The Doctor behind the Signature
I’m a physician who has always been more interested in understanding why things happen than simply memorizing that they do.
Throughout medical training and clinical practice, I found that many of the most important lessons lived between disciplines—in the space where physiology meets pharmacology, where pathology meets clinical reasoning, and where guidelines meet real patients.
That curiosity eventually became this website.
Here, I explore the mechanisms, patterns, and clinical connections that make medicine easier to understand and harder to forget.

Why I Built This Space?
Medical school teaches physiology, pharmacology, pathology, and clinical guidelines as separate subjects.
Patients do not arrive that way.
When a patient deteriorates, the answer is rarely found in a single chapter, guideline, or protocol. It is found in the connections between them.
I built this space because many of the lessons that shape clinical judgment are not taught explicitly—recognizing patterns, understanding mechanisms, spotting diagnostic blind spots, and asking the right question when the obvious answer doesn’t fit.

What I Create
I create educational resources that explain why patients improve, deteriorate, compensate, and fail.
Through mechanism-based articles, clinical case analyses, diagnostic reasoning exercises, newsletters, and practical reference tools, I focus on the connections that are often missing from traditional medical education.
The goal is not simply to provide answers, but to show how physiology, pharmacology, pathology, and clinical decision-making interact at the bedside.
Clinical insights for doctors who ask “why?”
• Research reviews that translate evidence into practical clinical understanding
• Mechanism-based articles explaining how diseases and treatments work
• Handwritten notes, case summaries, and quick-reference resources
• Essays on clinical reasoning, diagnostic pitfalls, and medical decision-making
If you’re trying to connect what you know to what you see, this space is for you.
Medicine isn’t just knowing the parts. It’s seeing how they fail together.
— Dr. Hena Lodhia
