@kala_ak: #tiktoktamilmalaysia #tiktoktamil #80stamilsong #goodmorning #tamillovesong

KalavathyNadeson
KalavathyNadeson
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Monday 29 September 2025 21:15:32 GMT
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mariasengole760
mariasengole760 :
Good morning 🥰🥰
2025-09-30 02:13:22
3
kumarisuppiah133
kumarisuppiah :
good morning ❤️🌹
2025-10-01 01:18:44
2
erlinghaaland355
user65701590790 :
good moring ji 🙏🙏🙏🙏
2025-10-30 01:04:02
2
ganesan.104
Ganasen Subramaniam. :
🥰🥰🥰 good morning.
2025-09-29 22:46:46
2
sarakumudha
Kumudha Kumudha :
gm
2025-10-02 02:54:17
2
jerrylowrances
Jeeey12jerry12 LOWRANCES :
jerry🥰🥰🥰😁🥰
2025-09-30 02:12:31
2
gsmaniam2
Gsmaniam :
Super.. Song
2025-10-15 09:11:15
0
senthil.murugan95
Senthil Murugan :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-09-30 03:54:33
2
susila.neelan
Susila NeelanKandan :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-09-30 01:57:01
2
selvammmmm
selvammmmm :
👌🥰🥰🥰🥰
2025-09-30 08:00:35
2
mahendren72
mahendren :
2025-10-03 02:07:20
1
mali.maliga
Mali Maliga :
♥️♥️♥
2025-10-05 06:54:01
1
vasanthi7608
Giva :
💃🤔🕺💃🤔😂🕺👌
2025-10-04 21:04:08
1
subatra68
Subatra kesaven :
❤️❤️❤
2025-09-29 23:43:42
2
queenmary125
queenmary125 :
🖤💢🖤💢🖤💢🖤💢🖤💢🖤💢🖤💢🖤💢
2025-10-04 04:40:38
1
ritamary428
geethalouis :
2025-10-04 00:00:21
1
shila33331
shila3333 :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-10-07 16:15:30
0
thanushan6877
Thanushan :
🥰
2025-10-05 05:41:15
0
povathalaya
Vicky Thevar :
♥️♥️♥
2025-10-23 22:51:39
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rosee3840
rosee :
😁😁😁😁😁😅
2025-10-07 16:19:23
0
rajkumar.r.b
Rajkumar.R.B. :
🥰🥰🥰🥰💖💖💖
2025-10-05 20:39:56
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nash52874
Nash :
👍
2025-10-02 06:52:25
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sasi.raj13
Sasi Raj :
❤️❤️❤️❤️🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-01-03 23:38:49
0
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Other Videos

If you constantly feel a lump in your throat, but doctors keep telling you everything looks normal, read this. That feeling has a name: globus sensation. And no, it is not automatically anxiety. And no, it is not automatically reflux. This is one of the most misunderstood symptom patterns in health because people keep chasing one explanation for a problem that usually lives across multiple systems. Globus sensation can be driven by laryngeal hypersensitivity, vagus nerve signaling, upper esophageal sphincter dysfunction, hyoid and laryngeal mechanics, jaw and TMJ tension, cervical spine structure, breathing pattern, autonomic overload, and sometimes structural issues like cervical osteophytes. In some people, especially those with hypermobility, hEDS, or HSD, the terrain is even more complex. That is why so many people get dismissed. They are told it is just stress. Or they are treated like it is just reflux. But a lump in the throat is not the same thing as true dysphagia, where food or liquid is actually getting stuck. That distinction matters. The driver matters. The perpetuators matter too: throat clearing, voice load, shallow upper chest breathing, jaw clenching, poor sleep, and nervous system amplification. So when I look at globus, I do not flatten it into one cause. I ask: Is this a sensation problem or a transport problem? Is there a red flag? Is the lead driver irritation, sensitivity, mechanics, or motor control? What is keeping the loop alive? If you have progressive swallowing difficulty, painful swallowing, aspiration, weight loss, coughing blood, persistent hoarseness, or a neck mass, get evaluated. If this is the first explanation that actually made sense, save it, share it, and send it to someone who keeps being told nothing is wrong. Full breakdown on my Substack, Movability Masterclass: “Globus Sensation (Lump in the Throat): Root Causes, Differential Diagnosis, and Systems-Based Care” Link in bio. Dr. Sina
If you constantly feel a lump in your throat, but doctors keep telling you everything looks normal, read this. That feeling has a name: globus sensation. And no, it is not automatically anxiety. And no, it is not automatically reflux. This is one of the most misunderstood symptom patterns in health because people keep chasing one explanation for a problem that usually lives across multiple systems. Globus sensation can be driven by laryngeal hypersensitivity, vagus nerve signaling, upper esophageal sphincter dysfunction, hyoid and laryngeal mechanics, jaw and TMJ tension, cervical spine structure, breathing pattern, autonomic overload, and sometimes structural issues like cervical osteophytes. In some people, especially those with hypermobility, hEDS, or HSD, the terrain is even more complex. That is why so many people get dismissed. They are told it is just stress. Or they are treated like it is just reflux. But a lump in the throat is not the same thing as true dysphagia, where food or liquid is actually getting stuck. That distinction matters. The driver matters. The perpetuators matter too: throat clearing, voice load, shallow upper chest breathing, jaw clenching, poor sleep, and nervous system amplification. So when I look at globus, I do not flatten it into one cause. I ask: Is this a sensation problem or a transport problem? Is there a red flag? Is the lead driver irritation, sensitivity, mechanics, or motor control? What is keeping the loop alive? If you have progressive swallowing difficulty, painful swallowing, aspiration, weight loss, coughing blood, persistent hoarseness, or a neck mass, get evaluated. If this is the first explanation that actually made sense, save it, share it, and send it to someone who keeps being told nothing is wrong. Full breakdown on my Substack, Movability Masterclass: “Globus Sensation (Lump in the Throat): Root Causes, Differential Diagnosis, and Systems-Based Care” Link in bio. Dr. Sina

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