New breakthrough in pig lung transplant on people
According to the British Daily Telegraph, Australian scientists have recently reached a new breakthrough in the study of pig lung transplantation in humans.
Specifically, the scientists transfused human blood into the pig's lungs and took advantage of the ventilation and pumping equipment to make the 'respiratory lungs' successful.'
Experts say that the results of this study over the next 5 years can help implant animal organs into humans.
The key technical aspect of the breakthrough in this experiment is that scientists have successfully removed a piece of DNA from pigs without a correlation between organs of pigs and human blood.
Currently, human DNA is also introduced into the organs of pigs, thus minimizing the elimination of mutations between coagulation and transplanted organs.
It is expected that by August, scientists will publish a complete report on this experiment. Professor Filippini, a medical expert, points out: 'This is indeed a form of' pig man. ' The problem is that the current society has not done a good job of preparing to receive a creature that is partly human and a part of pig '.
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