If you give a perfectly healthy person one of those pills, will they grow a third kidney?
My guess is he dispensed it in pill form so as not to alarm the sick woman in her ill state.
From the dialogue, it seemed to me that the kidneys she had were simply cured of their malfunction.
And yet, a century later they don't have them to grow a new heart for a cadet who gets stabbed in a bar fight. Unless, an artificial heart is the only way to have saved young Picard quickly and their wasn't time for anything else. I think that might be the explanation.A general purpose 'regenerate missing organ' pill makes more sense since it would be a good field treatment and applicable to many uses.
McCoy has that machine that repairs a broken blood vessel in Chekov's brain.I figure they would have had machines for regenerating organs, similar to Dr. Russell's device on TNG-Ethics, just less advanced.
It seems like in some scenes, you see them adjusting a hypospray rather than reaching for a new med.Int he same vein I think McCoy's hypospray does not carry the multitude of different medications we see him dispensing in the field but rather a couple of general purpose 'raw' medicines which he can set up or configure on the fly.
That makes sense. Her old kidney would be in there unless it had been removed, and that would only happen if another one was transplanted into its place, or there was an imminent danger from leaving it in place.It wouldn't be much of a stretch to say that the kidney had failed, which is why she was receiving dialysis, and the pill regenerated function. I imagine if it had made a *new* kidney, the doctors would be flipping out over "there's a kidney there?!" instead.
Yeah, my mother had a nephrectomy, so she only has one kidney, and she does okay. That being said, when she had that one kidney, the doctors were still floating the idea of using dialysis, because they didn't think the one kidney could take up the slack. So far, the kidney is doing exceptionally well, but if it significantly reduces function, she would absolutely get dialysis, so I'm thinking this little old lady was up for it because of the single kidney *and* her age, because she appeared to be in advanced years.That makes sense. Her old kidney would be in there unless it had been removed, and that would only happen if another one was transplanted into its place, or there was an imminent danger from leaving it in place.
A puzzle... you can function ok(-ish) with one kidney. So to be seriously ill she'd need both to be failing. Did the pill restore them both?
I've seen the movie countless times and I don't even remember that line.WOMAN PATIENT: The doctor gave me a pill and I grew a new kidney.
That's interesting. I'd assumed the new one 'used the existing plumbing', as it were, but not so.People that receive kidney transplants don't have the bad one removed. They just slave the new good one in to pick up the slack. Kidney recipients have three kidneys. It's just that the ones they were born with don't work so well.
I've seen the movie countless times and I don't even remember that line.
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