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  1. #11
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    Any source that doesn't come from a tabloid and a pro-life website?

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by bigentries View Post
    Any source that doesn't come from a tabloid and a pro-life website?
    http://articles.timesofindia.indiati...s-mice-embryos


    Does this work? Couldn't find any pro-life stuff and I don't believe it to be a tabloid.

  3. #13
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    This page quotes Nature

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/st...very-1.2515327

    Are they the same thing? They only talk about mouse cells. I can't find a reputable source about the human cells.

    This source claims it hasn't been replicated
    http://www.boston.com/news/science/b...dBQK/blog.html

    One of the guys involved is responsible for the infamous "ear mouse"

    http://www.bostonglobe.com/lifestyle...MbK/story.html

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by bigentries View Post
    This page quotes Nature

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/st...very-1.2515327

    Are they the same thing? They only talk about mouse cells. I can't find a reputable source about the human cells.

    This source claims it hasn't been replicated
    http://www.boston.com/news/science/b...dBQK/blog.html

    One of the guys involved is responsible for the infamous "ear mouse"

    http://www.bostonglobe.com/lifestyle...MbK/story.html
    Wouldn't it be nice if these guys started doing work on humans instead of mice?

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by hellouser View Post
    Wouldn't it be nice if these guys started doing work on humans instead of mice?
    They are
    http://www.newscientist.com/article/...an-tissue.html

    But I can't find any reputable source claiming they have already been successful

  6. #16
    Senior Member Desmond84's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by bigentries View Post
    They are
    http://www.newscientist.com/article/...an-tissue.html

    But I can't find any reputable source claiming they have already been successful
    Yeah that's the pictures I saw as well I think it is going through the peer review process, which usually takes 2-3 months and if the claims are true they managed to make human stem cells for less than $100, now that is called laws of accelerating returns

    Imagine in 10 years walking into a clinic and going from nw7 to nw1 for less than $3000! THAT IS GOD-LIKE...

    Hair transplant surgeons will downplay these breakthroughs till their last breath. I watched an interview with Dr Peter Diamandis the founder of Singularity university and X prize. Anyways he was talking about how technology will make a lot of high paying jobs redundant! He gave an example where an app on your phone will be able to diagnose you better than a board of clinicals combined and how this will put doctors in a very uneasy situation whereby they can't expect to charge so much for a consultation or diagnosis! I see the hair transplant industry following the same path...fingers crossed

    Science & Technology are our best friend and whoever puts them down is either uninformed or has vested interests in other places...

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Desmond84 View Post
    Well guys, all the naysayers last month were claiming this was another mice study and simply dipping human cells in acid will not yield stem cells! Well, to the surprise of many scientists, this simple and incredibly cheap technique (less than $100) has just shown to work in humans...We have managed to reduce the cost 100 fold in less than 3 years now that's exciting. Prepare yourself for a revolution in biotechnology and regenerative medicine

    Researchers herald greatest medical breakthrough of the age, deriving stem cells from human skin cells

    Scientists are heralding a massive breakthrough in stem cell research today, after a team of American and Japanese researchers announced yesterday that they had succeeded in turning human skin cells into fully pluripotent stem cells, a move many have said may be the greatest medical breakthrough of recent times.

    The technique involved an incredibly simple process of bathing the human skin cells in a weak citric acid solution for 30 minutes and inserting specific gene sequences back into the cell. The process astonished scientists just last month by successfully turning mice blood cells into stem cells, allowing scientists to then turn those newly-created stem cells into actual mouse embryos, demonstrating that the stem cells truly were pluripotent. The same process has now been successfully used to create human stem cells as well.


    Pluripotent stem cells, which have the ability to reproduce indefinitely as well as be transformed into any other type of tissue, have long been proposed to be a potential cure for any number of conditions and diseases, from diabetes to spinal cord injuries. Ethical concerns have previously haunted research proposals, however, as most stem cells, previously, were derived from either from human embryos and required killing the embryo in the process of retrieving the cells, or from the tissue of aborted fetuses. Concerns reached epic proportions when scientists announced just this past May that they had successfully cloned the first human embryos, literally bringing life to pro-life advocate’s fears of scientists creating human beings for the purpose of medical research.

