Page 2,315«..1020..2,3142,3152,3162,317..2,3202,330..»

stem cell therapy for Sports injuries. – Video

Posted: July 15, 2013 at 8:49 am


stem cell therapy for Sports injuries.
Videos is about the Stem Cell Treatment provided to various athletes and sports persons. Dr. Purita had provided treatment for the knee, elbow, shoulder, wri...

By: Stem Md

See original here:
stem cell therapy for Sports injuries. - Video

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on stem cell therapy for Sports injuries. – Video

Alessia Delli Carri, stem cell researcher – Video

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 3:43 pm


Alessia Delli Carri, stem cell researcher
Dec 2012: Researchers in Italy and the UK have developed a new system for turning human embryonic stem cells or induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells into a t...

By: EuroStemCell

Original post:
Alessia Delli Carri, stem cell researcher - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Videos | Comments Off on Alessia Delli Carri, stem cell researcher – Video

Heart attack treatment study being done in Milwaukee uses stem cells – Video

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 3:42 pm


Heart attack treatment study being done in Milwaukee uses stem cells
There #39;s new hope for the tens of thousands of heart attack survivors every year.

By: wisn

See original here:
Heart attack treatment study being done in Milwaukee uses stem cells - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Videos | Comments Off on Heart attack treatment study being done in Milwaukee uses stem cells – Video

Stem Cell Research – Changing Lives Today – Video

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 3:42 pm


Stem Cell Research - Changing Lives Today
The science of stem cells Dr. Nathan Newman, a world-renowned dermatologist and cosmetic surgeon, began searching for a topical treatment to help patients re...

By: TeamSailsGlobal

Link:
Stem Cell Research - Changing Lives Today - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Research | Comments Off on Stem Cell Research – Changing Lives Today – Video

Politics President Obama on Stem Cell Research – Video

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 3:42 pm


Politics President Obama on Stem Cell Research
#3586; #3657; #3629; #3617; #3641; #3621; #3648; #3614; #3636; #3656; #3617; #3648; #3605; #3636; #3617; http://www.farmui.jeunesseglobal.com Facebook : http://www.facebook.com/pinphet.ruankampa Page : http://www.facebook.com/jeunesse.theicon E-mail : thebestinnovati...

By: The Best Innovation

View original post here:
Politics President Obama on Stem Cell Research - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Research | Comments Off on Politics President Obama on Stem Cell Research – Video

Injecting iron supplement lets scientists track transplanted stem cells

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 4:46 am

July 12, 2013 A new, noninvasive technique for tracking stem cells after transplantation -- developed by a cross-disciplinary team of radiologists, chemists, statisticians and materials scientists at the Stanford University School of Medicine -- could help surgeons determine whether a procedure to repair injured or worn-out knees is successful.

The technique, described in a study to be published online July 12 in Radiology, relies on an imaging agent already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for an entirely different purpose: anemia treatment. Although this study used rodents, the approach is likely to be adapted for use in humans this fall as part of a clinical trial in which mesenchymal stem cells will be delivered to the site of patients' knee injuries. Mesenchymal stem cells are capable of differentiating into bone and cartilage, as well as muscle, fat and tendon, but not into the other cell types that populate the body.

Every year, arthritis accounts for 44 million outpatient visits and 700,000 knee-replacement procedures. But the early repair of cartilage defects in young patients may prevent further deterioration of the joint and the need for knee replacement later in life, said the study's senior author, Heike Daldrup-Link, MD, PhD, an associate professor of radiology and clinician who splits her time between research and treating pediatric patients.

Mesenchymal stem cells have been used with some success in cartilage-repair procedures. "These cells can be easily derived from bone marrow of patients who are going to undergo the knee-repair procedure," said Daldrup-Link, a member of the Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford. "And they can differentiate into the real-life tissues that compose our joints. But here, too, things can go wrong. The newly transferred cells might fail to engraft, or die. They might migrate away. They could develop into tissues other than cartilage, most commonly fibrous scar tissue."

Relatively few transplanted cells go the distance. The ability to monitor the cells' engraftment after they are deposited at a patient's knee-injury site is therefore essential. With the new technique, magnetic resonance imaging can visualize stem cells for several weeks after they have been implanted, giving orthopaedic surgeons a better sense of whether the transplantation was successful.

Until now, the only ways of labeling mesenchymal stem cells so that they could be noninvasively imaged have required their manipulation in the laboratory. Upon extraction, the delicate cells have to be given to lab personnel, incubated with contrast agents, spun in a centrifuge and washed and returned to the surgeons, who then transplant the cells into a patient.

