Secret Successful Human Trials in Artificial Womb Completed

in #technology6 years ago

Secret Successful Human Trials in Artificial Womb Completed

Are Women are obsolete? The answer is yes. They just don't know it yet. The media doesn't shout it from the rooftops, so you don't know it. Oh, I don't mean women aren't humans, yet. Sure they are human, but the primary function of women, is to carry on the human species. Raise your hand if only women can do that. Not so fast Agnes.

I have told you about the robots of Japan and China. I have even told you about the population problems they are having in Japan and China. Too many men, too many women, unwanted men, unwanted women. Feminist control of the society to the point that they don't get married and have kids. Men secluding themselves and simply writing off women. But in Japan and China, the answer has finally come, and it's been there for awhile. It's just that the media refuses to report on it.

Now robots can do what women do. You have men declaring themselves women, and women declaring themselves men. Now we have robots declaring themselves women. The information is out there, if you look for it. You probably just don't look for it, nor probably care.

But I return to the first question, are women obsolete? If they aren't the mothers of humanity, what purpose do they serve? If men are better at everything, both mentally and physically, at what point don't we say, sorry, we're gonna have to replace you with a better model.

“Ectogenesis” was a term created by British scientist J. B. S. Haldane in 1924. He believed that, by 2074, human pregnancy would be obsolete and artificial wombs would be the norm.

Of course, many people are already throwing out their concerns with this prospect. Most complaints have been that if women’s wombs are obsolete than will they soon be, too?

One of the positives that come out of this research is that this may be a way to care for preemie babies in the future. Micro-preemies could potentially be placed directly from a human womb to an artificial womb if the pregnancy is ending early due to complications. This could be especially beneficial for lung development in babies under 30 weeks.

Japan first tested and perfect its first artificial womb in the 1990s. A goat was successfully removed from it's mother and delivered, fully formed from the artificial womb weeks later. It is still alive, so there was no immediate failure, unlike other experiments.

In 2017, a team of Australian and Japanese scientists announced a breakthrough that could someday save the lives of countless babies. They used an artificial womb to keep premature lamb fetuses alive and healthy enough for them to be later delivered without serious health complications. This month, that same team announced a leap forward in their technology, now claiming it can keep even extremely premature lambs alive.

Their artificial womb is called the ex-vivo uterine environment (EVE) therapy. On its surface, it looks like a pillowcase-sized, transparent bag. Once the fetus is inside EVE, though, it is surrounded by a protective bath of sterilized, artificial amniotic fluid, which is routinely filtered out and replaced. Infusions of vital nutrients like amino acids and medications like antibiotics are regularly provided via IV. The womb also acts as a lung, pumping out carbon dioxide and pumping in fresh air.

Lambs are a popular model for studying prenatal humans because their development in the womb is similar to ours but sped along. Compared to the nine-month gestation period for humans, healthy newborn lambs are typically delivered in 150 days, or slightly less than five months.

The team behind this new study, published this month in The American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology (AJOG), say theirs is the first documented attempt to successfully reach this extra step with lambs.

Eight lamb fetuses at 95 days of development were placed inside EVE for 120 hours, or roughly five days. Their health was compared to a control group of lamb fetuses at 100 days of development. Ultimately, seven of the extremely premature lamb fetuses survived the entire five days of EVE therapy. These survivors were just as healthy and developed as the control group was, indicating that EVE was able to mimic the conditions of the womb well enough even for these especially fragile fetuses. In order to compare them, both groups were euthanized at 100 days.

“In the AJOG study, we have proven the use of this technology to support, for the first time, extremely preterm lambs equivalent to 24 weeks of human gestation in a stable, growth-normal state for five days,” senior study author Matthew Kemp, an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Western Australia and head of the Perinatal Research Laboratories at the Women and Infants Research Foundation, said in a statement. “This result underscores the potential clinical application of this technology for extremely preterm infants born at the border of viability. In the world of artificial placenta technology, we have effectively broken the 4 minute mile.”

Kemp’s team isn’t the only one that has made great strides recently in refining the artificial womb, a concept that’s existed theoretically for decades. Researchers at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia published research on their own artificial womb, the Biobag, in 2017. They claimed their technology could support lamb fetuses for as long as 28 days, and successfully led to normally developed lambs that, as of 2017, were still alive and thriving.

All the reports in scientific journals suggest that ONLY lambs and goats have been tested, and human testing is decades away, this is pure propaganda. Let's turn to an actual secret legal memorandum I have secured from findlaw.com. Let me tell you, since you don't know findlaw is what I used in law school to do all my legal research. We didn't go to anywhere else, because all other sources are tainted with agenda driven garbage. So what does findlaw have to say? prepare yourselves.

"However, despite the restrictions, researchers are pushing on. Recently, a human embryo was gestated in an artificial womb for 10 days. Although the moral and philosophical implications of using artificial wombs are vast, it is nearly undeniable that using an artificial womb in order to save an endangered embryo, fetus, or infant is worth pursuing. However, for more significant advances to be made, exceptions will need to be carved out of the 14-day rule, or the rule will need to be replaced with something that allows for researchers to continue beyond the 14-day limit."

premature baby.jpg

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