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WSCS 2014: UTILIZING STEM CELLS IN THE EFFECTIVE TREATMENT OF HEART DISEASE – Video

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 5:48 pm


WSCS 2014: UTILIZING STEM CELLS IN THE EFFECTIVE TREATMENT OF HEART DISEASE
Moderator - John P. Cooke, MD, PhD, Houston Methodist Research Institute Speakers - Atta Behfar, MD, PhD, Mayo Clinic - Karl-Henrik Grinnemo, MD, Karolinska ...

By: worldstemcell

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WSCS 2014: UTILIZING STEM CELLS IN THE EFFECTIVE TREATMENT OF HEART DISEASE - Video

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Stem Cell Research News from Medical News Today

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 5:48 pm

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End knee pain with stem cells from your hip: Cocktail of cells could halt damage caused by osteoarthritis

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 5:48 pm

Scientists test whether stem cells could halt damage from osteoarthritis Condition causes wear to knee cartilage and can be particularly painful Trial will take cells from bone marrow of the hip and implant them in knee

By Lucy Elkins For The Mail On Sunday

Published: 17:01 EST, 7 March 2015 | Updated: 08:14 EST, 8 March 2015

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For anyone suffering with osteoarthritis in their knee, the options for improvement are limited. There is no cure for the condition, and patients are advised to lose weight. In extreme cases, where the arthritis is disabling, joint replacement is offered.

But now there is hope for those who think they just have to put up with the pain. Scientists are testing whether a cocktail of stem cells including some from the hip could not only halt the damage osteoarthritis causes to the knee, but may ultimately do away with the need for surgery.

Osteoarthritis begins with wear to the cartilage the strong, flexible material in the joints that allows the bones to glide over one another and move easily.

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End knee pain with stem cells from your hip: Cocktail of cells could halt damage caused by osteoarthritis

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Stem cell donor navigates blizzard to do good deed

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 5:48 pm

When Alfred Howard offered a sample of his cheek cells to an organization looking for matches for cancer patients in need of blood and bone marrow, he probably never imagined the lengths others would go to help him carry out his good deed. "I just wanted to give someone a second chance at their life, and we needed a group effort," Howard, 40, an oil rig mechanic and former Navy seaman, said Monday. Last Tuesday, while travel was banned during the blizzard, Howard rode in a Groton Town police truck to Lawrence + Memorial Hospital in New London to get his final injection of filgrastim, a medication used to decrease the chances of infection in donated blood products. After that, an American Ambulance driver transported him to Yale-New Haven Hospital, where he underwent a four-hour peripheral blood stem cell donation process, in which blood is drawn, plasma separated out and re-injected back into the donor. From the plasma, stem cells are extracted for a waiting cancer patient. "The patient goes through intense rounds of chemotherapy, which leaves them without an immune system and extremely vulnerable," said Desiree Chavis, communications associate for Delete Blood Cancer, the organization that arranged the donation. A nurse from Delete Blood Cancer had given Howard the first three shots of filgrastim at his home in the weeks leading up to the donation, but couldn't get there during the blizzard to deliver the last one. So her organization contacted Yale-New Haven about finding another way. The transplant, she explained, must happen within a short window of time after the chemotherapy, so once the procedure starts, it must continue uninterrupted - blizzard or no. This particular donation was further complicated by the fact that the recipient, a middle-aged man with lymphoma, lives in England. "It was pretty intense," she said. "It took a lot of teamwork." Howard said he was originally supposed to take Amtrak to New Haven for the shot and procedure, but with train service canceled, that wasn't a possibility. Yale-New Haven's emergency management staff contacted L+M about administering the shot, and L+M in turn contacted American Ambulance. "Everybody wanted to make sure we could make this happen," said Ron Kersey, emergency management coordinator for L+M. A couple of hours after the donation procedure was finished, Howard got a ride home with a livery service. The procedure wasn't painful, he said. It just made him a little tired afterward, and he felt good knowing the quart-sized bag of his stem cells was on its way to an airport for the overseas flight to England, where a very sick man he didn't know was waiting for a cure. "We know the courier was able to get it out Wednesday night," Chavis said. The odyssey of Howard's stem cells began with chance encounter in Charlotte, N.C., two years ago when he had traveled there for work. He stopped at a USO office there on the day Delete Blood Cancer was collecting cheek swabs, and decided to offer his. In October, Delete Blood Cancer informed him he was a match. The donation was scheduled for January, after Howard would be back home from another month away for his job, this time in the Canary Islands. "I feel that I'm blessed, so why not help somebody else?" said Howard, who has lived in Groton with his wife, Tomeka, and their daughter, Kaylah, since 2010. Tomeka Howard said the turn of events was a public expression of her husband's character that ended up bringing people together to accomplish something good. "I'm so proud of what he's done for someone else," she said. "I always knew he was a selfless kind of person, because of the way he is with me. But now he's sharing that with the world. And everyone did a good job of making sure he was safe."

