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Fluke surgery restores this lady's eyesight after 21 years of blindness
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Mary Ann Franco, now 70 years old, lost here eyesight in 1995 when a car accident damaged her spine. More than two decades after the initial injury, she fell in her home and injured her neck, sending her to the hospital once again to seek treatment for pain in her arm and back. After doctors decided to perform surgery on her back to alleviate her pain, they happened to cure her blindness. It is suspected that her first injury caused a lack of blood flow to the brain that controls eyesight, and this operation restored it. Interestingly, Franco has been colour blind since birth, but the operation seems to have fixed that problem, too. The spinal cords running down our spines carry a bundle of nerve tissue and other cells from the base of the b ...
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4278 |
duddy |
7 years ago |
Could I borrow your head for a second?
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A 30-year-old Russian man has announced that he will volunteer to transplant his head onto another person's body. Earlier this year, Italian surgeon Sergio Canavero outlined the transplant technique he intends to follow in the journal Surgical Neurology International, a procedure that is predicted to last 36 hours, and requiring the assistance of 150 doctors and nurses. "I would not wish this on anyone," says top surgeon. Watch Dr. Sergio Canavero speak about head transplantation below. ...
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14271 |
duddy |
9 years ago |
Want to get rid of your double chin, now you can without surgery
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An injectable drug, called ATX-101, currently being tested melts away "submental fat", better known as the double chin. According to its makers, ATX-101 can be injected in a clinic and takes just five minutes. It consists of deoxycholic acid, a naturally-occurring molecule that helps us break down fat, which effectively destroys the membranes of fat cells, causing them to burst and then be metabolised by the body. ...
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27567 |
duddy |
9 years ago |
Want to become a brain surgeon? Better get used to this
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Watch as a neurosurgeon opens up a patient's skull and clears the clotted blood from the surface of her brain. We probably don't have to tell you that this is extremely graphic footage, but - you've been warned.
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5415 |
duddy |
9 years ago |
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2955 |
duddy |
9 years ago |
A battery-free pacemaker means less trips to the hospital
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Right now, people with pacemakers need to go into surgery every time the battery dies. But this new pacemaker is based on the mechanics of a self-winding wristwatch, drawing all its power from the patient's beating heart.
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4474 |
duddy |
9 years ago |
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5792 |
duddy |
9 years ago |
How do you stitch an eyeball?
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This is what eyeball stitches look like after a cornea transplant. Beautiful and terrifying all at once.
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3539 |
duddy |
9 years ago |
Surgeons successfully replaces a patient's skull with 3D-printed version
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Surgeons have successfully replaced a patient’s skull with a 3D-printed version. Three months after the operation the patient, a 22-year-old woman with a rare disorder that thickened her skull and gave her poor eyesight as well as headaches, has recovered her eyesight and has gone back to work. ...
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3166 |
duddy |
10 years ago |
Ghost heart
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This is a 'ghost heart' it was soaked in an ingredient found in shampoo to wash away all the cells. This technique leaves a protein scaffold that can be injected with stem cells from a person who needs a transplant, guaranteeing that the transplant won't be rejected.
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4480 |
duddy |
10 years ago |
The strangest medical story ever
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This 22-year-old man had a car accident last year and as a result his nose became infected and deformed. Doctors weren’t able to repair it, but decided to take cartilage from one of the young man’s ribs to grown a new nose. The nose, which is temporarily attached to his forehead, has been developing for 9 months and is ready to be transplanted.
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5044 |
duddy |
10 years ago |