Categories
- Global News Feed
- Uncategorized
- Alabama Stem Cells
- Alaska Stem Cells
- Arkansas Stem Cells
- Arizona Stem Cells
- California Stem Cells
- Colorado Stem Cells
- Connecticut Stem Cells
- Delaware Stem Cells
- Florida Stem Cells
- Georgia Stem Cells
- Hawaii Stem Cells
- Idaho Stem Cells
- Illinois Stem Cells
- Indiana Stem Cells
- Iowa Stem Cells
- Kansas Stem Cells
- Kentucky Stem Cells
- Louisiana Stem Cells
- Maine Stem Cells
- Maryland Stem Cells
- Massachusetts Stem Cells
- Michigan Stem Cells
- Minnesota Stem Cells
- Mississippi Stem Cells
- Missouri Stem Cells
- Montana Stem Cells
- Nebraska Stem Cells
- New Hampshire Stem Cells
- New Jersey Stem Cells
- New Mexico Stem Cells
- New York Stem Cells
- Nevada Stem Cells
- North Carolina Stem Cells
- North Dakota Stem Cells
- Oklahoma Stem Cells
- Ohio Stem Cells
- Oregon Stem Cells
- Pennsylvania Stem Cells
- Rhode Island Stem Cells
- South Carolina Stem Cells
- South Dakota Stem Cells
- Tennessee Stem Cells
- Texas Stem Cells
- Utah Stem Cells
- Vermont Stem Cells
- Virginia Stem Cells
- Washington Stem Cells
- West Virginia Stem Cells
- Wisconsin Stem Cells
- Wyoming Stem Cells
- Biotechnology
- Cell Medicine
- Cell Therapy
- Diabetes
- Epigenetics
- Gene therapy
- Genetics
- Genetic Engineering
- Genetic medicine
- HCG Diet
- Hormone Replacement Therapy
- Human Genetics
- Integrative Medicine
- Molecular Genetics
- Molecular Medicine
- Nano medicine
- Preventative Medicine
- Regenerative Medicine
- Stem Cells
- Stell Cell Genetics
- Stem Cell Research
- Stem Cell Treatments
- Stem Cell Therapy
- Stem Cell Videos
- Testosterone Replacement Therapy
- Testosterone Shots
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
Archives
Recommended Sites
Monthly Archives: February 2014
Awad Narrated Stem Cells Lecture#2 Spring 2014 1080p – Video
Posted: February 27, 2014 at 4:42 pm
Awad Narrated Stem Cells Lecture#2 Spring 2014 1080p
Module 4 (Stem Cells)-Lecture 2 BME262 Cell Tissue Engiuneering - Spring 2014 (UR)
By: hankeeeee
Continued here:
Awad Narrated Stem Cells Lecture#2 Spring 2014 1080p - Video
Posted in Stem Cell Videos
Comments Off on Awad Narrated Stem Cells Lecture#2 Spring 2014 1080p – Video
Chemotherapy may kill the patient but not the cancer stem cells – Video
Posted: February 27, 2014 at 4:42 pm
Chemotherapy may kill the patient but not the cancer stem cells
http://www.rawlifehealthshow.com You can keep the patient, you can kill the tumor but you can #39;t kept the cancer stem cells. Dr. Shandl explains in this video...
By: thedurianking
View post:
Chemotherapy may kill the patient but not the cancer stem cells - Video
Posted in Stem Cell Videos
Comments Off on Chemotherapy may kill the patient but not the cancer stem cells – Video
Stem Cells will Fix Your Broken Heart; Repair of Damaged Cardiac Muscle after MI – Video
Posted: February 27, 2014 at 4:42 pm
Stem Cells will Fix Your Broken Heart; Repair of Damaged Cardiac Muscle after MI
Visit http://www.MyMenopauseMagazine.com for more info on menopause. Doris Taylor, PhD discusses using stem cells to repair damaged heart muscle after a hear...
By: Mache Seibel, MD
Originally posted here:
Stem Cells will Fix Your Broken Heart; Repair of Damaged Cardiac Muscle after MI - Video
Posted in Stem Cell Videos
Comments Off on Stem Cells will Fix Your Broken Heart; Repair of Damaged Cardiac Muscle after MI – Video
Mini-liver research to reduce animal use in science – Video
Posted: February 27, 2014 at 4:42 pm
Mini-liver research to reduce animal use in science
Research that has for the first time successfully grown "mini-livers" from adult mouse stem cells has won the UK #39;s international prize for the scientific and...
