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The Immortal Life Of Henrietta Lacks

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A mother’s love is the kind of love that gives meaning to life, when everything seems to have your back against the wall, somehow the reassurance of a mother’s presence and support takes away all of the pain. A bond created from early on inside your mother’s womb, is the same bond that is cherished for a lifetime. From mother’s day cards every year, to special surprises for her birthday, a mother’s love can never be replaced. This kind of love is truly indescribable. But what happens when you’re only left with the memories and vivid imagination of what life would have been like if you had more time to spend with your mother. Imagine not knowing anything about who your mother was, or what kind of woman she turned out to be, the only thing …show more content…

It was as if I was reading about my own mother and the different trials and tribulations that my family would have had to face after her death if we were in this predicament. I can’t even fathom having to handle life’s ups and downs without my mom by my side. I started to reminisce about some of the things my mother and I would do together like girls night out which consists of getting our nails done and watching lifetime movies and binge eating on all of our favorite foods, or having girl talk about everything under the sun, because I needed a mother’s point of view. Henrietta was more than just scientific research, she was a wife, a sister, a friend, a granddaughter, and most importantly she was a mother.
The HeLa cell line was integral in the innovation of noteworthy medical advances including: the polio vaccine which showed how certain cells were resistant to antibiotics, the cancer drug Tamoxifen, chemotherapy, gene mapping, in vitro fertilization, and treatments for influenza, leukemia, and Parkinson’s disease (Skloot, 100). In 1965, HeLa cells were fused with mouse cells, making the first human-animal hybrid (Skloot, 141). These hybrids were able to advance the field of genetics to study cell genomes, create monoclonal antibodies, and identify ABO blood groups, lowering the rejection rate for transplants (Skloot,

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