Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Stereoscopic Dissection

Last week's Science Times had a piece on the Bassett Stereoscopic Dissection Collection. The article discusses the 1962, twenty-five volume collection created by University of Washington anatomist William Bassett. His “Stereoscopic Atlas of Human Anatomy” included some 1,500 pairs of slides photographed by William B. Gruber, seen here. Frankly, the collection puts Body Worlds to shame.

The New York Times piece also, very fortuitously, led me to the Morbid Anatomy blog which bills itself as "Surveying the Interstices of Art and Medicine, Death and Culture." Just yesterday the site launched its exhibition Anatomical Theater: Depictions of the Body, Disease, and Death in Medical Museums of the Western World, described therein as "a photographic exhibition documenting artifacts collected by and exhibited in medical museums throughout Europe and the United States."
It doesn't really get much better than this.

~ Postscript: I discovered later that if you are lucky enough to have access to pubmed, the atlas is available in downloadable form. If you don't have access, well, open-source for academic materials is definitely another topic for further discussion.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

ART Goes to Hollywood

I suppose the time has come to weigh in on all of the hype over the new, weirdly successful, movie Baby Mama. I must be missing something. I have even seen this movie billed as the ultimate in Hollywood feminism. Is that perspective some kind of joke or has feminism gone so far astray that having a successful movie with two female leads has become a coup, despite the male screen writer and wickedly misogynistic content? Clearly, the feminism question is worthy of its own attention, so let’s just have a very brief go at the movie.

The title. Reproductive technologies are available, largely, to white, upper-class Americans. The idea of co-opting traditionally disparaging terminology from another social and ethnic group to whom that technology is generally not available in order to nab the appropriate “blue collar” (read: white trash) portrayal of one of the leads is something of a pc nightmare.

And more generally, does the idea of a middle-aged, single, career-oriented woman looking for another woman - younger, dumber, poorer - to act as a surrogate in order that the successful woman have the pinnacle female trophy -- a child -- sound any alarms? It should.

When feminism starts recognizing the dilemma it has created for women to see either maternity or modernity as a trap -- maybe it will be able to reconcile the two rather than insist that we accept both.

~Postscript: I'm not the only one. When Chick Flicks Get Knocked-Up, Alissa Quart.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

For one year, two

Breakfast Song
- Elizabeth Bishop

My love, my saving grace,
your eyes are awfully blue.
I kiss your funny face,
your coffee-flavored mouth.
Last night I slept with you.
Today I love you so
how can I bear to go
(as soon I must, I know)
to bed with ugly death
in that cold, filthy place,
to sleep there without you,
without the easy breath
and nightlong, limblong warmth
I've grown accustomed to?
--Nobody wants to die;
tell me it is a lie!
But no, I know it's true.
It's just the common case;
there's nothing one can do.

My love, my saving grace,
your eyes are awfully blue
early and instant blue.


Friday, April 25, 2008

A Brief Circus History

After training since the summer of 2006, off and on, in acrobatics and on the static trapeze - and since December on the tissu - I decided that today I would try out a new circus apparatus, the single point trapeze.

Like all circus endeavors: humbling.

Vaccine Skepticism

I’ve had an on-going interest in the autism-vaccine debate in which parents opt-out of the measles, mumps, rubella (varicella, pertussis) vaccination series for their children. Of particular interest has been the case of Hannah Poling, the now nine-year-old diagnosed with a mitochondrial disorder that some believe was aggravated by a vaccine-induced fever that caused the child’s body to manifest autistic behaviors.

Earlier this week, an article in The Scientific American made the argument that the “genetic defect responsible for Poling’s condition is part of her nuclear DNA” rather than her mitochondrial DNA. Had the disorder been of the mitochondrial variety, the autistic features of the child would also have manifested themselves in the mother, as mitochondrial genes are carried in the egg. In this case, from the documents presented in the vaccine court, “the Polings did not make a case that deserved compensation,” this according to Dr. Salvatore DiMauro, a mitochondria expert at Columbia University.

That, in and of itself, raises some interesting questions, not the least of which involve autism as a set of traits rather than a disorder, how often these nuclear DNA disorders occur and are labeled as a manifestation of autistic traits, the implications for the vaccine court that awarded the Polings a settlement and what that decision means, symbolically, for those opting out of the vaccination series. With most experts in agreement that the underlying disorder would have been aggravated by any fever or infection, the relationship to the vaccination is a dubious one.

As the mother of a young child who did receive this series of vaccinations (and more to come - both children and vaccinations), living in a state where the ability to sign an exemption waiver for vaccinations is quite simple, working in health care where vaccinations seem to me to be obviously beneficial and socially responsible, and being presented with quite a significant number of parents in the area who choose not to vaccinate, of more general interest are the reasons why this link of autism to vaccinations or belief that vaccinations are of more danger than benefit has picked up such steam.

In my estimation, the argument, summed up in a comment made by one mother who was quoted in the NYT saying "I refuse to sacrifice my children for the greater good,” creates something of an ethical dilemma, not just for that parent to her child - in that the child is at a higher risk without the vaccinations - but for everyone else, and everyone else's children, who happen to come in contact with that child.

Both The Denialist and Respectful Insolence have insightful opinions on the subject.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Suspended Animation

For the past seven years as a doctoral student my work on cryonics, both postmortem and embryonic, proceeded methodically, that is to say: slowly. However, I was invested in seeing it through and felt I had developed a pretty fine understanding of the processes, histories and philosophies. It was difficult letting go. Until today.

The bottom line: when one's dissertation topic is featured in an episode of This American Life, that person should feel confident that the end was nigh.

Gross Anatomy

In fact, I am extraordinarily excited about my 'second life' as a nurse. That having been said, I have searched endlessly for blogs that offer some great insight into nursing practice, personal experience or some teeth-sinking clinical encounters. Two blogs I really like are The One Year Nurse and Dust in the Wind. gNat of one year has perhaps the best link I've seen thus far, which is a gross anatomy tutorial-of-sorts from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. You can see it here.

This anatomist is so precise, tactile, corporeally keen that watching the anatomy dissections has become a family affair.

Begin the begin

Having spent many years in research, negotiating the anti-collegial evil eye of the academe that initially accompanied my choice to go clinical was not easy. What better way to begin the transition than with this image? It's me! (The black nurse-cape is crucial to my transformation.)