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Just a thought rolling around my head at the moment ?

My oldest son lost a friend earlier this year.
He's spent his life from incubator to adulthood connected to oxygen bottles.
Born with a failing heart and lungs, he dealt with life as best he could given his biological limitations.
And by all accounts, lived a pretty full life.
He had a transplant at the age of 18.
Yet passed away earlier this year at the age of 28. And it got me wondering.....
I wondered why ?
Truth is, as far as my research indicates. Transplants aren't as successful or long lasting as I'd always thought they were supposed to be.
It seems they are something of a last resort to those who's own organs are failing so badly that their life expectancy is dramatically shortened without them !
You then have the problem of trying to reduce the body's desire to reject the transplanted organ !
So to do that you introduce suppressants to the immune system which then leaves you constantly fighting things that a fully functioning immune system would ordinarily take care of.
Ultimately, simple infections are often what causes the end of life.
Which then got me thinking about all those 'Carry a donor card' campaigns of the '80's and 90's.
I just imagined millions of us wandering around with them, believing we were seriously able to permenantly alter somebody's life, should it come to it. Without being aware that it would only be a short term benefit !
Wow! Hate to admit it. But mind blown !
SteelHands · 61-69, M
I learned about this thing you speak about some years ago.

I thought that the growing of human replacement tissues through targeted cell type duplication process to recreate exact, non rejected organ matches was just a few years off. Then I figured after it wasn't that they stalled that development to go one better, some form of genetic alteration science to correct health problems in the existing organs.

And then everyone began arguing about stupid shjt, and all of that was left in the trash bin of history.
greenmountaingal · 70-79, F
Many among the elite prefer organ donation because it keeps the population fown to more manageable numbers while providing huge profits for drug companies.
JennyM · T
It may soon be possible to 'grow' a brand new organ in a lab from the patient's own stem cells.

Then there'll be no need for donor cards, no rejection issues, & the threat of organ failure will be met with a relatively simple replacement.
JennyM · T
3D printing? Wow!! Astonishing!!!

Twenty years does seem a long time ..but for techniques which have been impossible from the dawn of time until now, those twenty years are just the blink of an eye perhaps
Picklebobble · 56-60, M
@JennyM: Yeah but it means a lot more loved ones will be lost until then, sadly.
JennyM · T
Yes. :(

God bless them all.

It could happen quicker than they say though.

Maybe much quicker. Sometimes governments inject lots of cash into excellent medical projects.
greenmountaingal · 70-79, F
It's something to consider.

And some say organ donor cards just give a hospital permission to pull the plug early making HMOs very happy...a sort of permission for euthanasia.

For more on this subject, you can read a book called [i]Forced Exit[/i]. It's a riveting read and will probably change your mind about many things.

 
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