Stem Cell Injections Pioneering Step Forward? 359
sanspeak writes "Indian Doctors at All India Institute of Medical Sciences have performed a radical new operation of sorts by pioneering the method of stem cell injections. Ishika Gupta, a seven month old girl child who was suffering from cardiac myopathy, was treated by injecting stem cells into her heart from bone in her own leg. AIIMS has marked a global first in pioneering stem cell medicine by the "injection method''." From the article: "There will now be a national stem cell centre at AIIMS which will coordinate the research and its applications. The statistics speak for themselves. After six months, 56% of the affected (dead muscle) area injected with these cells had shown improvement." Additional details on this therapy available from the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel and Medical News Today.
Not a general solution..... (Score:5, Informative)
The problem with this approach is that often, they really do not know what cells they are injecting. Sure they are harvesting cells from the bone marrow which do contain some stem cell populations. But here is the deal: These cells are already partially differentiated. They are not totipotent. Certainly there will be some applications where you can take partially differentiated cells and inject them into some systems that will show positive results, such as the cardiac improvements observed in these studies. However, this will not be generalizeable to other disorders such as vision loss or other degenerative diseases.
Not only adult stem cells -- RTFA... (Score:5, Insightful)
Although the U.S. article identified the applicability of stem cells harvested from (adult) bone marrow and other sources, the Indian article discusses the successes achieved from utilizing umbilical cord stem cells...
Re:Not only adult stem cells -- RTFA... (Score:2, Redundant)
I'm not sure the point you're trying to make, but the only restrictions in the US are on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research. Not adult or umbilical. And even embryonic research is still allowed without federal funding.
Re:Not only adult stem cells -- RTFA... (Score:2)
umm... you may be unsure of the point I'm trying to make, if you assume that I was addressing the funding of stem cell research. I wasn't.
You're correct in pointing out the nature of the federal funding restrictions. However, I wasn't addressing that issue. The OP framed up the issue in terms of adult stem cells; I pointed out that the Indian articles weren't discuss
Re:Not only adult stem cells -- RTFA... (Score:2)
as far as I know, such research cannot be done in ANY FACILITY THAT RECEIVES FEDERAL FUNDING at all whatsoever.
That is false. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not only adult stem cells -- RTFA... (Score:2)
They (umbilical cord cells) are also partially differentiated stem cells and are likely very close to those cell populations that are found in bone marrow.
References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:4, Insightful)
But for those who still don't get it:
- There isn't a "ban" on any kind of stem cell research in the US. There is a restriction on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research - entities are still free to perform embryonic stem cell research (see California's recent US$3 billion bond initiative to support such research in the state)
- The Bush administration is the first administration to allow any federal funding at all for embryonic stem cell research. Granted, this is partly due to timing, but it's still a point of information.
- When is an embryo "life"? At some arbitrary time? When it's in a woman's womb? When it's "wanted" by someone as the product of actions to create a child? When and how does it become life? What's the magic cutoff? When and why is it ok to destroy it? When it can exist on its own? What does "exist on its own" mean? I'm not saying any of these things necessarily should preclude embryonic stem cell research, and indeed, federal funding for it. But doesn't it seem that those ethical questions should be addressed or at least considered? It may well be that society collectively decides that the benefit outweighs ethical concerns. But bear in mind, too, that farming more developed human life for research would no doubt yield untold answers to questions that might hold great benefit. Does that mean we should do it? If not, why is that any different? Scientifically, it would seem clear that it's a life the second the embryo comes into being...
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:3, Insightful)
People can't even be bothered to donate their organs for transplants. You think that people who would never have had an abortion otherwise are going to line up to give up their embryo?
It doesn't matter if its "music makes people kill people" "video games makes people kill people" or "stem cell research makes people kill people" it still shows a serious disconnect with reality, whether through ignorance or through pushing an agenda (religious or not)
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
At any rate, if an embryo were human life, every bit as valuable as our own, and killing them were legal (as it is now), I can see how a lot of people would have qualms about havesting aborted fetuses for "scrap parts."
Donating your organs is done by your consent. And, presumably, either you died by natural causes or an investigation to bring the responsible party to justice has begun.
