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Chemical_Kitten
Captain

PostPosted: Thu Jan 19, 2006 12:18 am


[ Message temporarily off-line ]
PostPosted: Sun Jan 29, 2006 12:26 am


They did the first ever face transplant!!!

Quote:
ONE month after receiving a new face, Isabelle Dinoire is using her new lips to smoke a cigarette.

But rather than condemn her for renewing the habit, the French surgeons who performed the first ever partial face transplant, by giving Dinoire a flap of tissue containing the nose, lips and chin of a dead woman, are hailing the operation's outstanding success.

At the Sixth International Symposium on Composite Tissue Allotransplantation in Tucson, Arizona, last week, her surgeons Jean-Michel Dubernard from Lyon and Bernard Devauchelle from Amiens described how they selected the tissue and connected the blood vessels (New Scientist, 10 December 2005, p 10), and displayed the first photographs of Dinoire to be shown at a medical conference. "The actual surgery is extremely skilful," says Roy Calne, a transplant surgeon at the University of Cambridge.

Experts at the conference also agreed that the surgeons had taken all necessary ethical precautions, contrary to earlier suggestions that Dinoire may have been psychologically unprepared.

Reference: Issue 2536 of New Scientist magazine, 28 January 2006, page 5


I didn't even know this until I read the paper this morning... I knew that there was a race between the UK, USA and France... I'd seen a docu on the lady in America that was being considered and such... but I didn't know that they had done a partial transplant already!!!!

DISCUSS!

Chemical_Kitten
Captain


scruffy012
Crew

PostPosted: Thu Feb 02, 2006 5:54 pm


lol, yeah i had some idea that diabetes is genetically inherited, but yeah not to that extent but... hehehe on my mums side of the family, out of 14-15 people only 5 or 6 dont have actual diabetes, and there are a few in that lot with pre-diabetes. My dads side is similiar, but yeah.... hehehe with my family and diabetes ill be up there for the 141% extra chance...

yeah i was reading about the face transplant a few days ago... it actually suprised me becasue i hadent heard of anything about it until it hit the local rag... but as technology and understanding increases, there will be more advances like this..
PostPosted: Sun Jun 04, 2006 4:34 pm


Huh... does anyone know more about this..? o_O

Quote:
Mysterious red cells might be aliens
By Jebediah Reed
Popular Science

Friday, June 2, 2006; Posted: 12:36 p.m. EDT (16:36 GMT)


(PopSci.com) -- As bizarre as it may seem, the sample jars brimming with cloudy, reddish rainwater in Godfrey Louis's laboratory in southern India may hold, well, aliens.

In April, Louis, a solid-state physicist at Mahatma Gandhi University, published a paper in the prestigious peer-reviewed journal Astrophysics and Space Science in which he hypothesizes that the samples -- water taken from the mysterious blood-colored showers that fell sporadically across Louis's home state of Kerala in the summer of 2001 -- contain microbes from outer space.

Specifically, Louis has isolated strange, thick-walled, red-tinted cell-like structures about 10 microns in size. Stranger still, dozens of his experiments suggest that the particles may lack DNA yet still reproduce plentifully, even in water superheated to nearly 600 degrees Fahrenheit . (The known upper limit for life in water is about 250 degrees Fahrenheit .)

So how to explain them? Louis speculates that the particles could be extraterrestrial bacteria adapted to the harsh conditions of space and that the microbes hitched a ride on a comet or meteorite that later broke apart in the upper atmosphere and mixed with rain clouds above India.

If his theory proves correct, the cells would be the first confirmed evidence of alien life and, as such, could yield tantalizing new clues to the origins of life on Earth.

Last winter, Louis sent some of his samples to astronomer Chandra Wickramasinghe and his colleagues at Cardiff University in Wales, who are now attempting to replicate his experiments; Wickramasinghe expects to publish his initial findings later this year.

Meanwhile, more down-to-earth theories abound. One Indian government investigation conducted in 2001 lays blame for what some have called the "blood rains" on algae.

Other theories have implicated fungal spores, red dust swept up from the Arabian peninsula, even a fine mist of blood cells produced by a meteor striking a high-flying flock of bats.

Louis and his colleagues dismiss all these theories, pointing to the fact that both algae and fungus possess DNA and that blood cells have thin walls and die quickly when exposed to water and air.

More important, they argue, blood cells don't replicate. "We've already got some stunning pictures -- transmission electron micrographs -- of these cells sliced in the middle," Wickramasinghe says. "We see them budding, with little daughter cells inside the big cells."

Louis's theory holds special appeal for Wickramasinghe. A quarter of a century ago, he co-authored the modern theory of panspermia, which posits that bacteria-riddled space rocks seeded life on Earth.

"If it's true that life was introduced by comets four billion years ago," the astronomer says, "one would expect that microorganisms are still injected into our environment from time to time. This could be one of those events."

The next significant step, explains University of Sheffield microbiologist Milton Wainwright, who is part of another British team now studying Louis's samples, is to confirm whether the cells truly lack DNA. So far, one preliminary DNA test has come back positive.

"Life as we know it must contain DNA, or it's not life," he says. "But even if this organism proves to be an anomaly, the absence of DNA wouldn't necessarily mean it's extraterrestrial."

Louis and Wickramasinghe are planning further experiments to test the cells for specific carbon isotopes. If the results fall outside the norms for life on Earth, it would be powerful new evidence for Louis's idea, of which even Louis himself remains skeptical.

Source: CNN

Maryhl

Shy Werewolf


Sephiroth 9534

PostPosted: Tue Jun 06, 2006 9:31 am


Prephaps these red cells run on R.N.A. as some viriuses in the hantavirus family do. It is astonishing though that it can survive such high temperatures.
PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 2:41 am


http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/index/2FFTM2LX7D9A2AP5.pdf

try that, is a paper in the journal 'Aerosol Science and Technology', it sounds like the same thing, also the source was the media, which in general isn't overly reliable.

what the paper suggests is that there was a dust storm a few days before, from a nearby desert, (living in Australia, i've seen a few, and the dust in the upper atmosphere can last for days) and the mud formed from the dust turned the rain red.

I dont know where the super-heated water source came from but.... but using logic, generally a exotic species of anything only has a life span that covers one extreme of the temperature scale, not both... as the proteins to make the cell run would either be denatured or not enough energy to do its job.

But if you go off the evolution logic, the cells by the sounds of it have a high progeny rate, so therefore it would seem that the fungi/bacteria would have adapted to the cold extremes of space...

also things get hotter than the 600 degrees F during re-entry... much much hotter...

one thing i found whilst trying unsuccessfully find the average temperature of re-entry...

In 1979, Skylab reentered uncontrolled and parts of it crashed into Esperance, Western Australia, killing one cow and damaging several buildings. Local authorities issued a fine for littering to the United States, but the fine was never settled.

lol

scruffy012
Crew

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