The new technique involves labeling the cells before extraction, while they reside in the donor's bone marrow. For the study, lead authors Aman Khurana, MD, a postdoctoral scholar, and Fanny Chapelin, a research associate, injected ferumoxytol, an FDA-licensed anemia treatment composed of iron-oxide nanoparticles, into rats prior to extracting bone marrow from them. Then, after enriching the mixture for mesenchymal stem cells, the investigators injected it into the sites of knee injuries in recipient rats. They followed the implanted cells' progress for up to four weeks, comparing the results with those obtained both from cells labeled in laboratory dishes and from unlabeled cells.

Daldrup-Link and others previously have used ferumoxytol for stem-cell labeling in a dish. However, mesenchymal stem cells in a laboratory dish take up very little of this substance. Interestingly, the researchers showed in a series of experiments that, ensconced in donor rats' bone marrow, the same cells are avid ferumoxytol absorbers. Even several weeks after transplantation into the recipient rats' knees, the mesenchymal stem cells retain enough iron to provide a strong MRI signal.

The new labeling technique alleviates the risks of contamination introduced when cells are labeled via manipulations in a laboratory dish -- a major regulatory concern, said Daldrup-Link -- as well as of a substantial loss of the delicate cells due to their extensive manipulation. It also allows for the immediate transfer of cells from a patient's bone marrow to the site of that patient's own knee injury.

That makes the technique useful in an autologous transplantation procedure, in which cells are extracted from a patient for the purpose of being delivered to another site during the same surgery. Jason Dragoo, MD, associate professor of orthopaedic surgery at the medical school and head team physician for the Stanford football program, plans to initiate a clinical trial this autumn whereby patients in need of knee repair will be treated with mesenchymal stem cells taken from their own bone marrow.

Read this article:
Injecting iron supplement lets scientists track transplanted stem cells

Posted in Stem Cells | Comments Off on Injecting iron supplement lets scientists track transplanted stem cells

6 children with rare disorders helped by gene therapy

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 4:44 am

Two rare hereditary disorders, one of which kills children within the first few years of life, can be treated with gene therapy, new research from Italy suggests.

In children with the disorders, those who received gene therapy in which a "faulty" gene is replaced with a healthy one showed either improvement in their symptoms or a halt in the disease's progression. The children did not appear to experience serious side effects resulting from the gene therapy.

One disorder, called metachromatic leukodystrophy, causes a buildup of fatty acids in the brain, which leads to cognitive and movement problems and, ultimately, death at an early age.

The researchers treated three children with genetic mutations for metachromatic leukodystrophy, all of whom had older siblings with the condition. Because the patients were very young, ages 7 to 15 months at the study's start, they did not show full symptoms of the condition.

By age 3, one of the children treated with the gene therapy had a normal IQ score and language skills for his or her age, and was able to stand up voluntarily and walk holding someone's hand. In contrast, siblings of this patient who did not receive the therapy were incapable of speech and wheelchair bound by age 3.

The two other patients with the condition, who were also treated with gene therapy, did not show symptoms by age 2, an age at which researchers would have expected symptoms to appear.

Gene therapy was also used to treat three children with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, an immune system disorder caused by mutations in a gene called WAS. People with this condition are at increased risk for developing infections, as well as eczema. The children treated with the gene therapy saw their symptoms decrease or disappear within 20 to 30 months of undergoing treatment, the researchers said.

Though the results are promising, the study period was relatively short, and researchers said they need to continue to monitor all six children for changes in their conditions. [9 Most Bizarre Medical Conditions ]

Both groups of children (those with metachromatic leukodystrophy, and those with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome) received very similar gene-therapy treatments. The researchers removed blood stem cells, called hematopoietic stem cells, from the patients, and used a virus to introduce a corrected form of each patient's faulty gene. These cells were then infused back into the patients.

In patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, blood stem cells are directly affected by the disease, so the newly infused stem cells replace the diseased cells, the researchers said. For patients with metachromatic leukodystrophy, the newly infused stem cells find their way to the brain, where they release the corrected form of the gene product (a protein), which, in turn, is taken in by the brian cells.

More:
6 children with rare disorders helped by gene therapy

Posted in Gene therapy | Comments Off on 6 children with rare disorders helped by gene therapy

Life stem cell therapy Purtier – Video

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 4:41 am


Life stem cell therapy Purtier
9 years old girl benefited from deer placenta.

