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Most cosmetic procedures based on stem cells are bogus

Posted: August 5, 2014 at 10:40 pm

MONDAY, Aug. 4, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Could stem cell injections help rejuvenate your face or body? Probably not, plastic surgery experts say, but ads for these types of bogus procedures abound on the Internet.

"Stem cells offer tremendous potential, but the marketplace is saturated with unsubstantiated and sometimes fraudulent claims that may place patients at risk," a team led by Dr. Michael Longaker, of Stanford University Medical Center, wrote in a review published in the August issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.

The experts say consumers need to be wary of advertisements promoting the benefits of "minimally invasive, stem cell-based rejuvenation procedures." Claims for stem cell procedures for facelifts, breast augmentation and vaginal rejuvenation are not only unsubstantiated, but also risky, Longaker's team said.

They note that, to date, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved only one cosmetic stem cell procedure designed to treat fine facial wrinkles. And since that single procedure was approved, the product involved has been monitored extensively.

Overall, cosmetic stem cell procedures have not undergone significant scientific scrutiny, the Stanford team said. The risks associated with stem cell and tissue processing have not been closely examined. The effects of aging on stem cells are also not well established, the researchers explained.

To investigate concerning claims being made about cosmetic stem cell procedures, the researchers performed a basic Internet search. They found the most common result was "stem cell facelifts." Most of the procedures used stem cells isolated from fat but did not provide details on the quality of the stem cells.

More than 100 clinical trials are currently evaluating stem cells derived from fat, but few are focusing on cosmetic treatments. The researchers cautioned that the products used in these cosmetic procedures likely involves additional types of cells unless they utilized sophisticated cell-sorting techniques.

Many blood plasma-enriched "platelet protein treatments" are also incorrectly advertised as stem cell therapy, the study's authors noted.

Meanwhile, there is only minimal evidence that cosmetic stem cell procedures have any anti-aging effects, the researchers said. They warn that stem cell facelifts may actually be "lipo-filling" procedures -- fat injections with no prolonged anti-aging effect.

Although stem cells do hold potential for cosmetic procedures in years to come, today's advertising claims for these procedures are going beyond any scientific evidence on safety and effectiveness, the researchers conclude.

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Most cosmetic procedures based on stem cells are bogus

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Biology of Belief and Spontaneous Evolution – Video

Posted: August 5, 2014 at 7:40 pm


Biology of Belief and Spontaneous Evolution
Dr. Bruce Lipton joins me to discuss his books and ideas behind the Biology of Belief and Spontaneous Evolution. His pioneering research on cloned stem cells presaged the revolutionary field...

By: Eldon Taylor

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Biology of Belief and Spontaneous Evolution - Video

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My Thoughts On Stem Cell Research – Video

Posted: August 5, 2014 at 7:40 pm


My Thoughts On Stem Cell Research
I give my two cents on the topic of stem cell research and whether or not I think it would be good for scientific discoveries and the field of medicine. Plus...

By: TheRandomGangsta

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My Thoughts On Stem Cell Research - Video

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James Shapiro: "Cutting Edge Islet and Stem Cell Transplant Therapies in the Clinic for Diabetes" – Video

Posted: August 4, 2014 at 9:45 pm


James Shapiro: "Cutting Edge Islet and Stem Cell Transplant Therapies in the Clinic for Diabetes"
A summary of recent progress and outcomes in clinical islet transplantation for the treatment of Diabetes will be provided, together with a discussion of approaches to stem cell transplantation...

By: Talks at Google

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James Shapiro: "Cutting Edge Islet and Stem Cell Transplant Therapies in the Clinic for Diabetes" - Video

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Knee arthritis 28 months after stem cell therapy by Harry Adelson, N.D. – Video

Posted: August 4, 2014 at 9:43 pm


Knee arthritis 28 months after stem cell therapy by Harry Adelson, N.D.
Cory describes his outcome from a single bone marrow/adipose stem cell treatment for his arthritic knees by Harry Adelson, N.D. http://www.docereclinics.com.

By: Harry Adelson, N.D.

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Knee arthritis 28 months after stem cell therapy by Harry Adelson, N.D. - Video

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Stem cell beauty treatments? Be wary, experts say

Posted: August 4, 2014 at 9:43 pm

Could stem cell injections help rejuvenate your face or body? Probably not, plastic surgery experts say, but ads for these types of bogus procedures abound on the Internet.

