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The Most Adorable Way to Learn Anatomy Is With Knitted Organs

Discussion in 'Anatomy' started by Dr.Scorpiowoman, Feb 11, 2018.

  1. Dr.Scorpiowoman

    Dr.Scorpiowoman Golden Member

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    Using needles and yarn, a medical student is working his way through the human body.


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    Lam's plush viscera include kidneys, the gallbladder, and intestines.

    Daniel Lam was knitting his way through the whole tangled slew of abdominal viscera, and things were looking pretty good. He’d found the perfect yarn for the intestines—a marbled pink hue—and was closing in on the right proxy for a gallstone. It needed to be small and round. (A lima bean, to its credit, was small enough to shimmy between the stitches, but the shape was all wrong.) That’s when Lam hit the “rock bottom of nerdy knitting,” he wrote on his blog, Masculiknity. “AKA using a mardi gras bead inside a yarn gallbladder to simulate cholelithiasis.”

    For centuries, doctors have consulted anatomical models to understand how branching nerves, layered tendons, and nestled organs all collaborate to keep us alive. The 18th century birthed legions of wax models, with skin vaguely shellacked and utterly poreless. Sculptors sometimes engineered a game of Operation in reverse, tucking removable organs into a flayed-open abdominal cavity. A 19th-century surgeon crafted dissectable papier-mâché specimens from cork, paper, clay, and other ingredients.

    With yarn and needles, Lam, a fourth-year medical student at the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Medicine, takes an approach that is decidedly less macabre and way more cuddly. “I made the liver [into] a little plump pillow,” he says.

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    Students can practice nestling the organs, the way they are in the abdominal cavity.
    Lam’s been a knitter since childhood, but only moved beyond the usual suspects of scarves, hats, and socks during his second year of med school, when he was assisting with the anatomy class that’s the foundation of the introductory curriculum.


    It started with an eyeball, suspended in a shoebox so that students could survey the muscles that control movement. Lam based the shape off a pattern for a spherical Christmas ornament, but other crafters have compiled patterns for crocheted, felted, and knitted brains, lungs, spines, even chromosomes. Lam then tackled the brachial plexus—the ropey nerve bundle running from the spine and neck into the arms—and the whole lot of abdominal organs. Next up is the vascular system, with its elaborate ecosystem of arteries, veins, and capillaries.

    Since they serve as teaching tools, Lam’s plush viscera don’t throw anatomical fact to the wind. He strives to get the scale right—he lost a day or so of work when he’d bungled the size of the pancreas. For ease of identification, Lam sometimes takes liberties with the organs’ colors. (A healthy kidney is pink, not bright blue.)

    Aesthetics aren’t Lam’s primary concern for the models. “I’d prefer it to be accurate than look good,” he says. “But it does look kind of good.”

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    Lam drew inspiration for the eyeball from spherical Christmas ornaments.
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    The brachial plexus has a complex network of roots, trunks, division, cords, and branches.
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    Lam labeled the components of the brachial plexus to make the structure a little easier to follow.

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