Page 2,016«..1020..2,0152,0162,0172,018..2,0302,040..»

LEXXTEX 008 – THE SECRET REVEALED " STEM CELLS VS GENES " – Video

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 5:46 am


LEXXTEX 008 - THE SECRET REVEALED " STEM CELLS VS GENES "
THIS VIDEO IS PRESENTED AS " FAIR USE " FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE , NON-PROFIT ,RECEIVING NO FINANCIAL CONSIDERATION FOR DISPLAY OF THIS CONTENT FOR PUBLIC VIEWING . IF YOU ARE THE COPYRIGHT...

By: LEXXTEX2

Excerpt from:
LEXXTEX 008 - THE SECRET REVEALED " STEM CELLS VS GENES " - Video

Posted in Stem Cells | Comments Off on LEXXTEX 008 – THE SECRET REVEALED " STEM CELLS VS GENES " – Video

Stem cells could cut high rate of cornea transplant rejection

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 5:46 am

Human trials on the effectiveness of using adult stem cells in the fight against cornea transplant rejection could be under way within the next five years.

Corneal eye disease is the fourth most common cause of blindness in the world and affects more than 10 million people worldwide. New research from NUI Galway has found that transplant rejection rates could be reduced to as low as 10% by administering a stem cell grown from the bone marrow of adult donors.

Although 100,000 people worldwide undergo cornea transplants each year, about 30% are unsuccessful due to rejection by the patients own immune system.

An unhealthy cornea affects vision by scattering or distorting light and causing glare and blurred vision.

Corneal transplants are the most widely used treatments where the diseased or scarred cornea is replaced with healthy tissue from an organ donor.

Researchers from NUI Galways Regenerative Medicine Institute previously found that mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) release chemicals capable of adjusting the immune system balance in the body.

The cells can be readily obtained and grown from the bone marrow of adult donors and the finding led them to study their usefulness in combating cornea transplant rejection.

The teams lead scientist, Dr Oliver Treacy, said the model system they developed led to an increase in cells called regulatory T-cells, which dampen down inflammation, and a decrease in the number of natural killer cells, key players in the rejection process.

Consultant ophthalmologist at Galway University Hospital, Gerry Fahy, who was involved in the study, said corneal transplant rejection could result in blindness and was not uncommon in high-risk patients.

This important research presents a potentially new avenue of treatment to prevent transplant rejection and save vision in this vulnerable group of patients, said Mr Fahy.

Originally posted here:
Stem cells could cut high rate of cornea transplant rejection

Posted in Stem Cells | Comments Off on Stem cells could cut high rate of cornea transplant rejection

Stem Cell Therapy Save Her Dog, And Saved Her | Steve Dale …

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 5:40 am

The same remedy that healed journalist Julia Szabo's dog wound up saving her life.

Part of Szabo's book, "Medicine Dog: The Miraculous Cure that Healed My Best Friend and Saved My Life" (Lyon's Press, Guilford, CT, 2014; $16.47), is devoted to a black pit bull who found a sort of fountain of youth through stem cell therapy. Another portion focuses on how a similar therapy may have saved Szabo's own life.

Szabo says she purposefully intended to adopt a black pit bull from animal care and control in New York City because such a dog might otherwise never be adopted. It's true that black dogs of any breed are least likely to find homes, and dogs that resemble pit bulls aren't for everyone. Like most municipal animal control facilities, New York's is inundated with pits.

She recalls that when she first saw Sam, "He reached out his big bear-like paw, and I took it to my heart. It turned out the decision to adopt Sam was the best choice of my life." Sam was the "perfect dog," he adds, though large at 75 lbs. He was about a year old when adopted in 1996.

As the years passed, Sam became increasingly arthritic. Things got so bad that he could barely lift his leg to relieve himself. Szabo was treating Sam as her veterinarian suggested, but he continued to decline. One day, Sam collapsed on the street. Thing is - though he was about 14, aside from the arthritis, Sam was otherwise healthy.

Desperate to try anything, via Google, Szabo discovered Vet-Stem, a company that provides regenerative stem cell therapy for animals.

