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WHO projects Diabetes will affect 370m by 2030 (currently 177m) worldwide

April 4th, 2005

A diabetes epidemic is under way. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), an estimated 30m people worldwide had some form of diabetes in 1985; by 2000, the number had increased to 177m. WHO projections suggest that the number of people suffering from the disease will increase to some 370m by 2030.

Source: Research And Markets
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Way to go Massachusetts! Another state becomes wiser to the needs of stem cell research

April 3rd, 2005

A bill that would allow embryonic stem cell research in Massachusetts cleared its second big legislative hurdle on Thursday with enough support to withstand a near-certain veto by the state's governor.

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Stem Cells cultivated from Hair Follicles can transform into Neurons

April 1st, 2005

Most of the opposition to stem cells stem from the assumption that human embroys are required for stem cell production. However recent research indicates other viable sources (like placenta) of stem cells. The following appears to me a very promising avenue.
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Biocavity laser is now used to study stem cell functions

April 1st, 2005

Biocavity Laser - A New Tool to image living cells
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AIIMS to give proof of stem cell research- The Times of India

March 23rd, 2005

"Positron Emission Tomography is being installed at AIIMS next month, through which we will get the final proof of our work on heart patients. All the patients would be screened for finding how viable our work was and would also study various heart tissues of the patients metabolically," Dr P Venugopal, director AIIMS, said. 

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An injection to cure diabetes

March 16th, 2005

Diabetes
Stem-cell startup Viacell's experimental therapy procedure (tested so far on mice) is to take pancreatic tissue from cadaver and isolate the stem cells, which matures into islet cells.
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Way to go: Britain talks tough on stem cell research

March 12th, 2005

The Government today said: "The UN declaration is non-binding and has no legal status, but it calls on countries to prohibit all forms of human cloning. This is totally unacceptable to the UK government which strongly supports stem cell research, including embryonic stem cell research which involves the use of cloning technology. Stem cell research could lead to new treatments for serious and fatal diseases that affect millions of people."

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Stupidity on the rise: UN approves human cloning ban

March 12th, 2005

It is of much regret that the ban on human cloning has been passed in the UN, however symbolic it may be.
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How the ban on adult stem cells affects the fight against diabetes

March 7th, 2005

Harvard researcher Dr. Denise Faustman thinks she can cure type 1 (or juvenile) diabetes. She's done it in mice and wants to try it on humans. She's gotten financial backing from the Lee Iacocca Foundation and other groups, but needs millions more.

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Assembly gets pressure over stem cell bill

February 27th, 2005

They walk with canes, their bodies victim to degenerative diseases with no known cure.

For 50-year-old John Kellermann, it's Parkinson's, a ruthless disease that seizes his body and sometimes his speech, leaving him so vulnerable that he has to crawl to the bathroom at night.

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