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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: heart + cells + repair  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 490 for heart cells repair. (0.23 seconds) 
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Scientists Achieve Robust Repair Of Injured Heart Muscle
eMaxHealth.com, NC -
These transplanted myoendothelial cells repaired the injured muscle, stimulated the growth of new blood vessels in the heart and reduced scar tissue from ...
Cell-regeneration project at Wake Forest may help to repair human ... Greensboro News Record
all 3 news articles »
First trial in the US to treat heart failure using patient?s own ...
Newspost Online, India - Nov 30, 2008
The one-year study will examine the safety of injecting Cardiac Repair Cells (CRC) and their ability to improve heart function. Participants in the study ...

Current World News
Harvard Scientists Unravel The Secret Of Aging
eFluxMedia - Nov 29, 2008
Their paper published in this week issue of the journal Cell is the latest to draw attention to sirtuins, proteins involved in the aging process. ...
Drugs Reveal Another Possible Cause of Aging Wired News
One Cause of Aging Found, Scientist Say Potentially Reversible eFluxMedia
all 80 news articles »

Javno.hr
Cord Blood Stem Cells May Help Repair Babies' Heart Defects
Bloomberg - Nov 10, 2008
10 (Bloomberg) -- Umbilical cord blood, rich in stem cells, may provide raw material to repair the hearts of thousands of babies born each year with ...
Good News: Cord Blood Shows Promise for Repairing Babies' Hearts CitizenLink
Cells hope for heart defect babies The Press Association
all 43 news articles »
Why don't you hear about people getting heart cancer?
Boston Globe, United States - Nov 23, 2008
Indeed, if heart muscle cells never divided, there would be no way for the heart to repair itself after a heart attack or other tissue damage. ...
Stem cells to be used in heart trial
United Press International - Nov 18, 2008
The repair cells will then be directly injected into the left ventricle of the heart. The injection will use a minimally invasive surgery developed by Dr. ...
University of Utah Researchers Begin New Stem Cell Trial KCPW
all 5 news articles »
U. studying stem cell treatment for heart disease
Salt Lake Tribune, United States - Nov 17, 2008
After drawing about 3 tablespoons of patients' own bone marrow, researchers will grow cardiac-repair cells -- believed to help heart muscles and improve ...
U. study looks at stem cell impact on heart
Deseret News, UT - Nov 27, 2008
The yearlong, five-center study will look at safety and whether injecting "cardiac repair cells" improves heart function. It's the first study in the ...
Research and Markets: Heart Repair: A Placebo Fix? Or A Nocebo Mix?
MarketWatch - Nov 11, 2008
Identify the key factors in the current heart repair clinical trial protocols that attenuate efficacy of the therapeutic agent (protein, gene or stem cell) ...
Pitt researchers find help for hearts in stem cells
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA - Nov 25, 2008
By The Tribune-Review Human stem cells taken from skeletal muscles can repair damaged heart muscles in mice, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh scientists ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cells + 0.33 + heart  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)


AudiBlog.nl
Q5 in detail
AudiBlog.nl, Netherlands - Jul 8, 2008
Its drag coefficient of just 0.33 also represents a top figure for its category. The Q5?s design is elegant and sculptural - typically for Audi, ...
Source: Google News

Autologous Transplantation of Bone Marrow Cells Improves Damaged Heart Function -
S Tomita, RK Li, RD Weisel, DAG Mickle, EJ Kim, T … - Circulation, 1999 - Am Heart Assoc
... The heart was weighed and its size was measured by ... for cardiac-specific troponin
I. Surrounding cells did not ... fresh: 6.29?0.58, BMCs: 5.93?0.33, BMCs+5aza ...

… is Associated with Activation of Programmed Myocyte Cell Death in the Surviving Portion of the Heart -
G Olivetti, F Quaini, R Sala, C Lagrasta, D … - Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1996 - Elsevier
... 2 ) 0.37?0.02 0.36?0.02 (0.33?0.39) (0.34?0.39 ... Heart weight averaged 362?61 g. Body
weight was ... In- flammatory cells are also illustrated to confirm that ...

Inward-rectifying channels in isolated patches of the heart cell membrane: ATP-dependence and … -
G Trube, J Hescheler - Pfl?gers Archiv European Journal of Physiology, 1984 - Springer
... larger in isolated patches compared to cell-attached patches ... of the gaps within bursts
0.33 ms at ... Key words: Mammalian heart ventricle - Inward rectifica- tion ...

… of transmembrane potential changes during electric field stimulation of ventricular cells -
SB Knisley, TF Blitchington, BC Hill, AO Grant, WM … - Circulation Research, 1993 - Am Heart Assoc
... Vol 72, 255-270, Copyright ? 1993 by American Heart Association. ... end facing the S2
cathode and -0.71 +/- 0.33 at the ... occurred at the ends of the cells during S2 ...

… of Protein Kinase C Isoform ssII and Diacylglycerol Levels in the Aorta and Heart of Diabetic Rats: …
T Inoguchi, R Battan, E Handler, JR Sportsman, W … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992 - National Acad Sciences
... serum and smooth muscle cells were cultured with DMEM with 10%o calf serum. ... heart. ...
ml/0. 1 mg of aprotinin per ml/0.33 M sucrose) with Polytron ...

