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by arrel 3482 days ago
> found evidence for tissue rejuvenation in older mice when they are surgically joined to younger mice

That's terrifying.

4 comments

This is actually a useful experimental technique in biology. This wikipedia page isn't the best written, but is a good summary:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parabiosis#Parabiotic_experime...

"Mice Splicer" on your resume, though? That'd be an interesting interview conversation.
I had to do exactly these surgeries on rats for a few years as a lab tech.

Also did some other fun things such as mass killings of rats using mini-guillotines, harvesting bones and doing amateur brain surgeries while other rats watched restlessly and anxiously peeped from the smell of blood.

This kind of stuff can mess with your sanity. For me it was a converse of how serial killers injure animals when they were children.

Still have nightmares sometimes.

Why let the other rats watch/smell ? That's just cruel, and the stress might actually skew your testing data, screwing over your experiments.
Most likely they grab a box of 2-3 rats, take it to a procedure room, and perform surgeries on all the rats in sequence. It's a bit on the lazy end, since you could always do a surgery on one rat, take it back to the housing room, and get the next one. Some labs do not permit animals to observe another's surgery or euthanasia. The rules are more lax for Mus musculus and Rattus rattus, than for other mammalian species, in the US.
They probably don't have much choice for where they did it. The animals likely couldn't see it, and the stress levels were probably minimal. It's not likely to be enough to harm the experiment.

While, yes, everything can be a variable, the effect wouldn't be big. I imagine the person running the lab had done this before and has gotten good results: rats are expensive and a hassle to keep. If his experiments had been 'screwed over' because of practices like that, his PI probably wouldn't be able to gather enough useful data to afford funding for animal use.

>while other rats watched restlessly and anxiously peeped from the smell of blood.

What a sad situation to be caught up in.

Thats actually pretty cool. One more reason to have kids!
Yes, it works for women:

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2011/11/21/helpful...

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2633676/

  > Fetal cells migrate into the mother during pregnancy. Fetomaternal transfer probably
  > occurs in all pregnancies and in humans the fetal cells can persist for decades. 
  > Microchimeric fetal cells are found in various maternal tissues and organs including 
  > blood, bone marrow, skin and liver. In mice, fetal cells have also been found in the 
  > brain. The fetal cells also appear to target sites of injury. Fetomaternal 
  > microchimerism may have important implications for the immune status of women, 
  > influencing autoimmunity and tolerance to transplants.
Something out of a sci-fi horror novel.