physician
Comments
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So a complete rip-off of the method I described above, reposted on your blog? At least you didn't copy and paste. Consider this my first and last involvement in your online community. Enjoy the idea, i'll keep the remainder to myself.
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The fluid would be absorbed into the tissues in minutes and any implant would be secured. There's nothing for it to sink into unless you're the sandman. The implant will sit on the tissues you dissect apart.…
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JohnDoe, I'm not sure I understand your question. I hadn't heard of those body modifications but a quick Google taught me quickly. How would what affect depth accuracy? Anyone give this a try yet? I'm curious of your experience.
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I was thinking it would work on the sides of the finger, but I don't see why it wouldn't work on any skin. BUT I've never actually seen anything implanted in a fingertip pad, so take that for what it's worth. The idea for this was born out of placing tunneled dialysis catheters in the upper chest, so not a perfect analog.…
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The sensations felt are in the skin so that's where you want to place your magnet, i'd imagine superficial as the best. Someone could practice on their arm if they don't trust a first try. It doesn't hurt terribly. The amount of pressure is minimal to dissect the skin with a small guage needle and a 10cc syringe.