"It's an amazing thing," Szabo says, "While people in Europe know about this (treatment) and accept it, most Americans think embryonic stem cells (come) from aborted fetuses, but this isn't it; these stem cells are carried in belly fat. This is a case of loving fat."

Sam shortly after stem cell treatment

Under anesthesia, the animal undergoes liposuction, literally a tummy tuck. The fatty or adipose tissue is overnighted to Vet-Stem in San Diego, CA., where it's processed in a centrifuge to separate the stem cells from the fat. Then, the stem cells are placed in vials and delivered to the veterinarian on dry ice. The cells are then directly injected into the pet's arthritic joints and intravenously into the bloodstream.

"It's like the movie 'Fantastic Voyage,' where they shrink down the scientists into a tiny little capsule and go through the guy's bloodstream," says Szabo. "The stem cells naturally target places in the body that are inflamed and need an assist. In Sam's case, they went right to his inflamed joints, and it worked."

The rest is here:
Stem Cell Therapy Save Her Dog, And Saved Her | Steve Dale ...

Posted in Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Stem Cell Therapy Save Her Dog, And Saved Her | Steve Dale …

Therapy-Grade Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells can be …

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 5:40 am

Research has shown that cells called induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) may hold the potential to cure damaged nerves, regrow limbs and organs, and also model a patient's particular disease.

When the generation of iPSCs was first reported in 2006, efficiency was paramount because only a fraction of a percentage of reprogrammed cells successfully became cell lines. Accordingly, the stem cell field focused on reprogramming efficiency to boost the pool of cells that could be studied. However, as scientists gained an increased understanding of the reprogramming process, they realized that myriad variables, including the ratio of reprogramming factors and the reprogramming environment, can also greatly affect cell quality.

Now researchers working in the lab of Whitehead Institute Founding Member Rudolf Jaenisch together with scientists from the Hebrew University have determined that the reprogramming factors themselves impact the reprogramming efficiency and the quality of the resulting cells. Their work is described in the current issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell.

"Postdoctoral researcher Yosef Buganim and Research Scientist Styliani Markoulaki show that a different combination of reprogramming factors may be less efficient than the original, but can produce much higher quality iPSCs," says Jaenisch, who is also a professor of biology at MIT. "And quality is a really important issue. At this point, it doesn't matter if we get one colony out of 10,000 or one out of 100,000 cells, as long as it is of high quality."

To make iPSCs, scientists expose adult cells to a cocktail of genes that are active in embryonic stem cells. iPSCs can then be pushed to differentiate into almost any other cell type, such as nerve, liver, or muscle cells. Although the original combination of Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and Myc (OSKM) efficiently reprograms cells, a relatively high percentage of the resulting cells have serious genomic aberrations, including aneuploidy, and trisomy 8, which make them unsuitable for use in clinical research.

Using bioinformatic analysis of a network of 48 genes key to the reprogramming process, Buganim and Markoulaki designed a new combination of genes, Sall4, Nanog, Esrrb, and Lin28 (SNEL). Roughly 80% of SNEL colonies made from mouse cells were of high quality and passed the most stringent pluripotency test currently available, the tetraploid complementation assay. By comparison, only 20-30% of high quality OSKM passed the same test. Buganim hypothesizes that SNEL reprograms cells better because, unlike OSKM, the cocktail does not rely on a potent oncogene like Myc, which may be causing some of the genetic problems. More importantly, the cocktail does not rely on the potent key master regulators Oct4 and Sox2 that might abnormally activate some regions in the adult cell genome.

To better understand why some reprogrammed cells are of high quality while others fall short, Buganim and Markoulaki analyzed SNEL colonies down to the genetic and epigenetic level. On their DNA, SNEL cells have deposits of the histone protein H2AX in locations very similar to those in ESCs, and the position of H2AX seems to predict the quality of the cell. The researchers believe this characteristic could be used to quickly screen for high quality colonies.

But for all of its promise, the current version of SNEL seems unable to reprogram human cells, which are generally more difficult to manipulate than mouse cells.

