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Vendredi, 05 Novembre 2010 12:00

Gallery: Military's Freakiest Medical Projects

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The U.S. military has been on the forefront of medical research for decades. Earlier conflicts spurred discoveries to prevent malaria and typhoid, a sweeping overhaul of triage care and the introduction of skin grafts and morphine.

The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are no different. With more troops surviving devastating injuries, the military is fast-tracking efforts in regenerative medicine, investigating risky measures to prevent lifelong brain damage -- even employing acupuncture in an effort to manage pain and mitigate

post-traumatic stress. (And let's not forget about the zombie pigs.)

Some of the Pentagon's extreme medical innovations have already debuted in the war zone. And with myriad applications outside of combat, these advances in military medicine mean that revolutionary changes for civilian care aren't far behind.

Above:

Bone Cement for Traumatic Wound Repair

An injectable compound, which can repair damaged bone or spur bone growth, will soon be tested on 20 patients — mostly veterans — thanks to an extra $12 million in Pentagon funding doled out to the University of Pittsburgh earlier this year.

One day, bone cement could quickly heal fractures, prevent amputations, replace metal plates and even regrow portions of a human skull.

Photo: Pulse Lavage

Authors: Katie Drummond

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