The world's first person to receive a pig kidney has died:
Rick Schleman, 62, of the United States, died two months after the transplant. This incident is very dangerous and special people have said. Two months ago, Rick underwent a genetically modified pig kidney transplant at a hospital in Massachusetts. Expert doctors have revealed that the kidneys are not lazy due to lack of quality risk. After this difficulty, a sea of organized individuals have grieved and need to be helped. Rick is in this very sad situation because of this inevitable loss. This incident has raised critical questions from the environment and human health.
Rick Schlemann is the first person in the world to successfully survive by receiving animal organs. Rick, who suffers from diabetes and high blood pressure, suffered from two kidney failure 10 years ago. He had a human kidney transplant but still had to undergo dialysis. Finally, he agreed to xenotransplantation.Rick Schleman was performing an excessive work that became an optimistic proposal about the kidneys of other animals to raise the constituency in Hemal Okong's body. The optimistic proposal was laughed at by the global medical community.Hemal's organ was then obtained when a human kidney was organized and he continued to express excitement about the initial tests.After this experience, Rick's life was completely paralyzed and he accepted organs in his body to prevent him from experiencing additional life paths in his body.He was the first person to have a human kidney organized and his success was historic. He carefully planned the body to donate the kidneys of other animals to perform a reproduction.This event has been identified as a major event in the scientific community and has become a highly documented key worldwide.
The hospital, which transplanted pig organs into his body, performed the world's first human kidney transplant in the 1960s. A month ago, a woman in the United States will also be transplanted with a genetically modified pig kidney. Every year in the United States, 3,000 people die due to lack of kidney donors. In contrast, 90,000 people are waiting for kidneys. In 1997, Dr. Dhaniram Baruah transplanted a pig kidney and heart into a patient in Assam. However, he was unsuccessful and the patient died. Dr. Barua was arrested for illegally transplanting animal organs into human bodies
