Sunday, July 03, 2005

The Extent of the Embryonic Stem Cell Hype is Beginning to be Noticed

This article in the Journal of Clinical Investigation warns that medical treatments from embryonic stem cell research (ESCR) and therapeutic cloning may be very far away, if they ever come at all. ESCR and cloning have so many hurdles to overcome, ranging from tumor formation in animal studies, to the inability of biotechnologists to control the type of cells that are created in the dish, to tissue rejection, to maintaining proper proliferation once inside the body. Thus, the repeated media assertion that embryonic stem cells "can become any cell in the body," is entirely speculative--unless they remain parts of living embryos, that is. Scientists hope to find cures for these problems--and they might. But if they do, it is going to take a lot of time and money. In the meanwhile, adult stem cell research keeps moving forward with generally hopeful results in early human trials.

2 Comments:

At July 05, 2005 , Blogger Diana said...

Have you seen this article, http://physics.iop.org/IOP/Press/PR2105.html, on a new procedure that can harvest "embryonic quality" stem cells from adult blood? It certainly isn't being reported in any of the mainstream media, and no wonder since this would take away the main reason scientists keep claiming they need to use embryonic stem cells.

 
At July 05, 2005 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Thanks. Such reports are continual, but rarely reported. I'll check it out.

 

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