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Sunday, October 18, 2009, 8:52 PM
Wesley J. Smith

Two notable stories about ethical stem cell research. First, another announcement of how olfactory adult stem cells have aided paralyzed patients with spinal cord injury regain feeling–and even walkFrom the story:

The injuries in the study patients were 18 months to 15 years old. The patients, ages 19 to 37, had no use of their legs before the treatment. One paraplegic treated almost three years after the injury now ambulates with two crutches and knee braces. Ten other patients ambulate with physical assistance and walkers (with and without braces). One 31-year-old male tetriplegic patient uses a walker without the help of knee braces or physical assistance. When the stem cell transplant and scar removal process was combined with an advanced form of rehabilitative training that employs brain-initiated weight-bearing movement, 13 patients improved in the standard measures used to assess functional independence and walking capabilities.

Remember, these are still early studies and much terrain needs to be covered.  But can you imagine the headlines if this were an ESCR study?  Alas: Just as Dr. Carlos Lima’s earlier success was utterly ignored in this field, this advance appears to be  another case of “not the right kind of stem cell success to make news.” Indeed, paralyzed rat ESCR experiments get more press than these amazing human advances. (See my, “The Great Stem Cell Coverup,” from the Weekly Standard.)

And on the IPSC front, we find that the efficiency of the procedure is improving vastly.  From the story:

A team led by scientists from The Scripps Research Institute has developed a method that dramatically improves the efficiency of creating stem cells from human adult tissue, without the use of embryonic cells. The research makes great strides in addressing a major practical challenge in the development of stem-cell-based medicine…

The new technique, which uses three small drug-like chemicals, is 200 times more efficient and twice as fast as conventional methods for transforming adult human cells into stem cells (in this case called “induced ” or “iPS cells”). “Both in terms of speed and efficiency, we achieved major improvements over conventional conditions,” said Scripps Research Associate Professor Sheng Ding, Ph.D., who led the study. “This is the first example in human cells of how reprogramming speed can be accelerated. I believe that the field will quickly adopt this method, accelerating iPS cell research significantly.”

All good news.  That’s fine, many brave new worlders will shrug. But we want to keep on cloning.

7 Comments

    marybel
    October 18th, 2009 | 9:35 pm

    Stunning results. But with the Obamacare cost restraints, isn’t it a moot concern? If it’s too expensive, won’t it be prohibitive?

    Tweets that mention The Lame Walk! Ethical Stem Cell Research Successes Continue to Blaze » Secondhand Smoke | A First Things Blog -- Topsy.com
    October 18th, 2009 | 10:32 pm

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Nate Lee and Nate Lee, Back injury news. Back injury news said: The Lame Walk! Ethical Stem Cell Research Successes Continue to Blaze – First Things: The Lame.. http://bit.ly/OQDJQ (c/o Google News) [...]

    Ethically-sound adult stem cell research cures paralysis in human patients « Wintery Knight
    October 19th, 2009 | 12:44 pm

    [...] paralysis in human patients Story from Wayne State University, which made the discovery. (H/T Secondhand Smoke via [...]

    Jose Miranda
    October 19th, 2009 | 11:10 pm

    First Thank you to President Obama for signing the executive order that reversed eight(8) years of needless delays on great new therapies. I pray for all those it will help and am certain that the bible thumpers will be in line when they or their loved ones can benefit from the therapies.

    Wesley J. Smith
    October 20th, 2009 | 12:29 am

    Jose Miranda: There were no delays in therapies, this was not an embryonic stem cell success, so far ESCR can’t be used in humans due to safety concerns…aw, never mind. Facts don’t matter these days.

    bmmg39
    October 20th, 2009 | 1:39 am

    Jose, did you really not understand that these are adult stem cells in this study (and therefore having nothing to do with the more controversial embryonic stem cells), or were you just repeating the party line here?

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