Anyways, this issue has nothing t
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2, Interesting)
seems to me the question has already been answered decades ago. stem cell research, just like gay marriage, is nothing more than a buzzwor
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:5, Insightful)
It's like the death penalty. Both sides make their points, and it comes down to the values of society as a whole, and the price its members are willing to pay for the sort of society in which they wish to live.
The consensus of society is that it's okay to delete those "couple of cells", because the needs of the rest of us do indeed outweigh those of the embryo.
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2, Interesting)
Peter Singer addresses these concerns in some of his books, including the excellent `the president of good and evil` (about Bush) and `Writings on an ethical life`. His conclusion in the former is that Bush is inconsistant - he seems to value the `life` of an embryo above the lifes of Iraqi civilians, for instance.
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
He's said that people aren't people until after they've experienced life. And indeed, what's the difference between the 7-month fetus inside and the 7th month early birth outside?
You need to look at that argument more carefully. (Score:4, Insightful)
If more lives are saved than lost, what do you care if a few embryos were harvested for this treatment.
Re:You need to look at that argument more carefull (Score:2)
Um, yes, that's kind of the converse of the point I was making.
I don't have any problems with my own logical consistency, here, as I support both, for the reasons you (and I) stated.
If more lives are saved than lost, what do you care if a few embryos were harvested for this treatment.
I don't. Did I ever say I was opposed to embryonic stem cell resear
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
Iraq reclaimed territory it's people had believed to have been stolen from their nation long ago. It is for that we have been bombing them for over a decade and had these sanctions imposed to begin with. Make no mistake, we have killed far more Iraq
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
I thought about specifically addressing this in my reply, because I thought it almost certain that you'd say this. First of all, the sanctions were imposed by the UN proper. And I don't really have time to write a dissertation here on slashdot on this topic, but let's just shorten it up and say that continuing sanctions and keeping with the status quo was presented as the desirable option by opponents of the Iraq action. Therefore, the sanctions would have con
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
In which case, you still can't compare the two, because with embryotic stem cells, the embryos themselves are the "target" of destruction, wherea
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, this is absolutely relevant given the Bush administrations limits on funding for stem cell research. Research laboratories are leaving the US to establish themselves in other countries so that they may continue and the science in this country is suffering because of it.
- There isn't a "ban" on any kind of stem cell research in the US. There is a restriction on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research - entities are still free to perform embryonic stem cell research (see California's recent US$3 billion bond initiative to support such research in the state)
I have news for you: Most biomedical research funding for basic science comes from the Federal government and is taxpayer supported. Thus, elimination of funding is a tacit ban.
- The Bush administration is the first administration to allow any federal funding at all for embryonic stem cell research. Granted, this is partly due to timing, but it's still a point of information.
Not true. The bush administration is the first administration that has said anything specific about it. Stem cell research has been going on for quite some time. It has just not been an emotional or religious issue until it became politicized.
But doesn't it seem that those ethical questions should be addressed or at least considered?
I absolutely agree with you here as will most scientists. But the solution is not to prevent progress by placing arbitrary, political and religiously motivated limits on scientific progress. People are dying today and living compromised lives because of diseases that may be helped by stem cell research. And no, embryonic stem cell research is not about killing babies or farming developed humans.
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
Being at a large public research university, I'm more than aware of the status of federal funding.
But to say it's "banned" is still inaccurate, number one, and number two, this article wasn't talking about anything related to embryonic stem cell research. (Yes, I realize the detached effect it can still have on the establishment o
Try, try, again. (Score:3, Informative)
The value of adult stem cells has been shown over and over again. The value of embryonic stem cells has never been shown and, in fact, embryonic stem cells cause all sorts of havoc when injected into another individual. Havoc like sudden cancers caused by the embryonic cells n
Re:Try, try, again. (Score:2)
Not true. There's a restriction on funding to the lines that are already there. The federal government still pours millions, maybe even billions, of dollars every year into embryonic stem cell research through NIH grants, CDC grants, and even Department of Defense and US Army grants.
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:3, Informative)
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
But I guess I should know better.
And yeah, two responses posted to something in a slashdot thread? Wow, sure is fishy! That must invalidate the argument!
...