"Stem cells offer tremendous potential, but the marketplace is saturated with unsubstantiated and sometimes fraudulent claims that may place patients at risk," a team led by Dr. Michael Longaker, of Stanford University Medical Center, wrote in a review published in the August issue ofPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery.

The experts say consumers need to be wary of advertisements promoting the benefits of "minimally invasive, stem cell-based rejuvenation procedures." Claims for stem cell procedures for facelifts, breast augmentation and vaginal rejuvenation are not only unsubstantiated, but also risky, Longaker's team said.

They note that, to date, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved only one cosmetic stem cell procedure designed to treat fine facial wrinkles. And since that single procedure was approved, the product involved has been monitored extensively.

Overall, cosmetic stem cell procedures have not undergone significant scientific scrutiny, the Stanford team said. The risks associated with stem cell and tissue processing have not been closely examined. The effects of aging on stem cells are also not well established, the researchers explained.

14 Photos

Tummy tucks and facelifts pale in comparison to these surprising surgeries patients request

To investigate concerning claims being made about cosmetic stem cell procedures, the researchers performed a basic Internet search. They found the most common result was "stem cell facelifts." Most of the procedures used stem cells isolated from fat but did not provide details on the quality of the stem cells.

More than 100 clinical trials are currently evaluating stem cells derived from fat, but few are focusing on cosmetic treatments. The researchers cautioned that the products used in these cosmetic procedures likely involves additional types of cells unless they utilized sophisticated cell-sorting techniques.

Many blood plasma-enriched "platelet protein treatments" are also incorrectly advertised as stem cell therapy, the study's authors noted.

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Stem cell beauty treatments? Be wary, experts say

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Adult Stem Cells in Lupus – Video

Posted: August 4, 2014 at 6:44 pm


Adult Stem Cells in Lupus
Dr. Gary Gilkeson of the Medical University of South Carolina has been awarded a planning grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to prepare for a...

By: Lupus Foundation of America

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Adult Stem Cells in Lupus - Video

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Why store Stem Cells? – Video

Posted: August 4, 2014 at 6:44 pm


Why store Stem Cells?
Cryo-Save (India) Private Limited incorporated in the year 2008 is a leading Family Stem Cell Bank licensed by the Cryo-Save Group. Cryo-Save India has epito...

By: Cryo-Save India

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Why store Stem Cells? - Video

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Umbilical-cord stem cells valuable, but usually wasted

Posted: August 4, 2014 at 12:53 am

Melissa Dribben, Inquirer Staff Writer Posted: Sunday, August 3, 2014, 8:51 AM

At 2:11 p.m. on July 23, Michael Kuttler drew his first breath and belted out an exultant scream. Seconds later, he participated in his first act of altruism - trying to save a stranger's life.

His afterbirth was placed in a bin and handed to a woman who rushed down the hall in Lankenau Medical Center to a utility room. Working quickly, she swaddled the placenta in a cone of paper pads, pulled the rubbery umbilical cord through the bottom, then, using a syringe, plastic tubing, and gravity, spent the next 20 minutes collecting biological gold.

Stem cells from cord blood are an increasingly vital public-health resource with the potential to treat or cure scores of life-threatening diseases. Yet every day in delivery rooms, nearly all cord blood is thrown away.

The decision to donate her baby's cord blood was "a no-brainer," said Michael's mother, Megan Kuttler of West Conshohocken. "If it could help somebody else, of course I wanted to."

Most expectant parents in the Philadelphia region do not have that opportunity.

"Women want to donate, but we can't afford to collect it," said Dennis Todd, CEO at Community Blood Services in Montvale, N.J. The agency - one of only 21 public cord-blood banks in the nation that provide units for transplants - receives an average of five calls or e-mails a week from expectant parents asking how they can contribute their baby's cord blood for the greater good.

The answer is almost always, "Sorry, but you can't."

"It's tough to do a good deed," said Frances Verter, director of the nonprofit Parent's Guide to Cord Blood Foundation.

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Umbilical-cord stem cells valuable, but usually wasted

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Let It Grow – High School Stem Cell Researchers – City of Hope – Video

Posted: August 4, 2014 at 12:52 am


Let It Grow - High School Stem Cell Researchers - City of Hope
http://www.cirm.ca.gov Through a grant funded by California #39;s Stem Cell Agency (CIRM), high school students across California spent their summer getting hand...

By: California Institute for Regenerative Medicine

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Let It Grow - High School Stem Cell Researchers - City of Hope - Video

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