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  • End of stem cell debate?

    Hopefully this will put an end to the stem-cell debate;

    A team of Texas and British researchers says it has produced large amounts of embryoniclike stem cells from umbilical cord blood, potentially ending the ethical debate affecting stem-cell research -- the need to kill human embryos.

    The international researchers said the cells -- called cord-blood-derived-embryoniclike stem cells, or CBEs -- have the ability to turn into any kind of body tissue, like embryonic stem cells do, and can be mass-produced using technology derived from NASA.

    "It looks very promising," said Dr. Randall Urban, an endocrinologist at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. He stressed more research has to be done.

    In a report published in the August issue of the journal Cell Proliferation, Dr. Urban and researchers at Kingston University in England described how they turned the CBEs into human liver tissue.

    Scientists believe the ability to replicate tissue could lead to the development of ways to replace organs as well as treat life-threatening diseases such as diabetes, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, which have been the focus of stem-cell research.

    "It will be important if it's true, and I hope it's true," Charles Jennings, executive director of Harvard University's Stem-Cell Institute, said yesterday. But he said "many questions" need to be answered.

    Those questions, he and other scientists said, include whether CBEs will function properly and what their life span will be.

    Politically, the team's findings offer hope to pro-life opponents of using federal funding for embryonic stem-cell research, which requires the destruction of human embryos. They say such research has been hyped and is far from proven. They've regularly called for more umbilical-cord-blood research.

    In 2001, President Bush set a policy limiting federal funding to research on a group of embryonic stem-cell lines already in existence at that time -- estimated to be 78 lines -- a move many scientists argue has stifled the search for cures.

    Dr. Urban said he sees a need for both adult and embryonic stem-cell research, but recognizes the objections of the pro-life community. In contrast, he said, "cord blood is normally discarded tissue" after birth, so there are no ethical concerns.

    In addition to the moral questions surrounding their use, embryonic stem cells are rare. The Texas and British researchers point out that cord blood is an attractive source for stem cells, given that 100 million babies globally are born each year, 4 million in the United States alone.

    The researchers' findings come less than a month after Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist surprised Capitol Hill by endorsing a bill to make more embryonic stem-cell research eligible for federal funding, breaking with Mr. Bush, who has said he would veto the legislation.

    Mr. Frist, a physician, expressed qualified support for House-passed legislation that allows federal funding for an unspecified number of new lines of stem cells derived from embryos left over at in vitro fertilization clinics. Senate action on the stem-cell issue is still being worked out.

    David Prentice, senior fellow for life sciences for the Family Research Council, which advocates cord-blood and other adult stem-cell research that does not require destruction of embryos, said the research sounds "real exciting."

    Mr. Prentice said it is especially interesting because it comes just two weeks after scientists at the University of Pittsburgh announced they have discovered a type of cell in the human placenta that also shares the ability of embryonic stem cells to regenerate a wide variety of tissue.

    Publication in a medical or scientific journal is the usual forum to announce a medical discovery. But publication of the Pittsburgh research has been delayed while the university sought patent protection for its discovery.
    Dr. Mordrid
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    No, I'm sure the fun-DUH-mentalists will find some reason why we can't use cord blood.
    The Internet - where men are men, women are men, and teenage girls are FBI agents!

    I'm the least you could do
    If only life were as easy as you
    I'm the least you could do, oh yeah
    If only life were as easy as you
    I would still get screwed

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    • #3
      Your ever-present kneejerk anti-Christian b***s**t prejudices are showing badly.

      Fundamentalists and mainstream Christians (and non-Christians) with reservations about using foetal cells have been pushing for more research into alternative sources of embryonic stem cells since the debate started, including cord blood.

      Dr. Mordrid
      Dr. Mordrid
      ----------------------------
      An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

      I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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      • #4
        regardless of where you sit on the embryo fence, more sources of cells of different types is always good.

        sasq mutters something about 'necessity' and 'mother of invention'
        Juu nin to iro


        English doesn't borrow from other languages. It follows them down dark alleys, knocks them over, and goes through their pockets for loose grammar.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Gurm
          No, I'm sure the fun-DUH-mentalists will find some reason why we can't use cord blood.
          Its always fun to make fun of fundamentalists.


          If everybody took some time off, everyday, to laugh at your nearby fundamentlist Im certain the amount of Fundamentalist would decline sharply.

          Peace all around.

          ~~DukeP~~

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          • #6
            Yeah, but fundamentalists think they are normal, hold the one and only truth and that it's the non-fs who should be laughed at.

            Fundamentalism and extremism are almost synonymous, no matter the religion or lack thereof.
            Brian (the devil incarnate)

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Dr Mordrid
              Your ever-present kneejerk anti-Christian b***s**t prejudices are showing badly.
              Oh, come off it. I'm being fatalistic.

              Cord blood is discarded every day. Whoopee. So are thousands of embryos. The same fun-DUH-mentalists that have a problem with Embryonic Stem Cell research think nothing of using the rhythm method of birth control, or pulling out. But every sperm is sacred, right? They ignore the fact that thousands of embryos are routinely BURNT every day in incinerators across the nation, and instead focus on the bizarre idea that someone will be purposely creating life only to destroy it.

              So is it REALLY such a leap to think that these same ignorant, uneducated simpletons - they DID give us "intelligent design" as a classroom science, after all - might also find some reason to protest the use of cord blood? You assume that you can even explain to them the DIFFERENCE! We're talking about a group of people that keeps their children so ignorant that many of them don't know where babies COME FROM, nevermind the difference between a placenta and an embryo. Maybe if you use the term "afterbirth" they'll know... but then again maybe not.

              And you wouldn't think I was just posturing if you spent some time down at Julie's OB. Oh... my... GOD. Every time we go there, there is a parade of girls going in and out, and the nurses are so frustrated. There is a big Evangelical Christian presence in the area, and they've had HUNDREDS of girls in the past couple of years who don't even know that they're pregnant, or HOW THEY GOT PREGNANT.

              And this isn't the inner city, or farm country, or Botswana. This is slightly-off-cape-cod, suburban Massachusetts. When you see dozens of crying 15 year olds who don't know how they got pregnant, or even what it means when they miss their period... you start to get a LITTLE frustrated with the Christian "BULLSHIT" (to use your word) that gets tossed around.

              So... back to topic. I could think of a few really stupid scenarios where Christian Fun-Duh-Mentalists would cry "murder" over cord blood. But I bet ONE of them comes to pass.
              The Internet - where men are men, women are men, and teenage girls are FBI agents!

              I'm the least you could do
              If only life were as easy as you
              I'm the least you could do, oh yeah
              If only life were as easy as you
              I would still get screwed

              Comment

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