Baby Teeth Are A Source Of Stem Cells 53
Makarand writes "A pediatric dentist at the National Institutes of Health
has found that
baby teeth can be a rich source of stem cells.
Just like the stem cells found in embryos from which all organs arise,
the stem cells in baby teeth
could be encouraged to grow into nerve cells, fat cells and the precursors to tooth cells.
This alternative approach to harvesting stem cells from baby teeth
could help researchers to bypass the moral debate over
using embryonic stem cells for research."
The world today.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The world today.... (Score:2)
Re:The world today.... (Score:5, Funny)
Man, she's been running this racket for hundreds of years!
Tooth Fairy = Never seems to age
Stem Cells = Stops the aging process
Baby Teeth = Stem Cells
Re:The world today.... (Score:1)
1) Collect baby teeth
2) ???
3) Profit!
Use teeth instead of blood from the umbilical cord (Score:1, Interesting)
Would using the baby teeth be a cheap alternative to this for parents who can't afford the procedure to save the umbilical blood?
Re:Use teeth instead of blood from the umbilical c (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Use teeth instead of blood from the umbilical c (Score:2)
So... (Score:2, Funny)
So is that the genetic engineering term equivalent to chewing the fat?
Baby parts are good for all kinds of things (Score:4, Funny)
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Oprah
Re:Baby parts are good for all kinds of things (Score:2)
50% Funny
50% Informative
Informative? Uh oh.
Tooth Fairy with stethoscope and labcoat (Score:2)
So will parents be selling babyteeth now? Heck, some heath programs should allow them to save one tooth in a cell bank from where later it could be used to grow spare body parts.
I wonder why its not possible to turn two stem cells into an egg and a sperm, fertilize and continue the cycle for a limitless supply. I understand if its split into an egg and sperm, there will be genetic variations from the original, not to mention it will be like marrying your identical twin, with bad results.. but maybe the
No (Score:3, Insightful)
Not quite. If this turns out to be the case, it will mean that those of us against embryonic stem cell research, where the embryonic stem cells come from a fetus destroyed for this purpose, will have a new, even more devatstating argument.
Re:No (Score:2, Insightful)
Not quite. If this turns out to be the case, it will mean that those of us against embryonic stem cell research, where the embryonic stem cells come from a fetus destroyed for this purpose, will have a new, even more devatstating argument.
Devastating argument against what? The original post was regarding the ability of scientific researchers
Troll, mod parent down. (Score:1)
The Spelling Police -STRIKE!- (Score:1)
Isn't it? You're not very observant! (-:
s/bateing/baiting/
IOW, your spelling is even further off topic. (-:
The central theme is stem cells, one of the justifications for infanticide is the potential to use their stem cells to save others.
Re:No (Score:2)
This Slashdot is a hellhole.
Re:No (Score:1)
Re:No (Score:3, Informative)
Your use of even in that sentence implies that you previously had a moderately "devastating" argument in the first place, and you do not. Maybe this will give you an argument that rises above nonsensical (and you sure could use one of those), but to say it's devastating
Re:No (Score:2)
Of course that's right. I was using the term fetus in its less usual sense of the unborn human in all its stages from fertilized egg to full-term fetus.
the embryo in question is not "destroyed for this purpose".
This is wrong. When a fertilized egg is harvested for the purpose of using its stem cells, the entire blastocyst is used. At that point, the blastocyst is entirely composed of stem cells ("embryonic" stem cells). Aga
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:2)
I see you aren't willing to argue the ethical issues in a serious manner.
"Potential life" is just a ludicrous concept.
Perhaps you should inform the Supreme Court of the United States of America of that.
Re:No (Score:2)
That's because I don't see any here.
> "Potential life" is just a ludicrous concept.
Perhaps you should inform the Supreme Court of the United States of America of that.
The same clowns that decided Bush vs. Gore based on the outcome they wanted. So what court case are you talking about? Do you have a legal reference?
Your implication, of course, is that Scalia et al are the ultimate arbiters of what is and is not ethical. Ironi
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:1)
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:1)
Re:No (Score:2)
Except that your argument doesn't hold water (Score:2)
Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:1, Interesting)
Second, the promise of stem ce
Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:1)
I got all of my information from here [family.org].
