Question:

Stabilize human organs?

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Is there a wa y, to stabilize human organs . So that they won't die .bacteria orr anything . it's for a project!!!

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  1. Stabilizing human organs are at the mercy of the doctors

    and their instruments and........ the general health of the patient!!! Bacteria germs, viruses, fungus, etc has its own

    way with the body and all the knowledge and usage  of

    equipment will not always work on these vermins!!! Food is

    the best answer I can give you to work the body at its worth!!!

    That is healthy food of course.!!!


  2. freeze 'em.  Just put them down to 80-90F (27-32C) or so if the person's still alive (called protective hypothermia, as seen in the latest House episode), or put them on ice if they aren't.  Easy.

    Works for around 24 hours.

  3. i dont think so.

    Reason- the characteristics of all living things are

    movement, respiration, nutrition, irritability, growth, excretion, reproduction, competition and DEATH. So all living things must die.

  4. You wrote that the topic"how to stabilise human organs" should be a concern for your school project work.

    MY ANSWER is---- it is possible !  YOU can go with it!!

    ( at least in REGENERATIVE medicine it is possible to plan,  and works and experiments are at present being carried on)

    So, my suggestion is to deal with the topic this way.

    I propose to deal it relying on some medical point of views. There you can find some idaes and point to stick to and construct the project.

    PROJECT GUIDELINE

    --------------------------------------...

    Please follow my guideline.........

    ( make an appropriate plan first according to these points one by one or re-order them...then discuss with available medical efforts with examples)

    PROJECT PLAN

    1. Define: what is stabilising organs may mean in medicine? Give some existing examples of therapy (  from web-sites).... .....in prospect of present and  future treatment, cure, healing and even implantation or complete replacement of diseased organs)

    2. Discuss and define the term "regenarating human organs, tissues"

    3. Give examples of  medical fields dealing with this science;

    4. Talk about how they(doctors) are doing it, their aims and final destination in medical treatments and cures;

    5. Discuss their effort in terms of stabilising human organs and regenerating;

    6. A conclusion and  state your opinion to finish.

    7. Get all the informations from the sites I am including here with (PUT them in order as you fell better)

    8. Refer to web-site resources ( I will include to every point mentioned above)

    --------------------------------------...

    IMPORTANT!!

    THIS  subject matter seems to be superficially impossible but scientists and medical practitioners are working hard to stabilise and regenerate the organs. This is a long turn medical science project and works are in advance...

    --------------------------------------...

    HERE ARE SOME WEB-SITES, where you get ideas and materials to construct your project AS I HAVE PLANNED in my guideline...........  ( of course , if only you accept them)

    1. Federal Initiative for Regenerative Medicine  

    organs into healing themselves. Regenerative medicine also empowers ... on how regenerative medicine science works and. the risks of the technology. ...(OPEN AND READ TO MAKE NOTES to those guideline points)

    http://www.hhs.gov/reference/FutureofReg...

    2.   A New Vision - in 2020:

    A Future for Regenerative Medicine  

    Regenerative medicine also empowers scientists to grow tissues and organs in ... such as the Human Genome Project, the ... How regenerative medicine works ...

    http://www.hhs.gov/reference/newfuture.s...

    more web results

    --------------------------------------...

    1.What is regenerative medicine?

    Summary

    Regenerative medicine is an applied field of tissue engineering that holds the realistic promise of regenerating damaged tissues in vivo (in the living body) and externally creating �tissues for life� available for implantation. Through research and products developed from this field, previously untreatable diseases will become easily and routinely cured.

    2.How regenerative medicine works?

    Regenerative medicine is the application of tissue science, tissue engineering, and related biological and engineering principles that restore the structure and function of damaged tissues and organs. This new field encompasses many novel approaches to treatment of disease and restoration of biological function through the following methods:

    1. Using therapies that prompt the body to autonomously regenerate damaged tissues

    2.Using tissue engineered implants to prompt regeneration

    3.Direct transplantation of healthy tissues into damaged environments

    IMPORTANT CONCLUSION........

    Collectively, these treatments allow for two substantial advances over current medicine. The first advance is the potential to in vivo (in the living body) regenerate currently irreparably damaged tissues so that they return to full functionality. The second advance is to be able to produce tissues in vitro (in the laboratory) to be used for transplantation purposes when regeneration is not possible.

    USES......

    This technology has the potential to cure diseases ranging from diabetes (through regeneration of islets) to the repair of cancerous tissues (by replacing the removed cancerous tissue with externally grown healthy tissue).

    By creating these �tissues for life,� regenerative medicine treatments will undoubtedly lead to a tremendous improvement in quality of life and healthcare. ( READ MORE...)

    http://www.hhs.gov/reference/FutureofReg...

    http://www.hhs.gov/reference/newfuture.s...

    more web results

    --------------------------------------...

    Some site that deals with some existing medical examples of "stabilising human organs and tissues)

    1. Human skin is a uniquely engineered organ that permits terrestrial life ... may stabilise the bilayer structure and act as a molecular rivet' between. bilayers. ...

    http://www.pharmpress.com/shop/samples/T...

    2. A new model for ...  The artery segments were allowed to stabilise at a resting tension of 2 mN for 1 ... of contractile endothelin-B receptors in human arteries after organ culture. ...

    http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2261/2...

    3.Willkommen auf der Website des Pankreaszentrums Nordrhein-Westfalen  

    In theory, cancer can occur in any organ of the human body. ... The condition will usually stabilise after surgery, sometimes however it can ...

    http://www.pankreaszentrum.de/en/karzino...

    Islet cell transplantation for insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus ...  

    of human islet transplantation are likely to match. those of whole-organ pancreas transplantation. ... patients to stabilise metabolic control. Insulopaenic ...

    http://www-ermm.cbcu.cam.ac.uk/00001861a...

    5. Organ culture: a new model for vascular endothelium dysfunction  

    The artery segments were allowed to stabilise at a resting tension of 2 mN for 1 ... B receptors in human arteries after organ culture. Br J Pharmacol. ...

    http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/article...

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