• The first was to ban NIH funding for what's known as intramural research - essentially just programs within the agency - that involved newly obtained fetal tissue from abortions, from more recent abortions. (npr.org)
  • The first was a ban on NIH funding for what's known as intramural research (essentially programs within the agency) involving newly obtained fetal tissue from abortions. (kzyx.org)
  • Very little federal research is done with fetal tissue, but it has come under scrutiny since an anti-abortion group earlier this summer began releasing undercover videos alleging that Planned Parenthood was trafficking in fetal tissue and organs. (politico.com)
  • Planned Parenthood has denied that, saying it facilitates legal tissue donation at a few of its locations. (politico.com)
  • Holly O'Donnell, a licensed phlebotomist, said she "unsuspectingly took a job as a 'procurement technician'" at the fetal tissue company StemExpress, which was allegedly the primary buyer of fetal body parts from Planned Parenthood. (lifeeducationcouncil.com)
  • A second video allegedly showing a senior Planned Parenthood official negotiating for fetal tissue and fetal parts for profit has been released. (lifeeducationcouncil.com)
  • In the video, released by the Center for Medical Progress (CMP), Dr. Mary Gatter, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America's for-profit Medical Directors' Council, is seen haggling over prices of fetal parts. (lifeeducationcouncil.com)
  • An antiabortion group on Tuesday released an undercover video of an official at Planned Parenthood discussing in graphic detail how to abort a fetus to preserve its organs for medical research - as well as the costs associated with sharing that tissue with scientists. (lifeeducationcouncil.com)
  • Novogenix is one of the biomedical firms that Planned Parenthood works with to harvest fetal tissue, and then sell it to researchers. (lifesitenews.com)
  • As Melissa Farrell, Director of Research at Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast, admits: "Yeah, and so if we alter our process, and we are able to obtain intact fetal cadavers, then we can make it part of the budget, that any dissections are this, and splitting the specimens into different shipments is this. (lifesitenews.com)
  • She was among several pro-life supporters demonstrating after the release of two videos that showed Planned Parenthood officials discussing the method and price of providing fetal tissue obtained from abortions for medical research. (todayscatholic.org)
  • WASHINGTON (CNS) - Amid an outcry from members of the GOP demanding answers to questions raised by a video of a Planned Parenthood physician talking about preserving fetal organs and tissue for researchers for a fee, a second video emerged July 21 of a different physician from the organization talking about the same topic. (todayscatholic.org)
  • The new video shows a conversation between Dr. Mary Gatter, president of the Medical Directors Council of Planned Parenthood, along with two of the California center's workers posing as executives of a firm engaged in the collection and selling of fetal organs to researchers. (todayscatholic.org)
  • Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, released an official video response saying that "allegations that Planned Parenthood profits in any way from tissue donation is not true. (todayscatholic.org)
  • In the first video, released July 14, Dr. Deborah Nucatola, senior director of Planned Parenthood Federation of America's Medical Services, casually discusses ways the abortion procedure can be carried out to best preserve body parts requested for use in research. (todayscatholic.org)
  • I've said it all along and will say it again: The antiabortion "sting" videos purporting to trap Planned Parenthood into admitting it harvests and sells aborted fetal parts for profit were as malicious as they were untrue. (latimes.com)
  • Asked to investigate Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast, a branch of one of the country's most important healthcare providers for women, the grand jury found no wrongdoing on the part of the group, whose staffers were secretly videotaped talking about the cost of procuring fetal tissue for research. (latimes.com)
  • The Trump administration's policy required all applicants for NIH grants involving fetal tissue from elective abortions to be reviewed by an ethics board, but a notice released by the NIH Friday states that "HHS/NIH will not convene another NIH Human Fetal Tissue Research Ethics Advisory Board. (christianpost.com)
  • It says, "HHS is reversing its 2019 decision that all research applications for NIH grants and contracts proposing the use of human fetal tissue from elective abortions will be reviewed by an Ethics Advisory Board. (christianpost.com)
  • and Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., leaders of a group of 26 Democratic House members calling for the lifting of the restriction on research involving fetal tissue from elective abortions, said. (christianpost.com)
  • The Trump administration banned federal funding for scientific research on fetal tissue from abortions. (npr.org)
  • MCCAMMON: Now, this tissue is often obtained from abortions. (npr.org)
  • altering abortions in order to harvest valuable organs intact , joking about " war torn " dismembered babies, and even alluding to " intact fetal cadavers . (texasrighttolife.com)
