Comment problematic time-lag (Score 1) 201
Mentioned in the original article, a problematic, potentially fatal time-lag for transplants involving any but living donors:
"We took normal, healthy mice, injected them for three consecutive days with the complex, then transplanted insulin-producing cells on the fourth day..."
Vital organs like hearts are 'harvested' from the dying, often people who are terminally brain-injured in motor vehicle accidents. Medical policies and procedures involving keeping such traumatically injured people 'alive' on 'life support' for four days hold complex layers of ethical issues for doctors and excruciatingly painful emotional issues for families of those donors fatally injured.
That isn't a 'nay' to improving pancreatic islet transplantation (which, in my understanding, does not generally kill the donor), but rather an urgent 'caution' and plea to biomedical researchers: proceed honestly, transparently, and with as much public awareness as humanly possible of unintended consequences.
Seems to me that, in general, re-envisioning our lifestyles, diets, and relationships with our planet, seeking healthier ways of being, is a far more viable long-term cure for many degenerative diseases, than heroic and often inaccessibly expensive treatments.
"We took normal, healthy mice, injected them for three consecutive days with the complex, then transplanted insulin-producing cells on the fourth day..."
Vital organs like hearts are 'harvested' from the dying, often people who are terminally brain-injured in motor vehicle accidents. Medical policies and procedures involving keeping such traumatically injured people 'alive' on 'life support' for four days hold complex layers of ethical issues for doctors and excruciatingly painful emotional issues for families of those donors fatally injured.
That isn't a 'nay' to improving pancreatic islet transplantation (which, in my understanding, does not generally kill the donor), but rather an urgent 'caution' and plea to biomedical researchers: proceed honestly, transparently, and with as much public awareness as humanly possible of unintended consequences.
Seems to me that, in general, re-envisioning our lifestyles, diets, and relationships with our planet, seeking healthier ways of being, is a far more viable long-term cure for many degenerative diseases, than heroic and often inaccessibly expensive treatments.