the realization that frieren also wants to marry himmel & it’s the reason why she’s sharing the same dream as him when the demon tried to trap them is actually one of the greatest feeling ever WE LOVE YOU FRIMMEL
read somewhere that this is pretty close to what cas engraved on dean’s ribs in enochian and even if it isn’t this is too hilarious i choose to believe is real
evermore may not be her best braid, no grammy, no spotlight, hated by its mother, walked all over by its sister, starts by begging a man to take her hand, ignored by the fandom, not acknowledge by the gp- but she has cowboy like me & tayshakespeare with im still at the restaurant
NO ESTA CANCELADO. Hasta ahora, la Secretaría de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales no ha publicado un documento oficial que confirme de forma definitiva la cancelación del proyecto Perfect Day México.Aunque ya se han hecho declaraciones importantes donde se señala que el proyecto no sería autorizado por su impacto ambiental, todavía falta que eso quede por escrito y de manera formal. NO DEJEN DE FIRMAR Y SEGUIR PRESIONANDO ⚠️⚠️
Toru Miyazaki gave 11 cats with advanced kidney disease an experimental injection. 15 others didn’t get it. A year later, 9 of the 11 treated cats were alive. Only 3 of the 15 untreated cats survived. He just filed for approval, and the drug fixes a defect only cats have.
Most cats die from one thing: their kidneys fail. By age 10, 4 in 10 cats already have chronic kidney disease, and by age 15, the rate doubles to 8 in 10. Once diagnosed, a cat has about 2 years left.
The reason kidney disease hits cats so hard is a broken protein in their blood. All mammals carry a protein that helps the kidneys clean out waste. In humans and dogs, the protein floats freely and goes to work when the kidneys are in trouble. In cats, it stays stuck to another protein and can’t get loose. So the waste piles up, and the kidneys eventually give out.
Miyazaki originally found the protein in 1999, back when he was at the University of Tokyo. He figured out the cat-specific glitch in 2015. The paper he published in the Veterinary Journal in February laid out the trial. The injection is a working version of the missing protein. His company, the Institute for AIM Medicine, filed the approval paperwork with Japan’s Ministry of Agriculture on April 24, 2026. If the review clears, the drug goes on sale in spring 2027.
The 30-year lifespan figure in the tweet is Miyazaki’s own projection of what cats could reach without kidney disease. The trial only ran a year, and the average cat today lives 15. Most die from the same disease this injection treats.
The research almost died in 2020. After running out of funding during COVID, Miyazaki went public. Cat owners across Japan responded by sending in 300 million yen, around 2 million dollars total. He resigned from the University of Tokyo and worked on the drug full time. The treatment in front of regulators today exists because cat lovers refused to let the research die.