Background current in sino-atrial node cells of the rabbit heart -
N Hagiwara, H Irisawa, H Kasanuki, S Hosoda - The Journal of Physiology, 1992 - Physiological Soc
... H Irisawa, H Kasanuki and S Hosoda Heart Institute of ... sino- atrial node using the
whole-cell patch clamp ... increased from 0.45 +/- 0.18 to 0.87 +/- 0.33 nS (n ...

… Capacity of Bone Marrow Mononuclear Cells Derived From Patients With Chronic Ischemic Heart Disease -
C Heeschen, R Lehmann, J Honold, B Assmus, A … - Circulation, 2004 - Am Heart Assoc
... and 18 patients with stable coronary heart disease and ... role for basal and VEGF-induced
cell migration. ... healthy controls, 0.26?0.19% versus ICMP, 0.33?0.45%; P ...

A circulating myocardial depressant substance in humans with septic shock. Septic shock patients … -
JE Parrillo, C Burch, JH Shelhamer, MM Parker, C … - J Clin Invest, 1985 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... ventricular EF was decreased (mean = 0.33, normal mean ... decrease in velocity of
myocardial cell shortening during ... 10 patients with structural heart disease as a ...

… , cell swelling, and reperfusion in acute regional myocardial ischemia in the isolated porcine heart -
J Tranum-Jensen, MJ Janse, WT Fiolet, WJ Krieger, … - Circulation Research, 1981 - Am Heart Assoc
... At all tonicities, the ischemic cell diameters are significantly (P < 0.001)
larger than the non-ischemic cell diameters in the same heart. ...

… Calcium-Channel Currents of Internally Perfused Mammalian Heart Cells by Repetitive Depolarization -
KS Lee - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the …, 1987 - JSTOR
... At 0.33-sec interpulse intervals the time constant was about 1.5 sec; at ... channel
current and the intensity of twitch movement of single heart cells can be ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Cardiospheres-derived cells can repair heart attack damage

Stem cells derived from human heart tissue develop into multicellular, spherical structures called cardiospheres that express the normal properties of primitive heart tissue, smooth muscle and blood vessel cells.

In a related study, cells grown in the laboratory from these cardiospheres and injected into the hearts of mice following a lab-induced heart attack migrated straight to damaged tissue and regenerated, improving the organ's ability to pump blood throughout the animal's body.

 
The findings could potentially offer patients use of their own stem cells to repair heart tissue soon after a heart attack, or to regenerate weakened muscle resulting from heart failure, perhaps averting the need for heart transplants, " says Eduardo Marbán, senior author of both studies and at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. " By using a patient's own adult stem cells rather than a donor's, there would be no risk of triggering an immune response that could cause rejection. "

In the first study, researchers took heart tissue samples from 10 patients age 20 to 80 who had recently received a heart transplant, and as part of their regular checkup to make sure the new heart was functioning properly.
Researchers grew these tissues for two weeks, collecting any cardiac stem cells that started to migrate out, and then grew those loose cells with growth chemicals until they formed cardiospheres.
After two weeks of growth, the cardiospheres organized into structures consisting of at least two distinct, partially overlapping layers of cells. Cells in the center of the cluster had properties most like cardiac stem cells, while cells on the surface had properties similar either to myocytes or to cells that could develop into smooth muscle or blood vessel lining.

" We don't know yet the purpose or advantages of this organization," says study lead investigator Rachel Ruckdeschel Smith, at Hopkins. " Cardiospheres represent an interesting model of early, test-tube heart cell development. They expressed common characteristics of other cells while retaining a unique appearance."

In the second study, the research team grew adult heart tissue samples to extract cardiac stem cells, which were then grown to create cardiosphere-derived cells.
Researchers induced heart attacks in 19 mice, injecting eight with the cells grown from cardiospheres, in doses of approximately 100,000 cells, while other mice were injected with fibroblast placebo cells.
The injections were made directly into the area bordering the site of the heart attack, located in the left ventricle, the heart's main pumping chamber.
They then measured the infusion and migration of the cells at zero, eight and 20 days following injection to see what would happen.

At day zero, cells were located at injection sites bordering the heart attack area, but at days eight and 20, cells were mainly distributed within the area damaged by heart attack.

Researchers also studied the cells' function by injecting the mouse hearts with either cardiosphere-derived cells, human skin cells or placebo cells 20 days after heart attack, then using ultrasound echocardiography to measure the ability of the hearts to pump blood throughout the body. The hearts treated with cardiosphere-derived cells performed an average of 15 percent to 20 percent better than those treated with either of the controls.

" It was remarkable to see this improvement after only 20 days," says Lucio Barile, lead investigator of the study and at Hopkins. " Human cardiosphere-derived cells migrated into the heart attack zone, partially replaced the scar and improved the heart's function."

Further studies will look at the behavior of injected cardiosphere-derived cells over a longer period of time, and to examine how these cells perform in larger mammals, such as pigs.

Source: Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, 2005
 
 
 
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