"We know that SNEL is not the ideal combination of factors," says Buganim, who is currently a Principal Investigator at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. "This work is only a proof of principle that says we must find this ideal combination. SNEL is an example that shows if you use bioinformatics tools you can get better quality. Now we should be able to find the optimal combination and try it in human cells to see if it works."

View post:
Therapy-Grade Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells can be ...

Posted in Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Therapy-Grade Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells can be …

DAP-funded stem cell research a wrong priority

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 5:40 am

From the perspective of a community physician, the stem cell research, at this point, is not a priority. Given the daunting task of not only curing the present crop of diseases but also preventing them, and of course, building the human resource as the backbone of the health care system these should be the priority. Joseph Carabeo, convenor, Rx Abolish Pork Barrel Movement

By ANNE MARXZE D. UMIL Bulatlat.com

MANILA Eleazar Sobinsky, president of the Lung Center of the Philippines Employees Association-Alliance of Health Workers cannot decipher how the Disbursement Acceleration Program (DAP) has helped the poor. Of the P115 million ($263,822) DAP funds received by LCP, P70 million ($160,587) was spent for the stem cell research project and the rest was spent for the procurement of equipment.

He said if the DAP has helped the poor, why are there more indigent patients waiting in line at the LCPs out-patient department?

Joseph Carabeo, convenor of the Rx Abolish Pork Barrel Movement and a community doctor for the past 28 years, said that the stem cell research project does not even help solve the longtime health problems of Filipinos.

The stem cell research in LCP is a mispriority, said Carabeo in an interview with Bulatlat.com. There are many problems in the health sector that has to be addressed. We think, the DOH is merely riding the bandwagon on the stem cell research intervention in health care, wellness and primarily rejuvenation, Carabeo said.

Eleazar Sobinsky, union president of the Lung Center Employees Union said if the DAP has helped the poor, why are there more indigent patients waiting in line at the LCPs out-patient department? (Photo by A. Umil/ Bulatlat.com)

Stem cells according to http://www.stemcellnetwork.ca are the precursors of all cells in the human body.

Stem cells are very special, powerful cells found in both humans and non-human animals. They have been called the centerpiece of regenerative medicine medicine that involves growing new cells, tissues and organs to replace or repair those damaged by injury, disease or aging, the website said.

In the Philippines, Carabeo said, the medical community is not even united in the use of stem cell therapy in curing diseases. He said it is still under research in the Philippines. The Philippine Society of Endocrinology and Metabolism (PSEM) for one has even warned the public on the use of stem cell therapy as treatment for diabetes.

See original here:
DAP-funded stem cell research a wrong priority

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on DAP-funded stem cell research a wrong priority

Rhode Island | Interstate Alliance on Stem Cell Research

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:56 am

There is no Rhode Island law that specifically restricts the use of human adult or embryonic stem cells for research purposes. The Rhode Island law that does restrict some uses of human cells explicitly permits research as long as the research is not for the purposes of cloning an entire human beingwhich is not part of stem cell research.

Starting in 2003 and continuing every year thereafter, bills were introduced that would have explicitly allowed all forms of stem cell research and created a procedure for unused embryos as a result of in vitro fertilization treatments to be donated for the purpose of stem cell research. These bills were sponsored in the House by Representative Edith Ajello, and in the Senate by Senator Rhoda Perry. A 2007 version of the bill, 2007 H-6082, was introduced again but failed to pass.

In 2006, a resolution sponsored by Representative Eileen Naughton was passed, creating a special House commission to promote and develop a nationally recognized cord blood program for the future of disease management in Rhode Island. That commission began meeting in February of 2007. In 2007, a resolution sponsored by Representative Naughton was passed creating the Rhode Island House of Representatives Regenerative Medicine and Research Advisory Study Commission.

In 2007, Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts released a report entitled Discovering Rhode Islands Stem Cell Future: Charting the Course Toward Health and Prosperity, outlining the potential that stem cell research holds for reducing human suffering and supporting economic growth in Rhode Island.

