About me

Hi, and thanks for visiting my page!

My name is Vignesh. I'm a junior doctor working in the UK, interested in general medicine and physiology, cardiology, and radiology. Since the end of medical school, I've also delved into the world of programming. I'm especially interested in making tutorials to explain complex topics in a unique way.

If you have any feedback or would just like to get in touch, I'd love to hear from you - just email me at vigdhildev.2flou@dralias.com

Projects

Medical

An educational website designed to teach cardiac electrophysiology and electrocardiography in a unique way. Using interactive simulations consisting of grids of 'cells', the aim is to help you visualise arrhythmias and complex electrophysiology concepts in real time without relying on plain text and static schematic diagrams.
A step-by-step tutorial which uses interactive simulations to help you intuitively understand how the body regulates osmolality and volume, and how exactly hyponatraemia can occur when it goes wrong. By the end, we will have gradually built a hyponatraemia algorithm from the ground up, which you will understand much more deeply than if you had just looked up a flow chart.
A simple quiz website to complement Dr James P Howard’s www.cardiologytrials.org (with permission), in which users can learn about the most important clinical trials in cardiology by testing themselves with automatically generating multiple choice questions.
A 'file conversion as a service' website for junior doctors working in the UK. Use this to convert your rota from a spreadsheet, in whatever arbitrary layout your rota coordinator uses or has inherited, into a standardised google/apple/ical calendar format which you can import into whichever calendar app you use. This relies on doctors/rota coordinators kindly giving me access to anonymous template rotas for their jobs, for which I can then create specific conversion functions.
A score calculator for the official Situational Judgement Test (SJT) practice papers which I made back when I was practising for the SJT myself. Designed to help my final-year colleagues avoid tedious, difficult and error-prone manual marking of their practice SJT papers in the run-up to the official SJT.

Non-medical

Most chess puzzle websites ask the player to identify a move leading to a win in material or checkmate, with knowledge that such a move exists in that position. But in full games, the player doesn't actually know when they're in such a position. On this simple website, beginners can improve their confidence in identifying whether or not a checkmate or mate-in-X exists in any given position.