My apologies.
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:5, Informative)
Now, you are free to say that is wrong, or even call it abortion, but firstly it is much different than a "traditional" abortion where the embryo is destroyed and/or removed from a woman's uterus, and secondly, I don't see anyone trying to ban fertility clinics.
My personal feeling is that the primary instigators of the anti-stem cell movement are actually against stem cell research because they view it as playing God and meddling in affairs we have no right to. I respect that opinion, but to disguise it as protecting the lives of "innocent children" is duplicitous.
Also, stem cell research has only been going on in a real fashion for a couple of years now, and it is one of the most promising leads in medicine and science, both for it potential to repair people and to understand how life works -- two of the most important things we do as humans. It has shown incredibal potential in laboratory animals, and the fact is it takes time to develop treatments for humans precicely because of the ethical questions in human testing, and the care researchers take to insure they are not placing their test subjects in undue risk. To write it off because it hasn't saved anybody's life yet is short sighted and naive.
Incedentally, and totally off topic, I actually think life begins well before conception, and that every cell in every creature is alive, and a beautiful mystery of the universe, including gammetes. However, this doesn't stop me from eating meat or vegtables, killing incects, taking antibiotics, using birth control, or supporting the rights of women to have abortions. The question is, when does human life begin, and the only things I am pretty sure of are that it isn't before conception or after birth. I suspect it is not particuarly close to either one of those extremes, though.
Death is a natural part of life (the last part...), and even killing: we kill plants and animals to eat and stay alive, we kill animals and bacteria that try to kill us, we step on countless incects without realizing it, untold numbers of animals die as roadkill because they don't know better and we don't think it is important enough not to build highways, and we kill each other for a variety of reasons. While I am all about keeping killing to a minimum, at the end of the day the only thing I really care about is that the human species doesn't die, and to that end I also think that we should try to stop killing born people before we worry to much about the unborn, or the non-human/non-sentient.
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:1)
Third, I do not see it as meddling in the afairs of God. This is good research, and if it is viable, is good. So do many others. The place where the "playing God" comes into effect is stuff that is not essentially fesable yet, like genetic manipulations, or cloning. Both raise huge ethical questions that can be reasoned outside of using any theological argument.
To address the off topic portions: when I s
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:1)
But I see the process of fertilization as only important in a rather clinical/genetic sense. The fusion of an egg and sperm does produce something genetically distinct from the predecesors, but every
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:2)
Someone I know once said he thought that abortion should be allowed up until the child is about age 12. That way, if you get a dud, you can abort it and try agai
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, I have a hard time thinking of something without a brain as a human being. An anencephalic baby, for example, seems like a failed attempt at a human. So, a blastula, whether implanted or not, even in the early stages of differentiation, can't be a person, even if it's composed of human tissue.
Before the brain is formed (~30 days), I don't really have a problem with abortion. Regrettable, certainly, but it's not murder or anything like that.
I don't know what
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:1)
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:2)
Uh, no. You shed millions of live cells every day. Each one of them has your complete genetic code, and is definitely alive for at least a while. Are each of them human? In theory, they could be used to generate a clone of you - should you live in a vacuum bag and preserve all these potential people?
You cut off the hand and it is still a h
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:1)
Now lets apply this to the current topic. Killing unborn fetuses or embryos(it does not matter in this case) is
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:2, Insightful)
Then your biology teachers were remarkable ignorant. All life is constantly transforming. Organisms grow and die, changing size and shape (sometimes radially - think catepillar to butterfly) along the way.
On the cellular level, single cells spilt in two. In some organisms two cells merge into one, or two cells swap DNA. Cells differentiate.
Everything changes. That's why today, life is more than a puddle of primordial uck
Re:Stem Cell Uses and Origions (Score:2)
Counter-argument 1: "What do you mean by "conception"? At the climax of the mating ritual? When the sperm and egg meet? When the zygote splits for the first time? When the zygote implants in the womb's wall? Where are the funerals, then, for miscarriages & zygotes that just don't catch?"
Counter-argument 2: "Human life begins when the child enters this world, at the moment of birth.
Procurement of children's teeth. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Procurement of children's teeth. (Score:2)
And the teeth harvesting would be done in ethical and enviromentaly friendly way.