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Okyanos Presents the Science, Safety, and Efficacy of Adult Stem Cell Therapy

Posted: October 2, 2014 at 8:40 am

Freeport, Grand Bahama (PRWEB) October 02, 2014

Dr. Todd K. Malan, M.D., presented to the Grand Bahama Medical & Dental Association 14th Annual Scientific Educational Conference on the science, safety and efficacy of adipose- (fat) derived stem and regenerative cells (ADRCs) for ischemic heart disease and other unmet healthcare needs.

"It was an honor to participate in this conference with medical leadership that values this technology and works so tirelessly to serve the people of Grand Bahama," said Dr. Todd Malan." It is an opportunity for us to work closely with local doctors to improve the quality and standards of care for all patients."

Dr. Malan explained the interrelationship between tissue ischemia, inflammation, autoimmune response and cell death and how ADRCs have combined mechanisms known to assist in repairing multi-factorial illnesses associated with those issues.

According to Malan,The procedure begins with the extraction of a persons body fat, a process done using advanced water-assisted liposuction technology. The persons own adult stem cells are then separated from the fat tissue using a European Union-approved cell processing device."

Immediately following this, the cardiologist injects these cells into and around the low blood flow regions of the heart via a cathetera protocol which allows for better targeting of the cells to repair damaged heart tissue.

Adult stem cell therapy for heart disease is emerging as a new alternative for patients with severe heart conditions who want to live a normal life but are restricted in activities they can no longer do.

"As a leader in providing cell therapy, Okyanos is very excited to bring this innovative treatment to patients in a near-shore, regulated jurisdiction with a new standard of care, said Matt Feshbach, CEO of Okyanos. We welcome the opportunity to help those patients with limited options a chance to live a normal life.

Offering this minimally invasive adult stem cell treatment in their new cardiac catherization lab, Okyanos is scheduled to open in October in Freeport, Grand Bahama.

About Okyanos Heart Institute: (Oh key AH nos)

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Okyanos Presents the Science, Safety, and Efficacy of Adult Stem Cell Therapy

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Study Offers Fertility Preservation Option to Young Boys with Cancer

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 9:58 pm

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Newswise WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Oct. 1, 2014 Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center is one of a few centers in the world and the only one in North Carolina offering young boys with cancer the opportunity to participate in a research study focused on fertility preservation and restoration.

The research, conducted by the Medical Centers Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM) under the direction of Anthony Atala, M.D., institute director, gives boys who have a high risk of becoming sterile the option to bank a small piece of testicular tissue prior to treatment.

The average survival rates for childhood cancer are around 80 percent, but a side effect of some treatments can be permanent sterility, said Thomas W. McLean, M.D., a pediatric cancer specialist, who co-leads the experimental biological bank with Hooman Sadri-Ardekani, M.D., Ph.D., a male infertility specialist at WFIRM. Preserving or restoring the ability of our patients to one day have children is an important aspect of their treatment.

From the stored tissue, researchers can extract spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs), which are responsible for the continuous production of sperm throughout adult life. Physicians and scientists hope that when the boys reach adulthood, the cells can be transplanted back into their testicles through a simple injection and they will be able to produce sperm.

SSC transplantation has not yet been attempted in humans, but has been performed successfully in several species of animals, including monkeys, said Sadri-Ardekani, who developed the first laboratory protocol to isolate and grow human SSCs from small testicular biopsies.

McLean said a treatment to preserve fertility in boys who are not sexually mature is especially needed because no options currently exist for them. Older boys and men, on the other hand, can bank sperm for future use and women and girls can bank eggs or ovarian tissue.

SSCs are particularly sensitive to radiation and chemotherapy. Examples of cancers that involve these treatments that have a high risk of infertility are certain leukemias, Hodgkins disease, brain tumors and bone cancer.

For the current research study, participants have a small piece of testicular tissue harvested under general anesthesia while they are undergoing another procedure associated with their care, such as putting a catheter in the chest to deliver chemotherapy drugs.

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Genesis launches new Neuroscience Institute

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 9:55 pm

When 25-year-old Russell Evans arrived at Genesis Medical Center two months ago, he was motionless, lying in a hospital bed.

That's a sharp contrast to the Evans who showed up all smiles Wednesday, walking down a corridor at Genesis Medical Center-West Central Park Avenue in Davenport.

It's one example of what to expect from the new Neuroscience Institute at Genesis in apartnership with University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinicsthat was announced Wednesday.

