Search Results for: parkinson's disease

Stem Cell Person of the Year 2014 Award: Vote To Choose 12 Finalists

Stem-Cell-Symbol

Nominations have closed and we have more than two dozen nominations for Stem Cell Person of the Year 2014. It’s an exciting, diverse group including some news faces as well as nominees from years past as well. Happy Stem Cell Day! You can now vote for your choice for the top finalists in the poll …

Stem Cell Person of the Year 2014 Award: Vote To Choose 12 Finalists Read More »

ISSCR 2014 Day 2: Navigating Balanced Stem Cell Path to Clinic

turner-leigh

I’ve really enjoyed day 2 of ISSCR 2014. So far this day has already packed in a slew of great talks both in the lecture halls and outside one-on-one with old friends and new ones. How great is that? I’ll focus on just a few highlights to keep it concise. Dubious stem cell clinics and …

ISSCR 2014 Day 2: Navigating Balanced Stem Cell Path to Clinic Read More »

Kick Off of ISSCR 2014: Some Top Highlights Of World Cup of Stem Cells

Azim-Surani

This morning at ISSCR 2014 in Vancouver things kicked off in an exciting way, kind of akin to a World Cup soccer/football match for fans of stem cells. Azim Surani (pictured at right) received the McEwen Award for his innovative research on germ cell fate and epigenetic control mechanisms. It was great to see Paolo Bianco, Elena …

Kick Off of ISSCR 2014: Some Top Highlights Of World Cup of Stem Cells Read More »

Will Speedy A4M Stem Cell Course for Docs Put Patients at Risk?

A4M-logo

They say a little knowledge is a dangerous thing and more specifically I say that a little stem cell training for MDs, such as from A4M, can potentially be a dangerous problem too. I’ve been very concerned about self-proclaimed “stem cell training courses” for MDs. These kinds of courses have claimed that over as short as a …

Will Speedy A4M Stem Cell Course for Docs Put Patients at Risk? Read More »

Jeanne Loring interview: optimism on clinical translation of IPS cells

Loring-in-lab-1

One of my favorite stem cell scientists is Jeanne Loring of Scripps. She does great science and when you ask her questions, she frankly states her opinions and is clearly a gifted educator at heart too. Below is a Q&A interview I did with Jeanne on key issues of clinical translation of iPS cells. You …

Jeanne Loring interview: optimism on clinical translation of IPS cells Read More »

Surprising FDA audit report of Celltex a blow to dubious stem cell clinics

Celltex-300x241

As I first reported, the FDA conducted a two-week audit of Texas adult stem cell firm, Celltex, sometime in April. Today I received a copy of the so-called “483 report” of that audit. It is basically a summary of problematic issues that the FDA says need to addressed. The FDA report is cause for some …

Surprising FDA audit report of Celltex a blow to dubious stem cell clinics Read More »

Great letter on Guv Perry’s California visit video from the artist

On Monday, I made a big stink about Texas GOP Governor Rick Perry visiting a lab (that of Jeanne Loring) at Scripps Research Institute here in California because the lab in question is a leading group doing human embryonic stem cell (HESC) and Perry is a strong opponent of such research. I thought the visit …

Great letter on Guv Perry’s California visit video from the artist Read More »

Striking iPS cell research publishing trends: what do they mean?

Dopamine-neurons-derived-from-a-Parkinsons-disease-patients-iPSCs-Tyrosine-hydroxylase-1

Update in 2020: Wow, a lot has changed since this post almost 10 years ago, but Cell Stem Cell remains the main publisher of IPS cell articles still. The young iPSC field has published a truly massive number of papers in just 4 years. Searching ISI Web of Knowledge for papers with titles reflecting iPSC …

Striking iPS cell research publishing trends: what do they mean? Read More »

Weekly reads: stem cells for MS, good news x2, extending dog years, Neuralink updates

stem cells for MS

For about as long as I’ve been writing The Niche, people have been asking about stem cells for MS. There’s a huge need for new therapies. While a chemo-based approach with autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) looks to work for certain cases of multiple sclerosis (although not yet approved in the US), other cell …

Weekly reads: stem cells for MS, good news x2, extending dog years, Neuralink updates Read More »

Weekly reads: HIV from vampire facials, CAR-T, FDA warns Regenative Labs

vampire facials

Imagine regularly having someone rub your face all over with the equivalent of a small roller covered with spikes and doused with either your blood or someone else’s and you have what’s called vampire facials. There’s more news that this is a very bad idea. Vampire facials linked to more HIV cases “Vampire facials” promoted …

Weekly reads: HIV from vampire facials, CAR-T, FDA warns Regenative Labs Read More »