Page 2,006«..1020..2,0052,0062,0072,008..2,0202,030..»

Initial Six Teams to Compete for New Organ Liver Prize

Posted: September 17, 2014 at 6:44 pm

Washington, D.C. (PRWEB) September 16, 2014

New Organ, a collective initiative for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, announced today the initial six teams competing for the New Organ Liver Prize, a global prize competition sponsored by the Methuselah Foundation, a biomedical charity. The prize challenge will award $1,000,000 to the first team that creates a regenerative or bioengineered solution that enables a large animal to live 90 days without native liver function.

Initial teams represent scientists from Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Northwick Park Institute for Medical Research, University College of London, University of Florida, University of Oxford, University of Pittsburgh, and Yokohama City University. Additional teams are under review and will be announced in the future.

New Organ Founder and Methuselah CEO David Gobel: We are gratified to see the initial interest in the Liver Prize. We are doing this because of the millions who need new organs. Organ disease, and the associated organ shortage, represents one of the greatest medical challenges that can be solved. A scientific foundation has been built over the last 15 years to pursue the vision of organs on demand. Its time for a significant societal commitment to that vision.

The prize teams are led by:

Dr. Tahera Ansari (Team Hepavive): Pursuing the decell-recell approach to bioengineering a liver. Dr. Stephen Badylak (Team Badylak): A pioneer in biologic scaffolds using extracellular matrix. Dr. Eric Lagasse (Team Ectogenesis): Grew mini-livers inside the lymph nodes of mice with liver disease. Dr. Bryon Petersen (Team Petersen): An authority on the role of hepatic stem cells in liver pathology. Dr. Takanori Takebe (Team Organ Creative): Created tiny liver buds that grew and functioned in mice. Dr. Basak Uygun (Team HepaTx): First to report proof-of-principle transplantation of engineered liver grafts.

Representing distinguished leaders within regenerative medicine, the Founding Fellows of the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine International Society (TERMIS) remarked: We strongly and enthusiastically endorse New Organ. Regenerative medicine has made significant advances in the past 15 years and the New Organ Liver Prize represents a golden opportunity for the next leap forward. The public and the medical community will realize a remarkable clinical benefit with the availability of off the shelf whole livers obviating the need for donor organs, and the medical health care system will simultaneously benefit. We hope this forward-looking effort sets the standard that inspires other initiatives to focus all the resources of regenerative medicine on solving major health care challenges.

About New Organ:

New Organ is a collective initiative tackling organ disease by building a prize portfolio and global alliance of partners committed to advancing breakthroughs in bioengineering, banking, and regenerating vital organs, starting with the liver. It is designed to be a collaborative network of government, industry, and philanthropic organizations working together for the benefit of society. In December 2013, the New Organ Liver Prize was launched at the World Stem Cell Summit with $1 million in initial funding from the Methuselah Foundation. Learn more at http://neworgan.org.

About Methuselah Foundation:

Continued here:
Initial Six Teams to Compete for New Organ Liver Prize

Posted in Regenerative Medicine | Comments Off on Initial Six Teams to Compete for New Organ Liver Prize

Japan stem-cell trial stirs envy

Posted: September 17, 2014 at 6:42 pm

JIJI PRESS/AFP/Getty Images

Masayo Takahashi is the first to implant tissue derived from induced pluripotent stem cells into a person.

Its awesome, its amazing, Im thrilled, Ive been waiting for this, says Jeanne Loring, a stem-cell biologist at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California. She is one of several researchers around the world to welcome the news that a Japanese woman with visual impairment had become the first person to receive a therapy derived from stem cells known as induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells.

A lot rides on this trial. If the procedure proves safe, it could soften the stance of regulatory bodies in other nations towards human trials of iPS cells, and it could pave the way for treatments for other conditions, such as Parkinsons disease and diabetes. It could also cement Japan, recently plagued by a stem-cell scandal, as a frontrunner in iPS-cell research.

Pioneered in 2006 by Shinya Yamanaka, now director of the Center for iPS Cell Research and Applications at Kyoto University, iPS cells are created by inserting certain genes into the DNA of adult cells to reprogram the cells back to an embryonic-like state. The cells can then be turned into almost any tissue type, much as embryonic stem cells can. But because iPS cells can be derived from a patients own tissue, the hope is that they will dodge some of the controversial aspects and safety concerns of those derived from embryos.