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:5, Interesting)
No, no institute which recieves federal funding FOR ANYTHING can conduct such research. There are not many research facilities that aren't recieving federal funding for at least ONE project. This is effectively a ban.
"- The Bush administration is the first administration to allow any federal funding at all for embryonic stem cell research. Granted, this is partly due to timing, but it's still a point of information."
It is called a Red Herring, it is a rhetorical device along similar lines to the subject at hand (that Bush has banned embryonic stem cell research in any facility that receives federal funding for ANY type of research) designed to distract you from the actual topic and lend pseudo-logical strength to an argument.
"- When is an embryo "life"? At some arbitrary time? When it's in a woman's womb? When it's "wanted" by someone as the product of actions to create a child? When and how does it become life? What's the magic cutoff? When and why is it ok to destroy it? When it can exist on its own? What does "exist on its own" mean? I'm not saying any of these things necessarily should preclude embryonic stem cell research, and indeed, federal funding for it. But doesn't it seem that those ethical questions should be addressed or at least considered? It may well be that society collectively decides that the benefit outweighs ethical concerns. But bear in mind, too, that farming more developed human life for research would no doubt yield untold answers to questions that might hold great benefit. Does that mean we should do it? If not, why is that any different? Scientifically, it would seem clear that it's a life the second the embryo comes into being..."
Scientifically the cells are alive before they ever join to become a fertilized egg. Scientifically each of the millions of skin cells each of us has die everyday are life. We kill living cells when we mow our lawns or take anti-biotics.
Scientifically moral and ethical issues do not exist, it is people who create these artifical constructs. Humans attribute a uniqueness or addional value to their own lifeform.
However, since this ignorance is not likely to change soon we can consider natures answer. Nature has created a reference point for us, it exists in all complex lifeforms. It is at this point that multiple simple lifeforms can be considered a complex lifeform. It is called birth. Of course if something is raised entirely artifically (which we can't do now with humans) we can roughly call it at a full development term (9months for humans).
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:3, Interesting)
Does that mean premature babies aren't alive?
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:3)
1) Usefull because it gets around Bush restrictions, by not using embryonic stem cells.
2) But not a general purpose solution, since adult stem cells are partially differentiated.
He pointed out himself that this would not have been affected by the Bush policy - you didn't need to remind him. But he reitterated the fact that while there is much possible use for adult stem cells, there is much more potential for e
Re:References to Bush are utterly irrelevant (Score:2)
Re:Not a general solution..... (Score:2, Troll)
a) Bush Administration is the first administration to Federally fund stem cell research
b) This is further proof that the Bush Administration's stance was correct, fetal stem cell research is not necessary. In fact, every success I have read about in the past year has been non-fetal stem cells.
c) Please go educate yourself....thank you.
d) your point on them not knowing is potentially accurate and a good point, although it's very likely they "extracted" "tested" "re-inserted"
Re:Not a general solution..... (Score:2)
Re:Not a general solution..... (Score:2, Insightful)
One does not have to be religious to be concerned with the harvesting of embryos to gain use of their stem cells.
The Idiocy of Preconception (Score:5, Informative)
(1) The Bush Administration does not have a "religiously imposed dogma on science and progress". There is a significant segment of the American population that is concerned about scientists initiating the process of conception for the sole purpose of ripping apart the component stem cells while receiving federal funding to do so. Corporations and universities are welcome to continue studying embryonic stem cells, just not while using federal research grants.
(2) Unlike the aformentioned Embryonic Stem Cells, this process is another form of Adult Stem Cell research, which is using the patient's own stem cells to culture and augment existing organs. There has never been any political problems with this branch of stem cell research, and the Bush Administration has advanced this research alternative several times as the preferred path.
(3) Bone Marrow has long been known to be a source of red blood cells as well as muscle stem cells. If they are partially differentiated as marrow cells, they are still in the same family as cardiovascular muscles, and thus are a prime candidate for this type of injection research. It would be like taking neurons from the brain and injecting them into the spinal column, to see if the cells can merge and augment the spinal tissues.
Part of the problem of degenerative diseases is that there is a genetic problem with the adult, so transplanting cells with the same genetic makeup within the same adult will not magically create a missing protein... that is where we need to initiate aditional research with inter-adult stem cell research, and proceed from there.
