Tuesday, August 9, 2022
  • PRESS RELEASE
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT
Asia Post
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • INDIA
    • CHINA
    • WORLD
  • DEFENSE
  • POLITICS
  • BUSINESS
  • HEALTH
  • SPORTS
  • ENTRTAINMENT
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • TRAVEL
  • OUR TEAM
Asia Post
No Result
View All Result

Life after death? Researchers bring back to life vital organs of pigs one hour after the animals die- The New Indian Express

August 4, 2022
in HEALTH
0 0
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Email


By Online Desk

In experiments described as ‘stunning’ by experts, scientists were able to bring back to life vital organs of the pigs one hour after the animals died.

The research, according to the journal Nature, challenges the idea that cardiac death — which occurs when blood circulation and oxygenation stops — is irreversible, and raises ethical questions about the definition of death.

Nenad Sestan, a Yale neuroscientist and member of the team, quoted by the journal, predicted that these experiments might work in the light of the 2019 pig-brain study, because the brain is the organ most susceptible to oxygen deprivation. “If you can regain some function in a dead pig brain, you can do it in other organs, too,” he says.

According to the journal, Sestan’s team obtained pigs from a local farm breeder and monitored them for three days before sedating them, putting them on a ventilator and inducing cardiac arrest by delivering a shock to their hearts. After confirming a lack of pulse, they removed the animals from the ventilators. One hour after the pigs died, they restarted the ventilators and anaesthesia. Some of the pigs were then attached to the OrganEx system; others received no treatment or were hooked up to an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) machine, which some hospitals use in a last-ditch effort to supply oxygen to and remove carbon dioxide from the body.

After six hours, the researchers noticed that circulation had restarted much more effectively in pigs that received the OrganEx solution than in those that received ECMO or no treatment. Oxygen had begun flowing to tissues all over the bodies of the OrganEx animals, and a heart scan detected some electrical activity and contraction. But the heart had not fully restarted, and it’s unclear what exactly it was doing in those animals, says David Andrijevic, a neuroscientist at Yale University and research team member.

The researchers also noticed that the livers of the OrganEx pigs produced much more of a protein called albumin than did the livers of pigs in the other groups. And cells in each of the vital organs of the OrganEx pigs responded to glucose much more than did the animals in the other groups, suggesting that the treatment had kick-started metabolism.

The findings are striking given how quickly after death decomposition begins, says team member Zvonimir Vrselja, a neuroscientist at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Within minutes of the heart stopping, the body becomes deprived of oxygen and enzymes begin digesting cell membranes, leading to organs rapidly losing their structural integrity.

The researchers also found that more genes responsible for cellular function and repair were active across all major organs in the OrganEx group compared with the ECMO or no-treatment groups.

ALSO READ | In a first, US surgeons transplant pig heart into human patient

ECMO is currently used in an attempt to preserve the organs of some dead people for donation, or to try to resuscitate people following a heart attack. For these purposes, doctors typically need to start ECMO soon after the heart attack or death — and success rates can be low, depending on injury severity, says Sam Shemie, an critical-care physician at the McGill University Health Centre in Montreal, Canada.

Given the difference in how the pigs’ organs fared with OrganEx compared with ECMO, this is potentially a “landmark” study that could “significantly increase the number of organs that could be recovered for transplantation”, says Gabriel Oniscu, a transplant surgeon at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, UK.

Before that can happen, further research to assess the viability of the recovered organs will be crucial, says Shemie.

With these potential implications come ethical challenges, says Farahany, especially if the technique could one day restore brain activity after death.

The researchers note that electrical activity in the pigs’ brains might have been absent because the solution they pumped through was colder (28 ºC) than normal body temperature, or because it included anaesthetic compounds and neuronal blockers that could have suppressed such signals. Farahany says it will be important for future researchers to test for any restoration of brain activity, particularly in light of the neck-jerking the researchers observed during the experiment.

