Thoughts on Stem Cell?

Wokamuka

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Stem Cell Researcher on Hearing Loss Receives Grant
Author: Paula Rosenthal
Stem Cell Researcher on Hearing Loss Receives Grant | HearingExchange - Hearing Loss Blog and Resource Community for Deaf and Hard of Hearing People, Families and Professionals

University of Michigan announced a $22 million gift from Al Taubman, a retail pioneer and philanthropist. The gift includes funding for five top scientists, each in the amount of $200,000 for three year studies on cures for human diseases and conditions. One researcher is Yehoash Raphael who is trying to use stem cells to help deaf and hard of hearing people regain hearing.

:dunno:
 
I'm on UCI's stem cell Patient Advisory Council. UCI is going to be working on mitigating hearing loss.

Richard
 
Regain

I noted that, in the article, it mentioned "regain". Does that mean those who were born deaf/hard of hearing will not benefit?
 
Be nice if they took all that grant money and sunk it into educational services for deaf children.
 
I noted that, in the article, it mentioned "regain". Does that mean those who were born deaf/hard of hearing will not benefit?

That is like saying all deaf people can not hear... there are various forms of deafness.. from birth to late deafened.. and degrees of hearing loss within those times..

But, this research is most likely (if successful in the first place) be geared towards late deafened and HOH individuals. This is due to the fact that they already have a better understanding of sound, and to give them a better sense of "natural hearing" instead of mechanical improvements via hearing aids.

But, this is putting the cart well before the horse.. it is hard to speak of applications without having results first, and results I have seen so far from "stem cells" while promising in theory.. still have a long long way to go..
 
Yeah, the stem cell research is still really "anything is possible, but nothing promised".
Personally, I think it would be far better and more productive to sink research into things that REALLY effect people, like mental illness, mental retardation etc.
Physical differences CAN be adapted to, and lived with!
Also, just thought of something. People are all "oh hoh folks are gonna benifit from stem cell!.......but maybe its just gonna be late hoh folks. I mean people who've been hoh for their entire lives won't automaticly know how to process sound. And who knows? Maybe even if they can process the sound, they'll react to it like people with hypersensative hearing. (like some autsitic people have very hypersensative hearing)
 
[sarcastic asshole]But, but—it’s against God’s will to do stem cell research! Jesus wouldn’t like it![/sarcastic asshole] :rofl:
 
Richard, I know that they've really built you up with the potential for stem cells...........but the thing is there's a HUGE HUGE difference between an Iraq vet who has been hearing all their lives, recovering their hearing, and someone who has always been dhh responding to this sort of treatment. And yes, I'm aware of how organizations and corparations put their PR spin on things. Just b/c they hype it, it doesn't mean it's gonna work!
 
Richard, I know that they've really built you up with the potential for stem cells...........but the thing is there's a HUGE HUGE difference between an Iraq vet who has been hearing all their lives, recovering their hearing, and someone who has always been dhh responding to this sort of treatment. And yes, I'm aware of how organizations and corparations put their PR spin on things. Just b/c they hype it, it doesn't mean it's gonna work!

WOW!

That's almost the same stuff I heard when the PR over Ian Anderson getting the first CI implant was called 'hype'.

Richard
 
Richard, I know that they've really built you up with the potential for stem cells...........but the thing is there's a HUGE HUGE difference between an Iraq vet who has been hearing all their lives, recovering their hearing, and someone who has always been dhh responding to this sort of treatment. And yes, I'm aware of how organizations and corparations put their PR spin on things. Just b/c they hype it, it doesn't mean it's gonna work!

I asked Nesmuth to provide information on this.. I have spoken with more than a few people about soldiers being treated.. but.. I have yet to find ANY information regarding this..

nesmuth.. if you can.. please provide me with that info.. I would appreciate it..!
 
Nesmuth, that may be true BUT there's a HUGE difference between using a device to "hear" and having the damage that causes it cured, so hearing is normal. HELLO........most people who have been dhh since childhood, their brains won't know how to process sound like a hearing person. The "hearing" that CIs and hearing aids give is not what hearies think of as hearing. There's also the issue that mankind has NEVER cured disablity. Some diseases yeah. But I mean I think that you really should take a look at the wheelie/quad community. They have been saying for YEARS that a cure is just around the corner. I know people who were told twenty and thirty years ago, that a cure for their spinal cord injuiry was just around the corner. Fast forward a few years and they are STILL quads!
 
I just hope they don't do any testing on any animals.
 
No Embryo Needed: Scientists Say They Turned Skin Cells to Stem Cells

Tuesday , November 20, 2007

Scientists have made ordinary human skin cells take on the chameleon-like powers of embryonic stem cells, a startling breakthrough that might someday deliver the medical payoffs of embryo cloning without the controversy.

Laboratory teams on two continents report success in a pair of landmark papers released Tuesday. It's a neck-and-neck finish to a race that made headlines five months ago, when scientists announced that the feat had been accomplished in mice.

The "direct reprogramming" technique avoids the swarm of ethical, political and practical obstacles that have stymied attempts to produce human stem cells by cloning embryos.

Scientists familiar with the work said scientific questions remain and that it's still important to pursue the cloning strategy, but that the new work is a major coup.

"This work represents a tremendous scientific milestone — the biological equivalent of the Wright Brothers' first airplane," said Dr. Robert Lanza, chief science officer of Advanced Cell Technology, which has been trying to extract stem cells from cloned human embryos.

"It's a bit like learning how to turn lead into gold," said Lanza, while cautioning that the work is far from providing medical payoffs.

"It's a huge deal," agreed Rudolf Jaenisch, a prominent stem cell scientist at the Whitehead Institute in Cambridge, Mass. "You have the proof of principle that you can do it."

