• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Woman Visits Her Own Heart On Display In Museum 16 Years After It Was Removed

May 23, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

A woman who underwent a heart transplant at 22 years old has visited her old heart, now on display at the Hunterian Museum in London.

At university, Jennifer Sutton realized she was struggling with moderate exercise, the BBC reports. Soon, she was diagnosed with restrictive cardiomyopathy – a rare condition where the heart’s chambers stiffen over time – and would need a heart transplant to survive. Her health continued to deteriorate, but in 2007 a donor match was found. 

Advertisement

After the transplant, Sutton gave permission to the Royal College of Surgeons to display the heart she had from birth, hoping to raise awareness about heart conditions and organ donation.

“The minute you first walk in you think ‘that used to be inside my body’,” Sutton told the BBC.

“But it’s quite nice too – it’s like my friend. It kept me alive for 22 years and I’m quite proud of it really. I’ve seen lots of things in jars in my lifetime but to think that’s actually mine is very weird.”

Sutton had visited the heart before, when it was first displayed by the Wellcome Collection in 2007. 

Advertisement

 “Seeing my heart for the first time is an emotional and surreal experience. It caused me so much pain and turmoil when it was inside me. Seeing it sitting here is extremely bizarre and very strange,” she said at the exhibition, seen by the Salisbury Journal. “Finally I can see this odd looking lump of muscle that has given me so much upset.”

“It’s tremendous it has become such an object of fascination and will get people thinking about the disease, heart transplants and organ donation.”

Now 38 and still in good health, Sutton visited her heart again.

“It’s been 16 fantastic years and I wouldn’t have had any of them without my donor,” she told the BBC, urging others to consider becoming an organ donor. “I’m incredibly busy, active and keeping this heart as healthy as possible – keeping myself going for as long as possible.”

Advertisement

The heart is currently on display at the Hunterian Museum.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. UK government plans new pet abduction offence after rise in thefts
  2. While Britney Spears rejoices, her father’s attorney calls conservator suspension ‘wrong’
  3. Doctor Performs The World’s First Vasectomy Powered By A Car Battery
  4. The Creator Of The Internet Wants To Reinvent It By Giving Everyone Their Own AI

Source Link: Woman Visits Her Own Heart On Display In Museum 16 Years After It Was Removed

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • How We Know Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Is Not An Alien Mothership
  • First-Of-Its-Kind Evidence Shows Bees Can Learn “Morse Code” – Well, Kinda
  • Humans Have A “Seventh Sense” That Lets You Touch Things From A Distance
  • The Longest Place Name Has 111 Letters – And It’s Visited By Millions Of People Each Year
  • We Now Know Why Neanderthal Faces Looked So Different To Our Own
  • Why Does Africa Have So Many Of The World’s Largest Land Animals?
  • This “Ant-Mimicking” Spider Produces Its Own Kind Of Milk And Nurses Its Babies
  • 1972 Was The Longest Year In Modern History – Here’s Why
  • Why Did “Magic Mushrooms” Evolve To Be Hallucinogenic – What’s In It For The Mushrooms?
  • Why Can’t You Domesticate All Wild Animals? The Process Relies On 6 Characteristics Few Mammals Possess
  • Meet Some Of Earth’s Mightiest Predators
  • Canada Officially Loses Its Measles Elimination Status After Nearly 30 Years. The US Is Not Far Behind
  • Two “Anomalies” Detected In Egypt’s Menkaure Pyramid Using Electrical Resistance Tomography
  • Invasive “Tree Of Heaven” Unleashes Hell As “Double Invasion” Sweeps Across Virginia
  • Hamman’s Crunch: A Man Covered His Nose And Mouth Whilst Sneezing And Ended Up In Hospital
  • “One Of The Most Beautiful Experiments In Evolutionary Biology”: What The Peppered Moth Taught Us About Evolution
  • Why Do Microwaved Eggs Explode When You Bite Into Them?
  • First-Ever At-Home LSD Microdosing Trial For Depression Sees 60 Percent Improvement In Symptoms
  • People Are Just Learning What A Baby Turkey Is Called
  • Enceladus’s North Pole Is Leaking Heat, Indicating Its Ocean Is Ancient And Boosting Prospects For Life
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version