Great Power Technology.
Chapter 582 Wrong Direction
Chapter 582 Wrong Direction
From the man's mouth, Ye Zhou did not get any information he wanted, because the other party's medical knowledge was too lacking, and all his descriptions of the experiment were limited to the words "taking medicine" and "injection".
When Ye Zhou mentioned terms such as "transplant" or "immune reconstruction" to him, he was completely at a loss.
Perhaps these words he had heard in previous experiments, but had never entered his mind, because he simply did not care about them.
Compared with the illusory terminology and the so-called "curative effect" that has nothing to do with him, he cares more about the 500 rand that will inevitably be sent to him after each experiment.
That's a lot of money for him -- enough to feed him for two weeks.
Ye Zhou reluctantly left the man's tent. He already knew the man's name - Huo Bo, which was an English translation of a word, but from Huo Bo's experience, Ye Zhou could not see any hope.
Alone, seriously ill, addicted to gambling, does not produce any value to this society, even if he is allowed to leave here to recover his freedom, I am afraid it will only slowly decay like a pile of garbage.
On the day of his death, no one should cry for him, not even those who have been hurt by his misdeeds will clap their hands and applaud.
Are most people here like this?
Ye Zhou was suddenly a little confused.
If these people are like Huo Bo, then it seems that letting them undergo medical experiments in this not very "humane" experiment hall seems to be their best destination?
It can not only support itself, but also provide inestimable value to the whole world.
Perhaps, this is also a sacrifice.
Ye Zhou shook his head and continued to walk towards the other experimenters. He carefully controlled his actions, language, and demeanor, trying to make himself look like he was chatting. After all, he didn't want to be caught by those security personnel again. Get up and beat up.
Real pain is a trifle, and time lost is irreparable.
After wandering around, Ye Zhou returned to his place. He rummaged around and found a crumpled shirt under the bed. The cuffs of the shirt were lightly embroidered with a familiar luxury brand. It marks the former identity of the shirt owner.
In fact, it doesn't matter to Ye Zhou how the character he plays is down and out. The most important thing now is to find the most critical link in this simulation, so as to figure out the context of the whole thing.
Now the clues in his hands are too scattered, and there is not much room for manipulation, so he can only calm down and wait patiently for the emergence of key events.
According to Ye Zhou's previous experience, if that event happens, a new memory flow will also flow in, and then he will be able to really start the simulation.
He lay quietly in his tent, constantly reorganizing and analyzing the current information in his mind, and the framework of ASPEN's immune reconstruction project gradually became clear.
Judging from the descriptions of these experimenters, it is obvious that what they adopted is a brand new therapy, and it is likely to be related to CD34+ HSC-HIS therapy.
This therapy has appeared in the past few years. Its principle is to inoculate human CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells into irradiated immunodeficient mice for immune reconstruction, using the CD34+ HSC-HIS model.
After immune reconstruction is completed, the human body will have immunity to specific diseases, especially in tumor treatment.
However, their footsteps do not seem to stop there. What they are doing is more like an extension of the combination of CD34+ HSC-HIS model and stem cell therapy. If you let Ye Zhou describe it, it is not so much immune reconstruction as it is Immunoadaptation.
As we all know, bone marrow is only a relatively mature area of the immune system, and the human immune system is not generated purely from bone marrow. Therefore, traditional immune reconstruction programs cannot treat autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus erythematosus, and HIV. If we want to take a key step in the treatment of these diseases, we must rely on immune adaptation technology.
That is to say, through compound stem cells, the immune system that has been infested by the virus is replaced—maybe not a real replacement, but a certain technology that allows new cells to gradually erode the old cells and eventually replace it.
This is an extremely risky technology, but it can also explain why there are so many tumor patients in this experimental hall besides immunodeficiency disease patients.
They are all selected experimental subjects, and everyone has their own place.
Ye Zhou couldn't help but sigh, these capitalists have indeed achieved the ultimate in cost control and system optimization.
Ye Zhou sat up again, the stuffy air in the tent made him unable to breathe, he wanted to go outside to get some air, but just as he walked out of the tent, he saw a group of people gathered together, as if something happened.
