At last, a scientist confirms what I've believed for quite some time: the future of stem cell therapy will involve using the patient's own cells.
MonstersandCritics.com, a website that often deals in cutting edge bioethics and scientific and medical research, gives an early report on an upcoming article covering the work of Stephen Davies, a professor of neurology at Baylor University in Houston, Texas. Dr. Davies is using rats in his research, not humans. He has developed a treatment using embryonic stem cells that make astrocytes to greatly decrease scarring in the rats when they are given a spinal cord injury.
Dr. Wise Young, a neuroscientist whose specialty is treating spinal cord injury and who is currently investigating umbilical cord stem cells, discusses the problems with the ethics of using embryonic cells.Even so, this could be a short-term dilemma: Young said he is confident that it won`t be long before scientists can make any cell into a stem cell.
'A stem cell is just a cell expressing certain genes, and there`s nothing more mysterious than that. We just have to know what the genes are,' he said.
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
Make any cell into a stem cell
Posted by LifeEthics.org at 10:14 PM
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2 comments:
This would certinly be beneficial. As well as resolving the ethical debate, it would be a lot easier and thus cheaper than using embryonic stem cells. I am very optimistic about the future of this field. I hope that eventually stem cells will be seen as a dead-end avenue - one persued for its potential, but actually used only under extremally rare circumstances.
Oh, nasty laptop... I didn't mean to post that. It is far from easy to type while lying in bed :)
I was trying to edit it - I missed a word. I meant to say 'I hope that eventually *embryonic* stem cells will be seen as a dead-end avenue'
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