  • The latest shocking video records a former StemExpress technician, Holly O'Donnell, discussing how organs were harvested without the consent of mothers undergoing abortions, which contradicts Planned Parenthood's carefully crafted PR in the wake of the scandal. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • In a new video just released by the Center for Medical Progress, a former clinical worker at StemExpress described her job of identifying pregnant women "who met criteria for fetal tissue orders and to harvest fetal body parts after their abortions. (lifeeducationcouncil.com)
  • the claim that since no babies were killed for the creation of fetal cell lines, we're not encouraging more abortions by making use of this material. (brephos.org)
  • There are ethical requirements for tissue obtained from elective abortions: patients have to understand what they're doing and consent to it. (kzyx.org)
  • Lawmakers and pro-life leaders said the videos document the organization's illicit activities in selling organs and tissue procured in abortions. (todayscatholic.org)
  • They argue that the research supports abortions but have taken part in receiving vaccines and therapy that comes from the research. (ipl.org)
  • Now, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra says he's reversing several restrictions on fetal tissue research put in place during the Trump administration. (kzyx.org)
  • In a 2012 letter to Children of God for Life, PepsiCo stated that "Senomyx does not use HEK cells or any other tissues or cell lines derived from human embryos or babies for research performed on behalf of PepsiCo. (hli.org)
  • The laboratory, which is supported by the National Institutes of Health, can supply tissue from normal or abnormal embryos and fetuses of desired gestational ages between 40 days and term. (blessedquietness.com)
  • Stem cells may be derived from adult tissues but the most potent are extracted from developing human embryos. (edu.au)
  • The neural tubes of these exposed embryos often failed to close, and later in development, the fetal mice also grew unusually small heads and brains. (livescience.com)
  • The researchers exposed the organoids to valproic acid and found that the drug pushed the organoids' neuroepithelial cells into senescence, just as it had in the mouse embryos. (livescience.com)
  • Embryonic stem cell research "uses special cells found in three-to-five day old human embryos to seek cures for a host of chronic disease" (PRC). (ipl.org)
  • To facilitate discussion, it was agreed to distinguish between human cloning for reproductive purposes, that is to produce a human individual, and human cloning for nonreproductive purposes, that is to produce embryos for basic and applied research. (who.int)
  • Some countries have proposed a total ban on any research involving the cloning of human embryos. (who.int)
  • Several participants reported interest among the scientific and medical communities of their countries and regions in the use of somatic cell nuclear transfer techniques to produce cloned human embryos for time-limited basic research on ageing and genetic diseases. (who.int)
  • 7LPHOLPLWHG EDVLF UHVHDUFK LQYROYLQJ FORQHG KXPDQ HPEU\RV Some countries allow research, within prescribed time limits, on "spare embryos" obtained in assisted reproduction programmes and destined to be destroyed. (who.int)
  • However, many of these countries, and others, prohibit the production of human embryos specifically for research. (who.int)
  • The stem cells suits human needs, does not cause harm and can be obtained from both adult and fetal does not conflict with religious beliefs, it has tissues, umbilical cord and early embryos. (who.int)
  • Recent developments in the in vitro culture of peri-implantation stage human embryos have expanded opportunities to investigate implantation stage human development and trophoblast differentiation in the absence of maternal tissues. (bvsalud.org)
  • In this Oct. 22, 2008 file photo, research associate Crystal Pacutin pulls a frozen vial of human embryonic stem cells at the University of Michigan Center for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research Laboratory in Ann Arbor, Mich. An appeals court gave short-term approval Thursday for continuing federal funding of embryonic stem cell research. (christianpost.com)
  • We discovered that fetal precursor cells divide faster than the adult precursor cells," says the study's first author Elza Evren, doctoral student in Tim Willinger's research group. (eurekalert.org)
  • The fetal precursor cells therefore populate the lungs faster, which is important early on in life to quickly remove microorganisms and other inhaled particles. (eurekalert.org)
  • Which Cosmetics Use Fetal Cells? (hli.org)
  • Your children might enjoy using coffee creamers and eat soup with artificial flavor enhancers (Senomyx and Firmenich) tested on artificial taste buds engineered from aborted fetal cells. (hli.org)
  • To do this, they had to produce an army of never-tiring taste testers - that is, flavor receptors engineered from human embryonic kidney cells (HEK-293, a fetal kidney cell line popular in pharmaceutical research). (hli.org)
  • The merge does not seem to have stopped the use of aborted fetal cells in development. (hli.org)
  • Normally, a child's primitive fetal cells grow and mature into organs, bones and muscles. (chla.org)
  • Once this tissue is fully formed, the cells stop dividing. (chla.org)
  • The approach would be highly targeted to tumor tissue-and potentially less toxic to normal cells. (chla.org)
