Archive for the ‘stem cell therapy’ Category

Adult Stem Cells Provide Significant Promise for All in 21st Century (Internal Healthcare Like No Other)

Friday, December 27th, 2013

Dallas, TX — (SBWIRE). This week, Don Margolis of the Repair Stem Cell Institute in Texas issued the following statement.

In the past decade, international stem cell treatment has grown by leaps and bounds to the point where it is poised to become the most effective treatment for chronic conditions and diseases.  Currently, adult stem cell treatment is being used to help patients recover from over 150 debilitating chronic conditions previously thought to be untreatable, including the “Big Three” – Heart Disease, Diabetes, and Cancer.   To date, commercial stem cell treatments have been used by over 30,000 patients with a more than 65% success rate.  

Stem cells are unique, unspecialized cells in the body. Unlike other cells, they are able to differentiate into specialized cells for specific organs or develop into tissues. In some tissues, stem cells can regenerate to replace damaged cells. Specifically, adult stem cells maintain and repair organs and tissues throughout a person’s life.

Stem cell treatment is fast becoming the “go to,” state-of-the-art therapy for a wide range of diseases and chronic conditions (not just the “Big Three”) including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Spinal Cord Injury, Cerebral Palsy, Renal Failure, Arthritis, Autism, and even breast enhancement. A full list of diseases stem cells can help can be found on the website of the Repair Stem Cell Institute, often called “The Voice of Stem Cell Science” – www.repairstemcells.org.

In addition, stem cell treatment dispenses with the potentially dangerous side effects of surgery, chemotherapy, and drug therapy. Many international stem cell treatment centers and their physicians meet the highest standards offering the safest and most effective treatments – in many cases much more successful than “traditional,” hospital treatments. Don reports “Stem cell success stories abound and signal a new era in achievement and hope for those suffering from conditions they thought to be untreatable.”

Here are Stem Cell Worx we are sharing the word about adult stem cell advancements. The video below provides a wonderful oversight of what is happening now and what is on the horizon. In this short 3 minute video, people talk about their own personal experiences, and remarkable repair and recovery after having adult stem cell treatments. Leading Healthcare Professionals also speak about what these incredible master cells (that reside in our own bodies) can do and how we are living in amazing times to be able to take advantage of biological advancements like no time ever before.  These treatments are fast becoming more accessible and what is remarkable is the age of the person when they receive their adult stem cell treatment, therapy or take their stem cell supplement is not proving to be a barrier in anyway.

Click below to watch this video. Help us share the word about adult stem cell advancements.

Adult Stem Cells Found To Suppress Cancer While Dormant

Saturday, December 21st, 2013

Researchers at UCLA’s Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research have discovered a mechanism by which certain adult stem cells suppress their ability to initiate skin cancer during their dormant phase — an understanding that could be exploited for better cancer-prevention strategies.

The study, which was led by UCLA postdoctoral fellow Andrew White and William Lowry, an associate professor of molecular, cell and developmental biology who holds the Maria Rowena Ross Term Chair in Cell Biology in the UCLA College of Letters and Science, was published online Dec. 15 in the journal Nature Cell Biology.

Hair follicle stem cells, the tissue-specific adult stem cells that generate the hair follicles, are also the cells of origin for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, a common skin cancer. These stem cells cycle between periods of activation (during which they can grow) and quiescence (when they remain dormant).

The research was supported by the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine, the University of California Cancer Research Coordinating Committee and the National Institutes of Health.

To read more click the UCLA source link below.

Source:  UCLA Newsroom