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Category Archives: Stem Cells
Options exist when saving a newborns cord blood
Posted: July 1, 2014 at 6:56 pm
When a baby is born, blood that remains in his or her placenta and the attached umbilical cord blood is rich in stem cells that can potentially be used to treat certain diseases and genetic disorders.
And as medical technology has evolved, so has the ability to use cord blood that save lives and treat diseases. Today, parents of newborns have the option of banking their babys cord blood privately for their own possible future use, or they can donate it to a public bank similar to donating blood where it may be used to help others with a variety of illnesses.
July is National Cord Blood Awareness Month, a time when many health care providers and blood banks encourage the public to learn more about cord blood research and donations.
Sharon White, manager of the perinatal special care unit at Sharp Mary Birch Hospital for Women & Newborns said over 70 diseases can be treated with cord blood stem cells, such as acute and chronic leukemias, inherited metabolic and immune system disorders, plasma cell disorders and diseases such as breast cancer, neuroblastoma and renal cell carcinoma.
Dr. Lisa Brown, the physician in charge of national child health for the obgyn department at Kaiser Permanente San Diego, said stem cells from cord blood are used mainly to treat disorders of the blood. Since cord blood was first transplanted successfully in 1988, roughly 7,000 similar transplants have been performed, she said.
Stem cells in cord blood are valuable, she said, because they can become several different types of cells when transplanted in the body. For instance, she said, a patient with leukemia or lymphoma would typically get chemotherapy and radiation to destroy their own stem cells in the bone marrow that are causing illness. Those stem cells can then be replaced with healthy stem cells from cord blood. She said once transplanted, the new stem cells make copies of themselves and make blood cells a less painful option than getting stem cells from bone marrow.
To get stem cells from an umbilical cord is not dangerous, its not painful, she said.
Today, all new parents have the option of banking or donating their newborns cord blood. Some local hospital systems, such as Sharp Mary Birch, have partnered with private banks such as StemCyte to give parents the option of collecting and saving their babys cord blood at birth. Other systems, such as Scripps and the Navy, collect cord blood donations for public use through the San Diego Blood Bank. The blood bank first began collecting cord blood a decade ago, but then suppressed the program for financial reasons before ramping up collection efforts again about a year ago, said Chief Executive Officer David Wellis.
Some health care systems offer multiple options. White said Sharp Mary Birch offers private cord blood banking where parents have their babys cord blood collected at birth and stored for potential future use, as well as a related-donor cord blood program where a babys umbilical cord blood can be collected and used to treat a biological sibling or parent with a disease. Theres a fee with both these options. The hospital also offers public banking at no cost where parents donate their babys cord blood to others in need and to further cord blood research.
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Options exist when saving a newborns cord blood
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Stemcells' promising news on spinal cord injury, AMD therapies – Video
Posted: June 30, 2014 at 6:56 pm
Stemcells #39; promising news on spinal cord injury, AMD therapies
Martin McGlynn, CEO of Stemcells Inc., disclosed to BioWorld (http://www.BioWorld.com) fascinating data from a phase I/II clinical trial of human neural stem cells to treat chronic spinal cord...
By: BioWorld News Views
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Stemcells' promising news on spinal cord injury, AMD therapies - Video
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Her own stem cells saved her from hip replacement
Posted: June 30, 2014 at 6:56 pm
Apollo Health City team did autologous stem cell procedure to save both the hip joints
Hyderabad, June 30:
A team of doctors from a city hospital have harvested stem cells of a person using bone morrow from the pelvis area to replace some dead tissues in the hip. In this process, they saved the patient from undergoing a hip replacement.
The Apollo Health City team, headed by orthopaedic specialist Paripati Sharat Kumar, diagnosed a 39-year-old woman to be suffering from Avascular Necrosis, making her writhe with pain in her two hip joints. Her condition would require undergoing a replacement of hips.
After assessing her condition, the team has decided to go for autologous stem cell procedure (where donor and the receiver is the same person) to save both the hip joints.
The minimally invasive procedure involved taking bone marrow aspirate from the patients pelvis. Stem cells were harvested from the aspirate, through a process that takes about 15 minutes. Stems cells were planted in the area of damage under fluoroscopy control following core decompression, Sharat Kumar said here in a statementon Monday.
He felt that autologous stem cell treatments could edge out joint replacement procedures to a large extent in days to come. The scope of this procedure in orthopaedics and sports medicine is enormous. This could be extended to indications include osteoarthritis of knee, shoulder, hip, elbows, ankle and spine, he said.