    http://liveactionnews.org/researcher...an-skin-cells/
    Another one for the naysayers. They don't seem to get this part every time they say 20 years away..
    Under the new legislation, if small Phase I/II clinical studies can establish product safety and provide a meaningful indication of therapeutic effectiveness, accelerated approval becomes a possibility – in qualifying situations the government will grant conditional approval to commercialize the product. At that point, a post-market surveillance period will be in effect to more thoroughly delineate safety and efficacy profiles, with subsequent final approval granted at a later date, or alternatively, the potential of revocation of the approval if data shows the therapy to be inefficacious or unsafe.
    If the new policy can lead to new therapeutics being available and shave the regulatory route from seven-to-ten years down to only two or three years without sacrificing safety, Abe's plan could prove transformational on multiple fronts.

    http://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/com...150000280.html

  8. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Desmond84 View Post
    Well guys, all the naysayers last month were claiming this was another mice study and simply dipping human cells in acid will not yield stem cells! Well, to the surprise of many scientists, this simple and incredibly cheap technique (less than $100) has just shown to work in humans...We have managed to reduce the cost 100 fold in less than 3 years now that's exciting. Prepare yourself for a revolution in biotechnology and regenerative medicine

    Researchers herald greatest medical breakthrough of the age, deriving stem cells from human skin cells

    Scientists are heralding a massive breakthrough in stem cell research today, after a team of American and Japanese researchers announced yesterday that they had succeeded in turning human skin cells into fully pluripotent stem cells, a move many have said may be the greatest medical breakthrough of recent times.

    The technique involved an incredibly simple process of bathing the human skin cells in a weak citric acid solution for 30 minutes and inserting specific gene sequences back into the cell. The process astonished scientists just last month by successfully turning mice blood cells into stem cells, allowing scientists to then turn those newly-created stem cells into actual mouse embryos, demonstrating that the stem cells truly were pluripotent. The same process has now been successfully used to create human stem cells as well.


    Pluripotent stem cells, which have the ability to reproduce indefinitely as well as be transformed into any other type of tissue, have long been proposed to be a potential cure for any number of conditions and diseases, from diabetes to spinal cord injuries. Ethical concerns have previously haunted research proposals, however, as most stem cells, previously, were derived from either from human embryos and required killing the embryo in the process of retrieving the cells, or from the tissue of aborted fetuses. Concerns reached epic proportions when scientists announced just this past May that they had successfully cloned the first human embryos, literally bringing life to pro-life advocate’s fears of scientists creating human beings for the purpose of medical research.

    http://liveactionnews.org/researcher...an-skin-cells/

    Scientists Struggle to Replicate Stem-Cell Research Breakthrough

    New Approach Called Into Question



    Scientists say they are struggling to replicate a new approach for creating stem cells, raising further questions about the breakthrough technique whose announcement garnered international attention.

    The experiments have come under increased scrutiny after Japan's Riken research institute opened an investigation last week into whether there were any irregularities in images used in two papers describing the stem-cell technique. Several laboratories now report that their initial efforts to replicate the experiments have failed.

    "We tried it on human cells and so far it hasn't worked," said Jeanne Loring, director of the Center for Regenerative Medicine at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif. "That's consistent with what other people have found" in their initial efforts to replicate the experiments, she added.

    [Continues]

    The rest is here: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/...rss_Technology

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thinning87 View Post
    Scientists Struggle to Replicate Stem-Cell Research Breakthrough

    New Approach Called Into Question



    Scientists say they are struggling to replicate a new approach for creating stem cells, raising further questions about the breakthrough technique whose announcement garnered international attention.

    The experiments have come under increased scrutiny after Japan's Riken research institute opened an investigation last week into whether there were any irregularities in images used in two papers describing the stem-cell technique. Several laboratories now report that their initial efforts to replicate the experiments have failed.

    "We tried it on human cells and so far it hasn't worked," said Jeanne Loring, director of the Center for Regenerative Medicine at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif. "That's consistent with what other people have found" in their initial efforts to replicate the experiments, she added.

    [Continues]

    The rest is here: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/...rss_Technology
    It was easy to see that coming
    The guy that lead all of it already has a bad track record, and apparently doesn't even have a PhD and tends to see himself as a champion in the middle of evil evidence-backed medicine

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by bigentries View Post
    The guy that lead all of it already has a bad track record, and apparently doesn't even have a PhD and tends to see himself as a champion in the middle of evil evidence-backed medicine
    Thanks, didn't know Nigam was involved here

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