Contacts for IASCR: Adriana Thomas, Policy Analyst, Rhode Island House of Representatives, and Eli Zupnick, Policy Analyst, Office of the Lt. Governor

Excerpt from:
Rhode Island | Interstate Alliance on Stem Cell Research

Posted in Rhode Island Stem Cells | Comments Off on Rhode Island | Interstate Alliance on Stem Cell Research

Postdoctoral Fellow, Cancer and Stem Cell Biology …

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:56 am

A postdoctoral position is available immediately in the area of cancer and stem cell biology at the Perelman School of Medicine and Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania. The position is in the laboratory of Dr. Dev Basu in the Division of Head and Neck Surgery. Postdoctoral training and career development will be supported by close affiliation with the lab of Dr. Anil Rustgi, Chief of the Division of Gastroenterology. Dr. Rustgi leads a well-established, NCI P01-funded program in squamous cell carcinoma biology and will provide senior level mentorship for the position. Candidates are sought to join a rapidly growing translational research program focusing on oral squamous cell carcinomas. Studies will be supported by two new NIH/NIDCR grants as well as industry-sponsored collaborations. This program aims to develop novel approaches to targeting the tumor cell subpopulations within oral cancer that are innately resistant to current therapies. Studies will emphasize rigorous molecular and functional definition of stem cell-like subpopulations and pursue detailed understanding of signaling mechanisms involved in their homeostasis. Work will rely upon our labs experience in 3-dimensional in vitro cancer models and in vivo xenografts, in addition to heavily utilizing patient-derived tumor specimens. Significant prior training in stem cell biology, epigenetics, cancer biology, cell biology, or biochemistry is strongly desirable. Interested individuals should send cover letter, CV, and reference information by e-mail to:

Devraj Basu, M.D, Ph.D., F.A.C.S. Assistant Professor Dept. Otorhinolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery The University of Pennsylvania 3600 Spruce St., 5 Ravdin/Silverstein Philadelphia, PA 19104

email: devraj.basu@uphs.upenn.edu

website: http://www.med.upenn.edu/apps/faculty/index.php/g275/p8137952 Rustgi lab website: http://www.med.upenn.edu/apps/faculty/index.php/g20000220/p543

Don't forget to mention Naturejobs when applying.

The rest is here:
Postdoctoral Fellow, Cancer and Stem Cell Biology ...

Posted in Pennsylvania Stem Cells | Comments Off on Postdoctoral Fellow, Cancer and Stem Cell Biology …

I Gave My Stem Cells To Save a Life From Cancer And Now I …

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:56 am

Submitted by: Hannah Heinzig

Story Hero: Hannah

Location: Prague, Oklahoma, United States

RARE Condition: Pemphigus Vulgaris

My name is Hannah Heinzig, and I am 24 years old recently diagnosed with Pemphigus Vulgaris. This is how everyone starts out their story, so I will get those needed details out of the way. Now let me back track a few years.

I went to a small college called East Central University in Ada, Oklahoma to study nursing. My hopes and dreams were to be a missionary nurse overseas in third world countries helping provide healthcare to those who cannot afford it or have to access to good healthcare. As a college student I was very active on campus with international students and Christian campus organizations. I wanted to change the world by loving one human at a time.

As you know, local blood drives loveto use college campuses to request help. I loved the idea of being able to give blood and help save a life and gave on several occasions. One particular day at the blood drive there were representatives who were raising awareness for the National Bone Marrow Foundation. I listened all about the new research being done and how you can swab your cheek fill out the necessary paperwork and become a registered member as a possible candidate for either a bone marrow or stem cell donor for cancer patients needing healthy cells.

I was intrigued and of course was always willing to help save a life. Two years passed and I completely forgot about that day until I was in my junior year of nursing and we learned in class about stem cell and bone marrow donation from non familial relations for people with various cancers. The professor asked if anyone in the class had registered as a bone marrow or stem cell donor, I remembered two years ago that I had and realized I was the only one in my class of 75 students who was registered.

