YOUR HEALTH
“It’s alive!”
– almost
The
above quote -- from the story of Frankenstein,
when the scientist sees life in the creature he created from body parts –has
not yet become a reality but major breakthroughs in early 2012 show scientists
and medical researchers are getting closer to understanding and overcoming the
mysteries of life.
Disease
diagnosis is progressing on various
fronts. Alzheimer’s research in particular is making great strides as the
‘process’ is becoming better understood – allowing for better intervention
treatments. (See “New clues unearthed on
how Alzheimer’s spreads through the brain” G&M
Feb 3/12 L6)
And
reviving an old medical trick – smelling a patient’s breath – has gained
attention using new, breath machines.
Like a breathalyser for alcohol, the new devices scan breath for
telltale traces of various illnesses. In particular, researchers in Israel,
U.S.A. and Canada are testing such machines for tracing different cancers –
lung, bowel, breast and prostrate. (See “One breath away from diagnosing
disease” G&M Feb 4/12 A17)
Replacing/restoring
flesh and bones is also now possible.
Face transplants have been carried out successfully in Spain, Britain, Turkey
and U.S.A. in the last few years -- using skin and muscle tissue from deceased
donors.
Now,
at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, hands and forearms have been
successfully transplanted (from a deceased donor) to someone whose limbs were amputated
a decade ago! (See “Helping hands – that come from a donor” G&M Feb 3/12 L2)
Finally,
among the burst of medical breakthroughs published this February, researchers
are working on a computer that, when linked to brain electrodes, can reproduce
sounds and words -- based on a person’s thoughts. (See “Science offers hope for the voiceless.”
G&M Feb 3/12 L6)
In
brief, then, scientific and medical progress is moving forward at an ever
faster, almost exponential pace in a variety of areas. What was unthinkable 10 years ago is now
close at hand, or already reality.
So, Mary
Shelley and Dr. Frankenstein, “It’s alive!” – is almost here.
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