Medical procedure to replace a person's face using donor tissue
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Today on the show - 0.00 - Off The Lot Cost A Lot 5.38 - Overrated, Haven't Tried 14.38 - Face Transplants 20.00 - Sam Cane 27.16 - 1 Pizza, 60 Seconds 37.11 - Swifty Cash 39.38 - What Would Brad Do? 47.28 - New Zealander Of The Year
Interview with Pauliina Homsy, MD, PhD, and Patrik Lassus, MD, PhD, An Update on the Survival of the First 50 Face Transplants Worldwide. Hosted by Amalia Cochran, MD. Related Content: An Update on the Survival of the First 50 Face Transplants Worldwide
Interview with Pauliina Homsy, MD, PhD, and Patrik Lassus, MD, PhD, An Update on the Survival of the First 50 Face Transplants Worldwide. Hosted by Amalia Cochran, MD. Related Content: An Update on the Survival of the First 50 Face Transplants Worldwide
And more! Recapping the Ricky Gervais show on XFM. Note: this episode was recorded in 2022. Some references may be old/out of date. The Patreon no longer exists.
We're not getting any younger, so on this week's episode we're discussing face transplants! Our expert is Dr Brian Gastman, one of the very few surgeons to ever perform a successful face transplant. We find out about the process of receiving a transplant, the ethical considerations, what's needed from a donor and who's likely to get one. Are face transplants the future of cosmetic surgery? Dr Brian Gastman will be giving us the answer.@EurekaPod Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
6 years after an assassination attempt goes horribly wrong, resulting in the death of his young son, FBI Agent Sean Archer (John Travolta) finally captures and subdues international terrorist Castor Troy (Nic Cage) however with time running out to defuse a bomb that will destroy the entire city of Los Angeles, Archer decides to undergo experimental face transplant surgery in order to pose as his nemesis and infiltrate a secret underwater prison where he can meet Troy's brother Pollox, the only one who knows its location. However, complications arise when Castor Troy awakes and assumes Archer's identity for himself... It's not hyperbole to call John Woo's 1997 FACE/OFF one of the greatest action movies ever made. It treats its outrageous high-concept sci-fi premise respectfully and earnestly, features incredible stunts involving helicopters, planes, SUV's, boats as well as the expected John Woo staples such as balletic action, slow-mo and doves but more than anything what makes it successful is Woo's interest in the relationships between the protagonists. Infinitely rewatchable and featuring one of my all-time favourite Nic Cage performances, John Woo should have had an Oscar just for getting Travolta to say the joke about his chin.
Two people talking about anything and everything while simultaneously not knowing a damn thing
Today in the lab we lightly touch the surface of Chris Chan, Wonder what it's like to get a face transplant, plan a trip to the Star Wars Galactic Voyage and much more! Full episode on YouTube!!! https://linktr.ee/TactLabThis is TACT Lab, a podcast where nothing is off limits. Join four guys as they talk about the greatest accomplishments and problems in life. Hosted by Tyler, Alex, Chris, and Thomas. Check us out on all social media by searching TACT Lab or click the link above. New episodes every Wednesday. Help Support us at our Patreon. Like, follow, comment and let us know how we are doing!
The Twins discuss Face Transplants.Please follow us on Facebook at Podcast: Twins Discuss... & on Instagram at twinsdiscusspodcast
In this episode, Nadia and Jade discuss the topic of face transplants. With the help of guest’s emeritus Professor Nicky Rumsey (OBE), Dr Alex Clarke and historian Dr Fay Bound Alberti, this episode will explore both the history and debated ethical dilemmas of facial transplantation. Also, it's the podcasts 5th Birthday!! We can't celebrate in person, but as a birthday gift we would love it if our lovely listeners would... please rate us on Apple Podcasts – it really DOES help. Link to the Being Human Festival https://beinghumanfestival.org Let us know what you think https://twitter.com/car_UWE To find out more about CAR: www.uwe.ac.uk/car
In this episode we talk about Donuts, Grandmas, Hyperbole, Remembering song names, and Face Transplants.