(This article was published on June 30, 2014)
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Her own stem cells saved her from hip replacement
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Stem cells may be more widespread and with greater potential than previously believed
Posted: June 30, 2014 at 6:56 pm
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:
30-Jun-2014
Contact: Cody Mooneyhan cmooneyhan@faseb.org 301-634-7104 Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
With the plethora of research and published studies on stem cells over the last decade, many would say that the definition of stem cells is well established and commonly agreed upon. However, a new review article appearing in the July 2014 issue of The FASEB Journal , suggests that scientists have only scratched the surface of understanding the nature, physiology and location of these cells. Specifically, the report suggests that embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cells may not be the only source from which all three germ layers in the human body (nerves, liver or heart and blood vessels) can develop. The review article suggests that adult pluripotent stem cells are located throughout the body and are able to become every tissue, provided these cells receive the right instructions.
"This study highlights the mutual role of stem cells both for regeneration and in tumor growth by featuring two sides of the same coin: stems cells in cancer and regenerative medicine," said Eckhard Alt, M.D., Ph.D., the article's lead author from the Center for Stem Cell and Developmental Biology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. "Our workprovides novel insight on why and how mature has provided us with one universal type of stem cell that is equally distributed throughout the whole body, every organ and every tissue. Small early pluripotent stem cells are ubiquitously located in and around the blood vessels throughout the whole body and serve as a reserve army for regeneration."
In the review, Alt and colleagues suggest that small early pluripotent stem cells are able to replace any kind of tissue in the body--independent of where they comes from in the body--given that these cells receive the correct instructions. When researchers extract these cells from fat tissue, concentrated them and then injected them into diseased or injured tissue, they delivered beneficial outcomes for ailments such as heart failure, osteoarthritis, non-healing wounds, soft tissue defects, muscle, bone and tendon injuries and neurodegenerative diseases. The review also discusses how this is basically the same process that occurs in tumors, except that instead of healing or regenerating tissue, the cells work toward building a tumor. Better understanding and manipulating how these cells communicate not only will open new therapies that heal injury (heart failure, wounds, etc.), but will allow researchers to stop many cancers before they become life-threatening.
"This article suggests that the countless hours spent researching cancer and progenitor cells are finally coming to a head," said Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB Journal. "As the intersection between cancer and stem cell research becomes closer and clearer, all of today's medical treatments will begin to look as crude as Civil War medicine."
###
Receive monthly highlights from The FASEB Journal by e-mail. Sign up at http://www.faseb.org/fjupdate.aspx. The FASEB Journal is published by the Federation of the American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB). It is among the most cited biology journals worldwide according to the Institute for Scientific Information and has been recognized by the Special Libraries Association as one of the top 100 most influential biomedical journals of the past century.
FASEB is composed of 26 societies with more than 120,000 members, making it the largest coalition of biomedical research associations in the United States. Our mission is to advance health and welfare by promoting progress and education in biological and biomedical sciences through service to our member societies and collaborative advocacy.
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Stem cells may be more widespread and with greater potential than previously believed
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Human Gut Cells Become Insulin Producers in New Approach
Posted: June 30, 2014 at 6:55 pm
Scientists have converted human gut cells into insulin producers by turning off a single gene in an experiment that suggests a new way forward in treating diabetes.
Using a miniature model of the human intestine, only a few millimeters in size and made from stem cells, the scientists deactivated a gene in the cells tied to metabolic regulation called FOXO1. Once disabled, the cells began producing insulin.
The method, described today in the journal Nature Communications, raises the possibility of replacing insulin-making pancreatic beta cells lost in diabetics by using a drug to retrain patients existing cells. While progress has been made in generating beta cells from stem cells, the method hasnt yet produced ones with all the needed functions, said Domenico Accili, the studys lead author. Plus, such cells would require transplantation.
We provided a proof of principle that we can do this in human tissues and are also very excited that there is a single identifiable target to trigger this process, Accili, professor of medicine at Columbia Universitys Naomi Berrie Diabetes Research Center in New York, said in an interview. This is what the pharmaceutical industry is interested in -- make a chemical and do what we did in test tubes to administer to persons with diabetes and teach their gut cells to become beta cells.
The results build on research two years ago by Accili and his team that first tested the approach in mice, successfully converting gut cells into insulin-making cells. That work has since received independent confirmation from another group. In the human cell experiment, gut cells started releasing insulin after seven days and only in response to glucose.
Now that Accili and his team have shown it works in human cells, their next step is to develop a drug to test in people. Accili said its possible that there could be a compound for clinical trials in a year or two.
Diabetes, which results when the body doesnt use insulin properly or doesnt make the hormone, is the seventh-leading cause of death in the U.S. Insulin is a hormone secreted by the pancreas that helps the body control blood sugar.
