Okay so this is totally just a hypothetical question but if like you got an extra spinal cord -- a totally healthy one -- could someone or something here transplant it into a person with a damaged spinal cord. 'Cause that was impossible back home but I dunno, I'm still not completely used to the future-y gizmos and things and machines here. So, uh. Yeah.
We do have the technology to synthesize organs, I don't see why parts of the spinal cord would be out of the question. The hard part is the actual procedure.
We have automated surgery, but anything involving the spinal cord is inherently risky. There's always the possibility that a hypothetical patient might not be comfortable leaving themselves in the hands of a machine, even if someone like me supervises the procedure.
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Okay so this is totally just a hypothetical question but if like you got an extra spinal cord -- a totally healthy one -- could someone or something here transplant it into a person with a damaged spinal cord. 'Cause that was impossible back home but I dunno, I'm still not completely used to the future-y gizmos and things and machines here. So, uh. Yeah.
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That is...an incredibly specific hypothetical.
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[ somehow he hasn't found out about this yet. and he's vaguely offended by it. ]
Right, uh. There isn't a machine that can just bam, swap broken spinal cord for a whole one?
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We have automated surgery, but anything involving the spinal cord is inherently risky. There's always the possibility that a hypothetical patient might not be comfortable leaving themselves in the hands of a machine, even if someone like me supervises the procedure.