Categories
- Aesthetic Medicine
- Aesthetic Surgery
- Ai
- ALS Treatment
- Anatomy
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Batten Disease Treatment
- BioEngineering
- BioInformatics
- Biology
- Biotechnology
- Bitcoin
- Brain Injury Treatment
- Cardiac Nursing
- Cardiac Regeneration
- Cardiac Remodeling
- Cardiac Rhythm Abnormalities
- Cardiac Surgery
- Cardiology
- Cardiomyopathies
- Cardiovascular Pharmacology
- Cell Medicine
- Cell Therapy
- Cerebral Palsy
- Cerebral Palsy Treatment
- Cheap Pharmacy
- Chemistry
- Clinical Cardiology
- Coronary Heart Diseases
- Cryptocurrency
- DNA
- Drug Dependency
- Drug Side Effects
- Drugs
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Embryology
- Erectile Dysfunction
- FDA Stem Cell Trials
- Femtomedicine
- Future Medicine
- Gene Medicine
- Gene Therapy
- Gene Therapy Trials
- Genetic Engineering
- Genetic Therapy
- Genetics
- Germ Line Engineering
- Heart Diseases
- HGH
- Hgh Injections
- Hormone Replacement Therapy
- Human Genetics
- Human Growth Hormone
- Human Immortality
- Hyperbaric Medicine
- Hypertension
- Hypothalamus
- Impotency
- Internet Pharmacy
- Interventional Cardiology
- IVF Treatment
- Lyme Disease
- Male Sexual Dysfunction
- Mars Colony
- Medical Business
- Medical School
- Medical Technology
- Medicine
- Mental Health
- Mesenchymal Stem Cells
- Micropenia
- Molecular Cardiology
- MS Treatment
- Muscular Dystrophy Treatment
- Myocardial Infarction
- Nanotechnology
- Online Pharmacy
- Oral Health
- Parkinson's Treatment
- Pediatric Cardiology
- Penis Enlargement
- Pet Stem Cell Therapy
- Pharmacy
- Picomedicine
- Premature Ejaculation
- Prescriptions
- Retinitis Pigmentosa
- Sermorelin
- Singularity
- Sleep
- Spacex
- Spinal Cord Injury Treatment
- Stem Cell Clinical Trials
- Stem Cell Experiments
- Stem Cell Human Trials
- Stem Cell Injections
- Stem Cell Research
- Stem Cell Transplant
- Stem Cell Treatments
- Testosterone
- Ulcerative Colitis
- Uncategorized
- Vascular Biology
- Ventricular Remodeling
- Wholesale Pharmacy
Archives
Category Archives: Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Dr. Nikolai Tankovich, President Of Stemedica, Appointed Legate to The Center of Science and Society at The University …
Posted: Published on March 15th, 2012
The Board of Trusties of the Centre for Science and Society at Trinity College of the University of Oxford, England has appointed Nikolai Tankovich, MD, PhD, FASLMS as a Legate of the Centre. Dr. Tankovich is President and Chief Medical officer of Stemedica Cell Technologies, Inc. and Chairman of Stemedica International S.A. a manufacturer of ischemic tolerant adult allogeneic stem cells. (PRWEB) March 15, 2012 Dr. Tankovich has been a frequent lecturer and guest speaker at the Centre for the last several years. The position of Legate recognizes the importance of his continuing role in reporting on the latest worldwide trends in regenerative medicine and biotechnology. Dr Tankovich is a surgical oncologist who holds a Masters Degree in Physics and a PhD in Biophysics. He is a Fellow of the American Society of Laser Medicine and Surgery. Dr. Tankovich is the author of multiple patents in the fields of stem cells and laser science. Dr. Frank C. Schuller, Director of the Centre for Science and Society at Trinity College said, We are pleased to formalize our valued relationship with Dr. Tankovich by naming him a Legate of the Center. This honor is in recognition of his extensive contributions to advancing … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on Dr. Nikolai Tankovich, President Of Stemedica, Appointed Legate to The Center of Science and Society at The University …
Perry's stem-cell firm draws FDA scrutiny
Posted: Published on March 14th, 2012
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has received a complaint alleging the Houston company involved in Gov. Rick Perry's unregulated adult stem-cell operation is a potential danger to patients and not in compliance with federal law. In an eight-page letter sent last month, University of Minnesota bioethicist Leigh Turner called on the FDA to investigate Celltex Therapeutics Corp., which banks people's stem cells for future reinjection in the event of disease or injury. Perry was the company's first customer last year. "It appears their business plan involves injecting or infusing on a for-profit, commercial basis non-FDA-approved adult stem cells into paying customers," Turner wrote in the Feb. 21 letter. "This plan conflicts with FDA regulations governing human stem cells." An FDA spokeswoman declined comment, but Turner said an agency official told him the matter has been assigned to an investigator and is being taken seriously. Celltex co-founder David Eller said Tuesday night he is confident the company will "meet all FDA specifications." He emphasized that Celltex doesn't administer stem cells, but stores and processes them at the behest of doctors who later reinject them into patients. Dr. Stanley Jones, a Houston orthopedic surgeon, injected Perry's stem cells during his back … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on Perry's stem-cell firm draws FDA scrutiny
Washington Center for Pain Management Begins Enrollment in United States Stem Cell Therapy Study in Subjects With …