  • Over just a few weeks, researchers can track a tumor's development, gaining insight into how normal cells in the tumor's "neighborhood" are coerced into promoting the tumor's growth. (chla.org)
  • Most researchers obtain embryonic stem cells from the inner mass of a blastocyst, an embryonic stage when a fertilized egg has divided into 128 cells. (jcpa.org)
  • The destruction of the pre-embryo has been the critical issue in the U.S. behind imposing limits on federal government-sponsored research in embryonic stem cells. (jcpa.org)
  • Contrary to popular belief, stem cells are present in the human body throughout life and are found in many adult organs. (jcpa.org)
  • And he says because these cells are not fully developed, they can be useful for a lot of things like trying to develop replacement organs. (npr.org)
  • And so comparison to early fetal kidney cells that are doing it normally tells you that you're on the right track or not. (npr.org)
  • In the process of fetal development, specialized tissues and organs form from a small ball of stem cells. (ivanadedomenico.org)
  • The first step in this process, in which the cells separate into three germ layers, has consistently evaded the grasps of researchers, rendering further studies in regeneration impossible. (ivanadedomenico.org)
  • Children of God for Life has publicized the use of fetal cells taken from aborted babies used in the development of vaccines. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • Lab members employ a wide range of standard and advanced techniques, including tissue analysis, cell-based experiments, mouse models of aortic disease, and single-cell transcriptome analysis to understand how different types of cells in the aortic wall respond to stress and how these responses differ in men and women. (bcm.edu)
  • Researchers identified that an abundance of fungi in the gut, particularly strains of Candida albicans yeast, could trigger an increase in immune cells, which could worsen lung damage. (medicaldaily.com)
  • Researchers at the Wellcome Sanger Institute and Newcastle University have collected genomic data from over 250,000 cells from a range of donated developing human tissues including liver, skin, kidney, and placenta. (broadinstitute.org)
  • We expect this fundamental research to deliver a wide range of important insights - from a better understanding of why miscarriages and genetic developmental disorders happen, through to understanding childhood cancers that have their root in development and the developmental pathways that cancer cells take advantage of in adults. (broadinstitute.org)
  • The mini-brain structures were reprogrammed into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) using skin cells removed from three controls and four patients with schizophrenia as described in earlier publications by the UB researchers and Kristen J. Brennand of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai. (scienceblog.com)
  • In the developing embryo, Stachowiak explains, surface cells develop tissues and organs such as skin and brain structures. (scienceblog.com)
  • For a few weeks, the researchers fed the stem cells nutrients, glucose, acids and growth factors that enabled the development and formation of so-called embryoid bodies, which contain the first recognizable stage where tissues begin to differentiate. (scienceblog.com)
  • Our research shows that the disease likely starts during the first trimester and involves accelerated cell divisions, excessive migration and premature differentiation of the neuroectodermal cells into neurons," he says. (scienceblog.com)
  • The publicized work of Carrel and his associates at the Rockefeller Institute established the practice of long-term tissue culture for a wide variety of cells. (asu.edu)
  • They found that foetal human tissue exposed to paracetamol and ibuprofen for a week had reduced numbers of germ cells - the cells that develop into sperm and eggs. (zana.com)
  • The researchers did say their results suggested that painkillers have an effect on the level of germ cells, which may alter how DNA is formed and so could potentially affect future generations. (zana.com)
  • This was a laboratory study using human tissue exposed to painkillers in a dish, as well as a mouse model, to determine the effect of paracetamol and ibuprofen on the number of germ cells in the reproductive organs. (zana.com)
  • The researchers wanted to test whether painkillers affect levels of foetal germ cells in the reproductive organs. (zana.com)
  • For the mice studies, the researchers took germ cells from the testes of second-trimester foetuses and grafted them onto host mice. (zana.com)
  • The implant is made from the stem cells that reside in white fat, which could be made from tissue obtained through liposuction. (futurity.org)
  • The researchers used a specifically tailored hydrogel to "scaffold" and control an implant containing stem cells to form a functional brown-fat-like tissue. (futurity.org)
  • We applied this concept to stem cells isolated from white-fat tissue. (futurity.org)
  • The researchers then added the cells to the hydrogel and, before the mixture thickened, injected them under the skin of genetically identical mice. (futurity.org)
  • The researchers monitored the glowing cells after injection to determine how well they stayed put, how long they persisted in the body, and whether they were metabolically functional. (futurity.org)
