Medical Advances

To fully appreciate the importance of animal-based biomedical research, we must realize the impact it has had - and continues to have - on medical science and health care. If you or a loved one have ever been seriously ill, and recovered, consider this: the treatment, technology or medication probably would not have existed without biomedical research. Even the "little things" we take for granted which keep us healthy, such as regular vaccines for children, were for the most part carefully developed using biomedical research.

 

X-Ray Technician

 

In Canada, our surgeons are among the best in the world. Most of the tools and techniques they use have been developed through careful biomedical research. Just a few decades ago, it was nearly impossible to imagine the amazing medical advances that would be made in the 1980's and 1990's. Among those many advances, few seem more miraculous than the transplantation of human organs. Recognition of these achievements in transplantation came in 1990, with the award of the Nobel Prize in Medicine to two pioneers of transplant research, one of them a Boston surgeon, Dr. Joseph Murray.

 

high tech operating equipment

 

The era of transplant surgery began in the 1950's. Today, it is possible to replace the inner ear, the cornea, glands, blood vessels, muscles, nerves, bone marrow, blood, liver, kidney, lungs and heart, among other organs. Lens implant, for example, can provide sight to those whose vision is impaired through cataracts, and artificial joints can be constructed to repair the hips or other joints of people and animals who are aging or have had accidents.

 

Worldwide Organ Transplant Statistics (1998):

  • 576 kidney centres have done 411,071 transplants
  • 202 liver centres have done 55,421
  • 236 heart centres have done 44,550
  • 275 bone marrow centres have done 76,927
  • 145 lung centres have done 6,726

Organ transplantation is just one example of the medical miracles which have lengthened and enriched the lives of many people around the world.

 

These inventions could not have taken place without biomedical research:

 

Angiogram Artificial Heart

Artificial Hips and Joints

Artificial Limbs

Blood Pressure Measure

Cardiac Catheter

Cardiac Pacemaker

CT Scan

Electrocardiograph (ECG)

Electroencephalograph (EEG)

Electron Microscope

Iron Lung

Kidney Dialysis Machine

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Monoclonal Antibodies

Pump-Oxygenator

Radiation Therapy

Surgical Dressings

Ultrasound

X-Rays

 

Knowledge, Advances and Treatments Made Possible by Biomedical Research Using Animals:

 

AIDS research

Allergy treatments

Allergy research & treatment

Alzheimer's disease

Anemia treatment

Anaesthesia

Anti-convulsants for epilepsy

Antibiotics

Arthritis research

Artificial insemination

Artificial joint replacements

Artificial limb development

Birth defects research & treatment

Blood transfusions

Burn treatment

Cancer research

CAT scans

Chemotherapy

Cystic fibrosis research

Dental care

Development of vaccines for polio, measles, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough

Development of lifesaving drugs and hormones (antibiotics, insulin, thyroid)

Diabetes research & treatment

Emphysema research & treatment

Glaucoma research

Hearing aids

Chemotherapy drugs

Heart disease research

Coronary bypass surgery

Stroke treatment

Heart surgery

High blood pressure drugs

Hip and artificial joint replacements

Bone grafts & implants

Infant care

Kidney transplants

Kidney disease treatment

Laser surgery

Multiple sclerosis research

Muscular dystrophy research

Neonatal care

Nutritional treatment for pellagra and other deficiency diseases

Organ transplants

Orthopedic surgery

Pacemakers

Skin grafts for wounds

Tooth & gum disease research

Treatment of fractures

Ultrasound