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(Human embryonic) stem cells might cause brain tumors, study finds
Reuters ^ | 10-23-06

Posted on 10/23/2006 10:24:34 AM PDT by truthandlife

Injecting human embryonic stem cells into the brains of Parkinson's disease patients may cause tumors to form, U.S. researchers reported on Sunday.

Steven Goldman and colleagues at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York said human stem cells injected into rat brains turned into cells that looked like early tumors.

Writing in the journal Nature Medicine, the researchers said the transplants clearly helped the rats, but some of the cells started growing in a way that could eventually lead to a tumor.

Various types of cell transplants are being tried to treat Parkinson's disease, caused when dopamine-releasing cells die in the brain.

This key neurotransmitter, or message-carrying chemical, is involved in movement and Parkinson's patients suffer muscle dysfunction that can often lead to paralysis. Drugs can slow the process for a while but there is no cure.

The idea behind brain cell transplants is to replace the dead cells. Stem cells are considered particularly promising as they can be directed to form the precise desired tissue and do not trigger an immune response.

Goldman's team used human embryonic stem cells. Taken from days-old embryos, these cells can form any kind of cell in the body. This batch had been cultured in substances aimed at making them become brain cells.

Previous groups have tried to coax stem cells into becoming dopamine-releasing cells.

Goldman's team apparently succeeded and transplanted them into the rats with an equivalent of Parkinson's damage. The animals did get better.

But the grafted cells started to show areas that no longer consisted of dopamine-releasing neurons, but of dividing cells that had the potential to give rise to tumors.

The researchers killed the animals before they could know for sure, and said any experiments in humans would have to be done very cautiously.

Scientists have long feared that human embryonic stem cells could turn into tumors, because of their pliability.

Opponents of embryonic stem cell research cite such threats. Many opponents, including President George W. Bush and some members of Congress, believe it is immoral to destroy human embryos to obtain their stem cells.


TOPICS: Extended News
KEYWORDS: embryonic; esc; michaeljfox; prolife; stemcells
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To: gaijin

So we kill someone at a beginning stage of his or her life just to see how the killing process goes? No thanks. The Nazis did tests like that in the 1940s. If America goes that path, we will end the same way as the Nazis did. We have many successes with adult stem cells right now and that research doesn't kill human life and doesn't produce tumors or body rejection.


21 posted on 10/23/2006 12:00:57 PM PDT by conservative blonde (Conservative Blonde)
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To: GovernmentShrinker

You are spinning information. I went to the article in New Scientist and it said that adult stem cells are safe unless they have been stored too long. Nothing strange about that. I wouldn't eat a sandwich that had been in the refrigerator for eight months either. Research scientists will have to accept that they are not "creators." Only God can create.


22 posted on 10/23/2006 12:08:46 PM PDT by conservative blonde (Conservative Blonde)
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To: conservative blonde

Not stored too long, allowed to replicate too many times. And that is an inherent feature of many types of potential stem cell treatments: start out with a handful of cells and set them to multiplying until there are enough for the treatment.


23 posted on 10/24/2006 9:06:06 AM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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