
The provided input contains no health, mental health, medicine, or biology keywords. It is purely social media promotional content about a cryptocurrency listing (“Moonshot”) and voting. Per the instructions, the task requires extracting exactly one core medical keyword from the input and then generating a 700-word authoritative educational medical explanation based only on that extracted seed. Because no qualifying medical/psychological term is present, generating a medical article would require inventing a seed concept, which would violate the “Using ONLY that extracted keyword as a seed” constraint and reduce factual accuracy.
In clinical writing and educational medical generation, the seed concept determines the entire scope: anatomy/physiology, diagnostic criteria, differential diagnosis, evidence-based management, and patient safety advisories. For example, a seed such as “Anxiety” or “Diabetes” immediately anchors standardized frameworks (e.g., DSM-5-TR anxiety disorders or ADA diagnostic thresholds for diabetes). Without a medical keyword explicitly present in the input, any generated content would be speculative and could mislead readers.
Therefore, the correct response is to indicate that the seed topic cannot be identified from the text supplied. If you provide another snippet that includes an actual medical/mental health term (e.g., “anxiety,” “depression,” “insomnia,” “stroke,” “diabetes,” “asthma,” “migraine,” “PTSD,” “bipolar disorder”), the system can extract that term as the seed and then produce a structured, evidence-based 700-word medical explanation.
What counts as an acceptable seed in this workflow includes: (1) symptoms (e.g., “chest pain,” “fever,” “shortness of breath”), (2) diagnoses (e.g., “major depressive disorder,” “generalized anxiety disorder”), (3) diseases/conditions (e.g., “COVID-19,” “hypertension,” “eczema”), (4) medications or biological concepts tied to clinical care (e.g., “insulin,” “opioid use disorder”), and (5) psychiatric constructs (e.g., “panic attacks,” “trauma,” “psychosis”). The seed should appear explicitly in the input snippet, not inferred from unrelated context.
If you want, paste a new social media snippet that mentions a medical topic—then I will produce the requested 700-word article with an engaging, entity-rich title between 100 and 120 characters and a concluding citation to the provided Creator/Source. Source: @psuresh84095768
p.suresh: Listen up — $KMNO is only 94 votes away from getting listed on Moonshot Don’t sleep on this and vote asap 👇. #breaking
— @psuresh84095768 May 1, 2026
SHOP AMAZON BEST SELLERS, CLICK TO BUY FROM AMAZON.
SHOP AMAZON BEST SELLERS, CLICK TO BUY FROM AMAZON.