In 2012, Yamanaka received a Nobel prize for his work, and the field has now matured, with teams across the world champing at the bit to test therapies based on iPS cells in people. Loring, for example, uses the cells to create dopamine-producing neurons as a potential therapy for Parkinsons disease, and says that she will start clinical trials as soon as the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gives the go-ahead.

Still, tissues made from iPS cells carry their own concerns, and that had stopped any country from approving them for a clinical trial. The bodys immune system could attack them, or they might contain some cells that are still in the pluripotent state and cause cancerous growths although Loring points out that this has not happened with human trials of therapies based on embryonic stem cells, for which the same concerns would apply.

In July 2013, however, Japans regulatory authorities gave the go-ahead for a team led by ophthalmologist Masayo Takahashi at the RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology (CDB) in Kobe to collect cells to be used in a clinical iPS-cell pilot study.

Her team took skin cells from the first patient, a woman in her seventies who had retinal damage owing to a condition known as age-related macular degeneration. The researchers then reprogrammed the skin cells into iPS cells and coaxed the unspecialized cells into becoming retinal tissue. On 8September, Takahashi provided evidence that those cells were genetically stable and safe, a prerequisite for them to be transplanted into the eye. The procedure took place four days later, and RIKEN has reported that the patient experienced no serious side effects.

In this instance, the womans vision is unlikely to improve. However, researchers around the world are watching to see whether the cells stop the retina from deteriorating further and whether any side effects develop. Should the woman experience serious consequences, iPS-cell research could be set back years, much as gene therapy was in 1999 when a patient died in a trial that attempted to use a modified gene to correct a type of liver disease. That wakes me up at night, Loring admits.

View original post here:
Japan stem-cell trial stirs envy

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Japan stem-cell trial stirs envy

Stem cell harvesting methods used by Sydney doctor Ralph Bright untested by clinical trials

Posted: September 17, 2014 at 6:40 pm

ABC Ralph Bright harvests stem cells using the liposuction.

Serious questions have been raised about a stem cell doctor working in Western Sydney who charges $9,000 per procedure and uses methods that are untested by clinical trials.

An investigation by the ABC's 7.30 program has revealed that Dr Ralph Bright bought his liposuction-based technology from an American company.

The US company is now the subject of a multi-million dollar fraud action, which has revealed the cells being marketed as live were in fact dead.

Dr Bright, of Macquarie Stem Cells, is a former GP and self-taught cosmetic surgeon.

He has been working with stem cells for four years, treating more than 400 patients, including the late model Charlotte Dawson, cricketer Geoff Lawson and Olympic volleyballer Kerri Pottharst.

Dr Bright has licensed his methods to other practitioners around the country and because they use the patients' own cells he is not regulated by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA).

Stem cells are often hailed as a miracle cure, but the nation's top stem cell scientists are warning that buyers should beware of these sorts of procedures, which are yet to be subjected to clinical trials.

Professor of Stem Cell Science at the University of Melbourne, Martin Pera, said almost all stem cell therapy was experimental.

"Actually, this whole science of cell therapy is relatively new and it's very, very important to understand that," he said.

Read the original here:
Stem cell harvesting methods used by Sydney doctor Ralph Bright untested by clinical trials

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Stem cell harvesting methods used by Sydney doctor Ralph Bright untested by clinical trials

Stem cells treatment used by Sydney doctor Ralph Bright 'untested' by clinical trials

Posted: September 17, 2014 at 6:40 pm

ABC Ralph Bright harvests stem cells using the liposuction.

Serious questions have been raised about a stem cell doctor working in Western Sydney who charges $9,000 per procedure and uses methods that are untested by clinical trials.

An investigation by the ABC's 7.30 program has revealed that Dr Ralph Bright bought his liposuction-based technology from an American company.

The US company is now the subject of a multi-million dollar fraud action, which has revealed the cells being marketed as live were in fact dead.

Dr Bright, of Macquarie Stem Cells, is a former GP and self-taught cosmetic surgeon.

He has been working with stem cells for four years, treating more than 400 patients, including the late model Charlotte Dawson, cricketer Geoff Lawson and Olympic volleyballer Kerri Pottharst.

Dr Bright has licensed his methods to other practitioners around the country and because they use the patients' own cells he is not regulated by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA).

Stem cells are often hailed as a miracle cure, but the nation's top stem cell scientists are warning that buyers should beware of these sorts of procedures, which are yet to be subjected to clinical trials.

Professor of Stem Cell Science at the University of Melbourne, Martin Pera, said almost all stem cell therapy was experimental.

