The death of the first patient who undergoes a pork transplant after two months of operation

The patient, who underwent the first genetically modified pork transplantation to a living person, died, according to the hospital, who performed this operation in a statement. “We have a deep sadness about the sudden death of Rick Suleiman. We have no indications that death has been linked to the recently carried out kidney transplant process.” In March, the surgeons in ‘Massachusetts General Hosival’ managed to first cultivate a genetic mandate pig for a living patient, 62 -year -old Richard Suleiman, suffering from chronic kidney failure. The operation lasted 4 hours, and the Pork College was provided by E Genesis of Cambridge in Massachusetts. The hospital said: “Suleiman will remain a beacon of hope for a large number of members of the world’s organ transplantation, and we are very grateful for his confidence and efforts to progress in the field of organ transplantation.” The shortage of the availability of organs is a problem that affects different parts of the world, and in March Boston Hospital indicated that there were 1,400 patients on the waiting list to undergo kidney transplants in “Massachusetts General Hosival” alone. The hospital explained that the Pig College, used in the transplant, was provided by eginesis, biotechnology, and genetically adapted to remove harmful genes and add some human genes. In 2018, Suleiman, suffering from type 2 diabetes and a height of blood pressure, underwent a human kidney transplant, but she stopped working after five years and the patient was washing after a diary. Suleiman was the first person to surround a total transplant of genetically modified pigs, as this operation was previously performed for a brain -hearted and dying person, and he lived after two months. Last April, American surgeons managed to grow a genetically modified pork for a living patient for the second time, at the same time a heart pump, in a joint procedure, the first of its kind that represents a new important station in this field, which progresses very quickly. Millions need organ transplants annually, while thousands die, and they are on waiting lists.