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As a child, I remember the concept of Frankenstein's monster as being beyond any horror imaginable. The concept of piecing together a person from the parts of the dead was terrifying. But, science being what it is today, piecing together a person from parts becomes increasingly possible.
Some of the most amazing transplants imagined have been occurring to help people who have lost fingers, hands, and even a face!
This heroic firefighter (above) was given a new lease on life by a facial transplant. It is nothing short of miraculous!
His courage and bravery were rewarded with the best medicine has to offer today, allowing him a full life. (LINK)
We can all agree that this kind of science is beneficial beyond belief.
But what about the line in the sand that divides saving lives with risking medical ethics? Such is the case with a surgeon wishing to do a head transplant for a man who is severely disabled. Is this hope or madness?
This Russian man has volunteered for a head transplant attempt by a surgeon. He suffers from a disease that breaks down muscle and nerves. The likely outcome of the transplant is death, but to the Russian man trapped in this withering body, it seems any hope is better than none.
The proposed surgery will likely happen in China or a country more accepting of an extreme experimental procedure. It also brings up many ethical issues, such as what if he decides to start a family? Genetically, his offspring would be the donated body's offspring. Experts give it very little chance of working, almost none at all. The surgeon undertaking it puts it at 80%. (I'm sure Frankenstein would have thought same too).
Technically, if the man is aware of the dangers of death and the permanence of what is he undertaking, the potential for chronic pain if he survives, or inability to move the new body, and he still wants to take it, he should be allowed that option. If no one is sugar coating his odds, it's his decision.
The same goes for people with cancer who aren't allowed alternative options. Many people forgo chemo because it is such a horrendous option, that they are left with nothing, as countries such as America basically won't allow other methods and citizens must leave the country to seek them out.
Both sides of this argument are valid. There is a movie from the 1980s that really personified this issue.
Who Is Julia? A housewife and a model are in accidents. The housewife's brain is ruined and the model's body is ruined. Surgeons put the model's brain inside the housewife's body. Now neither husband knows what to think and the woman is very confused as to who she is.
And then there was Johann Dippel -
(LINK) This was the actual guy who inspired the Frankenstein legend. He lived in the Frankenstein castle, and signed his name as Frankenstein. Surprisingly, he was less like the good doctor than most people think, since he was more interested in preserving life than reanimating it. He did rob graves in the area — or is said to have — but only because he wanted to mix up an elixir of immortality, and for some reason he thought buried corpse parts might do it for him.
I look at it this way, we were given all the right stuff to work with here on earth including our intelligence and basic mastery over nature. The only time that concept rears its ugly head is when we have a disaster of nature, such as cancer. It behooves us to help the body do what it does naturally, kill off cancer cells. We all contain cancer cells at one time or another, but in optimal conditions, we have an immune system that rids them of taking hold. So, immunotherapy, assisting the body to identify and kill the cells itself, is a way of taking what nature gave us and allowing it to work optimally. The process of sending in chemotherapeutic drugs to kill off any cells it encounters, is a desperate way of trying to attack a problem without solving it.
In the case of the man with the body-withering disease, the research spent on eliminating that gene from lineages or perhaps even utilizing stem cells for self repair are a much more prudent study than taking heads and attaching them to other bodies.
In the future, it is hoped that we can grow our own organs with our own stem cells, treat cancer with immunotherapy, as well as autoimmune diseases. But until then, Frankenstein-esque procedures remain an option for the desperate with the clock ticking and no time to consider ethical outcomes.
And then, there are serial killers who have a touch of Frankenstein fever….
Joachim Knychała was a Polish serial killer known as a vampire or Frankenstein. Between 1975 and 1982, he killed five women. He was caught and hung for his crimes. He was known for butchering and desecrating the bodies of the women he murdered.