The White House lauded the papers, saying such research is what President Bush was advocating when he twice vetoed legislation to pave the way for taxpayer-funded embryo research.

There is a catch with the new technique. At this point, it requires disrupting the DNA of the skin cells, which creates the potential for developing cancer. So it would be unacceptable for the most touted use of embryonic cells: creating transplant tissue that in theory could be used to treat diseases like diabetes, Parkinson's, and spinal cord injury.

But the DNA disruption is just a byproduct of the technique, and experts said they believe it can be avoided.

The new work is being published online by two journals, Cell and Science. The Cell paper is from a team led by Dr. Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University; the Science paper is from a team led by Junying Yu, working in the lab of in stem-cell pioneer James Thomson of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Both reported creating cells that behaved like stem cells in a series of lab tests.

Thomson, 48, made headlines in 1998 when he announced that his team had isolated human embryonic stem cells.

Yamanaka gained scientific notice in 2006 by reporting that direct reprogramming in mice had produced cells resembling embryonic stem cells, although with significant differences. In June, his group and two others announced they'd created mouse cells that were virtually indistinguishable from stem cells.

For the new work, the two men chose different cell types from a tissue supplier. Yamanaka reprogrammed skin cells from the face of an unidentified 36-year-old woman, and Thomson's team worked with foreskin cells from a newborn. Thomson, who was working his way from embryonic to fetal to adult cells, said he's still analyzing his results with adult cells.

Both labs did basically the same thing. Each used viruses to ferry four genes into the skin cells. These particular genes were known to turn other genes on and off, but just how they produced cells that mimic embryonic stem cells is a mystery.

"People didn't know it would be this easy," Thomson said. "Thousands of labs in the United States can do this, basically tomorrow."

The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, which holds three patents for Thomson's work, is applying for patents involving his new research, a spokeswoman said. Two of the four genes he used were different from Yamanaka's recipe.

Scientists prize embryonic stem cells because they can turn into virtually any kind of cell in the body. The cloning approach — which has worked so far only in mice and monkeys — should be able to produce stem cells that genetically match the person who donates body cells for cloning.

That means tissue made from the cells should be transplantable into that person without fear of rejection. Scientists emphasize that any such payoff would be well in the future, and that the more immediate medical benefits would come from basic research in the lab.

In fact, many scientists say the cloning technique has proven too expensive and cumbersome in its current form to produce stem cells routinely for transplants.

The new work shows that the direct reprogramming technique can also produce versatile cells that are genetically matched to a person. But it avoids several problems that have bedeviled the cloning approach.

For one thing, it doesn't require a supply of unfertilized human eggs, which are hard to obtain for research and subjects the women donating them to a surgical procedure. Using eggs also raises the ethical questions of whether women should be paid for them.

In cloning, those eggs are used to make embryos from which stem cells are harvested. But that destroys the embryos, which has led to political opposition from President Bush, the Roman Catholic church and others.

Those were "show-stopping ethical problems," said Laurie Zoloth, director of Northwestern University's Center for Bioethics, Science and Society.

The new work, she said, "redefines the ethical terrain."

Richard Doerflinger of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops called the new work "a very significant breakthrough in finding morally unproblematic alternatives to cloning. ... I think this is something that would be readily acceptable to Catholics."

White House spokesman Tony Fratto said the new method does not cross what Bush considers an "ethical line." And Republican Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, a staunch opponent of publicly funded embryonic stem cell research, said it should nullify the debate.

Another advantage of direct reprogramming is that it would qualify for federal research funding, unlike projects that seek to extract stem cells from human embryos, noted Doug Melton, co-director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute.

Still, scientific questions remain about the cells produced by direct reprogramming, called "iPS" cells. One is how the cells compare to embryonic stem cells in their behavior and potential. Yamanaka said his work detected differences in gene activity.

If they're different, iPS cells might prove better for some scientific uses and cloned stem cells preferable for other uses. Scientists want to study the roots of genetic disease and screen potential drug treatments in their laboratories, for example.

Scottish researcher Ian Wilmut, famous for his role in cloning Dolly the sheep a decade ago, told London's Daily Telegraph that he is giving up the cloning approach to produce stem cells and plans to pursue direct reprogramming instead.

Other scientists said it's too early for the field to follow Wilmut's lead. Cloning embryos to produce stem cells remains too valuable as a research tool, Jaenisch said.

Dr. George Daley of the Harvard institute, who said his own lab has also achieved direct reprogramming of human cells, said it's not clear how long it will take to get around the cancer risk problem. Nor is it clear just how direct reprogramming works, or whether that approach mimics what happens in cloning, he noted.

So the cloning approach still has much to offer, he said.

Daley, who's president of the International Society for Stem Cell Research, said his lab is pursuing both strategies.

"We'll see, ultimately, which one works and which one is more practical."
FOXNews.com - No Embryo Needed: Scientists Say They Turned Skin Cells to Stem Cells - Health News | Current Health News | Medical News
 
Some stem cells can save a person life. When I was pregnant with my daughter and I donated my cord that have stem cells that can help other children with cancer. Stem cells have helps lot of cancer children.
 
All of us begin from a stem cell(s). Genetic information introduced into the human body that regenerates an organ or member is amazing.

Isn't that playing God? What an amazing amount of power.
 
All of us begin from a stem cell(s). Genetic information introduced into the human body that regenerates an organ or member is amazing.

Isn't that playing God? What an amazing amount of power.

Nah, I don't really think it just playing God, I believe God gave doctors a gift the ability to help people heal and get well. I would say that be amazing. I believe God give everybody speical gift at what they are good at and what they can do. :)
 
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