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Korea Oppa latest anti aging medicine is made from dead human, Samster can afford to try??

k1976

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Human Skin Is the Newest Ingredient in the K-Beauty Boom

Clinics across South Korea are injecting treatments made from donated cadaver skin into patients seeking a more youthful look.



Illustration by Huanhuan Wang for Bloomberg

By Sangmi Cha and Hyonhee Shin
July 17, 2026 at 8:00 AM GMT+8


Sara Yoon recalls the moment her Seoul dermatologist described the clinic’s newest offering. His English wasn’t perfect, making the pitch sound even more like science fiction than skin care.

“It’s made from dead people,” he said.
 
Cadaver skin, also known as an allograft, is human skin donated for medical use. Doctors use it as a temporary bandage to cover severe burns, large wounds, or ulcers. It acts like a protective shield to keep out germs, stop fluid loss, and reduce pain while the body heals. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]

How It Works
When a person has a large burn, doctors sometimes cannot use the patient's own skin (an autograft) because there is not enough healthy skin left. In these cases, they use sterilized cadaver skin to temporarily cover the injury. [1, 2]
Think of it like laying sod in a patchy yard. The cadaver skin protects the exposed soil (your body's tissue) while your own skin cells slowly grow underneath. [1, 2]

Medical Uses
    • Severe Burns: It protects the wound from infection and prepares the surface for a permanent skin graft.
    • Chronic Wounds: It helps heal deep ulcers by encouraging the body's own cells to migrate and rebuild the skin.
    • Safety: Unlike some synthetic coverings, donated human skin integrates well with the body and is less likely to trigger sudden rejection. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Preparation and Safety
Before it is used, scientists treat donated skin. They remove all living cells and use antibiotics to ensure the tissue is completely clean and safe. The skin is then preserved through cryopreservation (freezing) or glycerol storage until a patient needs it. [1, 2, 3]
Because the skin does not contain living cells, the patient's immune system will eventually recognize it as foreign and reject it. However, this rejection usually takes weeks, which gives the patient's body enough time to begin growing its own new skin or to prepare for a permanent graft. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
For more details on how treatments are planned, you can read the Cleveland Clinic's Skin Graft Guide.
 
Are these manufactured by the Vaxtards? If yes, they can’t even prevent sudden deaths and turbo cancers but they can prevent aging?

You will need some IQ first
 
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