Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $13,335
16%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 16%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: anthonyatala

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Code of Silence [by MSM on Adult Stem Cells]

    02/09/2007 7:42:48 AM PST · by aculeus · 5 replies · 485+ views
    Daily Standard via fumento.com ^ | February 8, 2007 | By Michael Fumento
    Another source of useful stem cells has been found – and the media and the cloning crowd are trying keep it quiet. While the Democratic-controlled House voted 253-174 to expand federal funding for embryonic stem-cell research, it fell far short of the 290 votes needed to override a virtually guaranteed presidential veto. A tragedy for victims of everything from Alzheimer's to warts? Not at all. Each year there are stunning breakthroughs with adult stem cells, and 2007 has already brought its first. Adult stem cells cure and treat more 70 diseases and are involved in almost 1,300 human clinical trials....
  • Regenerative Medicine

    04/17/2006 2:19:06 PM PDT · by Coleus · 7 replies · 600+ views
    FOX ^ | Dr. Manny Alvarez
    A couple of weeks ago Wake Forest University physicians described the first human recipients of a laboratory-grown organ. In the prestigious medical journal "The Lancet," Dr. Anthony Atala, director of the Institute for Regenerative Medicine, detailed a series of patients (children and teenagers) who received urinary bladders grown from their own cells. WHAAAAT? Did somebody say "laboratory organs?!" Yes. Perhaps like you, the first reaction of some who heard the news was, “why would anyone need a new bladder?” Well, many infants are born with congenital birth defects a very serous one is spina bifida (incomplete closure of the spine)....
  • A Tissue Engineer Sows Cells and Grows Organs

    07/10/2006 10:32:57 PM PDT · by neverdem · 14 replies · 682+ views
    The Treasonous NY Times ^ | July 11, 2006 | ANN PARSON
    WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Inside the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine’s spacious new headquarters here, when asked how many siblings he has, Anthony Atala gives a long gentle laugh instead of a reply. Just to have shared that he was born in Peru and comes from a large family is more than he normally divulges about his personal life to journalists. But asked about his work with urothelial cells — the cells that line the bladder, ureter and urethra — Dr. Atala bends forward and talks a blue streak. Which might be expected of a urologist and tissue engineer who...
  • Straight Out of Science Fiction: Organs Engineered in a Lab [1st total organ regeneration]

    04/03/2006 6:17:44 PM PDT · by AntiGuv · 61 replies · 1,436+ views
    ABC News ^ | April 3, 2006 | Joy Victory
    April 3, 2006 — The news is being hailed as a medical milestone: Several years after receiving new bladders engineered entirely in a laboratory, seven young patients are all still healthy. It marks the first long-term success of total-organ tissue regeneration, an area of medicine that until now was more the stuff of science fiction than clinical reality. Dr. Anthony Atala, the director of the Institute for Regenerative Medicine at Wake Forest University in North Carolina, reports in tomorrow's issue of the medical journal The Lancet on the success of the new procedure, which was performed on children born with...
  • On a Scaffold in the Lab, Doctors Build a Bladder

    04/03/2006 9:51:04 PM PDT · by neverdem · 9 replies · 461+ views
    NY Times ^ | April 4, 2006 | LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN
    Bladders created in the laboratory from a patient's own cells and then implanted in seven young people have achieved good long-term results in all of them, a team of researchers reported yesterday in a medical journal. It takes about two months to grow the new bladder on a scaffold outside the body. After implantation, the engineered bladder enlarges over time in the recipient. The researchers say they expect that the new bladder will last a patient's lifetime, but the longevity will be known only as the children grow older. The hope is that someday the experimental reconstruction procedure will be...