Destruction of insulin-making beta cells in the pancreas is the central feature of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes. In Type 1 diabetics, the cells are destroyed by the immune system and dont produce insulin. In Type 2, in which the body doesnt use insulin properly, beta cells become progressively dysfunctional.
One advantage to this experimental approach is that the gastrointestinal tract is partly protected from attack by the immune system, making gut cells less susceptible to destruction, Accili said.
A treatment for diabetes that doesnt require daily insulin injections would change the treatment landscape for the 29 million diabetics in the U.S. However, its likely that any potential drug would first be evaluated for Type 2 diabetes, because of concerns of testing in Type 1 diabetics going without insulin injections, he said.
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Human Gut Cells Become Insulin Producers in New Approach
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Autologous stem cell treatment could be the road ahead
Posted: June 30, 2014 at 6:55 pm
The treatment could edge out joint replacement procedures to a large extent.
Hyderabad, June 30:
A team of doctors from a city hospital have harvested stem cells of a person using bone marrow from the pelvis area to replace some dead tissues in the hip. By doing this, they saved the patient from undergoing a hip replacement.
The Apollo Health City team, headed by orthopaedic specialist Paripati Sharat Kumar, diagnosed a 39-year-old women suffering from Avascular Necrosis. Her condition would require undergoing a replacement of hips.
After assessing her condition, the team has decided to go for the autologous stem cell procedure (where donor and the receiver is the same person) to save both the hip joints.
The minimally invasive procedure involved taking bone marrow aspirate from the patients pelvis. Stem cells were harvested from the aspirate through a process that takes about 15 minutes. Stems cells were planted in the area of damage under fluoroscopy control following core decompression, Kumar said in a statement on Monday.
He feels that the autologous stem cell treatment could edge out joint replacement procedures to a large extent in the days to come. The scope of this procedure in orthopaedics and sports medicine is enormous. This could be extended to indications including osteoarthritis of knee, shoulder, hip, elbows, ankle and spine, he said.
(This article was published on June 30, 2014)
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Autologous stem cell treatment could be the road ahead
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Dr. Gidon Frame on Selphyl, PRP & Stem Cells for Skin – Video
Posted: June 28, 2014 at 4:48 pm
Dr. Gidon Frame on Selphyl, PRP Stem Cells for Skin
AntiAgingVancouver.com Dr. Gidon Frame, Medical Director and Cosmetic Injector for the Anti-Aging Medical Laser Clinic in Vancouver, gives a talk on the us...
By: AntiAgingClinic1
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Dr. Gidon Frame on Selphyl, PRP & Stem Cells for Skin - Video
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The Buzz About Plant Stem Cells – Video
Posted: June 28, 2014 at 4:48 pm
The Buzz About Plant Stem Cells
Plant stem cells are continuing to earn much attention in the beauty industry, providing a safe and non-controversial alternative to neutralizing free radicals that cause us to age. HydroPeptide #39;s...
By: DermStore
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The Buzz About Plant Stem Cells - Video
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Who's stronger, man or woman?
Posted: June 28, 2014 at 4:48 pm
HOUSTON -
It's a question that goes back to the beginning of time -- who's stronger, men or women? It's something that Brian Egwuatu and his wife, Kara Egwuatu, battle over all the time.
"Oh, Brian and I make everything a competition, everything; working out, driving home from work, running at the track," Kara Egwuatu said.
"Definitely, men are stronger, there is no doubt," Brian Egwuata said.
But now landmark research being conducted at The Texas Heart Institute by Dr. Doris Taylor and her team is proving for the first time that women, from their stem cells to their hearts, have got men beat big-time.
"There's a difference in the underlying structure of every organ, the blood vessels, the liver, the kidney, the lungs," Taylor said.
She said you can actually see the difference.
Take hearts, for example. Taylor took male and female pig hearts, nearly identical to the human heart, and stripped them of all cells so she could study their basic structure. She found the female hearts were taught and toned, plump andmuscular looking, like a picture of a heart you would see drawn in a book.
The male hearts were much softer, loose, thin-walled and generally kind of limp looking.
Holding up a male pig heart, Taylor said, "Look at this, it looks like an old, bad sock."
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Who's stronger, man or woman?
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Banking Stem Cells | Dr. Rhonda Patrick – Part 1 | Tim Ferriss Show (Podcast) – Video
Posted: June 27, 2014 at 7:51 am
Banking Stem Cells | Dr. Rhonda Patrick - Part 1 | Tim Ferriss Show (Podcast)
Dr. Rhonda Patrick - Banking Stem Cells Full Episode: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-tim-ferriss-show/id863897795?mt=2 SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/1dSz...
By: Tim Ferriss
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Banking Stem Cells | Dr. Rhonda Patrick - Part 1 | Tim Ferriss Show (Podcast) - Video
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