يحاول ذهب - حر

Xenotransplantation

January, 16 - 31, 2018

|

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Xenotransplantation

- Maneka Sanjay Gandhi

Xenotransplantation

The first known xenotransplantation was done by the god Shiva. Daksha, the father in law of Shiva, organized a yagna. He insulted Shiva and his daughter. Sati, Shiva’s wife, immolated herself in protest. Daksha’s head was cut off and burnt. Later, when Shiva forgave him, he was brought back to life but with a ram’s head. The more famous decapitation was that of Ganesha. Shiva cut off the head of a baby elephant and transplanted it on to his son’s neck.

For the last 300 years doctors have been trying to replicate this miracle. The process is called xenotransplantation, or the transplanting of non-human organs or cells into a human body.

Thousands of animals have died in the process. And each attempt has been a failure. But that doesn’t stop scientists from trying. After all, animal life is cheap and, in the name of science, one can do anything.

In the 17th century, Jean Baptiste Denis started the practice of blood transfusion from animals to humans. Everyone died and xenotransfusion was banned in France for a number of years. In the 19th century, skin grafts became relatively popular between various animal species and humans. The fact that many of the species used as donors—sheep, rabbits, dogs, cats, rats, chickens, and pigeons—had hair, feathers, or fur, growing from the skin, did not deter the surgeons involved. The ideal graft was from frogs, which were sometimes skinned alive. None of the grafts were successful.

In the 20th century, the French experimental surgeon, Alexis Carrel, developed surgical techniques for joining blood vessels, which enabled organ transplantation to be carried out successfully for the first time. For this work he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1912. He developed an interest in crossspecies transplantation and his techniques became a reason for more people to experiment on animals.

المزيد من القصص من BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

A Glut of Crops After Diwali: Farmers Face Price Pressure Amid Surplus Stocks

A glut situation has emerged in the post-Diwali period, with foodgrain stocks reaching exceptionally high levels.

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

CHHATH PUJA: WORSHIP OF THE SUN GOD

Continuing a sacred tradition that has existed since time immemorial, devotees across regions gathered to pay obeisance to the Sun — it was Chhath Puja.

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

India-Afganistan tie-up is good diplomacy, good business

The real reason behind Trump's call to regain Afganistan’s airbase is not just its strategic closeness to China, but the $3 trillion worth of rare earth deposits of the country. Describing his predecessor Biden's decision to withdraw US troops from Afganistan as a 'disaster', Trump threatened Afganistan by saying 'bad things are going to happen' if it does not hand over the Bagram airfield, 'one of the biggest air bases in the world' built by the US there.

time to read

2 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Indian women's historic first ICC World Cup victory cemented their economic credibility

Harmanpreet Kaur's Indian women's cricket team made history on 2nd November, 2025, at the DY Patil Sports Academy in Navi Mumbai.

time to read

3 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Translation in the Global Linguistic Landscape

Language plays a central role in all aspects of human connection — introduction, cooperation, harmony, exchange of thoughts and feelings, development of knowledge, preservation of values and traditions, reasoning, dialogue, and so on. What would be the significance of human life without a language? What meaning would life hold without it? We all know the answer.

time to read

3 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Charting the Blue Economy: India's Next Growth Wave

India is becoming a major maritime power and is being recognised as a reliable and responsible partner—ready to play the role of a steady lighthouse for the world.” Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India Maritime Week 2025

time to read

4 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

The Tea Industry must address climate vulnerability, price realization, and regulation of small growers

India's tea industry today stands at a crossroads.

time to read

3 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Lopamudra: The Rishika-Rishi Queen of the Vedas

The Rishika-Rishi-Tradition was an excellent, unique and dedicated order in Indian knowledge-philosophy. Its chief purpose was to pave the way for greater human welfare through their knowledgeable and duty-bound disciples. Both learned women and men were associated with this tradition. They devoted their entire lives to the transfer of knowledge to their disciples with complete selflessness and sacrificing personal comfort for society and the nation. Undoubtedly, they played a very important role in social and national development.

time to read

3 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Power Sector Reform: Draft electricity (Amendment) bill, 2025, to boost efficiency

On October 9, 2025, the Ministry of Power released the Draft Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2025, seeking feedback from stakeholders, including State Governments.

time to read

3 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

BUSINESS ECONOMICS

Reputation resilience today is less about crisis management and more about trust-building

Dhruv Bhalla, Head-Corporate Affairs, Kanoria Foundation, shares insights on authenticity, purpose, and building brand resilience in a digital era.

time to read

3 mins

November 01 - 30, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size