By: National Centre for the 3Rs
See the article here:
Mini-liver research to reduce animal use in science - Video
Posted in Stem Cell Videos
Comments Off on Mini-liver research to reduce animal use in science – Video
Shane Improves Dramatically After Stem Cell Treatments to Help Cerebral Palsy! – Video
Posted: February 27, 2014 at 4:42 pm
Shane Improves Dramatically After Stem Cell Treatments to Help Cerebral Palsy!
Shane came to Dr. David Steenblock to help treat his cerebral palsy. After receiving stem cell treatments, Shane had vast improvements in regards to his heal...
By: David Steenblock
The rest is here:
Shane Improves Dramatically After Stem Cell Treatments to Help Cerebral Palsy! - Video
Posted in Stem Cell Treatments
Comments Off on Shane Improves Dramatically After Stem Cell Treatments to Help Cerebral Palsy! – Video
Dr. Gerry Curatola Signs on as Advisory Board Member of Store-A-Tooth Dental Stem Cell Banking
Posted: February 27, 2014 at 1:48 pm
Littleton, MA , MA (PRWEB) February 27, 2014
Provia Labs Store-A-Tooth, a Stem Cell Bank specializing in dental stem cell preservation, announces the appointment of Dr. Gerry Curatola, dentist, author and humanitarian best known for his clinical contributions in cosmetic dentistry and wellness, to their Advisory Board.
Dr. Curatola co-founded CS Bioscience Inc., a dental biotech company, and currently serves as its Chairman of the Board. The company performs research and development of pioneering natural therapeutics that promote oral health. In addition, Dr. Curatola is the founder of Rejuvenation Dentistry, a wellness-focused global network of dental practices, and the co-inventor and co-developer of REVITIN Oral Therapy. Dr. Curatola has private dental practices in both Manhattan and East Hampton, New York.
Following a lifelong model of humanitarian service, Dr. Curatola traveled to Andhra Pradesh, India at the invitation of Dr. Krishna Ajjarapu, founder of an orphanage and school in the region, to help establish a dental and medical clinic which will serve thousands of impoverished in this community. Closer to home, Dr. Curatola helped to establish the Pediatric Dental Fund of the Hamptons, a dental charity founded by local pediatrician, Dr. Gail Schoenfeld, which provides free dental care to needy children on Long Islands East End.
We are extremely fortunate to have Dr. Curatola as part of our team, said Provia Labs CEO Howard Greenman. His passion for the integration of oral health with overall health and wellness is aligned perfectly with the value of banking stem cells from teeth that ultimately will be useful for a patients overall health. Greenman adds, Most importantly, Gerry is a great guy, has an infectious personality and is truly on a mission to improve patients health - globally.
Dr Curatola, best known as Dr. Gerry, is a Celebrity Dentist and has contributed to numerous TV and radio programs including The Dr. Oz Show, The Martha Stewart Show, ABC News, FOX News, NBC, CBS, and CNN. I am excited about being an advisor to a world-class team like the one at Provia Labs, says Dr. Curatola. The decision to store dental stem cells now is a very important consideration for parents and their children who would otherwise discard this tissue. The future use of these valuable cells, stored in a robust, youthful state, is made possible by Provia Labs. Every dentist should provide their patients with the information to make an informed decision about banking their childs stem cells.
About Provia Laboratories, LLC Provia Laboratories, LLC (http://www.provialabs.com) is a health services company specializing in high quality stem cell biobanking (the collection, transport, processing, and cryogenic storage of biological specimens). Its dental stem cell banking service, Store-A-ToothTM, gives parents the option to store stem cells today to protect their childrens health tomorrow. Store-A-Tooth preserves stem cells from baby and wisdom teeth that would otherwise be discarded, so parents can be prepared for advances in stem cell therapies that someday may help treat conditions such as type 1 diabetes, spinal cord injury, heart attack, stroke, and neurological disorders like Parkinsons and Alzheimers.
For more information about Store-A-Tooth dental stem cell banking, please call 1-877-867-5753 or visit us at http://www.store-a-tooth.com or Like Store-A-Tooth at http://www.facebook.com/storeatooth.
Read more from the original source:
Dr. Gerry Curatola Signs on as Advisory Board Member of Store-A-Tooth Dental Stem Cell Banking
Posted in Cell Therapy
Comments Off on Dr. Gerry Curatola Signs on as Advisory Board Member of Store-A-Tooth Dental Stem Cell Banking
Nuclear stiffness keeps stem cells, cancer cells in place
Posted: February 26, 2014 at 3:50 pm
Adult stem cells and cancer cells have many things in common, including an ability to migrate through tiny gaps in tissue. Both types of cells also experience a trade-off when it comes to this ability; having a flexible nucleus makes migration easier but is worse at protecting the nucleus' DNA compared to a stiffer nucleus. Nuclear proteins that regulate nuclear stiffness are therefore thought to control processes as diverse as tissue repair and tumor growth.
