Is this real, or what.. how come I never heard about this? In the video it said.. "The man who unfolded a thousand hearts, Paco Torrent-Guasp,
discovered that the heart is a single muscular band, folded over itself in a spiraling pattern.
The heart itself is a vortex of tissue. It is not a pump. It is a vortex machine."
Looking up this guy.. noticed a documentary trailer where it shows that clip and you see the heart how it usually does and just unfolding it into this long band.
"The Man Who Unfolded a Thousand Hearts - Trailer" 2min51sec.
[Music]
nature does not make
machines like how we make cars when we
make cars we order parts and then we
bring it together the the engineers at
the end the technicians put it together
once everything is together then they
turn it on becomes a car and moves out
of they assemble it on nature does not
have the
luxury when you have a heart from
beginning you have to pump
[Music]
in college we were told that the left
ventricle contracted by squeezing
itself but we didn't really know how it
happened the physical mechanism the
pulleys that move the muscle and enable
the heart to contract and expand the
cavity we didn't know how that
[Music]
worked
[Music]
he knew what he wanted and how he had to
do it and spent the whole day thinking
about it he even dreamed about it at
night and woke up talking about it I
believe he was a genius his anatomic
Discovery is a is one of the most
phenomenal things that's ever ever
happened in the in in cardiovascular
medicine
he put us a road map now we basically
can identify or connect the function and
structure together so if something wrong
with the function we can go back and
look where in the structure we have that
failure or deficiency and hopefully come
up with it from gin therapy to surgery
or to some medications
when this uh robber strips uh
shortens the basil is coming down the
basil look I was dumb struck dumb struck
because how can you have the nerve to
use those contractions when explaining
something like that from a mechanical
point of view and that's what he
did
Is this real, or what.. how come I never heard about this? In the video it said.. "The man who unfolded a thousand hearts, Paco Torrent-Guasp, discovered that the heart is a single muscular band, folded over itself in a spiraling pattern. The heart itself is a vortex of tissue. It is not a pump. It is a vortex machine."
Looking up this guy.. noticed a documentary trailer where it shows that clip and you see the heart how it usually does and just unfolding it into this long band.
"The Man Who Unfolded a Thousand Hearts - Trailer" 2min51sec.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1daFQmGjiG0
Let me get the transcript of that.
[Music] nature does not make machines like how we make cars when we make cars we order parts and then we bring it together the the engineers at the end the technicians put it together once everything is together then they turn it on becomes a car and moves out of they assemble it on nature does not have the luxury when you have a heart from beginning you have to pump [Music] in college we were told that the left ventricle contracted by squeezing itself but we didn't really know how it happened the physical mechanism the pulleys that move the muscle and enable the heart to contract and expand the cavity we didn't know how that [Music] worked [Music] he knew what he wanted and how he had to do it and spent the whole day thinking about it he even dreamed about it at night and woke up talking about it I believe he was a genius his anatomic Discovery is a is one of the most phenomenal things that's ever ever happened in the in in cardiovascular medicine he put us a road map now we basically can identify or connect the function and structure together so if something wrong with the function we can go back and look where in the structure we have that failure or deficiency and hopefully come up with it from gin therapy to surgery or to some medications when this uh robber strips uh shortens the basil is coming down the basil look I was dumb struck dumb struck because how can you have the nerve to use those contractions when explaining something like that from a mechanical point of view and that's what he did
I read the heart doesn't pump blood, it pulls it.