By: Keith Chew

Original post:
Life stem cell therapy Purtier - Video

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Life stem cell therapy Purtier – Video

Shestack Resignation Letter: Heartfelt and Eloquent

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 2:59 am

Jon Shestack(l) with J.T. Thomas, chairman of
CIRM, at a 2012 board meeting
California Stem Cell Report photo
Patient advocate Jon Shestack , who
resigned this week as a director of the
California stem cell agency, was on board on Day One in December 2004
when the agency's work began with no offices, no desks, no chairs, no phones and
no ability to even write checks.
Shestack's appointment came as a result
of his work in the autism community. He and his wife, Portia Iversen,
founded Cure Autism Now in 1995. A Hollywood film producer, Shestack
rattled cages at CIRM from time to time during his eight years of
service. And earlier this week, he wrote a heartfelt, eloquent
resignation letter, which he provided to the California Stem Cell
Report.
The full text can be found below. Here are some excerpts.

“Over eight years there were moments
that were inspiring, some were contentious, and there was a bruising
number of meetings but through it all, the board was involved,
passionate and, will forever be for me, the gold standard when it
comes to integrity.
“The same goes double for the staff –
truly the most excellent, devoted, committed group of people I
have ever had the pleasure of working with.”

“When I started at CIRM, my sweet son
with autism was 12. Now he is 21. Over eight years our family has
learned more about how many are the challenges that await him and how
few the opportunities he has to look forward to. We have seen his
world get smaller and smaller. While my son is special to me. He is
not unique. There are thousands and thousands affected by mental
illness who need a better life.
“Sometimes feel that I have failed
these people, in particular those affected by autism or cerebral
palsy. Though CIRM ran first-rate workshops on these disorders, we
did not do all we could to follow up, put out disease-specific RFAs
and get in proposals that addressed the workshop recommendations. I
wish I had been more persuasive."

“In the movies, the third act is
where the hero takes stock of all the previous wins and losses, all
the hardships and lessons learned, and she puts all that knowledge
together in new, and surprising ways until victory is within reach!
As CIRM enters its third act, I hope it will do the same. I hope it
will challenge itself, always put the urgency of the mission
ahead of everything else and be willing to question the policies that
have been so successful in the past, and consider that new ones may
be needed for the future.
“And this is the future as I see it
for CIRM. We will have faith, but we will continue to earn our
miracles We will use our hearts and our minds to rip those miracles
out of the dreamy future and make them real today. We will seek out
the best scientists and encourage them to use all their wisdom, art
and discernment to bring us cures. And when we have done that, we
will do it again the next day. We will be optimistic, but not
satisfied. We will question authority, despise complacency and above
all love those among us in need of healing--this is the obligation
without end, whose reward is also without end.”

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/BaaZlqP9Q4s/shestack-resignation-letter-heartfelt.html

Posted in Stem Cells, Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Shestack Resignation Letter: Heartfelt and Eloquent

TV News Piece on Pay-for-Eggs Airs in Los Angeles, San Francisco

Posted: July 14, 2013 at 2:59 am

The California pay-for-eggs legislation
yesterday picked up some mainstream media coverage, including a
two-minute, 24-second segment on two major television stations in Los
Angeles and San Francisco.
The piece stands out because the
mainstream media has largely ignored the bill, with a couple of
exceptions. The piece is also exceptional because it appeared on TV
news, which reaches many more people than print media.
Nannette Miranda, Sacramento bureau
chief for KABC-TV in Los
Angeles, KGTV in
San Diego, KGO-TV in San
Francisco and KFSN-TV in Fresno, prepared the segment, which included on-camera interviews with both
supporters and opponents. The video appeared on KGO and KABC
and may well appear later on the other stations. It can be seen at
the end of this item.
The legislation, AB926 by Susan
Bonilla
, D-Concord, would remove the ban in California on paying
women for their eggs for stem cell and other scientific research.
Women can already be paid for their eggs for fertility purposes.
Another piece on the bill appeared in
another mainstream media outlet this morning, the San Diego U-T.
Writing in an op-ed column, Leah Campbell said she sold her eggs at
age 25 and has since become infertile as the result of problems her
doctors believe involved the process of providing the eggs.

“Six months (after providing the
eggs) my body began to fail me. I had always been a healthy and
active woman, but suddenly I was crippled by pain and unable to live
the life I had once enjoyed. I was soon diagnosed with stage IV
endometriosis, a disease my doctors now believe was pushed into
overdrive as a result of the potent hormones involved in my egg
donation protocols.”

Campbell continued,

“AB 926 may open the doors for
increased fertility research, but the potential costs for women’s
lives and health far outweigh any compensation that could ever be
offered.”

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/uMnWUVrymr8/tv-news-piece-on-pay-for-eggs-airs-in.html

Posted in Stem Cells, Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on TV News Piece on Pay-for-Eggs Airs in Los Angeles, San Francisco

Page 2,315«..1020..2,3142,3152,3162,317..2,3202,330..»