  • Now, in a study using mice and human tissue, scientists discovered that the medication locks some embryonic cells into a suspended state where they can't properly grow or divide. (livescience.com)
  • Mind you, this involves actual human hearts, not 3-D printed replacements, or bits of heart tissue grown in labs from human stem cells. (michaelmcgaulley.net)
  • Not long ago here we posted about some research in Lund, Sweden attempting to rejuvenate blood (of mice) by reprogramming stem cells. (michaelmcgaulley.net)
  • In REMEDY , a researcher tries to implant brain cells from a human fetus into a young chimp. (michaelmcgaulley.net)
  • Dr Warkiani's current research activities focus on three key areas of (i) Microfluidic involving the design and development of novel microfluidic systems for particle and cell sorting (e.g., circulating tumor cells, fetal cells & stem cells) for diagnostic and therapeutic applications, (ii) Organ-on-a-chip involving the fabrication and characterization of novel 3D lab-on-a-chip systems (e.g. (warkianilab.com)
  • Lawrence Goldstein , a Distinguished Professor at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine, said because these cells are not fully developed they can be useful for many things - like trying to develop replacement organs. (kzyx.org)
  • Advocates of stem cell research believe that the cells are not equivalent to human life because it is inside the womb even facing the fact that the start of a human life is in the moment of conception. (ipl.org)
  • During the last 70 years, transplantation has saved millions of lives around the globe thanks to the development of cutting-edge surgical techniques that can replace malfunctioning organs, tissues and cells. (asu.edu)
  • Without fetal cells, we probably wouldn't have vaccines for German measles, chicken pox and polio. (latimes.com)
  • Some researchers have experimented with neural stem cells to treat spinal cord injuries. (latimes.com)
  • They hypothesized that blood levels of foreign DNA from the donated organ would rise during rejection, as transplanted heart cells began to die and burst open. (nih.gov)
  • In a first-of-its-kind look at human kidney development, researchers at The Saban Research Institute of Children's Hospital Los Angeles have isolated human nephron progenitor (NP) cells. (biologynews.net)
  • In humans, about 500,000 to 1,000,000 nephrons are generated before week 34 to 36 of fetal gestation, a point at which NP cells are fully depleted and nephrogenesis ceases. (biologynews.net)
  • Research suggests that decreased filamin A function may affect the shape of cells in the smooth muscles of the gastrointestinal tract during development before birth, causing abnormalities in the layering of these muscles. (medlineplus.gov)
  • No ethical problems were envisaged with the use of somatic cell nuclear transfer techniques which would lead directly to cloned differentiated cells or tissues such as skin, for future use by the nuclear donor. (who.int)
  • Some genes that influence fetal organ development or heart cells can increase your risk. (medlineplus.gov)
  • This paper outlines the debates prompted through a reproduction mechanism involv- by progress in cloning research, with special ing male and female germ cells. (who.int)
  • Isolation of villous cytotrophoblastic cells (vCTBs) from placental tissue provides the possibility of studying differentiation of these cells as well as their function. (bvsalud.org)
  • The protein protects tissue from inflammation when cells rupture. (lu.se)
  • Their placentas mimic those of mice during early fetal development, while other key placental genes are expressed and secreted into milk for the offspring, Stanford researchers say. (scienceblog.com)
  • reduce organ damage and that are significant for the continued development of important lung disease treatments. (eurekalert.org)
  • However, with the help of a model, researchers at Karolinska Institutet have now been able to directly study the development of human macrophages in a living lung. (eurekalert.org)
  • However, regardless of how strongly you support life, you may unknowingly be cooperating in aborted fetal cell research by purchasing products that use aborted fetuses either in the product itself or in its development. (hli.org)
  • Food and beverages do not contain any aborted fetal material but may be tastier because of the nature of the research done in their development. (hli.org)
  • Well, if the opposition to fetal tissue research comes mainly from abortion rights opponents, what are they saying today about this latest development? (npr.org)
  • With further tests and development, Wang also hopes to improve the efficiency of the process and move forward in advancing stem cell research. (ivanadedomenico.org)
  • Research areas Through programs spanning genetics, biology, and therapeutic development, Broad researchers are making discoveries that drive biomedical science forward. (broadinstitute.org)
  • Researchers from the global Human Cell Atlas (HCA) Consortium are taking the first steps toward using powerful single-cell genome analysis tools to understand early human development and how this can affect health or lead to disease. (broadinstitute.org)
  • In addition, further understanding of the processes during human development will shed light on the processes of aging and how tissues repair themselves, which could lead to advances in regenerative medicine. (broadinstitute.org)
  • Funded by Wellcome and the MRC, this well-established tissue bank provides vital materials to enable research into understanding human development to help improve health. (broadinstitute.org)
