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tippyclubb 04-29-2014 11:27 AM

Cloning Your Pet
 
I was thinking this is a wonderful thing to do if you can afford it and we cannot. In our case it would cost $200,000. However, at the end of the video they mention possible abuse to lab animals. This would be a deal breaker for us even if we could afford it.

What do you think of this?

MSN Entertainment -

ilovetv 04-29-2014 11:46 AM

Human burn victims and others could benefit unfathomably if $200,000 or more from numerous donors were put toward research and development of replacement skin:

Burns
Each year in the United States, 1.25 million burn injuries require medical attention. Ten thousand people die every year of burn-related infections. The good news is that, in recent years, survival statistics for serious burns have improved dramatically. Twenty years ago, for instance, burns covering half the body were routinely fatal. Today, patients with burns encompassing 90 percent of their body surface can survive, albeit sometimes with permanent impairments.

Burn-induced skin loss allows bacteria and other microorganisms to access the warm, moist, nutrient-rich fluids that course through the body, while at the same time it provides a conduit for the rapid and dangerous loss of fluids. Hence, replenishing skin lost to severe burns is an urgent matter in the care of a burn patient. When a patient has lost 80–90 percent of the skin as a result of direct contact with scalding hot liquids, flames, chemicals, electrical current, or radiation, two immediate tasks come to the fore.

First, a burn surgeon must remove the burned skin, then the unprotected underlying tissue must be quickly covered.

Laboratory-Grown Skin Cells

In the mid-1980s, Dr. Howard Green of Harvard Medical School conceived a method for growing a type of human skin cells called keratinocytes outside of the body.

The product that eventually resulted from Dr. Green’s work, called Epicel, is used to treat deep wounds that require grafting (skin replacement), such as occurs with severe burns. However, since Epicel replaces the lost epidermal layer only, it works best in combination with something that restores the dermal layer of skin. Epicel is not an artificial skin, but rather a method in which new epidermis is “grown to order” in a laboratory from surgically harvested skin cells taken from an unburned area of the patient. Products like Epicel are termed “autologous” grafts, meaning that the source of the epidermal graft material is taken from skin of the same patient who receives it.

Artificial Skin

In severely burned patients who have little or no remaining skin, artificial skin is an extremely useful material not only to cover and protect the wounded area, but to promote re-growth of natural skin instead of scar tissue......"
Skin Replacement

Lovethisplace 04-29-2014 12:50 PM

Find an animal shelter and adopt

casita37 04-29-2014 01:35 PM

We used to joke about cloning our dog (He was perfect!! :) ), but after he was gone, and it was time to adopt a new buddy, we didn't even want to consider a look alike dog.

tippyclubb 04-29-2014 02:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by casita37 (Post 870278)
We used to joke about cloning our dog (He was perfect!! :) ), but after he was gone, and it was time to adopt a new buddy, we didn't even want to consider a look alike dog.

That's the point of cloning you would have the same dog with the same personality. I'm thinking when we put our dogs down it may have been easier it we could have cloned them. We still miss them and it will be hard to find two dogs with personalities like they had. One day we will get 2 more and I'm sure we will grow to love them just as much.

Taltarzac725 04-29-2014 03:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lovethisplace (Post 870251)
Find an animal shelter and adopt

I found a dog that looks quite a bit like our recently passed Sport. Beau has quite a different personality. It does not seem to me that you would ever get the same personality as that is more a product of environment rather than genes. Sport was Sport because of his life history and then instincts.

CFrance 04-29-2014 04:02 PM

If it were "affordable" and you would get the same personality, we would have cloned our first golden in a heartbeat. Nothing against our second golden. He's a gem. But that first beloved dog... sigh.

However, I have to agree with ilovetv that the cloning $ is better spent elsewhere. I have two family member burn victims--one fatal, one not--whose circumstances point to the benefits of skin cloning.

tippyclubb 04-29-2014 04:25 PM

I certainly agree there are MANY better ways to spend a few hundred thousand dollars.

