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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: brain researchers + stem + research  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)


ABC News
Stem Cell Breakthrough Opens Door to Further ALS Research
eFluxMedia -
Using the cell reprogramming technique, researchers have the chance to study the brain cells that degenerate in patients with Lou Gehring?s disease, ...
Cell Changes May Help Lou Gehrig's Research FOXNews
Scientists create first personalized stem cells in ALS patients Los Angeles Times
Scientists report a breakthrough in stem cell production Boston Globe
Seattle Times - HealthNews
all 127 news articles »
Eating fish may thwart "silent" brain damage
Reuters -
In addition, the researchers note, the lack of a protective effect from fried fish may stem from the fact that foods like fish burgers and fish sticks are ...
Two Stanford Faculty Will Benefit from Keck Awards
MarketWatch -
Last year, his research group demonstrated the ability to genetically engineer brain cells, called neurons, so that they could be selectively turned on in ...
Software a 'boot Camp' for the Brain
PC World -
Scanlon pointed to recent research conducted on London taxi drivers. Scientists at University College London scanned drivers' brains and found they had a ...

Canada.com
Brain Cells Made From Skin of 80-Year-Olds With Lou Gehrig's
Bloomberg - Jul 31, 2008
The Harvard Stem Cell Institute, where Eggan works, has spent about $100000 on newspaper advertisements asking young women to donate their eggs for research ...
Disease-specific Stem Cells From Human Skin Cells Science Daily (press release)
Skin cells could help with treatment of Alzheimer's guardian.co.uk
Fritz family spearheading drive to Tiffin Advertiser Tribune
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Boosting Hope For Cancer Sufferers
Voxy, New Zealand -
Dr Ian Hermans heads the Malaghan Institute Vaccine Research group and is currently overseeing a phase I clinical trial for glioma, an aggressive brain ...
Invitrogen Licenses Stem Cell Line from Buck Institute
MarketWatch - Jul 30, 2008
Invitrogen offers researchers more than 1200 products tailored to various parts of the stem cell research workflow for embryonic and adult stem cell ...
Stem cell czar: UM researcher leads alternative effort MiamiHerald.com
all 58 news articles »  IVGN
Adult Stem Cells Activated In Mammalian Brain
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 24, 2008
One focus of stem cell research is transplantation, which entails injecting into the body healthy cells that may or may not genetically match the patient. ...
Adult stem cells from brain more promising for treatment Fresh News
all 17 news articles »
Brighter Smiles: Can teeth save lives?
Amesbury News, MA -
Each of us has unique and irreplaceable stem cells within the dental pulp of our teeth. As research emerges these cells will become more and more useful to ...
New initiatives in place to stem brain drain
Business Daily Africa, Kenya - Aug 1, 2008
It reflects the growing recognition of the importance of higher education and research to national development. I believe that no country can achieve its ...
Source: Google News

Identification of human brain tumour initiating cells -
SK Singh, C Hawkins, ID Clarke, JA Squire, J Bayani … - Nature, 2004 - Mass Med Soc
... it is possible to target adult stem cells for ... In the meantime, this growing field
of research is primarily ... Identification of human brain tumour initiating cells ...

CANCER RESEARCH: Mutant Stem Cells May Seed Cancer -
J Marx - Science, 2003 - sciencemag.org
... Researchers have identified what they call "cancer stem cells" in blood cancers,
such as leukemias, and in breast and brain cancers. ...

" Turning Brain into Blood"--Clinical Applications of Stem-Cell Research in Neurobiology and … -
MAS Moore - New England Journal of Medicine, 1999 - content.nejm.org
Volume 341:605-607, August 19, 1999, Number 8. Next Next. "Turning Brain into Blood" ?
Clinical Applications of Stem-Cell Research in Neurobiology and Hematology ...

[BOOK] Language, Cognition, and the Brain: Insights from Sign Language Research -
K Emmorey - 2002 - books.google.com
... Emmorey, Karen. Language, cognition, and the brain : insights from sign language
research / Karen Emmorey. p. cm. Includes bibliographical ...

Paradoxical functional facilitation in brain-behaviour research: A critical review -
N Kapur - Brain, 1996 - Oxford Univ Press
... between the clinician/researcher and a patient; secondly, it ... to be overlooked in
clinical and research contexts. ... Monkeys with split-brain lesions that involved ...

[BOOK] Brain Matters: Translating Research Into Classroom Practice -
P Wolfe, P Wolfe - 2001 - books.google.com
... Iam neither a neuroscientist nor a researcher in the ... In the embryonic brain, cells
divide to generate new ... Matters; Translating Research into Classroom Practice ...

BREAKTHROUGH OF THE YEAR: Capturing the Promise of Youth -
G Vogel - Science, 1999 - sciencemag.org
... of accepted wisdom, researchers in 1999 found that stem cells from adults retain
the youthful ability to become several different kinds of tissues: Brain cells ...

Emotion Regulation in the Brain: Conceptual Issues and Directions for Developmental Research -
MD Lewis, J Stieben - Child Development, 2004 - Blackwell Synergy
... peptides, the limbic system coordinates brain stem activity while ... Error-related brain
ac- tivity in obsessive-compulsive ... Psy- chiatry Research, 110, 63?72. ...

EMBRYO RESEARCH: Stem Cells as Potential Nerve Therapy -
S Steghaus-Kovac - Science, 1999 - sciencemag.org
... they report that they've taken embryonic stem (ES) cells ... a type of support cell in
the brain that also ... When the researchers injected the glial cells into the ...