"Actually, this whole science of cell therapy is relatively new and it's very, very important to understand that," he said.

View original post here:
Stem cells treatment used by Sydney doctor Ralph Bright 'untested' by clinical trials

Posted in Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Stem cells treatment used by Sydney doctor Ralph Bright 'untested' by clinical trials

Stem Cell Therapy helps dogs achieve better quality of life

Posted: September 17, 2014 at 6:40 pm

If your beloved pets can no longer play fetch because they suffer from chronic hip or back pain, then you might be interested in a stem cell procedure. Its minimally invasive and its growing in popularity in Central Pennsylvania.

Ben, the Akita, is undergoing stem cell surgery to reverse his chronic arthritis in his hip.

Veterinarian, Dr. Roger Horst, of Mercersburg Animal Clinic says, It just makes it more comfortable for them to be a pet, normal activity without to be on pain drugs.

Through a 30 minute surgery, Dr. Horst removes fatty tissue from Bens shoulder. He hands over the tissue to a lab technician. The technician, Delaney Kennedy, works with MediVet, a global leader in veterinary science.

Kennedy says, When we filter this tissue, everything stops at the top of the filtration and stem cells collect at the bottom. The stem cells are what we want and thats what we inject back into Ben.

Within 30 days, Bens quality of life will improve without the need for medicine.

Kennedy says, As pet owners maybe before could have put him down because hes in pain but now, were able to use stem cell therapy and help him live longer.

For more information contact Mercersburg Animal Clinic or MediVet.

More:
Stem Cell Therapy helps dogs achieve better quality of life

Posted in Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Stem Cell Therapy helps dogs achieve better quality of life

Red meat is destroying the planet, and the Frankenburger could help save it

Posted: September 17, 2014 at 3:55 pm

This article originally appeared on AlterNet.

It was just over a year ago that the worlds first laboratory-grown hamburger was introduced to the world.The in-vitro meat (aka test tube meat, cultured meat, cruelty-free meat, and my favorite, shmeat)took four years to growfrom cow stem cells and cost a meaty $332,000.Cultured in-vitro meator frankenburger, as the press dubbed itis the brainchild of a Dutch biologist, Mark Post, of the University of Maastricht. The single burger, created from 20,000 strands of muscle tissue grown in petri dishes, got some lukewarm reviews.

It wasnt unpleasant, Chicago food writer Josh Schonwald wrote. More enthusiastically, food researcher Hanni Rutzler commented, Thats some intense flavor. Because the meat was cultured from muscle with no fat cells, it lacked juiciness, and was reminiscent of an overdone dry turkey burger. Still, the consensus was that it tasted better than expected, had the consistency of real meat, and for a first try, was not discouraging. Post told NBC News, Im very excited. It took a long time to get this far. I think this is a very good start.

While anyone who has seen videos of the horrific conditions factory-farmed cows, pigs and chickens endure in their short, tortured lives might agree that in-vitro meat is a good idea, theres an even more pressing reason to figure out a way to grow meat: the production of meat on planet Earth is killing us. It takes up more than half of our agricultural capacity, and as the economies of China and other developing nations grow, and as their citizens demand more meat on their dinner tables, that capacity will be strained even further.

Here are some of the more staggering statistics:

Already in the Gulf of Mexico, there is a dead zone the size of Massachusetts, the water so compromised that no fish can live in it. Combine this with the meat itself, often pumped full of antibiotics and hormones, not to mention potentially harmful bacteria due to the inadequate inspection protocol, and it all adds up to a catastrophe in the making.

Enter the in-vitro meat enthusiasts. A study at Oxford University demonstrated that the production of in-vitro meat is far more energy efficient than factory farming, and resulted in far fewer greenhouse gas emissions. Successfully growing meat would eliminate the enormous stresses factory farming puts on the environment, and it would meet the growing developing worlds demand for meat.

While it is doubtful lab-grown meat could take the place of the real stuff at 300 grand a burger, that price could come down, drastically, as Mark Post and other scientists perfect the process and as a market begins to emerge for it.There is money behind the effort. Big money. Sergey Brin, the billionaire co-founder of Google, has largely funded the frankenburger initiative.

Hes as determined as we are to make this happen, Post told Time magazine. A year after the burgers debut, Brin continues to fund the program, and Posts team has grown. The goal is to produce meat indistinguishable from slaughterhouse meat. The color needs work as well as the taste and texture. The first burger was artificially colored (its natural color resembled chicken more than beef). Future lab burgers will be produced with a substance called myoglobin, the protein that makes red meat red. Scientists will grow fat tissues to make the burger juicier.