The more I learned about it the more I was excited to be a possible match for someone. I prayed that weekend that if God wanted me to be a healthy donor for someone, I was ready and willing. One week later I received a call from the Oklahoma Blood Institute saying I was a possible match for a 37 year old female with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My heart began to pound as I remember my prayer one week prior.

I quickly jotted down the address and agreed to go in for further testing to assessme as a match. Long story short, I was the perfect match and had the privilege to give my healthy stem cells through a process called aphoreis. This process required me to receive subcutaneous injections of the drug, Neupogen for 5 days prior to giving my stem cells.

Read the rest here:
I Gave My Stem Cells To Save a Life From Cancer And Now I ...

Posted in Oklahoma Stem Cells | Comments Off on I Gave My Stem Cells To Save a Life From Cancer And Now I …

Donate blood and join in on the fight against cancer

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:55 am

Updated: 09/05/2014 6:04 PM Created: 09/05/2014 5:38 PM WNYT.com By: Benita Zahn

Blood transfusions go hand in hand with high dose chemotherapy to save the lives of cancer patients. But too often, doctors worry there will be blood when it's needed.

Dr.Sami Brake is a cancer specialist at New York Oncology- Hematology. He says "We run short of platelets, of blood products all the time. So it's important for people in the community to be aware of this problem that we have all the time."

Many of the treatments he relies on depress a patient's ability to make new blood cells, so donated blood is critical to their survival. When there's a lag between ordering treatment and blood arriving, sometimes from hours away, it's worrisome. And it's not something cancer patients like Cindy Applebaum need to have on their mind.

" When they basically tell you they're killing everything inside of your body. Your entire immune system is completely wiped out" says Cindy.

That's what she endured in advance of her stem cell transplant with her own stem cells to fight her blood cancer: multiple myeloma. In short, without donated blood she could never have survived the treatment that's her only chance for remission of her disease.

" You're at rock bottom, I guess, is the best way to describe it. And the blood and platelets actually help enhance the growth of the new cells that you need to survive" she says.

Cindy's two, grown kids were at her side through her treatment - along with her brothers, other family and dear friends. All critical to her well being. But she's clear -- while their support and love is invaluable, it was the kindness of strangers who gave the gift of life, that gave her the chance for survival.

"It really takes everybody in the community fighting for it."

You can donate blood on Monday, September 8 at our Save a Life Blood Drive.

Go here to see the original:
Donate blood and join in on the fight against cancer

Posted in New York Stem Cells | Comments Off on Donate blood and join in on the fight against cancer

Stem cell medicine – Worldnews.com

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:55 am

Stem Cells for Regenerative Medicine

http://www.ucsf.edu/news/2012/11/13181/stem-cell-banks-envisioned-regenerative-medicine Stem cell banks might one day be used to meet the tissue-transplant n...

Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) Lawrence Goldstein, Distinguished Professor in the Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine and the Department of Neuroscie...

What are stem cells? - An short educational film by the Irish Stem Cell Foundation Stem cells are master cells of the body want to learn more? Visit http://www.ir...

Professor Arnold Caplan of Case Western Reserve University is widely regarded as "The Father of the Mesenchymal Stem Cell". This lecture is a "must see" for ...

Annotations are not working so those will be added later. Shirts and Stuff http://www.zazzle.com/qdragon Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/BrainstormS...

Doug Melton talks about the potential of stem cell biology for regenerative medicine, with a focus on finding new treatments for diseases such as diabetes. D...

Dr. Damon Noto at Spine and Joint Center in New Jersey offers cutting-edge, non-invasive regenerative medicine including stem cell treatment and PRP to treat...

The good part about getting older is that we gain some wisdom and patience. The bad part is that our bodies start to wear out. But what if we could revitaliz...

TEDxPhoenix 2009 presents Dr. Jane Maienschein, Professor of Biology, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University. http://www.tedxphoenix.com Needless ...

Read more here:
Stem cell medicine - Worldnews.com

Posted in New Jersey Stem Cells | Comments Off on Stem cell medicine – Worldnews.com

Page 2,016«..1020..2,0152,0162,0172,018..2,0302,040..»