American Decades
Organ Transplants and Limb Reimplantation
Transplant Surgery and the Immune System.
Between 1960 and 1969 numerous advances were made in the field of transplant surgery. In early 1960 the only major transplants performed were those of kidneys from one identical twin to another; surgeons had not yet learned how to suppress the body's natural tendency to reject tissue that is not its own. Each person's body has a unique chemical coding that is basic to the immune system. Body cells are protected by a complex system of protein that rejects foreign matter, including bacteria and viruses. Any matter that is not similar to the body's tissue is rejected (with the exception of some invaders, such as cold viruses). This system of protection also causes the body to reject organ implants from someone else's body.
Advances in the Field.
Several developments during the 1960s revolutionized the field of transplantation. A major discovery was that certain anticancer drugs...
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1960's Medicine and Health
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Care Questioned
- A Changing Tradition
- Foreign Doctors
- Government Health Programs
- Heart Surgery: the Artificial Heart
- Heart Surgery: Coronary Artery Bypasses
- Heart Surgery: Endarterectomy
- Heart Surgery: Resuscitation
- New Methods: Cryosurgery
- New Methods: Home Dialysis
- New Methods: Portable Ekg
- Organ Transplants and Limb Reimplantation
- The Polio Sugar Cube
- "Routine Illness": Measles
- The Rubella Epidemic
- Sex in the 1960s: Abortion
- Sex in the 1960s: Artificial Insemination
- Sex in the 1960s: The Birth-Control Pill
- Sex in the 1960s: Fertility Drugs
- Sex in the 1960s: Giving Birth
- Sex in the 1960s: Lippes Loop
- Sex in the 1960s: The Male Pill
- Solid Proof: Cancer Spreads
- Smoking and Cancer
- Sugar Substitutes
- Thalidomide: Global Tragedy
- Triparanol and Chloramphenicol
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1960–1969
