Medical Care

From Gothpoodle

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Cloning)
Line 87: Line 87:
fields on areas of the brain. $250,000, 500 lbs., 10 cf.
fields on areas of the brain. $250,000, 500 lbs., 10 cf.
Runs off building/vehicle power.
Runs off building/vehicle power.
 +
 +
==Nanodrugs==
 +
Drugs may come as pills, injectable liquids, aerosols,
 +
patches, etc. Most are available in multiple forms. Many
 +
are actually encapsulated nanofactories that manufacture
 +
proteins and nanoviruses to adjust the user’s biochemistry.
 +
Those that affect the user’s brain chemistry are commonly
 +
known as “brainbugs.” Developments in
 +
neurochemistry allow safe drugs to be designed deliberately
 +
to produce varied effects.
 +
 +
===Mnemotropins===
 +
Drugs taken to assist in memory. An mnemotropic
 +
regime allows acquisition of skill points at twice the normal
 +
rate. Costs $100/week.
 +
 +
===Popular Brainbugs===
 +
*'''Hobbes:''' This suppresses the user’s reasoning ability; the user regresses to a more animalistic behavior pattern. Often taken deliberately as a form of therapy.
 +
*'''Kujang:''' This brainbug causes the user to experience the flow of time as if everything were slightly slowed down. Excessive use can produce effects similar to post-traumatic stress syndrome.
 +
*'''Metatron:''' This jacks up the user’s mystical faculties, leaving him feeling that revelation is around the corner.
 +
*'''Nepenthe:''' The most popular “feel-good” brainbug. The user is unable to feel really sad or afraid, regardless of what happens to him.
 +
*'''Zero:''' The user becomes a sociopath.

Revision as of 17:41, 30 July 2012

2100-era medicine is extremely effective. If a person can be kept alive, and Fifth Wave medical care is available, then only injuries and diseases that rapidly destroy the brain or nervous system are likely to be fatal.

Contents

Limb and Organ Replacement

Transplants are tissue-engineered rather than provided by donors. It takes 6 weeks to custom-grow tissue using tissue-engineering techniques, or a week to do the same using biogenesis. Typical cost to grow a single limb, eye, or organ is $5,000 (doubled for biogenesis). The actual transplant operation might cost another $10,000 per part replaced. With limb transplants, full functionality is not attained for 6 weeks following the operation.

See also Biomod Transplants.

Cloning

A clone is a genetic duplicate of a person. It normally has a slightly different appearance, since many features develop after conception (such as fingerprints). The GM should decide which advantages and disadvantages reflect heredity and which represent acquired characteristics.

A human or animal clone can be created by taking a live tissue sample of a person, removing cells, and carefully starving them until they become still living but quiescent. The donor cells are then fused with an egg cell taken from a female of the same species; the egg cell’s own nucleus (with its DNA) is removed. This procedure takes about 3 days and costs $500. Now awakened, the egg cell, with donor nucleus, forms embryonic cells that can be implanted after a week or so in the donor (if female), or a surrogate mother or exowomb. It then develops like any other embryo, becoming a fetus and then a baby. Clones do not grow unusually fast or share an original’s memory.

Cross-Sex Clones: Chromosome manipulation can change a clone’s sex but keep it otherwise identical. This takes 1 week and costs $10,000 for a male-to-female change, or 3 weeks and $35,000 for female-to-male change.

Clones and the Law: Human clones have full civil rights; it is usually legal to clone oneself, but cloning another requires his permission (or that of his estate). Rights of parents to clone their children vary. Genetic upgrades, parahumans, bioroids, and sapient uplifts may have copyrighted genomes.

Medical Equipment

Medical Microtech and Nanotech

These are injected into a patient’s body.

  • Bionet: This is a network of microbots with acoustic transmitters, designed to spread through the body and serve as a communications relay system, receiving biochemical signals from smaller medical nano. It takes an hour to circulate through the body. It must be installed before radical nanosurgery or the use of programmable immune machines. It allows diagnostic nano to report without having to retrieve them; this lets the nano remain in the patient, providing constant updates. $1,000/dose. Will degrade harmlessly within a month.
  • Diagnostic Nano: Tiny robots used to determine what is wrong with a patient. Can also identify nanomachines, such as the proteus virus. Takes two hours to circulate through body and diagnose problems, and another hour to retrieve. The patient must be attached to a diagnostic bed, cyberdoc, or ESU. Alternatively, a bionet can be established and the diagnostic nano can report more rapidly and constantly. $2,000/dose. Can be retrieved using an ESU or cyberdoc, or will degrade harmlessly in a month.
  • Programmable Immune Machines: These are nanomachines that can be programmed to destroy specific viral, bacterial, or parasitic infections, cancers, or nanosymbionts. The target must have been correctly diagnosed for them to function. A Physician roll is needed to program them for a target (this takes half an hour). If the roll was a success, they will destroy their target within an hour; if it failed, they have no effect (try again). $500/dose.
  • Surgical Microbots: Miniswarm of microbots optimized for internal procedures, controlled through a bionet. Allows internal surgery that is otherwise impossible. Not usable for nanosurgery or brainpeeling. Reusable. $15,000, 0.1 lb.

Exowomb

An artificial womb tank that can be used to grow a multicellular animal (such as a human) from gametes to healthy adulthood. This is no faster than natural growth. An organism developing in an exowomb has the same awareness as a baby in its womb. If kept past the fetal stage, it will not develop mentally in the absence of stimuli. An exowomb requires a computer to monitor life support. A womb for a human-sized organism is $100,000, 250 lbs., 50 cf. It runs on building or vehicle power (0.1 kW). Renting an exowomb costs $3,000 per month.

Hypersensitive Magnetic Resonance Imager (HyMRI)

A high-definition magnetic resonance imager, commonly used to see inside the body and diagnose problems. HyMRI uses superconducting magnets and spin-polarized gases for maximal contrast enhancement. The gases (xenon-129 or helium-3) are hyperpolarized, using laser light to increase the proportion of atoms spinning in the same direction. They are then inhaled or injected. The HyMRI is further enhanced by exploiting intermolecular quantum effects, giving resolutions far better than 20th-century designs (down to 2 nanometers). AHyMRI can also be used in psychiatry, focusing intense fields on areas of the brain. $250,000, 500 lbs., 10 cf. Runs off building/vehicle power.

Nanodrugs

Drugs may come as pills, injectable liquids, aerosols, patches, etc. Most are available in multiple forms. Many are actually encapsulated nanofactories that manufacture proteins and nanoviruses to adjust the user’s biochemistry. Those that affect the user’s brain chemistry are commonly known as “brainbugs.” Developments in neurochemistry allow safe drugs to be designed deliberately to produce varied effects.

Mnemotropins

Drugs taken to assist in memory. An mnemotropic regime allows acquisition of skill points at twice the normal rate. Costs $100/week.

Popular Brainbugs

  • Hobbes: This suppresses the user’s reasoning ability; the user regresses to a more animalistic behavior pattern. Often taken deliberately as a form of therapy.
  • Kujang: This brainbug causes the user to experience the flow of time as if everything were slightly slowed down. Excessive use can produce effects similar to post-traumatic stress syndrome.
  • Metatron: This jacks up the user’s mystical faculties, leaving him feeling that revelation is around the corner.
  • Nepenthe: The most popular “feel-good” brainbug. The user is unable to feel really sad or afraid, regardless of what happens to him.
  • Zero: The user becomes a sociopath.
Personal tools