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The demand is growing with an increase in medical school enrollment, plus additional programs that use cadavers to allow surgeons, paramedics and other health providers to learn and practice new procedures. Whole-body donors usually are past retirement age, and because of disease or age can't offer their organs for transplant into someone else. One impediment is weight. Georgetown has quit accepting bodies that weigh more than about 200 pounds. Just last month, the university's embalmer injured his back preparing a heavy cadaver. ___ Back in the lab, "My hands are getting numb already, " Nicholas Bonazza of Pittsburgh murmurs to his classmates, about 20 minutes into the day's dissection. Embalming fluid is seeping through his surgical gloves. The skin sensation will wear off, reassures Suarez-Quian, but they must wash out their eyes quickly if any splashes. Bonazza once worked at a funeral home, so "I've seen them," he says of bodies, "but cutting is a very different experience." Then there's the pungent odor of phenol, a key chemical for long-term preservation. The smell can stimulate saliva, surprising students with feelings of hunger they find inappropriate. "I couldn't eat meat for a good month or two" after a brief introductory anatomy course over the summer, Buchman says. Forget the swooning stereotypes. In Suarez-Quian's 23 years teaching anatomy, no student ever fainted before this year. It happened the day the class used electric saws to cut the spine. Starting on the anonymous back actually eases many students' nerves. A few days later, the bodies are flipped again to start working on the chest. Pretty soon, one team finds hard, irregular breast tissue in an elderly woman. Breast cancer, a student exclaims, although it will take a look under the microscope to be sure. With bodies age 50 to 93, they'll stumble upon a variety of disease. "If you don't believe me that smoking causes cancer, trust me, you'll see the evidence here," Suarez-Quian promises the class. He reminds students to look beyond body structure and not forget "the humanity of anatomy." Buchman gets the message. "You're going to be working with vulnerable people. There's nothing more vulnerable than a dead body." Often, the students look over their shoulders to see McCarren, the lead chaplain at this Catholic university. He's there if they want to talk, but also because he's fascinated by this glimpse into the workings of the human body that most people never get. "You don't lose sight of the mystery of it," McCarren says. "It's very moving
-- this is a person." ___ It will be April before these students see their cadavers' faces. The faces are wrapped, in cloth and plastic, to keep the more delicate tissue of the head from drying out. Like with the rest of the body, the skin will be peeled back. They'll remove the skull cap to lift out the brain. Then they'll halve the face, the only way to see sinuses. "Seeing someone's face is a very tough situation," says Vinny DiMaggio of Brooklyn, N.Y. "It's really a gift" all these donors have given. He is in charge of organizing a memorial service the class will host for their donors' families in the spring, when dissection is done. That's when students thank families, one on one, for this big step in their education. About half of the donors' families want the remains returned after dissection is done. Students working on those bodies keep every bit of tissue, for Georgetown to cremate. The remaining bodies will be cremated, too, although Suarez-Quian retains some organs for additional classes. Those ashes are buried in a local cemetery plot, under a tombstone that reads: "In Memoriam Those who Gave of Themselves that Others Might Benefit." ___ On the Net: List of U.S. body-donation programs: http://tinyurl.com/2wn289 American Association of Anatomists: http://www.anatomy.org/
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