It looks like you’re combining a few viral health-style phrases, but they’re a bit garbled. I’ll clarify what they usually mean and what’s actually true.
🪦 “Dying muscle”
This likely refers to muscle wasting (muscle loss), medically called:
Sarcopenia
What it really is:
- Gradual loss of muscle strength and size (common with aging)
- Can also happen with inactivity, poor nutrition, or chronic illness
Not a sudden “dying” process—it’s slow and preventable in many cases.
💧 “Drinking water on empty stomach immediately after waking up”
This is just morning hydration advice.
As explained earlier:
- It helps rehydrate your body after sleep
- May support digestion and alertness
- It does not detox or cure disease
⚠️ “Highlig Coron”
This seems like a typo or broken phrase. It may be trying to refer to:
Coronary artery disease
If so:
- It involves narrowed or blocked heart arteries
- Symptoms include chest pain, shortness of breath, fatigue
- It is not related to drinking water timing
🧠 Bottom line
These phrases look like fragments from viral health posts mixed together. In reality:
- Morning water = hydration habit
- Muscle loss = long-term health condition
- Heart disease = medical condition unrelated to “morning tricks”
If you want, you can paste the full post you saw, and I’ll break it down line by line so you can see what’s real and what’s misleading.