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Pros And Cons Of Xenotransplantation

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God has placed certain animals in this word not only to provide us with food, clothing, transportation, and service, but also to provide living tissue and organs for Xenotransplantation. As long as animals are not put through any unnecessary pain, Xenotransplantation is a good alternative to human organ and graft donation. Since the 1960’s, Xenotransplantation has been helping humans with the need we have for tissues and organs. However, these donations come with pros and cons.
Xenotransplantation is the transplant of tissues, organs, or other parts of the body into another species (Connect). Alexis Carrel is the founding father of both Xenotransplantation and human to human transplants. Carrel and his colleague Guthrie contributed much of their time from 1904-1906. When experimenting with different species, he came up with numerous techniques for different transplants (Xenotransplantation: Overview). However, a full organ transplant did not happen till the 1960’s with a chimpanzee kidney into two human recipients. One recipient died after nine months because of effects of immunosuppressant drugs, and the other died of kidney rejection (Xenotransplantation. Nature News). The real argument on …show more content…

Three-fourths of that is for kidneys alone, and only half of them will get an organ. A new recipient is added every twelve minutes, which makes getting an organ even more difficult because if a person is less critical than someone else, they are bumped down the list and forced to wait even longer (Xenotransplantation. Xenotransplantation). Eventually, if someone was forced to wait too long, their sickness will take over and they will die. Thirteen people a day die because of this (Xenotransplantation. Nature News). The amount of donors available is so little. Families sometimes do not allow other family members to donate their organs or any part of them to be in another person due to religious

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