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Hormone Therapy No Longer Recommended

Posted: Published on September 12th, 2015

By Dr. Mercola The US Preventive Services Task Force recently published its draft recommendations on hormone replacement therapyi. While the task force has previously sparked controversy with its recommendations for breast cancer and PSA prostate cancer screening, their recommendations for hormone replacement therapy for menopausal women taking hormones to prevent chronic disease has been met with little resistance. The group is changing its recommendations for menopausal women who use hormone therapy, either estrogen alone, or in combination with progestin to prevent heart disease, osteoporosis, and cognitive decline. They are accepting public comments on the draft until June 26, at which point the group will decide whether to make the draft recommendations final. According to a recent report by CNNii: "... The task force recommendations "are aimed at older women, who are generally healthy asking, 'If I take a pill a day, will I prevent a heart attack?" [Dr. Carolyn] Crandall [professor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA] said. ... In the face of pretty good evidence, the balance of potential benefits and potential harms leads us not to recommend the use of these therapies," said Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, a task force member. The proposed recommendations … Continue reading

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Stem cell research | The Stem Cellar | Page 2

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2015

I spent the last two days at the annual Washington meeting of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM), the advocacy organization that CIRM became a founding member of in 2009. Having been CIRMs representative at that first organizing meeting it has been a pleasure to see the organization mature into an effective advocacy group for our field. It has lived up to its goal of creating a community where all the stakeholders in the field, from academic and industry leaders to patient advocates and investors, can come together in a coordinated front. ARM and CIRM share the goal of accelerating the development of regenerative therapies to patients with unmet medical needs. The organization also dovetails well with our effort to inform the public about the great hope in the field. To quote ARMs website: ARM also works to increase public understanding of the field and its potential to transform human healthcare. But that transformation can be fostered or impeded by actions in our nations capital, both regulatory and legislative, the main thrust of the past two days activities. While the iconic Capitol building is the most recognized footprint of our Congress, it is the House and Senate office buildings that … Continue reading

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House Passes Pro-Life Bill to Fund Adult Stem Cell …

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2015

On the very first day of the fall session, the House took up and passed vital legislation authored by U.S. Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) to continue Americas bone marrow and cord blood donor registry. Sponsored by Smith with lead co-sponsor Rep. Doris Matsui (D-CA), the Stem Cell Therapeutic and Research Reauthorization Act of 2015, H.R. 2820, ensures that two collaborative programs that support treatment and therapies derived from adult stem cell lines will not expire at the end of the federal fiscal year, Sept. 30. Under the legislation, the C.W. Bill Young Cell Transplantation Program will be authorized for 5 years at $30 million annually, while the National Cord Blood Inventory is authorized at $23 million annually for a 5 year period.Smith authored the original law (The Stem Cell Therapeutic and Research Act of 2005P.L. 109-129) that created the national cord blood program and expanded the C.W. Bill Young Cell Transplantation Program. Breathtaking scientific breakthroughs have turned medical wastepost birth placentas and umbilical cord blood into medical miracles treating more than 70 diseases including leukemia, lymphoma and sickle cell anemia, said Smith. Not only has God in His wisdom and goodness created a placenta and umbilical cord to nurture and … Continue reading

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Genetic Engineering Careers in India : How to become a …

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2015

Genetic Engineering (GE) is a highly complicated and advanced branch of science which involves a wide range of techniques used in changing the genetic material in the DNA code in a living organism. 'Genetic Engineering' means the deliberate modification of the characters of an organism by the manipulation of its genetic material.Genetic engineering comes under the broad heading of Biotechnology. There is a great scope in this field as the demand for genetic engineers are growing in India as well as abroad. A cell is the smallest living unit, the basic structural and functional unit of all living matter, whether a plant, an animal, humans or a fungus. While some organisms are single celled, others like plants, animals, humans etc are made up of a lot more cells. For eg humans have approximately 3 million cells. A cell is composed of a 'cell membrane' enclosing the whole cell, many 'organelles' equivalent to the organs in the body and a 'nucleus' which is the command centre of the cell. Inside the nucleus are the chromosomes which is the storage place for all genetic (hereditary) information which determines the nature and characteristics of an organism. This information is written along the thin … Continue reading

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Genetic engineering – Memory Alpha, the Star Trek Wiki

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2015

A portrait of Khan Noonien Singh, a man who was a product of genetic engineering Genetic engineering, or genetic manipulation was a process in which the DNA of an organism was selectively altered through artificial means. Genetic engineering was often used to produce "custom" organisms, such as for agricultural or medical purposes, as well as to produce biogenic weapons. The most common application of genetic engineering on intelligent beings in the Federation was corrective DNA resequencing for genetic disorders. A far more dubious application of genetic engineering was the genetic enhancement of individuals to produce improved senses, strength, intelligence, etc. During Earth's 20th century, efforts to produce "superhumans" resulted in the Eugenics Wars. Genetically engineered individuals such as Khan Noonien Singh attempted to seize power. (TOS: "Space Seed") This would lead to the banning of genetic engineering on Earth by the mid-22nd century, even research which could be used to cure critical illnesses. This ban was implemented because of the general fear of creating more tyrants such as Khan. It was also felt that parents would feel compelled to have their children genetically engineered, especially if "enhanced" individuals were allowed to compete in normal society. Some, including geneticist Arik Soong, … Continue reading

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Genetic Engineering – Oswego City School District Regents …