Re:The Idiocy of Preconception (Score:3, Informative)
Ummmm. A significant portion of the population would disagree with you here.
There is a significant segment of the American population that is concerned about scientists initiating the process of conception for the sole purpose of ripping apart the component stem cells while receiving federal funding to do so.
I understand and respect that concern. What we need is discourse and education on the part of the
Re:The Idiocy of Preconception (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, really? [news-medical.net]
Re:Not a general solution..... (Score:5, Insightful)
I have come very close to breaking this rule in this threat, and modding as many root posts as I can 'off-topic'. Instead, I am going to post the following little diatribe:
We're witnessing a medical miracle here, guys - and all you asshats can do is argue politics! Bush this, bush that, fetus this, abortion that - sort it out on Usenet, or on some YRO thread. Can we please talk about the technology, here? This is an amazing triumph of technology over the limitations of nature; something that can potentially save millions of lives - and just as importantly, restore millions more to full capacity from severely disabled states! We're talking longevity, health, disease eradication, all the quality-of-life improvements that have allowed further progress in the past two centuries. We're talking about influences over the next MILLENIUM of human prograss, and all we're doing is squabbling about politics that are potentially irrelevant in 4 years, and almost certainly irrelevant in 20. WHAT IS WRONG WITH YOU PEOPLE!?
This is future-of-humanity stuff, here. This political whining is about minor details in the grand scheme of things, and we'll work them out sooner or later. Get a grip and get a little perspective.
Re:Not a general solution..... (Score:3, Insightful)
And IMO one's side's arguments (because stem cell research hasn't TOTALLY STOPPED that means the arbitrary restrictions must be OK) spur a lot of responses.
stem cell harvesting (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:stem cell harvesting (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:stem cell harvesting (Score:5, Informative)
-B
Thanks! (Score:2)
-Daniel
Re:stem cell harvesting (Score:2, Interesting)
The companies harvesting cord blood are doing so beca
Re:stem cell harvesting (Score:4, Insightful)
Human life should not be saved at the cost of human life....(lest one day poor humans will be harvested to keep the powerful immortal)
Re:stem cell harvesting (Score:3, Insightful)
So, then committing troops to battle, no matter for what cause, shouldn't be done?
I'm not a supporter of the current administration's colonial policies, but what about WWII?
Should we not have intervened to stop the Nazi domination of Europe and the wholesale slaughter of Jews, Slavs and Gypsies?
Your comment is just wrong and ill-informed.
Re:stem cell harvesting (Score:3, Interesting)
Preemptive strike (Score:5, Insightful)
- This article isn't talking about embryonic stem cells, so any references to the Bush administration embryonic stem cell policy are utterly irrelevant
But for those who still don't get it:
- There isn't a "ban" on any kind of stem cell research in the US. There is a restriction on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research - entities are still free to perform embryonic stem cell research (see California's recent US$3 billion bond initiative to support such research in the state)
- The Bush administration is the first administration to allow any federal funding at all for embryonic stem cell research. Granted, this is partly due to timing, but it's still a point of information.
- When is an embryo "life"? At some arbitrary time? When it's in a woman's womb? When it's "wanted" by someone as the product of actions to create a child? When and how does it become life? What's the magic cutoff? When and why is it ok to destroy it? When it can exist on its own? What does "exist on its own" mean? I'm not saying any of these things necessarily should preclude embryonic stem cell research, and indeed, federal funding for it. But doesn't it seem that those ethical questions should be addressed or at least considered? It may well be that society collectively decides that the benefit outweighs ethical concerns. But bear in mind, too, that farming more developed human life for research would no doubt yield untold answers to questions that might hold great benefit. Does that mean we should do it? If not, why is that any different? Scientifically, it would seem clear that it's a life the second the embryo comes into being...
(Note: No, I am not anti-abortion, but do think we should acknowledge that abortion isn't just a "woman's choice" or a "medical decision" (unless it is a decision in relation to the safety of the mother). It is, essentially, the state sanctioned ability to end a life when it is not wanted by the mother. Let's at least acknowledge what we're doing instead of hiding it under the blinders of "choice" or "scientific progress".)
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:5, Informative)
But this kind of cutting edge research needs gov't funding for several reasons: it's very expensive; it's long term (too much so to attract enough private money); and the federal government can make a big difference in funding if it chooses to.
