Whatever you think of the US government's policy toward embryonic stem cell research, it has caused a major increase in research with other types of stem cells.
I dont see a problem with using embryos, as long as the woman who owns them is ok with it. After all its not a life, its just cells. If its going to save lives or make them better Im all for it.
Quote from: aMbEr_79 on September 25, 2006, 04:18:59 AMI dont see a problem with using embryos, as long as the woman who owns them is ok with it. After all its not a life, its just cells. If its going to save lives or make them better Im all for it.With all due respect, you make two assumptions are questionable: 1) That it's not a life, a statement you can't prove without some arbitrary definition of life; and 2) that a woman owns her embryos, which assumes that a father has no rights to his offspring. Adult stem cells are more promising from what I understand, and they don't carry all that moral baggage. I think scarce resources would be better directed that way.
Quote from: nkviking75 on September 27, 2006, 08:43:33 PMQuote from: aMbEr_79 on September 25, 2006, 04:18:59 AMI dont see a problem with using embryos, as long as the woman who owns them is ok with it. After all its not a life, its just cells. If its going to save lives or make them better Im all for it.With all due respect, you make two assumptions are questionable: 1) That it's not a life, a statement you can't prove without some arbitrary definition of life; and 2) that a woman owns her embryos, which assumes that a father has no rights to his offspring. Adult stem cells are more promising from what I understand, and they don't carry all that moral baggage. I think scarce resources would be better directed that way.I am not a specialist on stem cell research, but US National Institute of Health had following answer on their FAQ list:Why not use adult stem cells instead of using human embryonic stem cells in research?Human embryonic stem cells are thought to have much greater developmental potential than adult stem cells. This means that embryonic stem cells may be pluripotent—that is, able to give rise to cells found in all tissues of the embryo except for germ cells rather than being merely multipotent—restricted to specific subpopulations of cell types, as adult stem cells are thought to be.Of course there is some research ethic issue with using embryonic stem cells, but many countries in the world have allowed their usage on the research.It might be also true that private funding might push research to the faster result, I don't know. However in my opinion there could be more federal funding on the health care and research. The annual federal funding increase for National Institute of Health for has been going down last couple of years at the same as the annual federal funding increase for Department of Homeland Security has been rising to new records. Is this OK...? Now this is getting too political so better to stop.
If organization's name is Christian xxxx, this would automatically make me think that their opinions might be biased and I would think that opinions form National Institute of Health would be more neutral.
Quote from: waitlisted on September 28, 2006, 08:56:14 PMIf organization's name is Christian xxxx, this would automatically make me think that their opinions might be biased and I would think that opinions form National Institute of Health would be more neutral.It would be unfortunate for you to make that assumption. If you go to the link I provided, you'll find reasoned arguments, footnotes so you can do your own follow-up research, and nary a Bible verse in sight. "Christian scientist" is not an oxymoron. It would also be a mistake to assume that scientists are always fair and unbiased, even in a government agency.
Scientists Grow Human BladdersPosted on: Wednesday, 5 April 2006, 06:00 CDT redorbit.comBy Thomas H. Maugh IIIn a major advance toward the development of artificial organs, bladders made by growing a patient's own cells in the laboratory have been successfully implanted in seven children with spina bifida and shown to function for five years or longer, researchers announced today.The achievement, reported online in the medical journal the Lancet, marks the first time that artificial organs more complicated than skin and bone have been implanted in humans. It brings much closer the day when scientists will grow new organs for people who have lost them to disease or injury. Clinical trials of the bladder- building process could begin later this year. The team that invented it is using the same method to grow blood vessels, kidneys, livers and other organs -- some of which have already been implanted in animals.The bladder is a much simpler organ than a liver or a kidney, but the success of the artificial tissues in humans suggests that it may be possible to grow complicated organs and reduce the backlog of patients waiting for replacement organs.An estimated 54,200 Americans develop bladder cancer each year, and treatment often entails removal of the bladder. Others lose their bladders as a result of congenital defects, diseases, accidents, diabetes and heavy metal poisoning.Surgeons now replace the bladder by building a fluid reservoir using tissue from the bowel, but that produces many problems, including re-absorption of toxins, formation of stones, and kidney damage due to pressure buildup in the reservoir.Dr. Anthony Atala and colleagues at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine have been working to overcome this problem by growing bladder cells in the laboratory, then seeding them onto a polymer scaffold shaped like a bladder.They begin by removing a small piece of bladder, about half the size of a postage stamp. The tissue has three layers: muscle on the outside, a collagen supporting layer in the center, and specialized urothelial cells on the inside to hold the urine.The team isolates the muscle and urothelial cells and grows them in the lab for about 30 days. The cells are not stem cells, but "progenitor" cells, which have the capacity to grow only into other bladder cells.Meanwhile, using CT imaging of the patient to determine the size of the bladder, they construct a scaffolding of a biodegradable polymer. The muscle and urothelial cells are seeded onto the exterior and interior of the scaffold and the construct grown in an incubator for another two to three weeks.Surgeons then remove scarred and diseased tissue from the patient's own bladder and use the artificial tissue to rebuild the organ. As the final step, they wrap the new organ in omentum, a membrane from the interior of the abdomen rich in blood vessels that supplies nutrients and oxygen to the tissue until it can grow its own vessels.Keeping the cells alive until they can establish their own blood supply has been the major impediment in past attempts to produce bladders. The omentum seems to have overcome this difficulty, said Dr. Tony Khoury of the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.The study's patients all had spina bifida, the result of a birth defect that leads to incomplete closure of the spine. Their bladder tissue is hard, causing high pressures to build up and be transmitted to the kidney, where they cause kidney damage. They also have urinary leakage.Atala's team transplanted artificial bladders in nine children from 4 to 19 years old. Two of the patients dropped out of the study and could not be followed. In each of the seven patients studied, however, the tissue functioned successfully, ballooning as real bladders do up to 10 times the normal size as it filled, without increasing pressure. The bladders also stopped leakage.The patients were studied for an average of 4.6 years."We have to make sure the vessels last a long time," Atala said. "We've already shown that in animals, and now we have shown it in humans." The technology was developed by Atala when he was at Boston Children's Hospital and that institution holds a patent on the process. The patent was licensed in 2003 to Tengion, Inc. of King of Prussia, Pa.(c) 2006 Cincinnati Post. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.
I think we have a stauffenberg junior.
well, seeing you have all the answers 'student'- i guess there's really no need for discussion on the subject.if i ever want to know anything, i'll ask you.