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2015

Vocabulary: selective breeding, recombinant DNA, artificial selection, inbreeding, hybridization, genetic engineering, restriction enzyme, cloning, genetic mapping, Human Genome Project Genetic Engineering Throughout recorded history, humans have used selective breeding and other methods to produce organisms with desirable traits. Our current understanding of genetics and heredity allows for the manipulation of genes and the development of new combinations of traits and new varieties of organisms. This includes various aspects of DNA technology, including recombinant DNA technology. Scientists have also developed many ways of determining the genetic makeup of different organisms, including humans. Selective Breeding For thousands of years new varieties of cultivated plants and domestic animals have resulted from selective breeding for particular traits. Some selective breeding techniques include artificial selection, where individuals with desirable traits are mated to produce offspring with those traits. A variation of this process traditionally used in agriculture is inbreeding, where the offspring produced by artificial selection are mated with one another to reinforce those desirable traits. Hybridization is a special case of selective breeding. This involves crossing two individuals with different desirable traits to produce offspring with a combination of both desirable traits. An example of this are Santa Gertrudis cattle, which were developed by … Continue reading

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DNA Helix – University of California Museum of Paleontology

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2015

Despite what you may have seen in some textbooks, DNA is not built like a twisted ladder. The helix, or spiral, is an inherent feature of the DNA molecule. Notice, for instance, that in the picture below, that the groove on the left side of the picture is much larger than the right side. This is because the paired bases in the center meet each other at an angle. DNA is a very large molecule; the image here shows only a tiny fraction of the typical molecule. If an entire molecule of DNA from the virus "bacteriophage lambda" were shown at this scale, the image would be 970 meters high. For the bacterium Escherichia coli, the image would be 80 kilometers long. And for a typical piece of DNA from a eukaryote cell, the image would stretch for 1600 kilometers, about as far as it is from Dallas to Washington, D. C.! Obviously such a large molecule is not fully stretched out inside the cell, but is wound around proteins called histones which protect the DNA. Read the original: DNA Helix - University of California Museum of Paleontology … Continue reading

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A Science Odyssey: DNA Workshop: Replication

Posted: Published on September 10th, 2015

Within the nucleus of every cell are long strings of DNA, the code that holds all the information needed to make and control every cell within a living organism. DNA, which stands for deoxyribonucleic acid, resembles a long, spiraling ladder. It consists of just a few kinds of atoms: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and phosphorus. Combinations of these atoms form the sugar-phosphate backbone of the DNA -- the sides of the ladder, in other words. Other combinations of the atoms form the four bases: thymine (T), adenine (A), cytosine (C), and guanine (G). These bases are the rungs of the DNA ladder. (It takes two bases to form a rung -- one for each side of the ladder.) A sugar molecule, a base, and a phosphate molecule group together to make up a nucleotide. Nucleotides are abundant in the cell's nucleus. Nucleotides are the units which, when linked sugar to phosphate, make up one side of a DNA ladder. During DNA replication, special enzymes move up along the DNA ladder, unzipping the molecule as it moves along. New nucleotides move in to each side of the unzipped ladder. The bases on these nucleotides are very particular about what they connect … Continue reading

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Femto Medicine | Mayo Clinic In The News

Posted: Published on September 9th, 2015

January 8th, 2015 Mayo Clinic in the News Weekly Highlights By Karl W Oestreich Mayo Clinic in the Newsis a weekly highlights summary of major media coverage. If you would like to be added to the weekly distribution list, send a note toLaura Wuotilawith this subject line: SUBSCRIBE toMayo Clinic in the News. Thank you. Karl Oestreich, manager enterprise media relations Wall Street JournalWhat CEOs Expect for Business in 2015by John Bussey We asked the 153 members of the Wall Street Journals CEO Council to tell uswhether theyre positive or negativeabout business prospects in 2015, and why. Heres what several had to say:John Noseworthy, Mayo Clinic, Disruptive technologies ranging from regenerative and genomic medicine to remote monitoring devices have already begun to alter health care delivery. Were excited to work with diverse business partners to quickly commercialize these and other novel scientific discoveries so they benefit patients everywhere. Reach:The Wall Street Journal, a US-based newspaper published by Dow Jones & Company, is second in newspaper circulation in America with an average circulation of 223 million copies on week days. Its website has more than 4.3 million unique visitors each month. Previous Coverage in December 12, 2014 Mayo Clinic in the … Continue reading

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What Is Stem Cell Treatment? | eHow

Posted: Published on September 9th, 2015

Stem cell research is on the rise, giving hope to patients and providing treatment for many diseases and disorders. While stem cell treatments are a fairly new science, they can have life-saving effects. Stem cell treatments are effective at treating autoimmune diseases, cerebral palsy, degenerative joint disease, multiple sclerosis, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, spinal injuries and type 2 diabetes. It is thought that in the future, stem cell treatment can be used to treat Alzheimer's disease. Stem cell therapy can reduce pain and discomfort; it can help patients suffering from arthritis regain mobility. In serious cases, such as cerebral palsy and multiple sclerosis, stem cell treatments can be life-saving. Because stem cell treatment is a new science, little is known about its long term effects. According to Cell Medicine, no side effects have been reported by patients other than pain at the injection site. Sometimes the behaviors stem from a history of abuse or continuous exposure to a ... Several different treatment methods are commonly used... Heat and cold treatment such as ice and heating pads can be alternated for reducing inflammation and pain ... Regenerative Stem Cell... B cells and T cells operate in the adaptive immune response--the immune system's … Continue reading

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