  • Outside the UK, other HDCA projects are underway and researchers in Sweden are focusing on the development of the brain, lung, and heart, and on first trimester development. (broadinstitute.org)
  • Scientists from Karolinska Institute, Stockholm University, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, and Science for Life Laboratory are collaborating to discover how these organs develop in order to understand normal human development and shed light on developmental disorders. (broadinstitute.org)
  • Symptoms of schizophrenia usually appear in adolescence or young adulthood, but new research reveals the brain disease likely begins very early in development, toward the end of the first trimester of pregnancy. (scienceblog.com)
  • The findings provide powerful evidence that schizophrenia begins early in fetal development, says Michal K. Stachowiak, lead author and professor in the Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences. (scienceblog.com)
  • The pace of scientific development has been directly promoted by substantial increases in OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) government funding for genetic and biotechnological research. (edu.au)
  • By transitioning from the traditional 2D approach to 3D imaging, researchers can unlock a new realm of information, leading to a deeper comprehension of the underlying processes that drive vertebrate skeletal development. (news-medical.net)
  • The researchers quickly discovered that their protocol yielded detailed anatomical information about the skeleton, particularly focusing on crucial areas for studying skeletal development, such as the limbs and ribcage. (news-medical.net)
  • And then there are two kinds of energy-burning fat used to generate heat: brown fat, which arises during fetal development, and beige fat, which is brown-like fat formed within white fat tissue after exposure to cold and other situations. (futurity.org)
  • It's already known that for a number of organs, including the heart, the extracellular matrix in which a cell resides provides signals to guide growth and development," Healy says. (futurity.org)
  • Lung-on-a-chip, Tumour-on-a-chip) to model physiological functions of tissues and organs, and (iii) 3D micro-printing involving the design and development of novel miniaturized systems (e.g., micromixers, micro-cyclones) for basic and applied research. (warkianilab.com)
  • This short-lived but critical organ supports pregnancy by bringing nutrients and oxygen to the fetus, removing waste, providing immune protection, and producing hormones to support fetal development. (nih.gov)
  • These experimental models have enabled researchers to mimic the development of the brain and to study the biology underlying diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease, Zika virus infection and cancer. (tfri.ca)
  • The team led by Dr. Phedias Diamandis generated profiles of the proteins found at various stages of development in human brain tissue and in mini brains-in-a-dish. (tfri.ca)
  • In the current study, the researchers profiled the proteins expressed in two cell populations within cerebral organoids that represent different stages of brain development. (tfri.ca)
  • It is concerned with the sequential stages of embryonic and fetal development, beginning with fertilization. (ac.ir)
  • Powerful advancements in molecular genetic manipulation and assisted reproductive technolo-gies are employed during embryo and fetal development, and these efforts have had profound impact on animal production worldwide. (ac.ir)
  • new findings that can help to reduce organ damage and that are significant for the continued development of important lung disease treatments. (ki.se)
  • These encompass harm to the immune system, disruptions in reproductive and fetal development, hormone disruption and an increased risk of cancer. (eurekalert.org)
  • So, cancer has a very low bar to meet to hide from your own immune system, compared with foreign tissue like an organ transplant," said Weaver, who is an expert in biomaterials, drug delivery, and tissue and immune engineering for the development of functional and immune-protected tissue and cell grafts. (asu.edu)
  • In addition to defining the genetic profile of human NP, this system will facilitate studies of human kidney development, providing a novel tool for renal regeneration and bioengineering purposes," says principal investigator Laura Perin, PhD, co-director of CHLA's GOFARR Laboratory for Organ Regenerative Research and Cell Therapeutics in Urology. (biologynews.net)
  • This technique provides a 'how to' of human tissue during development," Perin says. (biologynews.net)
  • For decades, researchers assumed that this premature eviction from the womb left little or no role for the placenta, which in most mammals tightly links the physiological processes of the mother and the fetus to support the fetus's many stages of development. (scienceblog.com)
  • In short, female marsupials express genes important for fetal development that are normally found in the later stages of the eutherian placenta in their mammary glands instead - a kind of handoff of the developmental baton from womb to milk that suits their unique, savanna-hopping lifestyle. (scienceblog.com)
  • Guernsey studied the RNA transcripts in the wallaby placenta and compared them with those found in eutherian mammals during various stages of fetal development. (scienceblog.com)