The Bush administration is the first administration to allow any federal funding at all for embryonic stem cell research. Granted, this is partly due to timing, but it's still a point of information.
Wrong. Here's citation #1 [msn.com] about Clinton's support of stem cell research, and here's citation #2 [cnn.com] and #3 [mediamatters.org]. I think that Slate, CNN, and ABC are generally trustworthy.
And it would be nice if people stopped clouding the issue with abortion arguments. While there are some similarities, the analogy breaks down very quickly, and argument by analogy is generally suspect. Oh, and BTW, here's an ABC article [go.com] with some interesting statistics on ESR, including about 60% support for both ESR and federal funding of it by US citizens.
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:2)
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:2)
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:4, Informative)
Were the ban merely on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research, it would not be such a problem. The problem is that universities and many drug companies are prevented from doing such research even with independent funding.
Utterly false. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:4, Informative)
some points (Score:5, Insightful)
however, mother nature has designed us mammals so that for a moment in time, 2 lives are interconnected biologically, and then, 2 lives are socially connected for years
what this means is that you can not consider either the rights of the fetus or the rights of the mother in a vacuum and consider yourself to be moral or ethical
therefore, to fall 100% on the side of fetal rights is to basically consider a woman to be nothing but a breeding pod chamber
and to fall 100% on the side of maternal rights is tantamount to considering infanticide reasonable
but, of course, exactly where you draw the line, exactly when you draw the line: 3 months old fetus... 3 day old fetus... whatever, that becomes the critical question
and the problem is that no outside panel of people, no matter how reasonable or passionate about the issue, can decide the issue to satisfaciton on each individual case
there is, however, one person who can make such a passionate, reasonable decision: the mother
it seems that the anti-abortion crowd thinks women are all out having one night stands at raves and then aborting a month later and going to another rave to have one night stands the same night
as if women don't have any feelings about the fetus?! why do anti-abortionists have such a dim view of women?
so let the mother decide, and the mother ALONE decide, and all of us hyperconcerned but UNINVOLVED third party members should learn to BUTT OUT
this is the ONLY moral and ethical stand you can take on abortion: the mom decides, no one else can possibly have a say
is it superior to force a woman to have a child she does not love with no father there to support it?
are we only in the business of punishing women for acts of sex outside of marriage? what about the man's responsibilty?
the more you examine the issue, the more you realize anti-abortion stances are simply anti-women
let the mother decide, it's her body, and you cannot assume she doesn't care about the fetus, unless you have some sort of psychological problem with women
Re:some points (Score:2)
Re:some points (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, there is the argument that women who don't want to have a baby could give the baby up for adoption. In which case, the "rights" of the fetus and the "rights" of the mother are not impugned too greatly.
I think moral questions shoud be answered without the word "rights" because generally it's a question of whether or not a person or group should be granted the "right" to commit some act.
If it's morally acceptible, one should be allowed to do it. If it's morally unacceptible, then the government has
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:2)
- There isn't a "ban" on any kind of stem cell research in the US. There is a restriction on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research - entities are still free to perform embryonic stem cell research (see California's recent US$3 billion bond initiative to support such research in the state)
Saying that there is no ban on embryonic stem cell research is like saying the federal government didn't requi
Sorry, but I don't agree (Score:3, Informative)
[...]
There exist only a bare handful of labs who can afford to lose government funding. When the government says "Do this or you'll lose your federal funding", a PI can either do what the government says or close up shop--which means losing years of research, losing his livelihood, and firing a group of hig
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:2, Interesting)
1. When is an embryo "life"? Moral Question
2. At some arbitrary time? Repeat of qustion 1
3. When it's in a woman's womb? Repeat of question 1
4. When it's "wanted" by someone as the product of actions to create a child? Repeat of question 1
5. When and how does it become life? Repeat of question 1
6. What's the magic cutoff? Repeat of question 1
7. When and why is it ok to destroy it? Legal Question
8. When it can exist on its own? Irelivent or just another repe
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, you may not care about the OP's position on abortion, but the ethical issues s/he raises wrt embryonic stem cell research are the same ethical issues surrounding abortion. (Note that I didn't say political issues... the "right to choose" issues are primarily political, not ethical, in nature.)