Would you change your nose if you could? What about an entire face transplant? Des Fitzgerald speaks to researchers investigating the past and future of facial difference and medical intervention and looks at videos from participants in the AboutFace project, which are being launched as part of the Being Human Festival this November. Emily Cock, from the University of Cardiff, looks at our relationship with our noses throughout history – from duels and sexual diseases to racial prejudice. Fay Bound Alberti, from the University of York, talks about a project called AboutFace, which she is running to look at the emotional impact of face transplant surgery, investigating the moral questions it raises, looking at the impact of facial difference in the age of the selfie, and the emergence of facial transplantation as a response to severe trauma. There have been fewer than 50 face transplants globally since the first was performed in 2005 and none in the UK to date. You can find more at https://aboutfaceyork.com/ @AboutFaceYork Fay is a UKRI Future Leaders Fellow from the Department of History at the University of York and is working with Sarah Hall on the launch of new videos as part of the 2020 Being Human Festival https://beinghumanfestival.org/ The BBC has a series of programmes reflecting the anniversary of the Disability Discrimination Act UK Emily Cock is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, undertaking a three-year project Fragile Faces: Disfigurement in Britain and its Colonies (1600–1850). Her book is called Rhinoplasty and the nose in early modern British medicine and culture She and host Des Fitzgerald, from the University of Exeter, are New Generation Thinkers on the scheme run by the BBC with the AHRC to work with academics to put research onto radio. You can find a playlist called New Research on the Free Thinking website https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03zws90 This episode was made in partnership with the Arts and Humanities Research Council, part of UKRI.
In this weeks episode KK and Freddy discuss woke culture, a human face transplant, a bunch of other things that will make you think WTF.Remember to go follow the Insta page @oddversations, 1/2 our hosting team @thenickfreddy, and to hit that subscribe button to get automatic downloads to your favorite device when new episodes become available.
This week Jacob and Ryan talk Hanna-Barbera, Simon Cowell, wax museums, doll's eyes, search for botox, plastic surgery, brow lifts, face transplants, body modifications, actual red skull guy, kissing with a lip disc, and reverse Michael Jackson surgery.
The revelation that John has a skunk in his yard leads to dirty dancing, Prince, prison sex and ass-to-face transplants. Don't say you weren't warned!
Day 1 in the new studio and the guys are calling all rappers to send in your best King And The Sting rap freestyle. The guys talk White Rappers, Yung Gravy, Face Transplants, Clint Eastwood, Gator Bites, Mississippi Allstars, Thanksgiving Stories, Panda Express, Vietnamese Vegetarians, Women Proposing To Men, The Rock vs Stone Cold Steve Austin, Chinder Dating is Reborn and much more!1. MVMT: https://mvmt.com/kats2. ShipStation - https://shipstation.com code: KATS3. Policy Genius4. MyBookie - https://mybookie.ag/ code: KATSSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Day 1 in the new studio and the guys are calling all rappers to send in your best King And The Sting rap freestyle. The guys talk White Rappers, Yung Gravy, Face Transplants, Clint Eastwood, Gator Bites, Mississippi Allstars, Thanksgiving Stories, Panda Express, Vietnamese Vegetarians, Women Proposing To Men, The Rock vs Stone Cold Steve Austin, Chinder Dating is Reborn and much more!1. MVMT: https://mvmt.com/kats2. ShipStation - https://shipstation.com code: KATS3. Policy Genius4. MyBookie - https://mybookie.ag/ code: KATS
Episode 27 (Face Transplants, Michael Jackson and Sauerkraut): Does it really surprise you that Michael Jackson was a huge fan of face transplants and sauerkraut? As always we opened the door to some pretty interesting conversations, personal stories, bad jokes and lots of laughs. Thanks for listening and remember to subscribe and review if you enjoy what we're doing. Continued thanks to friends and family for the ongoing support. Another big thank you to Bend Tech for laying some of the ground work to help us get this up and running. Last but not least, thank you to Jen for our podcast artwork. You can find us on the Apple podcasts App, Spotify, Stitcher & Google Podcasts.We also have an Instagram account @withoutdefiniteaimpodcastIf for any reason you'd like to contact us we can be reached through the above instagram or our gmail: withoutdefiniteaim@gmail.comIf you'd like to donate an alcoholic beverage for us to consume during the episode, reach out to us and we'll make it happen. You will of course get a shout out and thank you. As always if you ever have any suggestions for topics you'd like us to cover please let us know (we like random, so go crazy)!► Music Credit for our theme: LAKEY INSPIRED Track Name: "Distant" Music By: LAKEY INSPIRED Official "LAKEY INSPIRED" YouTube Channel License for commercial use: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported "Share Alike" (CC BY-SA 3.0) License. Music promoted by NCM
Have you heard the good word of Klask? It’s your one, last, best hope for salvation! Klask is the only thing greater than ourselves! Klask was here before us and all that shall remain when we are gone will be KLASK! In this episode of Klask’s STAB! brought to you by Klask, host John Morris … Continue reading »
When a 2011 hunting accident left Maurice Desjardins' face disfigured, he lost hope for living a normal life. Despite having multiple reconstruction surgeries, he was left without a nose, parts of his jaw, and teeth. But then he went to see a new doctor who suggested a risky procedure that had only been successfully completed 40 times before. The plastic surgeon who led the operation Dr. Daniel Borsuk told us how he conducted a face transplant that changed Desjardins' life.