A loss of a pet is devastating for most people and for those with a lot of money cloning could ease the grieving process. It's not anything I would do, but I fully understand why others would.

CFrance 04-29-2014 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tippyclubb (Post 870399)
I certainly agree there are MANY better ways to spend a few hundred thousand dollars.

A loss of a pet is devastating for most people and for those with a lot of money cloning could ease the grieving process. It's not anything I would do, but I fully understand why others would.



Me too, tippy. Now if they bring the price down--say, $24.95--I'm in!

casita37 04-29-2014 04:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tippyclubb (Post 870399)
I certainly agree there are MANY better ways to spend a few hundred thousand dollars.

A loss of a pet is devastating for most people and for those with a lot of money cloning could ease the grieving process. It's not anything I would do, but I fully understand why others would.

I'm not sure I agree. I think the grieving would be the same and could be eased by another, non-cloned, pet as well as the cloned one. Hard to know for sure just how alike the personality would be. I understand cloning and know it's basically the same animal, but still, you would KNOW it wasn't the same pet.

Who knows...., and at $200K, I'll never find out!!

CFrance 04-29-2014 04:40 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by casita37 (Post 870408)
I'm not sure I agree. I think the grieving would be the same and could be eased by another, non-cloned, pet as well as the cloned one. Hard to know for sure just how alike the personality would be. I understand cloning and know it's basically the same animal, but still, you would KNOW it wasn't the same pet.

Who knows...., and at $200K, I'll never find out!!

...

DianeM 04-29-2014 06:41 PM

If I had the price I would clone my dog in a heartbeat

zcaveman 04-29-2014 08:16 PM

Never! Never! Never! There was only one Bart and that was him!

I look at his urn every day and look at my collection of his pictures that I set up and that is my Bart.

There is no way you can ever clone your pet - or anyone else. How would they be able to clone his/her personality or traits?

Z

Bonanza 04-30-2014 04:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CFrance (Post 870414)
...

I LOVE your photo!!!

CFrance 04-30-2014 07:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bonanza (Post 870600)
I LOVE your photo!!!

Thank you. I screwed the whole post up. The accompanying text was, "If it looks like Bear, acts Goofy like Bear and has Bear's sense of humor, I'm all for cloning!" Somehow I deleted that when adding the pic.

Taltarzac725 05-01-2014 08:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CFrance (Post 870414)
...

A rose, is a rose, is a rose... just before your dog eats it. ;)

I also really like your picture and I have no idea what kind of flower this is. I was just quoting Shakespeare and putting a spin on Juliet's words.

You may get about the same rose with cloning, but anything more complicated like a cat, dog or heaven forbid a person....

CFrance 05-01-2014 10:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Taltarzac725 (Post 871210)
A rose, is a rose, is a rose... just before your dog eats it. ;)

I also really like your picture and I have no idea what kind of flower this is. I was just quoting Shakespeare and putting a spin on Juliet's words.

You may get about the same rose with cloning, but anything more complicated like a cat, dog or heaven forbid a person....

It was our only surviving tulip, and that was our first golden, Bear--our most fun, goofiest dog ever. I would clone him if they would bring the price down:cryin2:

lovsthosebigdogs 05-01-2014 12:55 PM

I think about how wonderful it would be to clone so many of the dogs I have loved and lost BUT if I had done that (at whatever price I could afford in this theoretical idea), I wouldn't have the wonderful dogs I have now that have come only because the dogs O lost opened up a place for the ones I have now. While I ached and cried and mourned their passing and would do anything to have them back, I wouldn't give up my wonderful dogs that share my life now. Given a chance would I go back? How can I now even entertain that idea knowing it means I would have to give up one of my boys being here with me now. While I may have lost the perfect dog years ago, I'm a 'love the one your with' kinda girl so I don't think I could do it now. However, I fully understand the desire to do it. Also, I saw Pet Cemetery. Too scary... ugh!

Uptown Girl 05-01-2014 01:13 PM

…. but can they clone his soul? I'm not convinced of that.
(Yes, I believe animals each share a part of the group soul of their species.)


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