By identifying that s/he is not necessarily anti-abortion, the OP simply soug
Re: the abortion issue (Score:2)
Somehow, the issue of abortion has changed from the actual basis of the Supreme Court decision into something else entirely. The reasoning behind the decision in Roe v. Wade is that what happens between a Doctor and a patient is and ought to be a private matter.
Now, one could very easily argue that the Constitution of the United States does not guarantee one's privacy and I can agree that there is no privacy right enshrined in the Constitution or any of the Amendments, including the Bill of Rights. Certai
So it's ok to destroy it at any other time? (Score:3, Interesting)
That also means that a baby grown outside of the womb has no protections.
That also means we can farm developed fetuses for destructive research that might yield great benefit. You could even go further and grow them beyond any arbitrary period (e.g., 9 months for example). Since they've never been "born", and have never been wanted by a parent, it's not a "life" by your definition. And if such research could hold untold answers to questions and benefit for mankind, why
Re:Preemptive strike (Score:2)
I've noticed that as a tactic on Talk radio. When the calls start slipping off, just meniton Hillary. You'll get all the detractors coming out in droves.
Injecting new powers (Score:5, Funny)
personal experience (Score:5, Informative)
I didn't have to have long needles stuck into my bone marrow. The worst part was not being able to move my arms for 5 1/2 hours for any reason because of the needles in veins in my elbows.
They got 3 times as much material as they need and I am trying to arrange to have the rest stockpiled in case I need them at some later date. They needed 8 million cells per kilo of body weight for a cross donation, but only 4 million for self-donation.
Re:personal experience (Score:3, Interesting)
apparently it also increases stem cell count in the marrow to the degree that stem cells escape into the peripheral blood.
The docs told me they were stem cells and googling
neupgen stem cell transplant yields similar stories, for example:
http://www.flex.com.au/~kaye/Patexp.html
As my brother's bone marrow is going to be destroyed by chemotherapy, I hope they know what they are talking about.
The BIG mystery to me is how the machine works without twisting up the
Futurama Was Right!! (Score:2)
It's about time (Score:2, Troll)
Re:It's about time (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, kind of funny (not ironic) that research which isn't being funded well can't produce a single cure, whereas the research that _is_ does. Duh.
Royal Oak, 2003 (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/03/06/tech/
or google for royal oak heart stem cell
Can we just stop the FUD... (Score:4, Informative)
BUT stop claiming that the denial of federal funds doesn't make embryonic stem cell research in the US very difficult. Stop claiming that there is no merit to embryonic stem cell research - that is just patently untrue (yes I am a scientist and I have worked with EC but not ES cells). Look up Parkinson's and Diabetes and get a developmental biologist to explain to you why embryonic stem cell research provides hope for a cure to these diseases. Or read NIH's own summary on stem cell research
http://stemcells.nih.gov/info/basics/basics1.asp [nih.gov]
Like I said if you have strong opinions that embryonic cell research is immoral - stand up for yourself and just say so. I respect that much more than trying to trick other people into accepting your agenda with naked FUD.
Nothing against stem cells in general (Score:4, Informative)
And yet again someone missinformed. Bush DID NOT BAN Federal Funding of Stem Cell Research. He banned Federal Funding going to Embryonic Stem Cell Research on new lines. This research used Adult Stem Cells. Something that Federal money can go to.
Re:Nothing against stem cells in general (Score:2)
As for banning research that could help millions, seems all I hear about lately are the stem cells coming from umbilical cords and adult stem cells. Haven't heard anything from any country on positive research using embryonics lately.
Re:Bush's Stupid Policy (Score:2, Redundant)
You've got that wrong. It may not be your fault though, many people have said what you just said - maybe you heard it from them and assumed it was true.
Federal money can't go to stem cell research that doesn't abide by a set of guidelines. THERE IS A LOT OF GOVERNMENT FUNDED STEM CELL RESEARCH IN THE USA RIGHT NOW. It is very common for the government to attach rules to the money it hands o
Re:Bush's Stupid Policy (Score:2)
The thing most people don't realize and some people have a partial grasp is that the federal government funds most of the leading edge research in the U.S.
