A University of Queensland-led research group has created the world’s first successful donkey embryo using in-vitro fertilisation (IVF), which could save dozens of endangered donkey species.
human organs on demand potentially inside animal bodies. the obvious question is, what could go around? a lot. dr. marc siegel as a fox medical contributor and he joins us tonight for a doctor, give us a quick overview of what he s trying to do and why scientist juan a scientist is w in california, flies over to china, and he knows that he is going to be able to evade regulations, and that is a big part of it.ak he takes a monkey embryo and imbues it with human stem cells, saying that he s going to be able to create organs that could be used in the future for transplants. it s a press release science. there is no ethics involved to it. you know what the worst thing is? scientifically, it is impossible because monkeys are too small. even if you were able to grow a life monkey with human stem cells, you would not have organs that are usable. it s a disgrace. i want to say up top that i
seriously. now, officially, scientists say they hopefully will be able to grow new human organs on demand. the question is, what could go wrong? dr. mark seger is our guest. give us a quick overview of what they are trying to do and why? the salt institute in california flies over to china, and he knows he s going to be able to evade regulations, tucker. that s a big part of this. he takes a monkey embryo and infuses it with human stem cells, saying he is going to be able to use organs that could be used in the future for transplant. there is no ethics involved. do you know what the worst thing is? scientifically, it s impossible, because monkeys are too small. if so even if you were able to grow a life monkey with human stem cells, you wouldn t have organs that are usable.