate, and social realities. That decentralization is one of the greatest strengths of the American system. It creates speed. It creates accountability. It creates competition between states. It prevents dangerous levels of power concentration. And most importantly, it allows local problems to be solved locally. Meanwhile Nigeria calls itself a federation, but operates like an overprotected unitary state wearing a federal costume. Everything leads back to Abuja. Security? Abuja. Policing? Abuja. Major judicial power? Abuja. Revenue dependence? Abuja. Even governors that are called “Chief Security Officers” cannot fully control police operations in their own states. Think about how absurd that is. A governor can watch insecurity spread in real time and still wait for federal approval before meaningful action can happen. That is not federalism. That is administrative dependency. Nigeria is trying to centrally manage over 200 million people across completely different ethnic, economic, religious, and security realities as if Sokoto and Port Harcourt experience the same problems. They do not. And the damage is obvious. Our courts are overloaded. Judicial processes move at a painful pace. Security coordination is weak. States wait for federal allocations instead of building real economic independence. Every election becomes a war because too much power is concentrated at the center. Control Abuja and you practically control the country. That is why political tension in Nigeria is always explosive. Too much authority sits in one place. America distributed power intentionally. Nigeria concentrates power dangerously. And that difference affects everything from policing efficiency to judicial speed to economic development. The American system is not perfect. Far from it. But one thing it understood correctly is this: Local realities require local solutions. Nigeria still governs like every state is the same country inside the same problem. It is one of the biggest reasons governance keeps failing, institutions remain weak, and justice feels painfully distant from the average citizen.
180
1,473
3,362
113,004
Loki Skylizard retweeted
Spot diagnosis A child standing from a lying position, what is this sign and diagnosis ? #MedTwitter #MedX #MedEd #NeuroTwitter #CardioTwitter #GITwitter @IhabFathiSulima @albertoortegana @Doctors_GUILD @MEmwanta @DrMedica_13 @hemo_shk @dokitawaa
7
4
21
2,325