« Reply #137 on: January 07, 2026, 12:32:27 PM »
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Maybe the doctors could reinforce his skull to handle future slams. Kind of like an internal helmet.
That's a good idea. Cast a structure to fit around the head to hold it together for the operation. Crack the skull into measured segments, then one piece at a time you take out a skull piece and apply first a layer of perhaps titanium and then something like foam for insulation (because concussions are caused by brain hitting the inside of the skull). Once all pieces are remodeled and puzzled back together, perhaps use some kind of focused laser-torch to mold the internal metal layer together around the brain by heat without melting the foam or the brain. The skull will naturally gain circumference, but stemcells can be used to fill in and adhere the cracks of the expanded skull. Alternately, do a similar operation but without the external skull layer being (re-)applied: titanium skull replacement with padding.
And what when the foam packs out? Could we just leave a skin flap loosely stitched on, so doctors could insert fresh FP Newtonian Fluid Cranium Padding™ easier every couple of years?

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