To bring the price down, they will need to grow the meat in a new medium. Currently it is grown in fetal bovine serum (FBS), which comes from unborn slaughterhouse calves. Aside from the animal welfare aspects of that fact, fetal bovine serum is extremely expensive. Various vegetable and yeast-based broths are being explored asalternatives.

Read the original:
Red meat is destroying the planet, and the Frankenburger could help save it

Posted in New Mexico Stem Cells | Comments Off on Red meat is destroying the planet, and the Frankenburger could help save it

Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research …

Posted: September 16, 2014 at 10:58 pm

Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research is a complex and beneficial science using stem cells in a lab environment to better understand how normal human development works, and also to look for and develop new treatments for a wide range of human ailments. Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research involves two types of stem cells, classified as either embryonic stem cells or adult stem cells, which are used according to the type of Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research that is desired.

Embryonic stem cells are derived from pre-embryos, called blstocysts, approximately three to five days old. They are created specifically for fertilization treatments in the Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research lab, will not be used to start a pregnancy, and will be discarded if not used for research. Doctors use in-vitro fertilization to create an embryo in a culture dish, which after three to five days becomes a blstocysts. Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research lab technicians then extract the inner cell mass from the blstocysts, which is used to derive embryonic stem cells in the Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research facility.Embryonic stem cells are classified as pluripotent.

This means they can develop into any type of cell in a fully developed human body. It should be noted that embryonic stem cells cant develop into placenta or umbilical cord tissues, but they do appear to be able to develop into any other type of cell in a human body. What is so important about embryonic Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research is that it enables very flexible research, as the stem cells can be grown into any type of cell needing to be researched, at any time, at the Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research facility. This makes for more efficient and more productive stem call research, promising a faster path to cures for ailments that devastate humanity. Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research cannot use adult stem cells to generate just any desired tissues since they are already programmed. They are quite useful nonetheless, and Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research doctors have identified caches of adult stem cells in several tissues of the human body.

Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research in general has been able to make some wonderful advancement and create excellent treatments using adult stem cells. But there are limitations to doing Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research using "only" adult stem cells. Adult stem cells are able to give rise to related kinds of cells in their home tissues, but for example Kidney stem cells cannot generate heart cells, and liver stem cells cannot generate brain cells.

A great deal of Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research remains to be done, and at this point Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research doctors have developed a technique for getting an adult stem cell to behave similar to an embryonic stem cell. This specialized Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research technique creates what are called induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS). They can be produced from adult cells in skin, fatty tissue, and other sources. With this, Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research remains a promising field. There is of course a great deal more work to do, but Fayetteville NC Stem Cell Research promises to benefit mankind in many profound ways.

More:
Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research ...

Posted in North Carolina Stem Cells | Comments Off on Fayetteville North Carolina Stem Cell Research …

Startup uses 3D printing tech to create alternative to bone grafts

Posted: September 16, 2014 at 10:56 pm

A Michigan startup is using 3D printing technology to help surgeonsreconstruct skeletal defects helpingsurgeons minimize the need for bonegrafts to fill areas with significant missing bone.

Tissue Regeneration Systemsis developing porous, bioresorbable scaffolding that can replace itself with natural bone, leaving no residual implanted device. Instead of requiring metal plates and screws, the material is computer modeled based on CT scan input so that the implants fit a patients exact needs,CEO Jim Fitzsimmons said.

The companyjust raised $2 millionfrom existing investors, which include Venture Investors, the University of Michigan, the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation.

Rather than repairing simple fractures, the startups platform is most useful in cases of trauma, cancer where bone tumors are removed cases that require complex skeletal reconstruction.

For these kinds of clinical cases, surgeonshave to remove bone from somewhere else in the body the fibula, the scapula or part of the hip and use that to do the reconstruction, Fitzsimmons said. Our technology lets them do thatwithout the need to remove the bone from somewhere else.

The startups skeletal reconstruction and bone regeneration platform has been licensed from the Universities of Michigan and Wisconsin. It last yearreceived 510(k) approval from the Food and Drug Administration for its product that can repair neurosurgical burr holes.

The companys got a coating technology that helps it integrate the implants with an osteoconductive mineral coating that it says enhances bone regeneration and proliferation into and throughout the porous implant. Orthobiologics and bone-growing stem cells can bind easily to the coating, the company said, which allows for a controlled and sustained biologic release to accelerate new bone formation.

