US government owned patent on hair follicle neogensis

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  • lacazette
    replied
    Originally posted by baldybald
    It will take more than 10 years, sorry.
    Maybe ,maybe not

    Regarding regenerative medecine, a treatment in japan can be on the market in 2/3 years nowadays.
    And even in america with the new bill, and the fact that it is a ground breaking progress, it will help to reduce the timeline
    let's just hope this us team or others will progress fast with exponential progress
    And we will know soon if their hair follicle neogenesis findings work for wounded soldiers. And if it's the case, we would wait with more peace in our mind hehe

    Now I cross my fingers for things like SM, piloscopy,etc..to solve the problem for the few years we have to wait

    Yes Luiza I will ask him if when he talked about 'years', it's more 2/3 or more 7/10.

    Leave a comment:


  • TooMuchHairWontKillYou
    replied
    SM and Replicel is my only hope for next 5 years. Not bim, cb, US military etc

    Leave a comment:


  • baldybald
    replied
    It will take more than 10 years, sorry.

    Leave a comment:


  • luiza
    replied
    Lacazette, could you ask him how many year he thinks it will probably take so we could have a better idea?

    Leave a comment:


  • luiza
    replied
    Originally posted by lacazette
    Hey guys!! I got a response from Mr Darling! all he taks here is regarding hairloss solution(good and bad news)

    "Thank you for your interest in our work. We are very excited about it. Any development will be for everyone not just military. It is not ready for a clinical trial yet. We need to improve the process and I suspect that it will be years until ready for a clinical trial. I am optimistic that this approach or approaches being developed by others will eventually work in humans.

    Regards,

    Tom Darling"

    At least he seems to really believe in their works
    he "suspects", so in a lucky world, 2/3 years to perfect the process, then a collaboration in japan, and 2/3 years of clinical trials ^^
    Let's hope it will take less than 5 years to begin clinical trial. At least at that time, there will be the 21st century cure bill changes, and this probable solution is huge and "groundbreaking", so it will accelerate the processus. And as I said, in a lucky world , there will be a collaboration with japan, for the asia market

    well here we talk about successful follicular neogenesis, so the full real cure, it's normal that it will come after SM,Seti,Histogen,etc
    But for now, we don't need the full cure to be saved, a combination for ex of SM if it works and a good HT will give us great results even for Nwd5,6
    And even the Norwood 7 will have a solution with piloscopy (overharvest the donor area, put all on the top, and make smp/bht on the sides and back , military cut for everyone héhé
    Hey, thanks for the post!! So the Wake Forest University study has nothing do to with it?
    Well, anyway I guess he meant the 10 years away thing.

    Leave a comment:


  • lacazette
    replied
    Hey guys!! I got a response from Mr Darling! all he taks here is regarding hairloss solution(good and bad news)

    "Thank you for your interest in our work. We are very excited about it. Any development will be for everyone not just military. It is not ready for a clinical trial yet. We need to improve the process and I suspect that it will be years until ready for a clinical trial. I am optimistic that this approach or approaches being developed by others will eventually work in humans.

    Regards,

    Tom Darling"

    At least he seems to really believe in their works
    he "suspects", so in a lucky world, 2/3 years to perfect the process, then a collaboration in japan, and 2/3 years of clinical trials ^^
    Let's hope it will take less than 5 years to begin clinical trial. At least at that time, there will be the 21st century cure bill changes, and this probable solution is huge and "groundbreaking", so it will accelerate the processus. And as I said, in a lucky world , there will be a collaboration with japan, for the asia market

    well here we talk about successful follicular neogenesis, so the full real cure, it's normal that it will come after SM,Seti,Histogen,etc
    But for now, we don't need the full cure to be saved, a combination for ex of SM if it works and a good HT will give us great results even for Nwd5,6
    And even the Norwood 7 will have a solution with piloscopy (overharvest the donor area, put all on the top, and make smp/bht on the sides and back , military cut for everyone héhé

    Leave a comment:


  • lacazette
    replied
    I put this here in the right topic

    Here is all the contacts of Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine. Can someone who speak good English could phone at some of their numbers? I will send mails but maybe by phone we could have more chances to get infos on what's goin on regarding hairloss and see if the inventions in the patent are being tested, are preparing to be tested, or if not at all

    "Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine
    6720-A Rockledge Drive, Suite 100
    Bethesda, MD 20817

    Main Phone Number 240-694-2000
    Main Fax Number 240-694-3100
    Accounts Payable 240-694-4032 ap@hjf.org
    Clinical Trials 240-694-4017 clinicaltrials@hjf.org
    Communications 240-694-4018 HJF_Communications@hjf.org
    Contracting 240-694-4019 contracting@hjf.org
    Development donate@hjf.org
    Office of Education and Meetings 240-694-4002 education@hjf.org
    Ethics Hotline 866-687-2321 https://hjf.alertline.com
    Ethics and Business Conduct Department 240-694-4004 ethics@hjf.org
    Financial Reports 240-694-4020 reporting@hjf.org
    Graphic Production Services 240-694-2036 design@hjf.org
    HIV/International Contracting 240-694-2081 hiv_contracting@hjf.org
    Human Resources 240-694-4008 hr@hjf.org
    International Program Support Office 240-694-4027 ipso@hjf.org
    Legal 240-694-2063 legal@hjf.org
    Payroll 240-694-4024 payroll@hjf.org
    Program Management Office 240-694-4025 pmo@hjf.org
    Purchasing 240-694-4009 purchasing@hjf.org
    usupurchasing@hjf.org
    Regulatory Affairs and Research Compliance 240-694-4026 regulatoryaffairs@hjf.org
    Research Initiatives Office 240-694-4016 research@hjf.org
    Safety 240-694-4050 safety@hjf.org
    Sponsored Programs 240-694-4040 osp@hjf.org
    Technology Transfer & Commercialization 240-694-4028 techtransfer@hjf.org
    Travel 240-694-4013 travel-docs@hjf.org
    USU Services 240-694-2087 USUServices@hjf.org
    San Antonio Office 210-878-5124