Evans was involved in a one-vehicle accident in late July. He was riding in a truck that rolled on a gravel road, throwing him from the vehicle and injuring his spine in the neck and lower back areas.

He was treated at University Hospitals. Shortly after arriving in the emergency department, his parents were asked to enroll him in a neurological research study on a new drug that helps to stabilize the spinal cord after a traumatic injury.

The drug is safer than an alternative treatment that involves the use of stem cells, said Dr. Conway Chin, who oversees the project at Genesis.

The study involves Genesis as well as the University of Iowa.

Chin also supervises Evans' care in Davenport, which involves nurses and therapists who work especially to help Evans regain movement on his right side.

That Evans has recovered so much from a traumatic spinal injury is unusual, Chin said.

The rehabilitation unit at Genesis that is helping Evans is an example of how the hospital is working with specialists from the University of Iowa. That relationship is taking a step ahead with the Neuroscience Institute, officials said.

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Diabetes in a Dish

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 9:52 pm

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Newswise Although type 1 diabetes can be controlled with insulin injections and lifestyle modifications, major advances in treating the disease have not been made in more than two decades and there remain fundamental gaps in what is understood about its causes and how to halt its progression.

With a 5-year, $4-million grant from the National Institutes of Health, researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and bioengineers at UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering, with colleagues at UC Irvine and Washington University in St. Louis hope to change this.

The teams goal is to bioengineer a miniature pancreas in a dish, not the whole pancreas but the organs irregularly shaped patches called Islets of Langerhans that regulate the bodys blood sugar levels.

The bottleneck to new cures for type 1 diabetes is that we dont have a way to study human beta cells outside of the human body, said Maike Sander, MD, professor in the departments of Pediatrics and Cellular and Molecular Medicine and director of the Pediatric Diabetes Research Center at UC San Diego and Rady Childrens Hospital-San Diego. If we are successful, we will for the first time be able to study the events that trigger beta cell destruction.

Beta cells in islets secrete the hormone insulin. In patients with type 1 diabetes, the beta cells are destroyed and the body loses its ability to regulate blood sugar levels. Researchers, however, are unsure of the mechanism by which beta cells are lost. Some researchers believe that the disease may be triggered by beta cell apoptosis (self-destruction); others believe that the bodys immune system initiates attacks on these cells.

To actually bioengineer the pancreas endocrine system, researchers plan to induce human stem cells to develop into beta cells and alpha cells, as well as other cells in the islet that produce hormones important for controlling blood sugar levels. These cells will then be co-mingled with cells that make blood vessels and the cellular mass will be placed within a collagen matrix mimicking the pancreas. The matrix was developed by Karen Christman, PhD, associate professor of bioengineering at the Jacobs School of Engineering.

Our previous work with heart disease has shown that organ-specific matrices help to create more mature heart cells in a dish, Christman said. I am really excited to apply the technology to diabetes research.

If the pancreatic islets can be successfully bioengineered, researchers could conduct mechanistic studies of beta cell maturation, replication, reprogramming, failure and survival. They say new drug therapies could be tested in the 3D culture. It would also be possible to compare beta cells from people with and without the disease to better understand the diseases genetic component. Such work might eventually lead to treatments for protecting or replacing beta cells in patients.

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Fat Derived Stem Cells Knee OA – Video

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 1:42 pm


Fat Derived Stem Cells Knee OA
https://www.arthritistreatmentcenter.com Another encouraging stem cell study from Korea Fat Derived Stem Cells Help Knee OA Reported in the journal Stem cel...

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Age Is Just A Number: Drops Of Youth Eye Concentrate – Video

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 1:42 pm


Age Is Just A Number: Drops Of Youth Eye Concentrate
See life through younger-looking eyes. Our unique Drops of Youth Eye Concentrate, enriched with Edelweiss plant stem cells, instantly refreshes the eye contour, and smoothes out the appearance...

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Stem Cell Treatments showing results in Minnesota – Video

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 1:42 pm


Stem Cell Treatments showing results in Minnesota
http://rejuvmedical.com/pages/StemCellTreatments Rejuv Medical has been practicing Stem Cell Regenerative Treatments for a couple years now. Stem Cell Treatm...

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What makes a stem cell community? – Video

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 1:42 pm


What makes a stem cell community?
UC Berkeley Student Society for Stem Cell Research hosts "Culturing a Stem Cell Community 2014." This is the conference introduction video! A special thanks to all of our video participants!...

