no it didn't do click through for this metabolism at first but it read your comment and then added it I guess. "examples/acetaldehyde_metabolism.rs" its about to push this in a moment
The point is acetaldehyde metabolism is at the heart of your question: Why do some people flush red with alcohol.
Reading the first reference on Wikipedia's article about alcohol flushing [1][2] would have generated, I believe, more understanding about the biochemistry involved. (And the fact that ALDH2 deficiency simply exacerbates something we all do--acetaldehyde is a big part of what causes hangovers.)
What that would not have done is demonstrate (a) a genuinely interesting way to "step through" a physical system and (b) the ease with which a biochemist might be able to do so. As a hack and a project and a mode of communicating a model, I love this. Where I'm objecting is in pitching it per se as a mode for understanding a phenomenon, in this case, "what ALDH2 deficiency is."
JumpCrisscross|4 months ago
The point is acetaldehyde metabolism is at the heart of your question: Why do some people flush red with alcohol.
Reading the first reference on Wikipedia's article about alcohol flushing [1][2] would have generated, I believe, more understanding about the biochemistry involved. (And the fact that ALDH2 deficiency simply exacerbates something we all do--acetaldehyde is a big part of what causes hangovers.)
What that would not have done is demonstrate (a) a genuinely interesting way to "step through" a physical system and (b) the ease with which a biochemist might be able to do so. As a hack and a project and a mode of communicating a model, I love this. Where I'm objecting is in pitching it per se as a mode for understanding a phenomenon, in this case, "what ALDH2 deficiency is."
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_flush_reaction#cite_no...
[2] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2659709/