In episode #11, Trenton and Jesse discuss AI powered sex robots, sea monsters, and face transplants. They also get to the BOTTOM (he he get it?) of who may or may not have pooped in the bed. Follow the show on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/2dumbforthis Follow the show on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/2dumbforthis Like the show on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/2dumbforthis Email the show: 2dumbforthispodcast@gmail.com Give the show FIVE STARS on iTunes. Share with your friends and family. Listen to the complete archive: http://www.2dumbforthis.com
In this interview, professor Sharrona Pearl explores the history of face transplants through an ethical and societal lens. She discusses the intrinsic link between the face and one's sense of identity and wholeness as a person. Prof. Pearl is an Assistant Professor of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania. She received her PhD. in the History of Science from Harvard University. Her article, titled “Saving faces” was published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. Full medical humanities article (subscription required): www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.180039 ----------------------------------- Subscribe to CMAJ Podcasts on Apple Podcasts, iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Overcast, Instacast, or your favourite aggregator. You can also follow us directly on our SoundCloud page or you can visit www.cmaj.ca/page/multimedia/podcasts.
Face Transplants and news
This week on the Handsome Fella Variety Show we talked some tough topics and even tougher questions. Some of the topics in this weeks episode were; -floor collapsing on 100+ person party -criminal property damage -creepy face transplant -baby burgs a genius? -hoarding xmas trees -snorting pre workout mix -pre sex shower vs post sex shower -sexual misconduct -love advice from the Handsome Fellas follow @hfvarietyshow for more
Sharrona Pearl‘s new book is an absolute pleasure to read. Face/On: Face Transplants and the Ethics of the Other (The University of Chicago Press, 2017) looks closely at facial allotransplantations (FAT), commonly known as face transplants, in order to offer a careful and fascinating study of the stakes for changing the face, and the changing stakes for the face. Troubling the indexical relationship between the face and character and reminding us that “[t]he self has always been a set of choices,” Pearl explores face transplantation as it relates to cosmetic surgery and whole-organ transplants, the cinema of the 1960s, television shows, and more. She carefully and sensitively takes us into the debates among surgeons, bioethicists, and journalists that circled the first partial face transplant of Isabelle Dinoire in 2005, and offers a way toward a philosophical approach that brings together Levinas with the kind of (Deleuzian) subjectivity that allows for individuality through constant change and understands the self to be constantly in a process of becoming. The final chapter of the book also situates the analysis within larger contexts of online subjectivities and work with facial and bodily manipulation by artists and performers. It’s sparklingly written and well worth a read! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sharrona Pearl‘s new book is an absolute pleasure to read. Face/On: Face Transplants and the Ethics of the Other (The University of Chicago Press, 2017) looks closely at facial allotransplantations (FAT), commonly known as face transplants, in order to offer a careful and fascinating study of the stakes for changing the face, and the changing stakes for the face. Troubling the indexical relationship between the face and character and reminding us that “[t]he self has always been a set of choices,” Pearl explores face transplantation as it relates to cosmetic surgery and whole-organ transplants, the cinema of the 1960s, television shows, and more. She carefully and sensitively takes us into the debates among surgeons, bioethicists, and journalists that circled the first partial face transplant of Isabelle Dinoire in 2005, and offers a way toward a philosophical approach that brings together Levinas with the kind of (Deleuzian) subjectivity that allows for individuality through constant change and understands the self to be constantly in a process of becoming. The final chapter of the book also situates the analysis within larger contexts of online subjectivities and work with facial and bodily manipulation by artists and performers. It’s sparklingly written and well worth a read! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sharrona Pearl‘s new book is an absolute pleasure to read. Face/On: Face Transplants and the Ethics of the Other (The University of Chicago Press, 2017) looks closely at facial allotransplantations (FAT), commonly known as face transplants, in order to offer a careful and fascinating study of the stakes for changing the face, and the changing stakes for the face. Troubling the indexical relationship between the face and character and reminding us that “[t]he self has always been a set of choices,” Pearl explores face transplantation as it relates to cosmetic surgery and whole-organ transplants, the cinema of the 1960s, television shows, and more. She carefully and sensitively takes us into the debates among surgeons, bioethicists, and journalists that circled the first partial face transplant of Isabelle Dinoire in 2005, and offers a way toward a philosophical approach that brings together Levinas with the kind of (Deleuzian) subjectivity that allows for individuality through constant change and understands the self to be constantly in a process of becoming. The final chapter of the book also situates the analysis within larger contexts of online subjectivities and work with facial and bodily manipulation by artists and performers. It's sparklingly written and well worth a read! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/medicine
