HUMAN ORGANS TO ORDER.
WHAT THE AMERICAN DOCTOR CAN DO.
Surgeons in the United States can now order and receive within a few hours practically every part of the human body, the same to be delivered in a living and growing condition. As a housewife in New York can be supplied on demand with daily necessities, so can American surgeons be supplied with parts of the human heart, nerves, blood vessels, spleen, some of the smaller glands of the body, the cornea of the eye, parts of the various bones, cartilages, etc. These remarkable statements were made by Dr. Alexis Carrel, of New York, who is in charge of the research work at the Rockefeller Institute, to a gathering in Atalantic City of members of the American Medical Association. Dr. Carrel started the meeting by a unique offer of supply, and went on to declare that it has become possible to make such parts live alter they have been removed from the body. He said he could make parts live and grow nine months after life had ceased in the human body from which they had been removed, i'or six years these experiments have been going on, and now that they have been completed and verified the world of medicine has an opportunity to avail itself of the discovery. Dr. Carrel began to experiment on the lower orders of animals. A piece of the heart of a chicken pulsated, and was alive for as long as 104 days after it had been removed from the fowl, and microscopic examination revealed the fact that connective tissue was growing from it live mouths after removal. Dr. Carrel uses nine mediums in which to preserve the life of structures removed from the body, and he declares that he obtains his parts for preservation by removing them from dead bodies. It is possible, he says, to transplant after death the tissues and organs which compose a body that has ceased to live into other identical organisms. In this . transfer no death of the tissues occurs, and after they have been made part of another body life in them continues as though it had been there from birth.
Clinical reports, said Dr. Carrel, show conclusively that his system of transplanting is successful, so that with the experiments completely verified it was possible to inform the prolessiou that the institute was prepared to Supply them on short notice. The institute, said Dr. Carrel, is quite capable of carrying ’ out rush orders, and only recently they had occasion to rush an order from Chicago to New York, for cartilage which was wanted for use in a case of knee disease. The cartilage was sent by express in a tiny refrigerator, arrived safely, and was used. The patient recovered the use of his leg, and is walking about as though he had never had any trouble with it.
This advance in surgery simplifies the methods ot transplanting skin and bone. Surgeons used to graft skin trom one living creature to another. They used to scrape the leg of a dog, and strap the animal to the patient. Now science has given the surgeon living skin, living bone, and the living glands that are most essential to life, and all he has to do is to break the seal of the refrigerator, place the part in position, and it grows.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19120801.2.20
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXIV, Issue 1077, 1 August 1912, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
561HUMAN ORGANS TO ORDER. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXIV, Issue 1077, 1 August 1912, Page 4
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Manawatu Herald. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.