Posted: Published on March 14th, 2012
EDMONDS, Wash., March 14, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --Washington Center for Pain Management is participating in a nationwide FDA-cleared adult stem cell study testing novel treatment for chronic low back pain and has enrolled its first patient. The study will test the use of Mesenchymal Precursor Cells (MPCs) adult stem cells derived from bone marrow that will be directly injected into the lumbar disc. The minimally invasive procedure may offer an alternative to back surgery for eligible patients with chronic pain from degenerative discs. An estimated 30 million people in the United States suffer from back pain. Degenerative disc disease is the most common cause of low-back pain, which develops with the gradual loss of a material called proteoglycan, which cushions the bones of the spine and enables normal motion. Most patients with low-back pain respond to physical therapy and medications, but in advanced cases, artificial disc replacement or spinal fusion -- removal of the degenerated discs and the fusion of the bones of the spine -- is necessary. However, these surgeries often are not entirely effective. "Millions of Americans are debilitated by chronic low back pain," says Dr Hyun Joong Hong MD, the lead investigator at The Washington Center for Pain … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on Washington Center for Pain Management Begins Enrollment in United States Stem Cell Therapy Study in Subjects With …
TEDMED 2012 Conference Offers $2 Million in Scholarships to Health and Medicine Leaders and Innovators; Free National …
Posted: Published on March 13th, 2012
WASHINGTON, March 13, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- TEDMED, http://www.TEDMED.com, the annual gathering where science, medical and technology leaders focus on "imagination, innovation and inspiration" to advance the art of health and medicine, today announced two new programs that will vastly increase the size and scope of its audience. TEDMED is the world's only TED-licensed event focused solely on innovation and breakthrough thinking across all of health and medicine. It will be held at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., April 10 - 13. Speakers, attendee-Delegates and participants will range from biologists (Dr. E.O. Wilson) and writers (Ben Goldacre), to physicists (Albert-Laszlo Barabasi) and public health leaders like the director of the National Institutes of Health (Dr. Francis Collins). Topics to be explored by TEDMED speakers will include neuroscience, microbiology, surgery, oncology, stem cell therapy, bad science, Alzheimer's, robotics, game science, wearable tech, disease evolution, patient choice, virtual anatomy models, the nature of imagination, and dozens more. For the first time this year, TEDMED will offer a free simulcast, TEDMEDLive, to teaching hospitals, medical schools, research institutions, university life science departments, state and federal government agencies, health-oriented corporations and non-profits across the nation. Participants, forecasted at … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on TEDMED 2012 Conference Offers $2 Million in Scholarships to Health and Medicine Leaders and Innovators; Free National …
Chia medical tourism–stroke–stem cell therapy 3.flv – Video
Posted: Published on March 13th, 2012
12-03-2012 21:11 by:www.medicaltourism.hk Read more here: Chia medical tourism--stroke--stem cell therapy 3.flv - Video … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on Chia medical tourism–stroke–stem cell therapy 3.flv – Video
Chia medical tourism–stroke–stem cell therapy 1.flv – Video
Posted: Published on March 13th, 2012
12-03-2012 20:48 by:www.medicaltourism.hk Read more here: Chia medical tourism--stroke--stem cell therapy 1.flv - Video … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on Chia medical tourism–stroke–stem cell therapy 1.flv – Video
Repairing mutations in human mitochondria
Posted: Published on March 13th, 2012
LOS ANGELES Researchers at the UCLA stem cell center and the departments of chemistry and biochemistry and pathology and laboratory medicine have identified, for the first time, a generic way to correct mutations in human mitochondrial DNA by targeting corrective RNAs, a finding with implications for treating a host of mitochondrial diseases. Mutations in the human mitochondrial genome are implicated in neuromuscular diseases, metabolic defects and aging. There currently are no methods to successfully repair or compensate for these mutations, said study co-senior author Dr. Michael Teitell, a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and a researcher with the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA. Between 1,000 and 4,000 children per year in the United States are born with a mitochondrial disease and up to one in 4,000 children in the U.S. will develop a mitochondrial disease by the age of 10, according to Mito Action, a nonprofit organization supporting research into mitochondrial diseases. In adults, many diseases of aging have been associated with defects of mitochondrial function, including diabetes, Parkinson's disease, heart disease, stroke, Alzheimer's disease and cancer. "I think this is a finding that could change the field," Teitell said. … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on Repairing mutations in human mitochondria