The journal added that the study also further emphasizes that death is not a moment but a process, making it challenging to come up with a uniform way to declare a person dead, says Arthur Caplan, a bioethicist at New York University. That means that the legal definition of death will continue to adapt as medicine continues to advance, he adds. “People tend to focus on brain death, but there’s not much consensus on when cardiac death occurs,” he says. “This paper brings that home in an important way.”



Source link

Tags: animalsbringDeathdieExpresshourIndianLifeOrgansPigsresearchersVital
ShareTweetSend

Related Posts

HEALTH

Pfizer to acquire sickle cell drugmaker GBT for $5 bn, Health News, ET HealthWorld

August 9, 2022
HEALTH

Refresh your workout routine- The New Indian Express

August 9, 2022
HEALTH

The long haul: When COVID-19 symptoms don’t go away

August 8, 2022
HEALTH

Apollo Hospitals acquires asset from Nayati Healthcare for Rs 450 crore

August 8, 2022
HEALTH

BioNTech expects Omicron-adapted vaccine deliveries as soon as October, Health News, ET HealthWorld

August 8, 2022
HEALTH

Centre to move Central Universities (Amendment) Bill, 2022 in RS, Health News, ET HealthWorld

August 8, 2022
Load More
Next Post

Reuters US staff plan to strike for first time in decades

Padma Subrahmanyam’s unified vision of art

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Man Declared Dead at Shanghai’s Elderly Care Centre, Found Alive in Morgue

May 2, 2022

As Shanghai’s Covid Cases Fall, China’s Restrictions Tighten

May 10, 2022

Shanghai to end Covid lockdown and return to normal life in June amid economic slowdown | China

May 16, 2022

Outcry in Shanghai as person declared dead and put in body bag found to be alive | China

May 3, 2022

Tesla halts most production in Shanghai over supply problems | Tesla

May 10, 2022

Shanghai Declares Victory in Covid Outbreak, but Lockdowns Continue

May 17, 2022

Luxury brands navigate Shanghai’s lockdown to keep VIPs pampered

May 10, 2022

Has Shanghai Been Xinjianged? – The New York Times

May 6, 2022

Pakistan Cricket Shoaib Akhtar Knee Surgery Shoaib Akhtar Health Update Viral Instagram Video

August 9, 2022

Biden to sign $280 billion CHIPS act in bid to boost U.S. over China

August 9, 2022

China’s commercial rocket CERES-1 Y3 launches three satellites

August 9, 2022

Kaun Banega Crorepati 14: Can you answer this question that helped Dulichand Agarwal win Rs 50 lakh?

August 9, 2022

How an Armenian startup plans to use a new innovation to tackle the billion-dollar phishing industry – TechCrunch

August 9, 2022

Govt makes it must for aircraft operators to share details on international air travellers to & from India

August 9, 2022

Nitish Kumar decides to break off alliance with BJP

August 9, 2022

Zazie Beetz in talks to return for ‘Joker’ sequel

August 9, 2022
Asia Post

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of breaking news, local news, national, politics, and more from the Asia's top trusted sources.

Categories

  • BUSINESS
  • CHINA
  • DEFENSE
  • ENTRTAINMENT
  • HEALTH
  • INDIA
  • INDIA-NORTHEAST
  • LIFESTYLE
  • POLITICS
  • SPORTS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • TRAVEL
  • WORLD

Recent News

  • Pakistan Cricket Shoaib Akhtar Knee Surgery Shoaib Akhtar Health Update Viral Instagram Video
  • Biden to sign $280 billion CHIPS act in bid to boost U.S. over China
  • China’s commercial rocket CERES-1 Y3 launches three satellites
  • Home
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Our Team
  • Contact

Copyright © 2021 Asia Post.
Asia Post is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • INDIA
    • CHINA
    • WORLD
  • DEFENSE
  • POLITICS
  • BUSINESS
  • HEALTH
  • SPORTS
  • ENTRTAINMENT
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • TRAVEL
  • OUR TEAM

Copyright © 2021 Asia Post.
Asia Post is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In