Sharrona Pearl‘s new book is an absolute pleasure to read. Face/On: Face Transplants and the Ethics of the Other (The University of Chicago Press, 2017) looks closely at facial allotransplantations (FAT), commonly known as face transplants, in order to offer a careful and fascinating study of the stakes for changing the face, and the changing stakes for the face. Troubling the indexical relationship between the face and character and reminding us that “[t]he self has always been a set of choices,” Pearl explores face transplantation as it relates to cosmetic surgery and whole-organ transplants, the cinema of the 1960s, television shows, and more. She carefully and sensitively takes us into the debates among surgeons, bioethicists, and journalists that circled the first partial face transplant of Isabelle Dinoire in 2005, and offers a way toward a philosophical approach that brings together Levinas with the kind of (Deleuzian) subjectivity that allows for individuality through constant change and understands the self to be constantly in a process of becoming. The final chapter of the book also situates the analysis within larger contexts of online subjectivities and work with facial and bodily manipulation by artists and performers. It’s sparklingly written and well worth a read! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sharrona Pearl‘s new book is an absolute pleasure to read. Face/On: Face Transplants and the Ethics of the Other (The University of Chicago Press, 2017) looks closely at facial allotransplantations (FAT), commonly known as face transplants, in order to offer a careful and fascinating study of the stakes for changing the face, and the changing stakes for the face. Troubling the indexical relationship between the face and character and reminding us that “[t]he self has always been a set of choices,” Pearl explores face transplantation as it relates to cosmetic surgery and whole-organ transplants, the cinema of the 1960s, television shows, and more. She carefully and sensitively takes us into the debates among surgeons, bioethicists, and journalists that circled the first partial face transplant of Isabelle Dinoire in 2005, and offers a way toward a philosophical approach that brings together Levinas with the kind of (Deleuzian) subjectivity that allows for individuality through constant change and understands the self to be constantly in a process of becoming. The final chapter of the book also situates the analysis within larger contexts of online subjectivities and work with facial and bodily manipulation by artists and performers. It’s sparklingly written and well worth a read! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Comedian Beth Appel talks about the equally fascinating and disturbing world of FACE TRANSPLANTS (capitalized for how much we are fascinated by it). We get into the most famous cases of it, the science of it, how much better it is than you think, and how strange is it and lotsa stuff. Also Will talks about how long a window people's nostalgia is, or something like that and Anthony discusses the book The Things We Carried.
Fred Nations, Andy Establishment and Phoenix Ppardoshe deliver 3 hours of power in a fact packed laugh a minute episode. Subjects include but are absolutely deifintely not limited to... Chodes (object as wide as it is long) and faggots (bundle of sticks) Dr Zues and Racism, Gun Control, Northern Territory Texas And Nigerian Prisons, Hmongs in California, Gun Control and the Great Australian buyback, Face Transplants, Cliven Bundy and the Nevada Ranch, Kim Jong Un executes Minister, Adam Goodes Aboriginal War Dance, a fun new game called Possible or Im, Indian Heat Wave, Roof Tiling a horrible job, Dry Ice, Will we live on Mars, Sea Steading, The famous Race Sex and Orientation game, the Angel of Phuket, Kissinger Nixon ignorance and so much more.... That would literally be about a quarter of it. Give us a chance and see how we sound. Feedback is welcome @highhorseradio on twitter. + libsyn.com and @ iTunes to download and subscribe this epic show. (@frednations, @phoenixpardoshe)
Believe it or not, scientists and doctors have discovered a way to transplant part -- or all -- of a face from one person to another. Tune in to this podcast from HowStuffWorks.com to learn more about the astonishing practice of face transplants. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Believe it or not, scientists and doctors have discovered a way to transplant part -- or all -- of a face from one person to another. Tune in to this podcast from HowStuffWorks.com to learn more about the astonishing practice of face transplants. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Martian magnetism by Nat Staib, Face Transplants by Jacqui Pfeffer, News by Matt Clarke, Produced by Chris Stewart and Noel Hanna, Presenter Matt Francis