Get our daily newsletter or follow us.

Please enter your email below:

Read the original post:
Startup uses 3D printing tech to create alternative to bone grafts

Posted in Michigan Stem Cells | Comments Off on Startup uses 3D printing tech to create alternative to bone grafts

Turmeric Shows Benefit for 530 Health Conditions And Studied for Alzheimer's, Osteo and Rheumatoid Arthritis …

Posted: September 16, 2014 at 10:56 pm

Studio City, CA 91604 (PRWEB) September 16, 2014

A unique , Enhanced Turmeric+ Formula won an Excellence in Health Product Innovation Award presented at the Emord & Associates 20th Anniversary GALA celebration, Sept. 5th & 6th in Cambridge Maryland.

The award was presented to Christian Wilde honoring his research into the healing properties of turmeric and development of turmeric formulations. http://www.abigon.com/buying_turmeric.html Wilde had previously authored two landmark health books, Hidden Causes of Heart Attack and Stroke, (inflammation, cardiologys new frontier) and Miracle Stem Cell Heart Repair documenting how a patients own stem cells or those of a donor are rejuvenating the hearts of no option heart failure patients. He is the author of the Christian Wilde Stem Cell and Turmeric Research Report. Many notables in the health, journalistic, public policy, medical research and integrated medicine fields were honored before an audience of 300 invited guests. Among those receiving awards were, Dr. Julian Whitaker, Dr. Joseph Mercola, Dr. Steven Sinatra, Dr. Joel Wallach, Dr. Andrew Weil, Mike Adams, Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw and Sean Hannity. The Christian Wilde Enhanced Turmeric+ Formula contains 7 synergizing ingredients, to learn what makes this formula unique visit http://www.abigon.com/buying_turmeric.html, NOW WELCOMING AFFILIATES. The event theme was, The Sacred Fire of Liberty as introduced by George Washington in his inaugural address of 1789.

Read the original:
Turmeric Shows Benefit for 530 Health Conditions And Studied for Alzheimer's, Osteo and Rheumatoid Arthritis ...

Posted in Maryland Stem Cells | Comments Off on Turmeric Shows Benefit for 530 Health Conditions And Studied for Alzheimer's, Osteo and Rheumatoid Arthritis …

Walk To End Alzheimers

Posted: September 16, 2014 at 10:53 pm

Eight hundred people from around Long Island and out of state braved the 90-degree temperature to walk at the Alzheimers Disease Resource Center 11th annual fundraiser event at the Old Bethpage Village Restoration recently.

The event featured a Coney Island theme, with 90 teams walking the paths around the village. The event raised close to $150,000 and the donations are still being tallied. Executive director Mary Ann Malack-Ragona was pleased with the turnout given the sweltering heat of the day. Malack-Ragona said two grants were recently awarded, with $5,000 to the New York Stem Cell Foundation and $3,000 to Dr. Irving Gomolin, chief division of Geriatric Medicine at Winthrop University Hospital in Mineola.

Many local residents came out in support. Photos by Cynthia Paulis

The Stem Cell Foundation makes stem cells not from embryos, but from skin grafts of people who have Alzheimers disease, said Malack-Ragona. This is ground breaking research. The second grant to Dr. Gomolin is doing a study on how the removal of Namenda from the marketplace, which is set to take place at the end of the year and the use of the substitute, an extended release formulation will impact the blood levels of patients with Alzheimers Disease.

Team leaders were asked to come to the stage to be recognized. Randy Bet from Old Bethpage with her group Team Cousins raised the most money for this event coming in at $10,028.

I am proud to be a part of this organization. I want to thank Mary Ann Ragona for all of the work she is doing to keep the funds we raise here on Long Island, said Bet. She has met so much resistance but keeps going.

My father and my mother-in-law both had Alzheimers, so my two children have Alzheimers on both sides of their family. It is really important for us to find a cure for this disease.

One of the major contributors to the team from Syosset was Robert Rankell who donated $7,500. He was honored with a plaque and was humbled by the award.

This is something near and dear to myself and my family members and I walk to help find a cure.

Old Bethpages Al Sasano was the captain of Team Lucy, which boasted 13 members.

Go here to see the original:
Walk To End Alzheimers

Posted in Connecticut Stem Cells | Comments Off on Walk To End Alzheimers

Page 2,006«..1020..2,0052,0062,0072,008..2,0202,030..»