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A heartbeat away? Hybrid 'patch' could replace transplants

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 5:56 am

17 hours ago

Because heart cells cannot multiply and cardiac muscles contain few stem cells, heart tissue is unable to repair itself after a heart attack. Now Tel Aviv University researchers are literally setting a new gold standard in cardiac tissue engineering.

Dr. Tal Dvir and his graduate student Michal Shevach of TAU's Department of Biotechnology, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, and Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, have been developing sophisticated micro- and nanotechnological toolsranging in size from one millionth to one billionth of a meterto develop functional substitutes for damaged heart tissues. Searching for innovative methods to restore heart function, especially cardiac "patches" that could be transplanted into the body to replace damaged heart tissue, Dr. Dvir literally struck gold. He and his team discovered that gold particles are able to increase the conductivity of biomaterials.

In a study published by Nano Letters, Dr. Dvir's team presented their model for a superior hybrid cardiac patch, which incorporates biomaterial harvested from patients and gold nanoparticles. "Our goal was twofold," said Dr. Dvir. "To engineer tissue that would not trigger an immune response in the patient, and to fabricate a functional patch not beset by signalling or conductivity problems."

A scaffold for heart cells

Cardiac tissue is engineered by allowing cells, taken from the patient or other sources, to grow on a three-dimensional scaffold, similar to the collagen grid that naturally supports the cells in the heart. Over time, the cells come together to form a tissue that generates its own electrical impulses and expands and contracts spontaneously. The tissue can then be surgically implanted as a patch to replace damaged tissue and improve heart function in patients.

According to Dr. Dvir, recent efforts in the scientific world focus on the use of scaffolds from pig hearts to supply the collagen grid, called the extracellular matrix, with the goal of implanting them in human patients. However, due to residual remnants of antigens such as sugar or other molecules, the human patients' immune cells are likely to attack the animal matrix.

In order to address this immunogenic response, Dr. Dvir's group suggested a new approach. Fatty tissue from a patient's own stomach could be easily and quickly harvested, its cells efficiently removed, and the remaining matrix preserved. This scaffold does not provoke an immune response.

Using gold to create a cardiac network

The second dilemma, to establish functional network signals, was complicated by the use of the human extracellular matrix. "Engineered patches do not establish connections immediately," said Dr. Dvir. "Biomaterial harvested for a matrix tends to be insulating and thus disruptive to network signals."

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A heartbeat away? Hybrid 'patch' could replace transplants

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Disease decoded: Gene mutation may lead to development of new cancer drugs

Posted: October 1, 2014 at 5:52 am

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30-Sep-2014

Contact: Laura Bailey baileylm@umich.edu 734-647-1848 University of Michigan @umich

ANN ARBORThe discovery of a gene mutation that causes a rare premature aging disease could lead to the development of drugs that block the rapid, unstoppable cell division that makes cancer so deadly.

Scientists at the University of Michigan and the U-M Health System recently discovered a protein mutation that causes the devastating disease dyskeratosis congenita, in which precious hematopoietic stem cells can't regenerate and make new blood. People with DC age prematurely and are prone to cancer and bone marrow failure.

But the study findings reach far beyond the roughly one in 1 million known DC patients, and could ultimately lead to developing new drugs that prevent cancer from spreading, said Jayakrishnan Nandakumar, assistant professor in the U-M Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology.

The DC-causing mutation occurs in a protein called TPP1. The mutation inhibits TPP1's ability to bind the enzyme telomerase to the ends of chromosomes, which ultimately results in reduced hematopoietic stem cell division. While telomerase is underproduced in DC patients, the opposite is true for cells in cancer patients.

"Telomerase overproduction in cancer cells helps them divide uncontrollably, which is a hallmark of all cancers," Nandakumar said. "Inhibiting telomerase will be an effective way to kill cancer cells."

The findings could lead to the development of gene therapies to repair the mutation and start cell division in DC patients, or drugs to inhibit telomerase and cell division in cancer patients. Both would amount to huge treatment breakthroughs for DC and cancer patients, Nandakumar said.

Nandakumar said that a major step moving forward is to culture DC patient-derived cells and try to repair the TPP1 mutation to see if telomerase function can be restored. Ultimately, the U-M scientist hopes that fixing the TPP1 mutation repairs telomerase function and fuels cell division in the stem cells of DC patients.

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