'Plentiful' Non-Embryonic Stem Cells Found 489
An anonymous reader writes "CNN reports that scientists at Harvard and Wake Forest have discovered a 'plentiful' non-embryonic source for stem cells, as well brain, liver, and bone cell types as well. The cells, found in amniotic fluid, can be harvested without harm to the donor or the donor's unborn child. While there's no proof that amniotic stem cells are as potent as embryonic stem cells, scientists are hopeful that this will be a huge step forward for the field of stem-cell research."
Still human ... ? (Score:4, Insightful)
From what I can gather, the basic issue that most religious folk have to do with stem cell research is that we're mucking around with human lives. Unless you can make this process look as simple as a cheek scraping for human cells (allergy research, for instance) the objections will not abate.
The argument that this cell couldn't have become a baby doesn't quite hold good and has been answered before [slashdot.org] about harvesting eggs from fertility clinics.
So are these cells are still human, but without a potential human, doomed to die when the aminotic fluid drains. Some facts which might not matter to those who have decided all of this to be Playing God.
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It's a good point -- to the public it's all about the perception of the science, not the actual science. I suspect lots of people will see "stem cell" and react immediately. Hopefully lots of other people will be more reasonable.
I don't think there's any way to make it look as harmless as a cheek scraping, though -- from my meagre understanding, there's still a risk involved with going into the amniotic sack - any medics able to comment further?
Re:Still human ... ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Whether you agree with the classification of embryos as people is what the debate should be about. See http://www.gerv.net/writings/foetal-personhood/ [gerv.net] for some pointers
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"Clearly human" cells die every sing
Re:Still human ... ? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm afraid I have to disagree here. The problem is not with stem cell research, or even the fact that it is possible to manipulate a stem cell into becoming a human being, but how you got the cell in the first place.
I fully support stem cell research. I think it is a sin not to. The only problem people like me have with embryonic stem cell research is not the research at all, but the production of the stem cells to begin with. In order to harvest embryonic stem cells (as my feeble mind understands it), an embryo must be coaxed to divide and start to grow. At a certain point, it has to be destroyed to harvest the stem cells. It's that destruction of a growing embryo that is the problem. People like me equate that to an abortion, but it's no longer about women's choice, but experimentation and profit.
Now we can get into a ton of philosophical debates as to when life begins and when an embryo becomes human and such, but this debate goes into so many different directions. If we agree not to harvest embryos for stem cells because they are human, then they must be human when considering an abortion. If an embryo is not human, then why the rub about abortion? This is another reason why the debate gets so heated. There is more at stake than just stem cells.
Most people want embryonic stem cells for one or a combination of three reasons:
1) Bush said not to and it pisses off fundies (these tend to go together)
2) It legally reaffirms that embryos are not human, and thus abortion remains legal
3) They want to stop the suffering humans with diseases that stem cell research promises to cure, and they don't know that stem cells can come from other sources.
This is why other sources must be found. It's not because anyone is right or wrong, but because neither side will ever give up. Will it get to the point where fundies are blowing up research labs and feminists are performing stem cell harvesting with coat hangers? Doubtful, but why have the debate at all when there are other means of harvesting stem cells than to kill a growing embryo? We really can have our cake and eat it too!
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I think this is where it gets pretty dirty... having Michael J Fox and John Edwards (referencing Christopher Reeve) that "cures" are on the way when - to the best of my knowledge and research - *adult* stem cells are the only ones which have actually demonstrated anything useful.
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You're wrong on two counts. 1) The primary concern was that extracting the stem cells would destroy the embryo, not "Playing God". 2) You're also wrong to use the "religious folk" label. People who are non-religious also found that destroying human embryo's for research purposes was a concern. People who were religious argued for the research. Using statement
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Seeing that I am fertile, when I walk into a room with a fertile woman there in lies the potential for a human being.
Just as easily as you can argue that the embryo should be preserved, I can argue that you must let me mate with the woman.
There is no end to this. The argument can be moved further and further from actual human life.
Pointing to the embryo and saying
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Like, I don't know, when a cell with completely unique, diploid genome is created? A cell completely different from gametes that were its origin, yet geneticaly identical (modulo non-lethal mutations) with all cells that will exist in the body of a person which will grow from this one cell?
If we are to establish the dividing line based on knowledge then the conception is the only vi
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Viability? (Score:2)
After I RTFA, the answer is no.
"However, the scientists noted they still don't know exactly how many different cell types can be made from the stem cells found in amniotic fluid. They also said that even preliminary tests in patients are years away."
Or we can keep putting money into embryonic stem cells which have already resulted in _proven therapies that work_
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And thoses would be???? Please name two, here I will make it easy name one.
Since the original poster will never be back the list of proven embryonic stem cell therapies is none. The truth about embryonic stem cell was that since it contained a large amount of possibilities venture capitalists invest huge amounts of money and have shown no possible pay back any time soon, so they started pushing to have the government put
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Treatment derived from stem cells isn't the issue... that's why the debate has been about using different types of stem cells and whether or not they could be used as successfully in research.
Here's a question...
Would you allow your daughter, who suffers from a debilitating, and hideously painful, ultimately fatal disease, to undergo curative treatment deriv
Re:Questions to both sides of the argument (Score:4, Funny)
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Yes, because there is a well-nigh 100% certainty that cure came form adult stem-cell research, not embryonic. So far the only actual cures provided by stem-cell research are from adult stem-cells. Note that this is not because embryonic stem-cell research is illegal or somehow hard to fund. America spends more money on embryonic stem-cell reasearch than anyw
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Without harm... (Score:2, Insightful)
after amniocentesis. Also, the amount of cells in
the volume of fluid that would normally be collected
is likely to be small.
Sounds like no news to me.
Abortions (Score:2)
Regardless of your feelings on abortion, why should it bother anyone for stem cells to be retrieved from aborted fetuses? They are already going to be aborted, we just ought to get stem cells out of it so that we can help more
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Hell and considering how rare viable stem cells are I can see a great business opportunity hear... start baby farming. Get pregnant, abort the little bastard, and get paid for the stem cells. Hells yes... where's my ho.
Ha-ha, but . . . (Score:2)
Harvested without harm??? (Score:2)
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Life is a risk.
If women are already undergoing amniocentesis [netdoctor.co.uk], then the risk has already been taken, so why not get extra value from the resulting fluid ?
I don't think anyone is suggesting that the fluid is harvested on industrial scales.
You Can Be Sure (Score:5, Insightful)
Nice strawman. (Score:2)
My objection to embryonic stem cell use is that it sets a scary precedent - I really don't want to live in a society that believes living beings - even non-viable, merely potential living beings, as a private property and a commercial resource.
This is no different than my opposition to patenting huma
One big problem (Score:2, Informative)
Poking a hole in the uterus of a pregnant woman is not something to take lightly. This article makes it seem like a trvial procedure, which is certainly is not.
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I donated umbilical cord stem cells (Score:4, Informative)
None of the hospitals in my state accept cord blood donations, nor are their any cord or blood banks here. I found only one cord bank that accepts donations from out of state (their name escapes me), and at no charge to my doctor, the hospital, or me. From what I've read, I know that the cord blood stem cells aren't able to be used like embryonic stem cells, but since they were just going to be destroyed anyway, why not donate them?
A better article on New Scientist (Score:3, Informative)
The article on New Scientist [newscientist.com] clearly states that the amniotic stem cells can be taken from the placenta after delivery and placed in cryogenic storage and then replicated easily within 36 hours to become a plentiful source of these cells....
So all the comments about the dangers of taking fluid during pregnancy are mis-informed based on the original link apparently... sounds like bias from cnn editors.
This is a great new discovery and should certainly be explored fully before being discounted because it doesn't involved the destruction of embryos to accomplish new science.
Re:amazing (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:amazing (Score:5, Funny)
Now they can do all the stem cell research they want with no ethical problems. Can't wait 'till the religious wackos try to stop space exploration. The moment they do, God will drop inertialess drives and FTL engines right onto the physicists' laps.
Re:amazing (Score:4, Insightful)
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I could say the same for the "mentally challenged". Should we carve them up as well?
To take it a step further: I remember the Chaivo case a while back where a l
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First, the "problems as to where you draw the line" are so big as to be impossible to overcome.
Second, even if you could draw the line, what makes it ethically reasonable to do that.
Third, it is spelled "per se", not "persay".
Re:amazing (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:amazing (Score:5, Insightful)
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Haven't you noticed that about 95% (I didn't make that number up) of the war in the world currently is caused because of religion? I'm all for Faith, but there's way too much religiopathy today. Time to dial it back a bit.
Re:amazing (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:amazing (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's amazing how people will believe in Miracles if there's a billion-dollar company behind it
Re:The idea that human life begins at conception (Score:3)
There is no scientific definition of when human life starts. Such an idea will always be religious or philosophical.
In that sense the "secular" definition of when human life starts, are the limits we make for legal abortion. Something like 20 weeks.
Re:The idea that human life begins at conception (Score:5, Insightful)
The ethical concerns over stem-cell research are over whether the embryo is sentient, and has a soul. The first is scientific, while the second is religious in nature. We can theorise scientifically that it isn't sentient, since it has not yet developed a brain, and in the absence of evidence showing you can think without a brain we accept this as being as close to true as science get.
Whether it has a soul, however, is a different matter. Religious people can argue that it has a soul from the instant of conception. The idea, however, that something can be non-sentient but still have a soul has a number of ramifications that they don't seem to have fully grasped.
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Umm, no. Legal limits on abortion in the USA are pretty much set at "before labor commences".
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Wrong.
According to what Law? If it's anything less than a law, it's not a fact. Go read a book on existentialism. The line between human and not human is so fuzzy you can't even call it a line. I'm inclined to believe any animal that can feel AND express emotion (and don't say they can't, go talk to a dog for a little while) deserves some of our human rights. An embryo (not a fetus) cannot do that. It is not human. It's
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2) At conception, the genetic structure is uniquely human.
So I think that an embryo would count as human life.
Now, as to whether it is a person is a totally different issue.
Re:Liar (Score:4, Insightful)
When you ask for a definition you're asking someone to put exact borders around an idea and say "everything on this side is x, everything on the other side is not x". If you're talking about a case right on the edge, this degree of precision may be a necessary. For example: is a virus alive? Tough question. But no one seriously asks "is bacteria alive" unless they are being philosophical or unnecessarily obtuse.
As far as your rejection of the analogy, I have to wonder if you know what an analogy is. When something can be agreed by analog, it means that two things are similar, but not the same. So, setting aside your questionable characterization of an embryo as "a group of embryonic cells", your point that an embryo is not a bacteria is rather odd. Of course it's not. If it was the same, it wouldn't be an analog, would it?
It's pretty clear that what is going on is that you are playing the part of a good reactionary. You have, for whatever reasons, a strong emotional attachment to the abortion issue. You see the argument that an embryo is a living human being to threaten your position and so you react. Your logic in the reaction has been pretty poor (as indicated by your unapologetic resort to ad hominem and the CAPS LOCK OF ANGRY ANGRY DOOM(tm)).
1. An embryo is alive. Your response: define life. As I've already shown, this is an unnecessary burden. Your other response: an embryo is not a bacterium. True, but hardly relevant.
2. An embryo is a human being. No response so far. And there can hardly be one. I'm waiting (heart racing, I assure you) for the inevitable my liver/sperm/hair is human response. And this is true, but your hair is not a complete human entity, it's a part of one. Same for liver, blood cells, etc.
In any case, the solution to your apparent philosophical crisis is simply to realize that there is, or can be, a distinction between a human being and a person. That an embryo is technically a human being at the point of conception is pretty much beyond question. It's a living and unique instance of the species homo sapiens. The question is whether human rights should be expanded to all human beings (which is my position) or just to "persons" (yet to be defined). If you read the other Slashdot comments, you can see that there are plenty of people who are happy to have more constrictive definitions of "person" that exclude (for example) the mentally handicapped.
-stormin
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Why lie? That is by no measure a "scientific fact" and you destroy any credibility you may have had by lying in such an obvious fashion.
