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Young-Joon established a hospital with funds raised through the A-Bio Foundation. He bought a large, old building in Mapo-gu in Seoul, applied for repurposing the building, and began to renovate it, and turn it into a hospital.
As Phase Three of the glaucoma clinical trial was going smoothly, they would be able to provide glaucoma treatment after the construction ended and it became a general hospital. If they could make just one small intestine organoid until then, they could perform precise diagnoses and treatment, although it would be limited to the small intestine.
These were the first services provided by the next-generation hospital. They would be able to broaden their range of treatments as the results from stem cell research came out one by one. As such, they had to get more research results as soon as possible.
And he was lucky enough to get a chance to accelerate his research even more.
“Long time no see.”
Carpentier and Young-Joon lightly hugged.
Carpentier, a professor from Caltech, was a Nobel Prize recipient. He had studied the regeneration of spinal nerves using stem cells for a long time. So, had he succeeded in recovering the nerves using stem cells? No, he hadn’t. If he had, Young-Joon wouldn’t have been doing this in the first place.
Sometimes, Nobel Prize-winning achievements sounded like...



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