Yes, there have been, however, there have been no clinical trials. We have reason to believe that these therapies work, but we don’t know for sure. In any case, there are differences between adult stem cells and embryonic stem cells. Adult stem cells are multipotent, while embryonic stem cells are totipotent. There are valid scientific reasons to **hypothesize ** that embryonic stem cells will have therapeutic uses that adult stem cells will not. However, we can’t get there until the research is unimpeded by politics.
Dallas Hextell is living proof of the healing power of adult stem cells
there. He was diagnosed at eight months with cerebral palsy, which has no
known cure. Fortunately, Dallas’ parents had his umbilical cord blood stored
when he was born. **He was accepted in a clinical trial at Duke University in
July 2007 and was among the first in the country to be intravenously infused
with his own cord blood stem cells to induce healing in his brain. **Soon
after his procedure Dallas’ parents began noticing improvements. Today, with the help of therapists,
Dallas is doing things no one thought possible. He runs, he laughs, and he’s beginning to talk.
“When babies are born, the umbilical cord is generally discarded. This is
partly because pregnant women and many of their doctors are unaware that
life science has demonstrated cord blood cells have immense therapeutic
value.
Increasingly families are educating themselves about cryogenic
storage of their child’s cord blood because they understand recent progress
has revealed it is a safe and ethical source of stem cells for therapeutic
use and the technology is evolving rapidly. These cells can be
cryogenically stored for more than 30 years. It’s a one-time opportunity,”
said David Koos, Chairman and CEO of San Diego-based Bio-Matrix Scientific Group, Inc.
(OTC Bulletin Board: BMSN;
BMSN.us
lifenews.com/bio2818.html
**Rather than using stem cells from embryonic sources, which opens difficult ethical and complicated scientific issues, **scientists have been looking to adult human stem cells, culled from a person’s own body. Adult stem cells are now being cultivated from various tissues in the body – from skin, bones and even wisdom teeth.
At the forefront in this research is a team of scientists from Tel Aviv University and Scripps Research Institute in California.
They recently reported a breakthrough on a new classification system for identifying pluripotent stem cells in human tissue. News about this system recently appeared in the scientific journal Nature.
sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080904102852.htm
So your score should be 70 maybes to 0 because it’s never been allowed to play.
The only response worthy of this statement is this: :banghead:
We’ll have a chance to find out soon enough.
Evil can only beget more evil.
P.S. How come you haven’t mentioned pluripotent stem cells?