More to the point, YOU betray your religious leanings by lying like that.
You either don't know the definition of "living organism" or you are the liar yourself. I don't know which is worse.
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No, the funny part is that you think that science does not able to identify:
1) Life. We are not talking about strange, Martian life here, but mammalian life here on earth. I think science has ID'd cells as living, especially when they do things like divide and convert chemicals into energy.
2) Human. A DNA test will c
Buddha nature (Score:2)
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I don't know if you have heard of Aristotle's Form/Matter distinction, but basically, it is this. Matter is the stuff of a thing, and Form is (more or less) how it is arranged. To put it another way, Matter is the material stuff that makes something what it is, and Form is the immaterial stuff that makes it how it is.
So, why is this important to note? Well, for a
Re:The idea that human life begins at conception (Score:5, Interesting)
You think you know all the answers, but you're just as wrong as everyone else.
Re:Ethic issues (Score:4, Insightful)
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Mod parent up !
It is not necessary to interfere with the pregnancy at all in order to gain access to amniotic fluid.
All ethical arguments are moot.
Does my urine have inalienable rights to existence ?
When I hawk up a greeny saying "get out and walk", do the UN guarantee its natural right to use the bus ?
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If someone from the hospital where you were born arrived at your doorstep tomorrow and handed you your aminotic fluid, umbiical cord and placenta, would you
a) Thank them for their considerable trouble
b) Have them arrested
c) Bin the items as quickly as possible
Or any combination of the above?
There are people who eat placentas. They mince it and cook it in a lasange. Should we convict them
Re:Ethic issues (Score:4, Informative)
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Anyone arrogant enough to reject the verdict of the judge or of the priest who represents the LORD your God must be put to death. Such evil must be purged from Israel. (Deuteronomy 17:12)
If a man lies with a male as with a women, both of them shall be put to death for their abominable deed; they have forfeited their lives." (Leviticus 20:13)
A man or a woman who acts as a medium or fortuneteller shall be put to death by stoning; they have no one bu
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I can be an atheist and still think abortion is fundamentally wrong (albeit very convenient for the greater good)
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For what reason?
Also, just being an atheist doesn't make you an ethicist. Atheists can have wacky beliefs too, I'll grant you that.
Re:Ethic issues (Score:4, Insightful)
You are wrong. Ethical systems are individualized first and shared second. One's world view, whether it incorporates a religious viewpoint or not, determines one's ethics. Religion has a huge bearing on individual ethics. The challenge is to communicate and discuss those ethical values across groups of people that may have different world views.
Simply naive! (Score:2)
While it is true that one could theoretically develop an ethical framework without religion, it is simply naive to assume that any ethics system in place in modern society is devoid of a religious influence and therefore ethics and religion are definitely linked together.
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That is simply not the case. From TFA which you clearly didn't read:
Nice troll, though. I'll expect to be hearing this kind of ignorant FUD from Pat Robertson Real Soon Now(tm).
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Unless you just need a cell or two, I would say you need to drain much more that few drops.
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You mean like this [albertmohler.com]?
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Why are you placing a higher value on beings with lower capabilities and prospects then other beings? It seems like you have some sort of personal norm that is keeping you from accepting the fact that we should use the weak to make the strong stronger? Right? I mean... fetuses can't feel anything and it doesn't really matter that they're life and will soon be sentient, if we take that away from them then it's ok...
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For almost all brain dead people on life support, no one set out to "make them brain dead". Something happended, wither an accident or other event, the result of which is that person is now a vegetable on life support.
The only reason this person is alive is that in this case modern medicine is too efficient and in addition to being able to keep a person alive, it is now able to keep a dead persons body animated. Truely
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It would however make for great science fiction if in the future when AI and robotics were more advanced if we kept our celebrities alive using organ transplants, and a robotic shell. That way future generations could enjoy Paris Hilton as much as we do today
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You're being conclusory. Left to its own devices it its natural environment, a child usually results. Or, at least it has done so billions of times before. Show me another way a child results---a diamond left behind a head of cabbage? You assert an embryo is not a child because it supports your own moral preference. I assert an embryo is a child because it supports life and the bests interests of the child. Even if an embryo is not a child (yet), then protecting its interests unti
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You're being conclusory. Left to its own devices it its natural environment, a child usually results.
