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Didn't know how to end this

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As a bioengineer, Linda Griffith once grew a human ear on the back of a mouse. Now she is reframing endometriosis as a key to unlocking some
Some key points from this very interesting profile:
1. One of the researchers behind earmouse is now studying endometriosis
2. They're developing a non-surgical diagnostic test for endo
3. Lots of ob-gyns have never heard of menstrual cups
Anyway, this article made me just as angry about endometriosis as always, but it also gave me some hope, which is new.
What Happened to the Vacanti Mouse?
A few years ago I wrote an article about the Ear Mouse, based on a famous image of a mouse with a scaffolding shaped like a human ear on their back. I interviewed one of the scientists who created it for about an hour and wrote some of the answers in an interview for Newsweek. I’m so interested in the Vacanti Mouse, it’s the inspiration for my icon (and shirts)
Lately there have been some viral posts and videos saying that the scientists removed the ear from the mouse and he lived out his life happily. That’s not true, but I think that myth may be my fault.
Here’s a clip from my interview with Joseph Vacanti:
What happened to the mouse in the photo? Many people had children asking those questions, and so what we would say is, we removed the ear, and the mouse lived out a happy, normal life. It was not harmed by our work, so I think that's the answer that I would like to give. In the world of medicine, there's a massive controversy about the use of animals. We're hoping to eliminate the need to use animals because we can now generate human structures and tissues using human cells and we can study them without the use of animals. That's our long-term goal.
It didn't actually live happily ever after, did it? Of course it did. The happy little mouse. That little mouse was very pleased that he could contribute in some way and make people's lives better.
So, some are reporting that “the mouse lived out a happy, normal life.” Perhaps I should have been clearer, or added an author’s note here. But it’s wrong. The scientists/lab workers killed all the mice. I know this because: 1) The whole statement was very wink-wink-nudge-nudge. Like he’s sure I know he/his employees killed them. “That is the answer I would like to give,” not “that is the truth.”
2) Mice used in experiments generally don’t just live out their lives afterwards, the standard is to kill them. So the Vacanti lab didn’t have to make a choice whether to kill them, it’s just standard. (If you have a problem with the standard, talk to ethics committees, not lab workers who are following the rules those committees set!)
3) The originally published paper, on pages 300-301, specifically states “Removal of the skin envelope from Group 1 specimens after sacrifice...” Sacrifice means being killed.
I know that much fewer people are going to read this post as opposed to the one little quote that is making the internet rounds. But, I wanted to put this out there. The many ear mice/Vacanti mice were killed as a standard procedure.
what is the scientific name of vacanti mouse?
The scientific name as in, the species name? Lab mice are usually Mus musculus, so that’s probably what the famous earmouse was. Or rather, the earmice, as “there were lots and lots of animals,” as Joseph Vacanti told me.
To be a little more specific, they were SCID, or severe combined immunodeficient, mice.
In my interview with Vacanti for Newsweek, he said “My brother and I called it ‘Euriculosaurus,’ because when you looked at it from the side it kind of looked like a dinosaur.” Read all about it here!
That’s only the most interesting like, 25% of what he told me, but if you have any more questions, I may have the answers in my unpublished notes.
Design friends, any thoughts on making this look better? Thinking this could be for a shirt. Alternatives for the text: “What has science done?” or “What has Science Wrought?” I can make the lines thinner too, or add shadows or anything.

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#earyrat !!! 3 #superglowearyrat and one natural rat. #rubbermonster #zacamendolia #earmouse #earrat #mrjiggler #arttoy #arttoys #glowinthedark #fivepointsfestival
A mouse with an ear ache.
DeMonstrable
Did you know male mice sing songs to woo the ladies in a frequency that the human ear cannot hear? Donna Franklin is exhibiting a collaborative work that explores this phenomena in the DeMonstrable exhibition and I'm super excited to have contributed a small stitch work to it. DeMonstrable opens this Friday at Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery!