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+22 +1
Stem cell 'major discovery' claimed
Stem cell researchers are heralding a "major scientific discovery", with the potential to start a new age of personalised medicine.
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+14 +1
USPTO issues patent for fraudulent stem cell procedure
Last weekend, The New York Times discovered that the US Patent Office had issued a patent for a procedure to generate human stem cells. This, by itself, isn't especially surprising. What is surprising is the recipient: Hwang Woo-suk, the Korean researcher who is widely considered to have faked his data in the paper that claimed derivation of the first cloned human stem cells.
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+16 +1
Stem Cells Allow Nearly Blind Patients to See
Embryonic stem cells can be turned into a therapy to help the sight of the nearly blind
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+13 +1
Scientists stumble across unknown stem-cell type
"Region-selective" pluripotent cells raise possibility of growing human organs in animals.
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+20 +1
The boom in mini stomachs, brains, breasts, kidneys and more
Biologists are building banks of 'organoids', and learning a lot about human development on the way. By Cassandra Willyard.
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+2 +1
Have scientists really created a fully formed 'made in the lab' brain? | Genetic Literacy Project
“Scientists grow almost fully formed human brain in a lab for the first time,” ran the headline in The Independent a couple of weeks ago. Other news outlets followed along similar lines, breathlessly reporting what seemed to be a groundbreaking discovery in neuroscience research.
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+28 +1
'Big step forward' in new treatment for age-related macular degeneration, U.K. surgeons say
'Having got this far, we feel it will work. There has been a lot of research behind this and this is now looking like a route to treatment'
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+46 +1
Surgeons test possible stem cell cure for blindness
Surgeons test possible stem cell cure for blindness. Surgeons in London have used human embryonic stem cells in a pioneering attempt to cure blindness. Cells derived from a donated early embryo were implanted into the retina of a 60-year-old woman with age-related macular degeneration - the most common cause of blindness in the UK.
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+16 +1
New hydrogel can keep stem cells alive for heart repair
A new hydrogel protects stem cells inside the body, possibly making existing therapies a lot more effective.
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+35 +1
First new sound wave class in half a century to revolutionize stem cell therapy
A new class of sound wave has been developed for the first time in 50 years that looks set to revolutionize the use of stem cells in medical treatments. Created by acoustics experts from RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia, the sound waves – known as “surface reflected bulk waves” – are gentle enough to manipulate stem cells without causing damage, something that has not previously been possible with sound waves.
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+19 +1
Lab-grown sperm makes healthy offspring
Sperm have been made in the laboratory and used to father healthy baby mice in a move that could lead to infertility treatments. By James Gallagher.
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+47 +1
'Sci fi' eye experiments improve vision in children — and rabbits
Discs made of multiple types of eye tissue have been grown from human stem cells — and that tissue has been used to restore sight in rabbits. The work, reported today in Nature1, suggests that induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells — stem cells generated from adult cells — could one day be harnessed to provide replacement corneal or lens tissue for human eyes. The discs also could be used to study how eye tissue and congenital eye diseases develop.
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+12 +1
Scientists Grow Full-Sized, Beating Human Hearts From Stem Cells
It’s the closest we've come to growing transplantable hearts in the lab. By Alexandra Ossola. (Mar. 16)
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+38 +1
3D printing of implants during a surgery soon possible
Surgeons can soon use a 3D printing pen to build customized cartilage tissues during surgery. The pen with bio-ink which supports human stem cells can print cells according to the precise geometry of the implant needed. Australian researchers were able to 'draw' human stem cells in freeform patterns with extremely high survival rates. Developed by a team from ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science...
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Stem Cell Technique Could Regenerate Any Human Tissue Damaged By Aging or Disease
A team led by the University of New South Wales says that a stem cell therapy capable of regenerating any human tissue could be available within a few years.
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+23 +1
Stanford researchers ‘stunned’ by stem cell experiment that helped stroke patient walk
Stanford researchers studying the effect of stem cells injected directly into the brains of stroke patients said Thursday that they were "stunned" by the extent to which the experimental treatment restored motor function in some of the patients. While the research involved only 18 patients and was designed primarily to look at the safety of such a procedure and not its effectiveness, it is creating significant buzz in the neuroscience community because the results appear to contradict a core belief about brain damage — that it is permanent and irreversible.
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+41 +1
New MS treatment using stem cells may produce revolutionary results
A novel Canadian treatment to halt the progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) is being hailed as revolutionary, after doctors and researchers used the new stem cell transplant method to treat the disease. The results of the trial, published in The Lancet medical journal, showed long-term improvement of disease control in 23 out of 24 MS patients tested. The treatment combined chemotherapy and a stem cell transplant. It halted relapses and the development of new brain lesions in 23 of 24 patients...
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+29 +1
Researchers use light to coax stem cells to repair teeth
Cambridge/Boston, Mass. – May 28, 2014 – A Harvard-led team is the first to demonstrate the ability to use low-power light to trigger stem cells inside the body to regenerate tissue, an advance they reported in Science Translational Medicine. The research, led by David J. Mooney, Robert P. Pinkas Family Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), lays the foundation for a host of clinical applications in restorative dentistry and regenerative medicine more broadly, such as wound healing, bone regeneration, and more.
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+27 +1
Mouse Study Suggests Stem Cells May Reverse Stroke Damage
The experimental treatment combined transplanted neural stem cells with a protein called 3K3A-APC, the scientists said.
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Paralyzed man regains use of arms and hands after experimental stem cell therapy
Doctors at the USC Neurorestoration Center and Keck Medicine of USC injected an experimental treatment* made from stem cells and other cells into the damaged cervical spine of a recently paralyzed 21-year-old man as part of a multi-center clinical trial. Two weeks after surgery, Kristopher (Kris) Boesen began to show signs of improvement. Three months later, he’s able to feed himself, use his cell phone, write his name, operate a motorized wheelchair, and hug his friends and family. Improved sensation and movement in both arms and hands also make it easier for Kris to care for himself, and to envision a life lived more independently.
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