- The results don’t actually seem all that exciting? - So they sewed a single pig lung into a brain-dead human… and then within a few days the body showed signs of organ rejection. - They performed a transplant, but it wasn’t successful. - A step in the right direction though. - What’s the step? Everything about this failed, right? Was it the practice of sewing it in place? - I mean basically, yes. - This experimental procedure has shown conclusively that sewing works. So, we know that now. 
 
 
- This is how progress is made. Slowly, with great care and sacrifice. 
 
- Human-to-pig is proving more difficult. - That said, I worry about the cross-species disease potential with transplants like this. Like, not from the lungs themselves but is the recipient more able to catch porcine-exclusive diseases zoonotically now? What if they work on a hog farm and are breathing in stuff all day there? Seems like a danger that could be overlooked. - I have no idea if having pig organs would make one more susceptible to pig diseases, but I imagine the human immune system (as opposed to a pig immune system) would play a part in this as well. - That said, the anti-rejection meds usually given to transplant patients make them more susceptible to infection in general. So the added risk could be negligible. - Also worth noting, if it were me and my lungs were failing, I’d choose “at risk for pig diseases” over “certain death” any day. - The thing is, a lot of serious human disease started as diseases affecting other animals that made the jump over: Tuberculosis, Anthrax, and Plague, Ebola, and likely Covid-19, so regardless of how much someone might want an intervention like this to survive it’s with giving consideration, in my opinion 
 
 
- Is there any police statement about it ? 