    Leave a comment:


  • FooFighter
    replied
    Originally posted by GSD
    haha trust me im german. im very happy that shiseido is a japanese company with japanese researchers. replicel trials in germany will need many years more to complete and for releasing the product. The quality of german work and research is good but very very very slow. it would need approximately 10 years more.
    Actually, i have been in Germany couple of times. Germans are one of the smartest nations in the world and really hardworking people with very good work ethic, but Germany has very strong laws and thats why clinical trials are so slow. It is much more good than third world countries where people like Nigam are national stars, lol!

    Leave a comment:


  • GSD
    replied
    Originally posted by baldybald
    It makes me happy when I hear German people are making researches and I trust them more than Japanese people, not only in researches but also cars : )
    haha trust me im german. im very happy that shiseido is a japanese company with japanese researchers. replicel trials in germany will need many years more to complete and for releasing the product. The quality of german work and research is good but very very very slow. it would need approximately 10 years more.

    Leave a comment:


  • Renee
    replied
    StrataGraft is for more severe burns. Developed by Stratatech Corporation, StrataGraft is a living, meshable, suturable human skin substitute that reproduces many of the structural and biological properties of normal human skin.

    Leave a comment:


  • Renee
    replied
    In order for skin to be functional and normal looking it needs hair. So hopefully they figured out that part as well.

    Leave a comment:


  • joachim
    replied
    wow, this stratagraft skin technology looks great. i'm always glad when i see biotechnology evolving like this.
    still not really helpful for hair, but who knows what else they have.
    for burn patients and other wounds this skin substitute is fantastic.

    Leave a comment:


  • hellouser
    replied
    Originally posted by Desmond84
    Hopefully she gets a travel grant to attend the congress and we get to hear what she's been up to
    She could just tell us or someone else through a different means of what her and Lauster have been up to, it's not like Hair Congress is the only way of having her let everyone know what theyve been up to.

    Leave a comment:


  • baldybald
    replied
    It makes me happy when I hear German people are making researches and I trust them more than Japanese people, not only in researches but also cars : )

    Leave a comment:


  • lacazette
    replied
    Originally posted by JayM
    Lacazette sent one but as far as I'm aware he received no reply.
    Yes no replies
    Maybe I was too technical and cold in my questioning mail. If someone want to try, you should act like a sexy mum who search little answers and solutions for his desperate son^^ maybe we could have more chance to get something haha

    To stay on the subject, here's a recent article from US army official homepage, regarding skingraft for their wounded soldiers. They are beginning phase 3 and had good results in phase 2 ( patient's with statagraft regenerate their own skin (no statagraft DNA))

    Conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan brought a surge in burn and blast wound injuries from improvised explosive devices. Many who sustain such injuries endure years of rehabilitation and countless surgeries.


    "Finding innovative strategies to heal these complex wounds more quickly, with fewer complications and less long-term impact from scarring, contractures and disability is a high priority for military medicine.

    In 2008, the Department of Defense established the Armed Forces Institute of Regenerative Medicine, or AFIRM, led by the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine and Rutgers University. AFIRM was designed as a partnership between academia, industry and the government to deliver regenerative medicine therapies with the goal of restoring form and function to the most critically-injured wounded warriors.

    "Regenerative medicine is a rapidly growing area of science that aims to unlock the body's own ability to rebuild, restore or replace damaged tissue and organs," said Kristi Pottol, director of the Tissue Injury and Regenerative Medicine Program Management Office.

    At Fort Detrick, Maryland, the Tissue Injury and Regenerative Medicine Project Management Office at the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Development Activity is monitoring the progress of two new burn treatments under development with DOD funding:

    *ReCell

    *StrataGraft

    StrataGraft is for more severe burns. Developed by Stratatech Corporation, StrataGraft is a living, meshable, suturable human skin substitute that reproduces many of the structural and biological properties of normal human skin.

    "The promise of both of these new technologies is that they could be the first substantial change in how burn and skin injuries are treated in the last half century," said Dr. Wendy Dean, Tissue Injury and Regenerative Medicine Program Management Office medical advisor. "Sparing burn patients the pain of large donor sites, or offering surgeons a ready-made, permanent option for wound coverage could lead to a paradigm shift in skin injury treatment."


    On the stratagraft company website, they already in phase 3 in their pipeline:



    Most recently, a proof-of-concept clinical trial in patients with second degree, deep, partial-thickness burns was completed in October 2014. Of 28 evaluable per-protocol patients, 27 (96%) achieved complete wound closure by Day 90 with a single application of StrataGraft tissue. The sole outlier closed in following weeks. Moreover, no StrataGraft DNA was detectable at Day 90, confirming the patients had regenerated their own skin.


    If their findings on skin are working, it gives hope that their findings on hair growth could take the same road

    Leave a comment:

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