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Stem cell donor navigates blizzard to do good deed

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$3.6 Million in Grants for Pair of UC Davis Scientists

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 5:47 pm

(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) - The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) has awarded a pair of $1.8 million grants to two UC Davis scientists to develop better tools for enabling physicians to assess the safety and efficacy of bioengineered tissues used to treat cardiovascular disease and bone and cartilage repair. Laura Marcu, a professor of biomedical engineering and neurological surgery, and her colleagues, aim to combine label-free optical and ultrasonic imaging technologies so that newly developed vascular replacement materials - typically used in surgical grafts to restore blood flow - can be better assessed and monitored directly in patients and thus prevent a graft's potential failure. Kent Leach, an associate professor of biomedical engineering and orthopaedic surgery, will lead an interdisciplinary research team that will also develop advanced light and sound technologies to detect changes in engineered bone and cartilage. The goal of the project is to ultimately provide clinicians with improved abilities to identify if and how implanted cells are maturing and functioning in patients. Having these types of new diagnostic imaging capabilities could accelerate the development and clinical applications of everything from engineered vascular grafts, which currently can pose significant complications for patients, to stem cell therapies for regenerating bone and cartilage in diseased or damaged areas of the human body. "The broad range of biophotonic and ultrasound technologies developed in our laboratory could improve our ability to produce safer, more functional engineered tissues in the laboratory and large animal models to speed their use in clinical settings," said Marcu, who also is co-principal investigator on Leach's research project. "It should improve real-time, non-invasive, label-free imaging capabilities and give us a more thorough assessment of site-specific cellular growth and functional properties when engineered tissues are used." The two CIRM grants are part of the state stem cell agency's latest Tools and Technologies Initiative, which is designed to support research that addresses unique translational challenges in regenerative medicine. The three-year research grants that were awarded by the agency last week focus on the creation, design and testing of novel or existing tools and technologies to address translational bottlenecks to stem cell therapies. "Sometimes even the most promising therapy can be derailed by a tiny problem," said Jonathan Thomas, chair of the CIRM Board, in a statement regarding the nearly $30 million in grants that stem cell agency approved at its Jan. 29 meeting. "These awards are designed to help find ways to overcome those problems, to bridge the gaps in our knowledge and ensure that the best research is able to keep progressing and move out of the lab and into clinical trials in patients." In her CIRM proposal, Marcu noted that cardiovascular disease, when combined with rising rates of peripheral artery disease and ischemic stroke, make the illness the most prominent health problem in California and the United States. "Our goal is to help develop a diagnostic technology that is more practical and less costly than what is currently available," said Marcu, whose project is being done in collaboration with Leigh Griffiths at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and Claus Sondergaard at the UC Davis School of Medicine. "We want to be able to more rapidly screen vascular scaffold production and real-time assessments, on an ongoing basis, of bioengineered vascular tissues after studies are performed in patients or in animals. Having that type of ability could allow clinicians to more readily identify early signs of rejection and vascular graft failure and thereby improve safety and efficacy for use in patients." As new therapies are developed to treat the disease, especially involving tissue grafts and patches engineered with unique cellular material, the need for devices to test and monitor bioengineered products will be all the more important. "Currently, using stem cells to generate individualized implantable grafts suffers from patient-to-patient variability that is unpredictable and immeasurable without destructive techniques," said Leach, whose project also includes Kyriacos Athanasiou, chair of UC Davis' Department of Biomedical Engineering. "The aging population of California, 20 percent of whom will be over the age of 65 in the next decade, will require functional replacement tissues to maintain their quality of life. We simply cannot assess the success or failure of a cellular therapy in living individuals, and it represents a major bottleneck in translating stem cell technologies to the clinic and delivering quality products for patients. We need nondestructive, minimally invasive methods to measure dynamic changes in tissue development." UC Davis' stem cell program director, Jan Nolta, also sees great benefits for regenerative medicine research from the tools Marcu and Leach are developing. "One of the great barriers in regenerative medicine is our ability to understand and monitor what happens after stem cells are given to a patient," said Nolta, who also directs the UC Davis Institute for Regenerative Cures in Sacramento. "We need to be able to tell whether the blood vessels are truly improving, and whether the bone and cartilage are getting stronger. This type of novel biomedical imaging research will advance our clinical assessment capabilities and add to our efforts to safely turn stem cells into cures."

For more information, visit http://www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/stemcellresearch

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"Big Brain" Gene Allowed for Evolutionary Expansion of Human Neocortex

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 5:47 pm

The newly identified gene is found in modern-day humans, Neandertals and Denisovans, but not in chimps

New research suggests that a single gene may be responsible for the large number of neurons found uniquely in the human brain. When this gene was inserted in the brain of a mouse embryo (shown here), it induced the formation of many more neurons (stained red). The extra neurons led to the formation of characteristic convolutions that the human brain uses to pack so much brain tissue into a small space (convolutions shown on the right). Credit: Marta Florio and Wieland B. Huttner, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics

A single gene may have paved the way for the rise of human intelligence by dramatically increasing the number of brain cells found in a key brain region.

