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Scientists Grow Pig's Heart On Sheep's Neck

t0rnt0pieces writes "Yahoo! News reports that Nebraska scientists say they successfully grafted a pig's heart to a sheep by manipulating the immune systems of both animals, a step that may soon allow scientists to grow organs for human transplantation. Trials using pig organs to transplant into humans are on the way. Besides hearts, the technology could be applicable to kidney, liver and pancreatic islet cell transplants. Take a look at a picture of one of the sheep here."

7 of 75 comments (clear)

  1. Re:functional? by Merlin42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One step at a time please ...

    I think the point of this experiment was to be able to do interspecies transplants while avoiding rejection, actually replacing the heart would have added one more complication to the experiment that could have confused the results.

  2. Why are you so negative? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How do you plan to test your immunology theories without doing real research on living things? You don't plan to test them? Fine, go ahead and die your ignorant and natural death but please shut up until then.

  3. Re:Gah? by Bonker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Mr. Chase, your steady diet of greasy porkrinds and quarterpounders with cheese has finally caught up with you. Your heart is damaged beyond repair. Your only hope of living longer than six months is a full heart transplant. Unfortuneately the waiting list is quite long and you're of a race that typically has very few registered donors. (Ask Asians about transplants...) The prognosis isn't good.

    Fortuneately, we've been doing immune-system research with sheep and pigs that may allow you to use a pig heart in the short... or even long term.

    Now, Mister Chase, do you think that the research is so wrong?

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  4. Re:Nebraska, eh? by AngryPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They're from Nebraska, so what they've done doesn't have significance? The East and West coast folks don't have a monopoly on intelligence or innovation. That heart wasn't held on with bailing wire, Einstein. Whether I agree with it or not, the location has nothing ot do with the significance of the achievement.

    Troll.

    Terry

    Omaha, Nebraska

  5. Re:so? It's called empathy & civilisation by Directrix1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You know what? I'm sure that if scientists could advance the state of medical technology without possibly harming animals, they would. This is all just a transitional stage to the point where we can literally just grow organs, customized to the recipient to save lives of all types. Maybe someday even other animals. Sometimes you just have to step on an animal to get to the next step. And believe me, other animals do the same thing. We are not being predatory here. We are aiming to save lives. A goal which you are saying we should just ignore. Why don't you open your mind even more, and realize that people may "blown" their lives by eating greasy foods and not exercising, but are you saying we become prejudiced against them. They are predisposed to do what they do. We are all products of our environment and our genetic makeup. Nothing is our fault. We are in this world to live this one life. Period.

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    Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  6. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You're quite correct, sir! There's another asshole-grafted-to-neck experiment that is working hard to start World War III as we type. The graft experiment was successful, but there was an unforeseen mutation that caused it to be completely and totally addicted to oil.

  7. Just one step . . . by TwP · · Score: 2, Insightful

    . . . towards grafting a brain into Mr. Bush's head!