He walked forward curiously, pushed through the crowd with difficulty and walked to the middle, and what he saw was an extremely terrifying scene.
A man was lying on the ground, his whole body was purple red, his skin was oozing and festering everywhere, his mouth kept spitting out dark black blood, mixed with a lot of blood clots, and his body was already wet , exudes a disgusting stench.
"What's the matter with him?"
Ye Zhou asked.
"I don't know. It was fine two days ago, but suddenly it's like this—maybe it's AIDS. Look, isn't this a typical AIDS symptom?"
Ye Zhou frowned. From what he saw now, festering, vomiting blood, and gangrene were indeed symptoms of advanced AIDS. However, how could AIDS break out within two days?
Onlookers also said it was fine before - an important message.
A thought flashed through Ye Zhou's mind. He squatted down and carefully opened the man's arm. He saw large and small pinholes on his arm, and those pinholes seemed to have never healed since they were created. .
This is an extremely rare phenomenon. Logically speaking, even a disease of the immune system would not cause this situation.
He ran to his tent for a bottle of water, dampened a rag and wiped the man's face clean, and he found the answer.
The man's face is obviously jaundice, and when the three terms jaundice, hemorrhage, and immune reconstruction are combined, there is only one conclusion left.
DIC.
Disseminated intravascular coagulation.
Due to the rejection reaction in the immune reconstruction experiment, the coagulation mechanism in the blood was diffusely activated, causing extensive tissue and organ damage, and now it has entered the start-up phase.
The survival rate of this disease does not exceed 20%, and under the current medical conditions, it is obvious that it is impossible for men to get proper treatment.
In other words, he was certain to die.
Ye Zhou stood up heavily, and asked:
"Are there many people like him?"
The people around were silent for a moment, and then replied:
"It seems to be quite a lot—is it the fourth time this month?"
Ye Zhou suddenly realized that he had finally found the goal of this simulation.
The research direction of ASPEN is wrong.
If they continue to follow the original direction, not only will the immune reconstruction technology fail, but countless poor people will continue to die as a result!
(End of this chapter)
From the man's mouth, Ye Zhou did not get any information he wanted, because the other party's medical knowledge was too lacking, and all his descriptions of the experiment were limited to the words "taking medicine" and "injection".
When Ye Zhou mentioned terms such as "transplant" or "immune reconstruction" to him, he was completely at a loss.
Perhaps these words he had heard in previous experiments, but had never entered his mind, because he simply did not care about them.
Compared with the illusory terminology and the so-called "curative effect" that has nothing to do with him, he cares more about the 500 rand that will inevitably be sent to him after each experiment.
That's a lot of money for him -- enough to feed him for two weeks.
Ye Zhou reluctantly left the man's tent. He already knew the man's name - Huo Bo, which was an English translation of a word, but from Huo Bo's experience, Ye Zhou could not see any hope.
Alone, seriously ill, addicted to gambling, does not produce any value to this society, even if he is allowed to leave here to recover his freedom, I am afraid it will only slowly decay like a pile of garbage.
On the day of his death, no one should cry for him, not even those who have been hurt by his misdeeds will clap their hands and applaud.
Are most people here like this?
Ye Zhou was suddenly a little confused.
If these people are like Huo Bo, then it seems that letting them undergo medical experiments in this not very "humane" experiment hall seems to be their best destination?
It can not only support itself, but also provide inestimable value to the whole world.
Perhaps, this is also a sacrifice.
Ye Zhou shook his head and continued to walk towards the other experimenters. He carefully controlled his actions, language, and demeanor, trying to make himself look like he was chatting. After all, he didn't want to be caught by those security personnel again. Get up and beat up.
Real pain is a trifle, and time lost is irreparable.
After wandering around, Ye Zhou returned to his place. He rummaged around and found a crumpled shirt under the bed. The cuffs of the shirt were lightly embroidered with a familiar luxury brand. It marks the former identity of the shirt owner.
In fact, it doesn't matter to Ye Zhou how the character he plays is down and out. The most important thing now is to find the most critical link in this simulation, so as to figure out the context of the whole thing.