I'm being factual. The word "child" has a specific meaning, and an embryo is not a child. It's an embryo. It doesn't matter if it might later become a child.
You assert an embryo is not a child because it supports your own moral preference.
No, I'm saying that because an embryo is not a child.
I assert an embryo is a child because it supports life and the bests interests of the child.
That doesn't even make any sense. Is water human because it supports life, and the best interests of humans?
Even if an embryo is not a child (yet), then protecting its interests until it is a child is preferable to subverting its interests for somebody else's selfish indulgence
What if the child that comes from the embryo was to have a miserable life? Wouldn't it be selfish to keep the embryo alive, when you could prevent the suffering of a child by disposing o
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If the vast majority did in fact r
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That is not true. Non-embryonic stem cells have been used successfully for years to cure various conditions. No one has ever cured anything with embryonic stem cells. In fact, embryonic stem cells cause monster tumors.
The argument usually goes that scientists _hope_ embryonic stem cells will prove more effective than non-embryonic ones, and "we won't know until we t
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Tom Caudron
http://tom.digitalelite.com/ [digitalelite.com]
Huh? - who's doing the spin now? (Score:2)
An embryo is not a child. Why do we need an "alternative" to embryonic stem cells anyway? Embryonic stem cells work perfectly well, and are usually considered more effective than non-embryonic cells.
Funny how you don't see the anti-stem-cell people protesting IVF and other fertility programmes, even though they "kill" embryos too.
I'm not sure if you're deliberately trolling, or are just expressing an emotional opinion. Regardless, I think your points deserve a response. And I'm really not trying
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Re:The spin (Score:5, Informative)
An embryo has the capability to develop into a viable child, but even that is not guaranteed.
Mainly because menstruation is the bodys way of expelling unfertilised eggs !It's a good thing you don't have to be a scientist to procreate, otherwise you wouldn't exist.
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You don't have to like it, but the reality is that if embryotic stem cells weren't considered a child, it would be widespread and paid for already, with Congress easily overridding Bush.
I doubt it. A vocal religious minority with strong ties to the government does not make a majority. If most people really believed that strongly about it, abortion would be illegal by now. The thing is that most people don't have strong opinions about stem cell research, as it doesn't really affect them. So, a vocal minority can easily sway the issue. However, abortion affects a lot more people, and most don't want that right taken away from them.
It's a tenuous balance (Score:5, Informative)
I'm not sure that I agree with you about people don't want that right taken from them. Recent surveys show that the majority of Americans find abortion unacceptable for themselves but feel that there is some need for it to be available. Most seem to want to protect the right of others to have abortion.
The following numbers come from recollection - frankly I'm too busy this morning to go look up the actual numbers, but this is pretty close to what I've been reading on this issue:
The number of Americans that think abortion is a bad thing is something like 80+% The number that feel it should be illegal is substantially smaller, but the bottom line is about 10% want it legal under every possible circumstance, about 10% want it illegal in every circumstance, and the other 80% of the population is split just about down the middle with varying circumstances determining the legality.
Essentially about half of the US wants it illegal under some circumstances, and about half of the US wants it legal under some circumstances.
I tire of the meme that a 'religious minority controls the government.' That's crap. If it was true, there are lots of things that would be handled differently.
The fact is that there are a lot of people who disagree with the liberal view that abortion should be legal for all women. Most of those people are not passionate advocates of that position, but when the issue comes up, they stand for what they believe. This is the phenomenon of the "values voters."
The religious minority of which you speak is merely the 'tip of the spear' to speak in military parlance. You see them, the politicians feel them because of their platforms, *and* because of the values voters. Policies are made as a result.
That abortion is still legal in the US shows that there are many near silent people who share your view, and the politicians feel their presence on election day, too.
Respectfully,
Anomaly
Re:the more important question is.... (Score:5, Insightful)
And so you would advocate giving power to a limited few to make decisions for us all?
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Yeah, who ever heard of a "Representative democracy"? Unthinkable!
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