This gene seems to be uniquely human: It is found in modern-day humans, Neanderthals and another branch of extinct humans called Denisovans, but not in chimpanzees.

By allowing the brain region called the neocortex to contain many more neurons, the tiny snippet of DNA may have laid the foundation for the human brain's massive expansion.

"It is so cool that one tiny gene alone may suffice to affect the phenotype of the stem cells, which contributed the most to the expansion of the neocortex," said study lead author Marta Florio, a doctoral candidate in molecular and cellular biology and genetics at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Dresden, Germany. Still, it's likely this gene is just one of many genetic changes that make human cognition special, Florio said.

An expanding brain

The evolution from primitive apes to humans with complex language and culture has taken millions of years. Some 3.8 million ago, Australopithecus afarensis, the species typified by the iconic early human ancestor fossil Lucy, had a brain that was less than 30 cubic inches (500 cubic centimeters) in volume, or about a third the size of the modern human brain. By about 1.8 million years ago, Homo erectus was equipped with a brain that was roughly twice as big as that of Australopithecus. H. erectus also showed evidence of tool and fire use and more complex social groups.

Once anatomically modern humans, and their lost cousins the Neanderthals and Denisovans, arrived on the scene, the brain had expanded to roughly 85 cubic inches (1.4 liters) in volume. Most of this growth occurred in a brain region called the neocortex.

"The neocortex is so interesting because that's the seat of cognitive abilities, which, in a way, make us human like language and logical thinking," Florio told Live Science.

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Seven strategies to advance women in science

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 5:42 pm

Despite the progress made by women in science, engineering, and medicine, a glance at most university directories or pharmaceutical executive committees tells the more complex story. Women in science can succeed, but they are succeeding in fields that may not even be conscious of the gender imbalances. These imbalances manifest themselves in the number of women that are invited to speak at conferences, the percentage of grants awarded to women scientists, and the higher rates of attrition of women at every stage of the career ladder compared to those of men.

In the March 5 issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell, the Initiative on Women in Science and Engineering Working Group, a collection of more than 30 academic and business leaders organized by the New York Stem Cell Foundation, present seven strategies to advance women in science, engineering, and medicine in this modern landscape.

"We wanted to think about broad ways to elevate the entire field, because when we looked at diversity programs across our organizations we thought that the results were okay, but they really could be better," said Susan L. Solomon, co-founder and CEO of the New York Stem Cell Foundation and a member of the working group. "We've identified some very straightforward things to do that are inexpensive and could be implemented pretty much immediately."

The working group's seven strategies are broken into three categories: the first two are direct financial support strategies, the next three are psychological and cultural strategies, and the final two are major collaborative and international initiatives.

1. Implement flexible family care spending

Make grants gender neutral by permitting grantees to use a certain percentage of grant award funds to pay for childcare, eldercare, or family-related expenses. This provides more freedom for grantees to focus on professional development and participate in the scientific community.

2. Provide "extra hands" awards

Dedicate funds for newly independent young investigators who are also primary caregivers to hire technicians, administrative assistants, or postdoctoral fellows.

3. Recruit gender-balanced review and speaker selection committees

Adopt policies that ensure that peer review committees are conscious of gender and are made up of a sufficient number of women.

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Seven strategies to advance women in science

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Hello Doctor – Information about Stem Cell Therapy – [Ep 76] – Video

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 5:41 pm


Hello Doctor - Information about Stem Cell Therapy - [Ep 76]
Subscribe to Vendhar TV http://goo.gl/wdkOLp Social media links Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1CYqoAg Twitter: https://twitter.com/Vendhartv Google+ :http://goo....

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World Over – 2015-02-26 – Vatican latest, ISIS, stem cell therapy, Ray Flynn with Raymond Arroyo – Video

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 4:41 am


World Over - 2015-02-26 - Vatican latest, ISIS, stem cell therapy, Ray Flynn with Raymond Arroyo
RAY FLYNN, former Mayor of Boston and former US Ambassador to the Vatican on the latest papal news from Rome and his efforts to work with the medical communi...

By: EWTN

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World Over - 2015-02-26 - Vatican latest, ISIS, stem cell therapy, Ray Flynn with Raymond Arroyo - Video

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Alternative Treatments For COPD – FAT STEM CELL THERAPY in Dallas, Texas – Video

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 4:41 am


Alternative Treatments For COPD - FAT STEM CELL THERAPY in Dallas, Texas
http://www.InnovationsStemCellCenter.com.

By: dallasdrj

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