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Posted 15 July 2010 - 03:36 AM
Technology developed in the Bay Area could soon have a dramatic impact on kidney transplants. It is designed to help patients who need a matching donor and a new version may be able to pair up thousands of patients in a fraction of the time.
Maggie Ervin recently started a chain reaction. After listening to a documentary on organ donation, she decided to donate one of her two kidneys to a stranger, as an altruistic donor.
Rather than helping just one person, Maggie's kidney was the first of a chain donation at California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco. Over the course of the day, surgeons removed and transplanted kidneys among half a dozen people.
"It's exciting. A lot of people are getting transplanted that otherwise wouldn't have an opportunity to get a transplant," said.
They are known as unmatched donors. Maggie's kidney went to Fernando Rico whose friend Guadalupe Ramirez was not compatible. Instead, Guadalupe donated her kidney in Fernando's name to a different recipient, whose sister then donated to another stranger.
Posted 13 July 2010 - 04:54 AM
Posted 12 July 2010 - 02:44 PM
"Right now we’re really good at printing blood vessels," says Ben Shepherd, senior research scientist at regenerative-medicine company Organovo. "We printed 10 this week. We’re still learning how to best condition them to be good, strong blood vessels."Most organs in the body are filled with veins, so the ability to print vascular tissue is a critical building block for complete organs. The printed veins are about to start testing in animal trials, and eventually go through human clinical trials. If all goes well, in a few years you may be able to replace a vein that has deteriorated (due to frequent injections of chemo treatment, for example) with custom-printed tissue grown from your own cells.
Posted 30 April 2010 - 08:00 PM
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Posted 24 March 2010 - 03:11 PM
Posted 10 March 2010 - 07:37 PM
The Donor's Key Club previews the results of new longevity research funded by Methuselah Foundation, and made possible through the generous support of our many donors. News from the laboratories, advance notice of new research results, webinars, and interviews with researchers in fields important to human longevity: all these and more will be forthcoming. Watch this space!
Only donors to Methuselah Foundation can access the Donor's Key Club; please contact our Senior Donor Concierge Kamol Farid if you are a Foundation supporter and need assistance in logging in to the Donor's Key Club.Posted 21 July 2010 - 08:20 PM
Posted 21 July 2010 - 07:33 PM
Posted 23 July 2010 - 11:48 PM
Posted 18 August 2010 - 10:24 PM
Check out the full article here.
Posted 18 August 2010 - 10:16 PM
<img src=http://www.lifestarinstitute.org/site/images/blog_img.png>
For the first time in history, the aged will outnumber the young. Battling with age-related diseases and cost of treatment, global economic disaster looms in the future for all of us if aggressive action isn’t taken now. International investment in aging research will give us the chance to slow or actually reverse the degenerative process of aging to extend healthy, happy lifespan for coming generations.Posted 18 August 2010 - 10:09 PM
Posted 23 September 2010 - 04:18 PM
Edwards Lifesciences Corp.’s Sapien heart valve may become the first life-saving treatment in the U.S. for frail, elderly patients with diseased valves after a study found it slashed deaths in those with few medical options. ... Edwards, based in Irvine, California, will use this research and additional tests in healthier patients to seek FDA approval of the $30,000 valve next year. ...
The valve, made partly from cow tissue, is inserted into an artery in the groin, and threaded using a thin wire into the heart. It’s designed to help patients who may be too frail to undergo surgery in which doctors cut open the chest, spread the ribs and temporarily stop the heart. It may also give a less invasive option with speedier recovery to healthier patients.
Posted 01 December 2010 - 02:05 AM
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Posted 10 January 2011 - 05:06 PM
Posted 17 January 2011 - 09:34 PM
Posted 17 February 2011 - 04:04 AM
The longest-lived mouse on record is one studied by Dr. Bartke. It had a defect in its growth hormone receptor gene, just as do the Laron patients. "It missed its fifth birthday by a week," he said. The mouse lived twice as long as usual and won Dr. Bartke a prize presented by the Methuselah Foundation (which rewards developments in life-extension therapies) in 2003.
Posted 22 February 2011 - 11:13 PM
Posted 28 February 2011 - 08:00 PM
Posted 16 March 2011 - 05:15 PM
Posted 05 April 2011 - 04:50 PM
"y providing doctors and clinicians the ability to rapidly and accurately build sophisticated cross-matching tables for paired donations from a varying set of recipient and donor clinical records... [t]hese cross-matching tables enable transplant professionals to rapidly find and analyze potential organ donations by mixing and matching a varying pool of potential donors with recipients in order to provide the best possible placement of compatible organs with recipients that are in need."
"This is really going to happen, Suzi," said her husband of 48 years, Dick."[b]Hot dog!" she said before kissing him and shuffling off into surgery.
Posted 18 April 2011 - 10:55 PM
Lustig makes the compelling case that sugar is a "toxin" or a "poison", even "evil"
and that high fructose corn syrup is "the most demonized additive known to man".
"It's not about the calories," he says.
"It has nothing to do with calories. It's a poison by itself."
Posted 12 May 2011 - 07:46 PM
"We're looking at people living 30 to 40 years longer than they did 100 years ago," said Joseph Coughlin, director of the MIT AgeLab. "More of your adult life will be lived after the age of 50 than before age 50. The question is, what're you going to do with it?"
The American concept of old age as we know it today owes much of its structure to a government decision made in 1935 when the Social Security Act set a mandatory retirement age of 65. The idea was definitely a product of its time, when medical breakthroughs sent infant mortality rates plummeting and life expectancy soaring. Older workers were competing with a lot more young ones for work. "There was actually a theory, called 'disengagement theory,' that said it was mutually beneficial for older adults to remove themselves from active, productive roles in society," said David Burdick, director of the Stockton Center on Successful Aging in New Jersey. The retirement system was essentially designed to ease obsolete old people out of the workforce to make room for the American youth and even with retirement eventually ceasing to be mandatory in the US, the Social Security Act left in its wake a potent legacy in marking 65 as the fault line in the public imagination between citizens whom our society values and those considered no longer productive.Posted 18 May 2011 - 08:56 PM
"There's a very good chance that this study will eventually have a major impact on many disorders that afflict humankind," said Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB Journal where the study is published. "These scientists have basically used the body's repair mechanisms to make new tissues through bioengineering. In years to come, starfish and salamanders will have nothing on us!"
A new method discovered by Yale scientists could be a major milestone in the science of human tissue regeneration and engineering. Because of their discovery, new evidence is provided to support a major shift in the paradigm of the accepted science of tissue engineering from the concept that cells added to a graft pre-implantation are the building blocks of tissue, to a new concept that engineered tissue constructs can actually mobilize the body's own reparative mechanisms. This includes complex tissue regeneration.
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