The federal government does not fund new stem cell research and as a result you have organsizations such as the pentagon which has to fund it in Sweden instead because new cell lines ar
Re:Bush's Stupid Policy (Score:2)
There is some truth to that. But as members of a democratic society, we are free to be motivated by whatever we choose. If I choose to vote according to my faith, I am free to do so. If you choose to vote according to a magic eight ball, you are free to do so. If you choose to vote according to what you view i
Re:so thanks to bush (Score:2)
How so? Please elaborate. I didn't know that it was against the law to privately fund this type of research in the US. Or, like California did, publically fund it.
Another question: Are Zonk and Mike Sims brothers?
Re:so thanks to bush (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:so thanks to bush (Score:2)
I think science is fairly sure that conciousness, which is really what we are talking about here, is unlikely to begin until the brain has developed which doesn't happen until well after conception takes place.
Re:so thanks to bush (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:so thanks to bush (Score:2)
I am not sure of a lot of things but unless you can prove that something is the case it's pointless taking it into account or letting it influence your decision making one way or another.
Human life is valuable to other humans, we ar
Re:so thanks to bush (Score:2)
The key word here being think. And no I don't think conciousness is what we are talking about. I'm talking about life period. If conciousness is your defining characteristic of being worthy of living then you have to decide what level of conciousness.
If you truly want to minimize the life destroyed, please kill yourself now. This will preserve the lives of all the animals and vegetables you would normally consume, as well as the millions of microorganisms your body automatically kills each day. Stop ki
Thank you "journalism" (Score:2)
It doesn't have to be true, it just has to be read.
BTW, this would be perfectly legal here in the US.Re:so thanks to bush (Score:2)
Discuss.
Re:so thanks to bush (Score:2)
Thanks to Bush, life won't be killed to benefit other life.
Question...if I discovered that people with a special gene could produce a chemical to be harvested that would make others live forever. Should we harvest that chemical. Now let's say you have that gene. Should we kill you to and all like you to keep others alive longer?
Are you willing to die? If not...than please don't be so ignorant.
What ban? (Score:5, Informative)
There is no outright ban. It is a myth.
Re:What ban? (Score:2)
The history of medical advances in the U.S. has shown again and again that the federal government should be funding as much as it can. 10 billion dollars to research a technology that could start a biotechnological revolution sure seems like a good way to spend the money. The best part is the results belong to the public so advancements are actually accelerated because other resear
Re:What ban? (Score:2)
I work at a university's medical school, which receives hundreds of millions of dollars of research grants and awards each year. I'd say about 50%-60% of that comes from federal funding - NIH, CDC, Department of Defense, and even some from the US Army. The rest comes from private donations - charitable trusts, Amer. Cancer Soc, etc.
We're talking million
A ban is a possibility. (Score:2)
Re:stop the ban (Score:2, Redundant)
You know, even some atheists like myself tend to think human life is important, and more than a commodity. Assuming that some abortions might be killing actual human beings, then using their tissue might compound the immorality of it. Has nothing to do with god, rather, it's the same reason I don't murder you in the night to harvest your transplantable organs.
But it's more complicated t
Re:There is no ban! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:proof (Score:2)
Please list examples. (Score:2, Troll)
Re:proof (Score:2, Troll)
In the past year i've read a dozen articles on stem-cell successes. ALL have been adult or umbilical.
I have yet to read a single success of embryonic stem cells. Most of what I have heard about them is the tests result in tumors.
Re:big problem (Score:4, Informative)
It should also be noted that the effect is often different than the common conception of tumors. What is seen (mostly in animal trials, since that is were it has mostly been done) is that injected stem cells which, for example, are meant to help the heart instead decide to turn into bone tissue or nerve tissue or something else that shouldn't be there. This certainly qualifies as a tumor, since it is a detrimental and abnormal growth, but it usually rather different than the kind of malignancy most people think of as cancer.
Adult stem cells from bone marrow are already partially differentiated so they almost always only become cells related to blood or muscle tissues. Hence the risk of them turning into bone or nerve tissue after injection is considerably reduced.
Ultimately, if the use of embryonic stem cells is to be succesful, it may rely on finding ways to program the cells to evolve in a particular desired direction.