Correcting human mitochondrial mutations
Posted: Published on March 13th, 2012
Public release date: 12-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Kim Irwin kirwin@mednet.ucla.edu 310-206-2805 University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences Researchers at the UCLA stem cell center and the departments of chemistry and biochemistry and pathology and laboratory medicine have identified, for the first time, a generic way to correct mutations in human mitochondrial DNA by targeting corrective RNAs, a finding with implications for treating a host of mitochondrial diseases. Mutations in the human mitochondrial genome are implicated in neuromuscular diseases, metabolic defects and aging. There currently are no methods to successfully repair or compensate for these mutations, said study co-senior author Dr. Michael Teitell, a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and a researcher with the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA. Between 1,000 and 4,000 children per year in the United States are born with a mitochondrial disease and up to one in 4,000 children in the U.S. will develop a mitochondrial disease by the age of 10, according to Mito Action, a nonprofit organization supporting research into mitochondrial diseases. In adults, many diseases of aging have been associated with defects of mitochondrial function, including diabetes, Parkinson's … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on Correcting human mitochondrial mutations
UCLA scientists find insulin, nutrition prevent blood stem cell differentiation in fruit flies
Posted: Published on March 12th, 2012
Public release date: 11-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Kim Irwin kirwin@mednet.ucla.edu 310-206-2805 University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences UCLA stem cell researchers have shown that insulin and nutrition keep blood stem cells from differentiating into mature blood cells in Drosophila, the common fruit fly, a finding that has implications for studying inflammatory response and blood development in response to dietary changes in humans. Keeping blood stem cells, or progenitor cells, from differentiating into blood cells is important as they are needed to create the blood supply for the adult fruit fly. The study found that the blood stem cells are receiving systemic signals from insulin and nutritional factors, in this case essential amino acids, that helped them to maintain their "stemness," said study senior author Utpal Banerjee, professor and chairman of the molecular, cell and developmental biology department in Life Sciences and a researcher with the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine at UCLA. "We expect that this study will promote further investigation of possible direct signal sensing mechanisms by mammalian blood stem cells," Banerjee said. "Such studies will probably yield insights into chronic inflammation and the myeloid cell accumulation seen in patients … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on UCLA scientists find insulin, nutrition prevent blood stem cell differentiation in fruit flies
Insulin, Nutrition Prevent Blood Stem Cell Differentiation in Fruit Flies
Posted: Published on March 12th, 2012
Newswise UCLA stem cell researchers have shown that insulin and nutrition keep blood stem cells from differentiating into mature blood cells in Drosophila, the common fruit fly, a finding that has implications for studying inflammatory response and blood development in response to dietary changes in humans. Keeping blood stem cells, or progenitor cells, from differentiating into blood cells is important as they are needed to create the blood supply for the adult fruit fly. The study found that the blood stem cells are receiving systemic signals from insulin and nutritional factors, in this case essential amino acids, that helped them to maintain their stemness, said study senior author Utpal Banerjee, professor and chairman of the molecular, cell and developmental biology department in Life Sciences and a researcher with the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine at UCLA. We expect that this study will promote further investigation of possible direct signal sensing mechanisms by mammalian blood stem cells, Banerjee said. Such studies will probably yield insights into chronic inflammation and the myeloid cell accumulation seen in patients with type II diabetes and other metabolic disorders. The study appears March 11, 2012 in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Cell Biology. In … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Comments Off on Insulin, Nutrition Prevent Blood Stem Cell Differentiation in Fruit Flies
We cordially invite you to collaborate with us (as Speaker/Exhibitor/Sponsor/Media Partner) for “10th Annual Conference on Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine” scheduled on August 13-14, 2018 in London, UK.
For meeting details visit: https://stemcell-regenerativemedicine.conferenceseries.com/