Now the clues in his hands are too scattered, and there is not much room for manipulation, so he can only calm down and wait patiently for the emergence of key events.
According to Ye Zhou's previous experience, if that event happens, a new memory flow will also flow in, and then he will be able to really start the simulation.
He lay quietly in his tent, constantly reorganizing and analyzing the current information in his mind, and the framework of ASPEN's immune reconstruction project gradually became clear.
Judging from the descriptions of these experimenters, it is obvious that what they adopted is a brand new therapy, and it is likely to be related to CD34+ HSC-HIS therapy.
This therapy has appeared in the past few years. Its principle is to inoculate human CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells into irradiated immunodeficient mice for immune reconstruction, using the CD34+ HSC-HIS model.
After immune reconstruction is completed, the human body will have immunity to specific diseases, especially in tumor treatment.
However, their footsteps do not seem to stop there. What they are doing is more like an extension of the combination of CD34+ HSC-HIS model and stem cell therapy. If you let Ye Zhou describe it, it is not so much immune reconstruction as it is Immunoadaptation.
As we all know, bone marrow is only a relatively mature area of the immune system, and the human immune system is not generated purely from bone marrow. Therefore, traditional immune reconstruction programs cannot treat autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus erythematosus, and HIV. If we want to take a key step in the treatment of these diseases, we must rely on immune adaptation technology.
That is to say, through compound stem cells, the immune system that has been infested by the virus is replaced—maybe not a real replacement, but a certain technology that allows new cells to gradually erode the old cells and eventually replace it.
This is an extremely risky technology, but it can also explain why there are so many tumor patients in this experimental hall besides immunodeficiency disease patients.
They are all selected experimental subjects, and everyone has their own place.
Ye Zhou couldn't help but sigh, these capitalists have indeed achieved the ultimate in cost control and system optimization.
Ye Zhou sat up again, the stuffy air in the tent made him unable to breathe, he wanted to go outside to get some air, but just as he walked out of the tent, he saw a group of people gathered together, as if something happened.
He walked forward curiously, pushed through the crowd with difficulty and walked to the middle, and what he saw was an extremely terrifying scene.
A man was lying on the ground, his whole body was purple red, his skin was oozing and festering everywhere, his mouth kept spitting out dark black blood, mixed with a lot of blood clots, and his body was already wet , exudes a disgusting stench.
"What's the matter with him?"
Ye Zhou asked.
"I don't know. It was fine two days ago, but suddenly it's like this—maybe it's AIDS. Look, isn't this a typical AIDS symptom?"
Ye Zhou frowned. From what he saw now, festering, vomiting blood, and gangrene were indeed symptoms of advanced AIDS. However, how could AIDS break out within two days?
Onlookers also said it was fine before - an important message.
A thought flashed through Ye Zhou's mind. He squatted down and carefully opened the man's arm. He saw large and small pinholes on his arm, and those pinholes seemed to have never healed since they were created. .
This is an extremely rare phenomenon. Logically speaking, even a disease of the immune system would not cause this situation.
He ran to his tent for a bottle of water, dampened a rag and wiped the man's face clean, and he found the answer.
The man's face is obviously jaundice, and when the three terms jaundice, hemorrhage, and immune reconstruction are combined, there is only one conclusion left.
DIC.
Disseminated intravascular coagulation.
Due to the rejection reaction in the immune reconstruction experiment, the coagulation mechanism in the blood was diffusely activated, causing extensive tissue and organ damage, and now it has entered the start-up phase.
The survival rate of this disease does not exceed 20%, and under the current medical conditions, it is obvious that it is impossible for men to get proper treatment.
In other words, he was certain to die.
Ye Zhou stood up heavily, and asked:
"Are there many people like him?"
The people around were silent for a moment, and then replied:
"It seems to be quite a lot—is it the fourth time this month?"
Ye Zhou suddenly realized that he had finally found the goal of this simulation.
The research direction of ASPEN is wrong.
If they continue to follow the original direction, not only will the immune reconstruction technology fail, but countless poor people will continue to die as a result!
(End of this chapter)
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