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Conception to birth -- visualized

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    I was offered a position as associate professor of medicine
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    and chief of scientific visualization
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    at Yale University
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    in the department of medicine.
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    And my job was to write many of the algorithms and code
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    for NASA to do virtual surgery
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    in preparation for the astronauts going into deep spaceflight,
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    so they could be kept in robotic pods.
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    One of the fascinating things about what we were actually working on
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    is that we were seeing, using new kinds of scanning technologies,
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    things that had just never been seen before --
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    I mean, not only in disease management,
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    but also things that allowed us to see things about the body
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    that just made you marvel.
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    I remember one of the first times we were looking at collagen.
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    And your entire body, everything --
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    your hair, skin, bone, nails --
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    everything is made of collagen.
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    And it's a kind of rope-like structure
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    that twirls and swirls like this.
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    And the only place that collagen changes its structure
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    is in the cornea of your eye.
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    In your eye,
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    it becomes a grid formation,
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    and therefore, it becomes transparent, as opposed to opaque.
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    So perfectly organized a structure,
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    it was hard not to attribute divinity to it.
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    Because we kept on seeing this over and over and over again
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    in different parts of the body.
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    One of the opportunities I had
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    was one person was working on a really interesting
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    micromagnetic resonance imaging machine with the NIH.
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    And what we were going to do
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    was scan a new project
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    on the development of the fetus from conception to birth
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    using these kinds of new technologies.
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    So I wrote the algorithms in code,
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    and he built the hardware -- Paul Lauterbur --
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    then went onto win the Nobel Prize for inventing the MRI.
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    I got the data.
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    And I'm going to show you a sample of the piece,
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    "From Conception to Birth."
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    (Music)
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    Video text: "From Conception to Birth"
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    Oocyte
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    Sperm
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    Egg Inseminated
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    24 Hours: Baby's first division
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    The fertilized ovum divides a few hours after fusion ...
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    And divides anew every 12 to 15 hours.
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    Early Embryo
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    Yolk sack still feeding Baby.
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    25 Days: Heart chamber developing
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    32 Days: Arms & hands are developing
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    36 Days: Beginning of the primitive vertabrae
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    These weeks are the period of the most rapid development of the fetus.
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    If the fetus continues to grow at this speed for the entire nine months,
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    it would be 1.5 tons at birth.
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    45 Days
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    Embryo's heart is beating twice as fast as the mother's.
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    51 Days
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    52 Days: Developing retina, nose and fingers
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    The fetus' continual movement in the womb
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    is necessary for muscular and skeletal growth.
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    12 Weeks: Indifferent penis --
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    girl or boy yet to be determined
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    8 Months
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    Delivery: the expulsion stage
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    The moment of birth
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    (Applause)
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    Alexander Tsiaras: Thank you.
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    But as you can see,
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    when you actually start working on this data,
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    it's pretty spectacular.
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    And as we kept on scanning more and more,
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    working on this project,
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    looking at these two simple cells
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    that have this kind of unbelievable machinery
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    that will become the magic of you.
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    And as we kept on working on this data,
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    looking at small clusters of the body,
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    these little pieces of tissue
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    that were a trophoblast coming off of a blastocyst,
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    all of a sudden burrowing itself into the side of the uterus,
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    saying, "I'm here to stay."
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    All of a sudden having conversation and communications
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    with the estrogens, the progesterones,
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    saying, "I'm here to stay, plant me,"
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    building this incredible trilinear fetus
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    that becomes, within 44 days,
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    something that you can recognize,
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    and then at nine weeks
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    is really kind of a little human being.
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    The marvel of this information:
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    How do we actually have this biological mechanism
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    inside our body
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    to actually see this information?
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    I'm going to show you something pretty unique.
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    Here's a human heart at 25 [weeks].
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    It's just basically two strands.
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    And like this magnificent origami,
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    cells are developing
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    at one million cells per second at four weeks,
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    as it's just folding on itself.
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    Within five weeks, you can start to see the early atrium and the early ventricles.
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    Six weeks, these folds are now beginning
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    with the papilla on the inside of the heart
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    actually being able to pull down
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    each one of those valves in your heart
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    until you get a mature heart --
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    and then basically the development of the entire human body.
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    The magic of the mechanisms
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    inside each genetic structure
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    saying exactly where that nerve cell should go --
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    the complexity of these mathematical models
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    of how these things are indeed done
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    are beyond human comprehension.
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    Even though I am a mathematician,
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    I look at this with marvel
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    of how do these instruction sets
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    not make these mistakes
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    as they build what is us?
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    It's a mystery, it's magic, it's divinity.
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    Then you start to take a look at adult life.
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    Take a look at this little tuft of capillaries.
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    It's just a tiny sub-substructure, microscopic.
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    But basically by the time you're nine months and you're given birth,
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    you have almost 60,000 miles of vessels
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    inside your body.
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    I mean, and only one mile is visible.
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    59,999 miles
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    that are basically bringing nutrients and taking waste away.
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    The complexity of building that within a single system
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    is, again, beyond any comprehension
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    or any existing mathematics today.
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    And that instruction set,
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    from the brain to every other part of the body --
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    look at the complexity of the folding.
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    Where does this intelligence
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    of knowing that a fold can actually hold more information,
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    so as you actually watch the baby's brain grow --
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    and this is one of the things that we're doing right now.
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    We're actually doing the launch of two new studies
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    of actually scanning babies' brains from the moment they're born.
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    Every six months until they're six years old --
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    we're going to be doing actually to about 250 children --
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    watching exactly how the gyri and the sulci of the brains fold
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    to see how this magnificent development
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    actually turns into memories and the marvel that is us.
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    And it's not just our own existence,
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    but how does the woman's body understand
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    to have genetic structure that not only builds her own,
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    but then has the understanding
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    that allows her to become
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    a walking immunological, cardiovascular system
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    that basically is a mobile system
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    that can actually nurture, treat this child with a kind of marvel
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    that is beyond, again, our comprehension --
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    the magic that is existence, that is us?
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Conception to birth -- visualized
Speaker:
Alexander Tsiaras
Description:

Image-maker Alexander Tsiaras shares a powerful medical visualization, showing human development from conception to birth and beyond. (Some graphic images.)

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:16

English subtitles

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