In a study published in the Journal of Cell Biology, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have shown that cell migration through micron-size pores is regulated by lamin-A, a nuclear protein that is very similar to the fibrous ones that make up hair.
They have also shown that a cell's ability to survive the mechanical stress of migration depends on proteins called "heat shock factors." Using an anti-cancer drug that inhibits heat shock responses, they showed that this drug's effectiveness relies on inhibiting the invasive migration of cells via the same mechanism.
Taking into account the role that lamin-A plays in increasing nuclear stiffness could help stem cell biologists and cancer clinicians interpret the diversity of nuclear shapes seen in a static sample of tissue under a microscope. Nuclei normally appear rounded but can also appear multi-lobed or greatly elongated; high lamin-A levels tend to produce the more distorted shapes after a cell squeezes its nucleus through a narrow pore.
"If we can understand more clearly the effects the lamin-A meshwork within nuclei has on the ability of cells to crawl through tiny openings," said Dennis Discher, professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Science, " then we can develop better nucleus-directed treatments for stopping the spread of cancer or for keeping stem cells in the right place while they grow into tissue."
Discher, along with lead author Takamasa Harada, a graduate student in his lab, conducted the studies with fellow lab members Joe Swift, Jerome Irianto, Jae-Won Shin, Kyle Spinler, Avathamsa Athirasala, Dave Dingal and Irena Ivanovska, as well as undergraduate student Rocky Diegmiller.
The study's experiments were conducted on immortalized human cancer cells as well as human-donor-derived mesenchymal stem cells, which are in wide use in clinical trials for tissue repair. The researchers either inhibited or overexpressed lamin-A in the cells, then placed both kinds on top of a thin sheet with very small pores. By adding blood serum to a chamber on the bottom of the porous sheet, the researchers encouraged the cells to push, pull and squeeze their nuclei through the pores.
Looking under a microscope at the cells that made it though the sheet revealed very few of the cells where lamin-A had been overexpressed. There was also a dearth of cells where lamin-A was strongly repressed. The cells that were most successful in migrating through the sheet's pores were the ones with lamin-A only slightly less than normal.
"The decreased migration with very low lamin-A levels was especially surprising," Harada said, "and so we measured the physical stiffness of the various nuclei, confirming that cell nuclei were systematically softer with low levels of lamin-A."
"While cells with stiffer nuclei are clearly unable to push or pull their nuclei through the pores," he said, "all of the softer nuclei could be moved through more easily, which presented a paradox."
Here is the original post:
Nuclear stiffness keeps stem cells, cancer cells in place
Posted in Stem Cells
Comments Off on Nuclear stiffness keeps stem cells, cancer cells in place
Penn researchers show nuclear stiffness keeps stem cells and cancer cells in place
Posted: February 26, 2014 at 3:50 pm
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:
25-Feb-2014
Contact: Evan Lerner elerner@upenn.edu 215-573-6604 University of Pennsylvania
Adult stem cells and cancer cells have many things in common, including an ability to migrate through tiny gaps in tissue. Both types of cells also experience a trade-off when it comes to this ability; having a flexible nucleus makes migration easier but is worse at protecting the nucleus' DNA compared to a stiffer nucleus. Nuclear proteins that regulate nuclear stiffness are therefore thought to control processes as diverse as tissue repair and tumor growth.
In a study published in the Journal of Cell Biology, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have shown that cell migration through micron-size pores is regulated by lamin-A, a nuclear protein that is very similar to the fibrous ones that make up hair.
They have also shown that a cell's ability to survive the mechanical stress of migration depends on proteins called "heat shock factors." Using an anti-cancer drug that inhibits heat shock responses, they showed that this drug's effectiveness relies on inhibiting the invasive migration of cells via the same mechanism.
Taking into account the role that lamin-A plays in increasing nuclear stiffness could help stem cell biologists and cancer clinicians interpret the diversity of nuclear shapes seen in a static sample of tissue under a microscope. Nuclei normally appear rounded but can also appear multi-lobed or greatly elongated; high lamin-A levels tend to produce the more distorted shapes after a cell squeezes its nucleus through a narrow pore.
