I got a synthetic bone sand. Little bits of it migrated like glass slivers would but otherwise it wasn’t bad and at least I didn’t have dead people in my mouth.
Obviously this is a bit of a different scenario given the fairly substantial differences in the shape of the wound, but I wonder how much longer we will need to use naturally occurring materials versus synthesized ones, made in a sterile environment.
Flames. On the sides of my face.
What happened to "repair" as a noun? "Bone tissue repair".
It was exhausting. And English is my first language. I felt sorry for my Indian coworkers. Jesus man, stop trying to look smart and just talk like a normal person. The intelligence is in the ideas not the words used to convey them.
What is normal to one person may not be normal to another. Especially when someone learns a language from books without much human interaction.
Often, if you substitute the haughty words for more speedily parseable ones, you realise the argument falls apart, if there was one at all.
Some of the dumbest, or rather the most dangerous, ideas I’ve heard came from smart people. Lots of dumb ideas come from someone who isn’t in danger of bringing them to fruition. The Smart Guy is imminently in danger of doing so. Or I suppose rather that we are in imminent danger of him doing so.
Lots of people have perfect skin, but they still look old. Why? Bone morphology. The zygomatic bone erodes, and the orbital gaps widen. The mandible degrades and pivots down and backwards (jaw rotation). Issues like resorption are currently very challenging. Skin is comparatively much easier. Also (and besides well-known interventions like collagen, retinoids, HA, and dermarolling), Epidermal and Keratinocyte Growth Factors are already very cheap, and showing much promise.
Zygomatic bone: cheeck bone, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zygomatic_bone
Orbital gaps: hollow areas around the eyes
Mandible: lower jaw, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandible
Resorption: a process in which a substance is lost by being destroyed and then absorbed by the body.
HA: hyaluronic acid
It makes sense to have somewhere to store extra nutrients so you can keep functioning for a long time between taking in those specific nutrients again.
Your body does this with a lot of your organs. Fat is obviously calorie storage, but muscles can also be resorbed for energy under starvation conditions (or just when they're under used). Your kidneys can resorb water from stored urine, and your intestines pull most water out of what you consume. Most neurotransmitters and hormones get recycled at various rates and turned into new molecules.
I'm sure there's more, but that's all I know of offhand.
> Animal and human studies suggest that high-frequency, low-magnitude vibration therapy improves bone strength by increasing bone formation and decreasing bone resorption.
So you could apply vibration to the head bones. Not sure about any side effects.
Or more thrilled, who knows - be careful out there, and if you do something stupid, take notes and share the results for our entertainment^W learning!
It's my electric toothbrush :)
It’s a small effect but real, and it’s passive from the patient’s standpoint and we always seem to find that to be a selling point. This research was, if I recall, originally done for NASA and studied sheep. Shake a Sheep for Science!
https://twitter.runhello.com/mcclure111/status/8374813399893...
https://twitter.runhello.com/mcclure111/status/1108808351150...
I don't know any specific studies, but I would expect that the bone density improvements are in some sense systemic in that the metabolic changes that increase bone density will have spillover effects to bones not directly involved in some given movement.
Last-Modified: Fri, 09 Dec 2005 22:37:30 GMT
Fuuuuck. I think I heard about this guy before he went mad scientist, but not after.
There's a Netflix pop-documentary called "Bad Surgeon" with a that does cover the viewpoint of the colleagues that turned whistleblowers (and the persecution they endured before media and prosecutors started looking into it) even if much of the focus is on his many concurrent women (the main one believing she's going to be wed by the pope).
I guess the scaffold matrix in me must have been of the coating variety. As far as I was told, the spacers were just the same titanium alloy as the screws and rods, which for some reason don't set off metal detectors, which makes me wonder why nobody makes knives and guns out of the same material.
It'd be nice if they put a date on this page. The other references I could find were from 2011 and 1987.
Why was it not the first suggestion? Why did he not even mention it in the first place? Sadly, I forgot to ask these questions.
Tl;dr I had a coral graft, and it worked great.