[BOOK] Case Study Research: Design and Methods -
RK Yin - 2003 - books.google.com
... The ideas contained in this book stem from early case study methods courses ... in Denmark,
and initial forays into the method during my career in policy research. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Researchers spur growth of adult brain stem cells

Last Updated: 2006-11-15 14:14:32 -0400 (Reuters Health)

WASHINGTON - Researchers have found a way to spur the growth of neural stem cells in the brains of adult mice with an eye toward harnessing the brain's innate capacity for repair to help people with diseases such as Alzheimer's.

Determining how these stem cells can be deployed to replace cells in mice whose brains are damaged in ways resembling Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and multiple sclerosis in people is the next key step, researchers said. The study, appearing on Tuesday in the Journal of Neuroscience, provides a fresh example of the potential for using so-called adult stem cells to treat illness by replacing cells damaged by disease or injury.

But Paul Patterson of the California Institute of Technology, senior author of the study, said it is important for scientists to continue to study embryonic stem cells as well.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Patterson and colleague Sylvian Bauer injected a natural protein from the body -- leukemia inhibitory factor, or LIF -- into a part of the brain of adult mice where stem cells reside. This fostered the production of up to six times the usual count of adult neural stem cells.

Using a person's own cells, rather than foreign cells, in future regenerative therapies avoids the transplantation of stem cells that the body's immune system might reject.

While this study involved mice, the researchers noted that human adults also harbor neural stem cells in their brains.

The brains of neurodegenerative disease patients appear to try to marshal their own neural stem cells to replace dying cells, but not in the numbers sufficient to do the job.

'KICK IT IN THE PANTS'

"The adult brain does try to repair itself by stimulating its own neural stem cells. But obviously it's not enough. So what we're trying to do here is kick it in the pants and increase the number of neural stem cells," Patterson said in an interview.

Stem cells are a kind of master cell for the body, producing various tissue and cell types. If researchers can figure out how to control them and direct them into changing into specific types as needed, stem cells might be able to replace tissue harmed by illness or injury.

Those taken from days-old embryos are especially malleable, and can produce any cell or tissue found in the body, but so-called adult stem cells also have shown promise.

Some people oppose as unethical the use of cells from human embryos in research, arguing that good research can be done using adult stem cells.

Scientists are trying to develop potential treatments using both kinds of cells.

Patterson said possible human therapies related to his research remain years away. He emphasized the importance of scientists pursuing work on adult and embryonic stem cells as they try to realize the potential of regenerative therapies.

"My own feeling is that lots of different approaches should be tried simultaneously because we don't know which ones are going to be the most successful. So we have to push on all fronts," Patterson said.

Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

 

Merck drug reduces niacin-induced flushing

Last Updated: 2006-11-15 11:40:57 -0400 (Reuters Health)

NEW YORK - Patients who took Merck & Co.'s experimental anti-flushing drug in combination with extended-release niacin experienced significantly less facial flushing discomfort than those taking the niacin alone, according to a study released on Wednesday.

Merck's drug, MK-0524, is designed to limit the flushing side effect associated with niacin, which has been shown to raise levels of HDL, or "good" cholesterol.

MK-0524 was able to reduce flushing without lessening the beneficial effects of the niacin on cholesterol, according to researchers who presented the data at a medical meeting in Chicago.

Flushing, a reddening of the skin accompanied by warming or burning on the face and neck, is a common niacin-induced side effect that often leads patients to discontinue the therapy.

"It has been frustrating because its use has been limited by flushing," said Christie Ballantyne, professor of medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and a co-author of the study.

"This is very encouraging," Ballantyne told Reuters in a telephone interview. He said MK-0524 could help harness the beneficial effects of niacin by making it easier to use for patients and doctors.

Merck hopes to combine MK-0524 with its own extended-release niacin as a stand-alone treatment and later combine the two with Zocor, the company's cholesterol-lowering statin drug.

The U.S. drugmaker is counting on the new medicines to help restore earnings growth hurt by the withdrawal of its Vioxx arthritis drug and generic competition for some of its other medicines. If approved, the new medicines would compete with Kos Pharmaceuticals Inc.'s extended-release niacin, sold as Niaspan.

The 412-patient, 8-week mid-stage study showed that compared with patients taking niacin and a placebo, those on the Merck drug plus niacin significantly reduced flushing discomfort.

During the first week of therapy, patients in the niacin group on average experienced 2.3 days of moderate to severe flushing, compared with 0.8 days for the Merck drug plus niacin group and 0.2 days for the placebo group.

"There was a reduction in overall flushing, but in particular a big reduction in terms of severe and extreme flushing" with the Merck drug, Ballantyne said.

By weeks six through eight of the study, the rate of moderate or severe niacin-induced flushing in patients also treated with MK-0524 was similar to placebo, Merck said.

Ballantyne noted that flushing also went down in the niacin-alone group to 1.1 days of moderate to severe flushing, compared with 0.3 and 0.2 days in the other groups.

"Over time, people tend to tolerate niacin better," Ballantyne said.

The patients on average saw HDL rise by 22.9 percent, while LDL, or "bad" cholesterol, fell by 13.2 percent and triglycerides fell by 26.5 percent. There was no difference in the MRK-0524 plus niacin group and the niacin-alone group.

No serious safety issues arose during the eight-week trial, Ballantyne said. "We have to do much larger studies, but it looked good here," he added.

Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

 
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