"If we can understand more clearly the effects the lamin-A meshwork within nuclei has on the ability of cells to crawl through tiny openings," said Dennis Discher, professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Science, " then we can develop better nucleus-directed treatments for stopping the spread of cancer or for keeping stem cells in the right place while they grow into tissue."
Discher, along with lead author Takamasa Harada, a graduate student in his lab, conducted the studies with fellow lab members Joe Swift, Jerome Irianto, Jae-Won Shin, Kyle Spinler, Avathamsa Athirasala, Dave Dingal and Irena Ivanovska, as well as undergraduate student Rocky Diegmiller.
The study's experiments were conducted on immortalized human cancer cells as well as human-donor-derived mesenchymal stem cells, which are in wide use in clinical trials for tissue repair. The researchers either inhibited or overexpressed lamin-A in the cells, then placed both kinds on top of a thin sheet with very small pores. By adding blood serum to a chamber on the bottom of the porous sheet, the researchers encouraged the cells to push, pull and squeeze their nuclei through the pores.
See the rest here:
Penn researchers show nuclear stiffness keeps stem cells and cancer cells in place
Posted in Stem Cells
Comments Off on Penn researchers show nuclear stiffness keeps stem cells and cancer cells in place
Stem Cell Replacement Therapy for Common Foot Injuries Provides Rapid Healing
Posted: February 26, 2014 at 3:45 pm
New York, New York (PRWEB) February 26, 2014
Adler Footcare of Greater New York is offering an advanced treatment option for chronic foot problems like plantar fasciitis, as well as common foot problems like Osteoarthritis, Achilles tendonitis and torn soft tissue.
In the past these conditions have been treated by physical therapy or orthotic therapy, but the results have often been poor, leaving patients continuing to struggle with the pain. With stem cell replacement therapy, the treatment of these conditions is proving far more effective and long lasting than traditional treatments.
At Adler Footcare we use live birth stem cells which are introduced into the affected area. Stem cells are used by many physicians to treat a broad variety of conditions because of their ability to either replicate themselves, or change into the cell type that is needed to repair the tissue that has been damaged. When a patient comes in for stem cell therapy, the affected area is carefully measured so the stem cells can be delivered directly to the area that needs the treatment.
The Joint Commission accredited Podiatric OR of Midtown Manhattan housed within Adler Footcare is designed to facilitate advanced treatments such as Stem Cell Replacement Therapy to all their patients.
With stem cell treatment we are finding that patients heal much faster and are able to return to their normal activities much sooner than with traditional treatment options, said Dr. Darline Kulhan, podiatric surgeon at Adler Footcare. Recovery time depends on each individual patients medical diagnosis and overall general health.
Treatments using stem cells have been used by physicians for over 100 years. Stem Cell Replacement Therapy is covered by commercial insurance and Medicare, and is approved and regulated by the FDA. The product is tested and screened by medical professionals to eliminate the potential of any communicable diseases.
To learn more about Stem Cell Replacement Therapy or to schedule a consultation with a New York podiatrist at Adler Footcare, call (212) 704-4310 or visit http://www.mynycpodiatrist.com.
About Adler Footcare New York
Dr. Jeffrey L. Adler, Medical/Surgical Director and owner of Adler Footcare New York has been practicing podiatric medicine since 1979 and has performed thousands of foot and ankle surgeries. Dr. Adler is board certified in Podiatric Surgery and Primary Podiatric Medicine by the American Board of Multiple Specialties in Podiatry. Dr. Adler is also a Professor of Minimally Invasive Foot Surgery for the Academy of Ambulatory Foot and Ankle Surgeons. As one of only several in the country who perform minimally invasive podiatric surgery, Dr. Adlers patients enjoy significantly reduced recovery times.
Go here to see the original:
Stem Cell Replacement Therapy for Common Foot Injuries Provides Rapid Healing
Posted in Stem Cell Therapy
Comments Off on Stem Cell Replacement Therapy for Common Foot Injuries Provides Rapid Healing
ABC 7 LA – Experimental Treatment Uses Stem Cells to Regenerate Discs – Video
Posted: February 26, 2014 at 8:42 am
ABC 7 LA - Experimental Treatment Uses Stem Cells to Regenerate Discs
Watch this story about how Arizona Pain is helping patients using stem cells. Check out our Stem Cell page: http://arizonapain.com/stemcell/ for more informa...
By: Arizona Pain
Read the original:
ABC 7 LA - Experimental Treatment Uses Stem Cells to Regenerate Discs - Video
Posted in Stem Cell Videos
Comments Off on ABC 7 LA – Experimental Treatment Uses Stem Cells to Regenerate Discs – Video