#cadaver

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 The statue, on display at Saint-Étienne church in the French city of Bar-le-Duc, is known as a &ldq

The statue, on display at Saint-Étienne church in the French city of Bar-le-Duc, is known as a “transi.” Popular in western Europe during the Renaissance, the art form depicts a deceased person during the transition between life and death—the corporeal husk of a departed soul. It’s a particularly impactful memento mori.From the late 14th century onward, some tombs were also adorned with recumbent transi sculptures. In contrast to the usual serene depictions of eternally sleeping saints, these “cadaver tombs’ showed the effects of death in stark detail. The effigy of French doctor Guillaume de Harsigny is emaciated and noseless, while Belgian sculptor Jacques du Broeucq’s 16th-century "l'homme à moutons” (“man eaten by worms”) shows a decaying body riddled with the wriggling creatures.A Look at the Striking “Transi” Corpse Sculptures. 

Source: http://www.slate.com/blogs/atlas_obscura/2014/09/24/transi_statues_and_cadaver_tombs_memento_mori_of_renaissance_europe.html?wpsrc=fol_tw 


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Pennywise Ask # 10 - Human Flavors

In the end, the clown loves everyone.
You’re all tasty in his eyes.

PS : Thanks to Meadow for being the prey. :3

cadaver
 Daniel Vazquez photography -american ghoul-

Daniel Vazquez photography -american ghoul-


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Portraits At The Pub - Trudie

Portraits At The Pub – Trudie

After a month away from Portraits At The Pub, it was a little scary – mostly because next to Trudie was the resident Lamb Skeleton (yes they have one) dressed in Halloween attire of a top hat and weirdly a heart cushion in their rib cage. I guess it’s the skeleton’s favourite time of year! Trudie was wearing her wedding dress, so it looked like some spooky wedding so the first drawing was a nod…


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Illustration based on this Nautilus article I read about the Venus Anatomical models, constructed du

Illustration based on this Nautilus article I read about the Venus Anatomical models, constructed during a period of time where the line between medicine/the divine/and the nature of femininity/virtue/beauty were all weird and fuzzy. 


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 Day 3: VirusMermaid Virus -Bodies found in bodies of water show there skin growing a unknown type o

Day 3: Virus
Mermaid Virus -

Bodies found in bodies of water show there skin growing a unknown type of algae
No signs of struggle appear in the body
Perhaps it’s not safe to drink any water from faucets.



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Mermay Day 2: MirrorThe Mermaids MirrorA urban legend best forgotten. Fill a large metal bowl with w

Mermay Day 2: Mirror

The Mermaids Mirror

A urban legend best forgotten. Fill a large metal bowl with water and let the water settle. Stand away from the mirror, only looking at it from the sides. Never directly over it. Never let them see you. Never make eye contact.


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Collier School Of Embalming - New York City, NY, 1932

Collier School Of Embalming-New York City, NY, 1932


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Beating Heart CadaversLast year we had a terminal (non-recovery) fish practical which required fresh

Beating Heart Cadavers

Last year we had a terminal (non-recovery) fish practical which required fresh cadavers. The fish were humanely euthanised with an anaesthetic overdose. As an added precaution, the gill arches were then cut (causing them to bleed out and preventing respiration) and the spinal cord transected (obstructing electrical signals from the brain). Despite these measures, the fish hearts continued to beat for several minutes. Even once removed from the rest of the body, they continued to beat. As you can imagine, it was quite disconcerting, but we were all reassured that the fish were, in fact, dead and unable to feel any pain. 

I hadn’t given it another thought until I came across this video yesterday and my curiosity got the better of me. So I did what any ex-vet student would do - RESEARCH!

The heart continues to beat because, unlike most muscles in the body, the heart doesn’t rely on electrical impulses from the brain, but instead generates its own electrical impulses from specialised cells within the heart. These cells can continue to fire as long as they have sufficient ATP (energy). Apparently this phenomenon can (and does) occur in humans too.

So then I started thinking about the process of dying, how “death” is defined, and what criteria are used to determine death. Is a patient dead when the heart stops beating, or when respiration ceases? Are they dead when there is no longer conscious thought, no response to stimulus, or an absence of electrical activity in the brain (“brain dead”)? Or a combination? It’s clearly a controversial question because death isn’t a single event, it’s a process! Cells, tissues and organs die at different rates.

While I was reading, I came across the term “beating heart cadaver” which I hadn’t heard of before. A beating heart cadaver is a body that is pronounced dead (by the brain dead definition), yet retains functioning organs and a pulse. Because the brain stem is dead and can’t control ventilation, the body is connected to a medical ventilator which keeps the blood oxygenated. This blood is circulated around the body by the heart, which continues to beat independently. Beating heart cadavers are known to “survive” for up to 20 years! These cadavers are even capable of maintaining pregnancies! Fascinating right?

In the vet industry we routinely determine whether an animal is alive or not simply by feeling for a pulse and using a stethoscope to auscultate the heart. I suppose if the heart ISN’T beating, the animal is definitely dead. And with pharmacological euthanasia, the cardiovascular system is likely to be the last to go (after nervous and respiratory systems). Even so, assessing cardiovascular function now seems an over-simplified means for determining death in veterinary patients. I will certainly be giving more thought to my death criteria from now on.

If you’re as fascinated by this topic as I apparently am, I found this interesting BBC article which is worth a read: http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20161103-the-macabre-fate-of-beating-heart-corpses

Check out the videos of my fish practical here: https://www.instagram.com/p/BtaeSQKnW-a/


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 One more ‘Anatomia’ is listed to the shop… Ultimate Renaissance anatomical sketc One more ‘Anatomia’ is listed to the shop… Ultimate Renaissance anatomical sketc One more ‘Anatomia’ is listed to the shop… Ultimate Renaissance anatomical sketc

One more ‘Anatomia’ is listed to the shop… Ultimate Renaissance anatomical sketchbook - scientific masterpiece with lucid insights into the functioning of the human body.



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