  • These numerous functions involving filamin A have been found to play roles in regulating skeletal and brain development, the formation of heart tissue and blood vessels, blood clotting, skin elasticity, the maintenance of lung tissue, and the function of the digestive system. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Researchers suspect that the variants involved in frontometaphyseal dysplasia may change the way the filamin A protein helps regulate processes involved in skeletal development, but it is not known how changes in the protein relate to the specific signs and symptoms of the condition. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction organized a second interregional and interdisciplinary meeting on cloning (Geneva, 24 October 1997), in conjunction with a regular session of its Scientific and Ethical Review Group. (who.int)
  • However, ethical problems were foreseen with the production by cloning of fully formed and functioning organs, as participants could not envisage how such organs could be made without first producing a cloned embryo and allowing it to grow, at least partially, through the fetal stage of development. (who.int)
  • It is essential to understand the effect of medications and to know the point in fetal development when drugs are most toxic and which fetal organs are most susceptible. (medscape.com)
  • Researchers at Lund University have discovered that a specific group of genetic elements in our DNA influence the development of the human brain, their study was published in Science Advances. (lu.se)
  • Researchers at Lund University offer new insights in their latest study, published in Science Advances, detailing how a specific group of genetic elements have influenced the development of the human brain over time. (lu.se)
  • In Lund, researchers are investigating these repetitive regions of our DNA to understand the role transposable elements play in human brain development and evolution. (lu.se)
  • Johan Jakobsson, a professor at Lund University and research group leader at MultiPark and Lund Stem Cell Center, explains, "LINE-1 retrotransposons are a rich source of genetic sequences that we suspect have shaped the evolution of the human brain, and we now have the tools to explore their role in brain development. (lu.se)
  • Periconceptional, fetal and neonatal period is crucial for organ development. (lu.se)
  • The National Institutes of Health on Friday decided to disband an independent advisory board that reviews applications for federal funding of projects outside the NIH that use fetal tissue from aborted babies in their research. (christianpost.com)
  • Tiny human babies are aborted by abortionists and then exploited to be farmed for their organs and tissue for use in experiments," Carol Tobias, president of National Right to Life, said in a statement . (christianpost.com)
  • WASHINGTON - The National Institutes of Health (NIH) on Friday reversed restrictions on federally-funded research using fetal tissue and organs of aborted babies. (ncregister.com)
  • The National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced on April 16 that it was reversing restrictions on research using fetal tissue and organs of aborted babies. (ncregister.com)
  • Even worse, the reports show that university researchers may have harvested organs from babies who were old enough to survive outside the womb. (senate.gov)
  • Last week, Breitbart highlighted one of the other uses of fetal organs "donated" to scientific research: Organs of aborted babies are implanted into rats in order to experiment with growing organs for the possibility of transplant to children and even adults. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • Once the rats were implanted with human kidneys from aborted babies, researchers surgically removed the rats' own kidneys a month later. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • Perhaps, he says, the practice will seem "more palatable" if the organs of aborted babies grown in rodents and pigs can only be transplanted into infants and children. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • Learning about how these organs develop will help us make progress on disorders that severely affect large numbers of babies and children. (broadinstitute.org)
  • It would obviously be unethical to subject pregnant women and their unborn babies to potential harms, so the researchers used animals and lab-based research involving foetal human tissue to try to replicate the effects of painkiller exposure during pregnancy. (zana.com)
  • namely, the harvesting of vital organs from human babies - which continues today. (brephos.org)
  • If I can make only one reality memorable and central in this whole debate let it be this: organ harvesting from human babies is not a thing of the past. (brephos.org)
  • Here in the UK, the Cardiff Fetal Tissue Bank has been collecting organs for research purposes from babies electively aborted. (brephos.org)
  • I would like to know if…would be prepared to take a vaccine made with the fetal cell line WALVAX-2, for which nine human babies were dissected in 2015, in China? (brephos.org)
  • 2. There are other times when aborted babies are born with beating hearts before organ harvesting. (lifesitenews.com)
  • In their letter to Grimm, the lawmakers reiterated the grave allegations that HHS refused to address, including concerns that University researchers had illegally altered abortion procedures solely for the purpose of obtaining fetal tissue, or derived fetal tissue by organ or tissue harvesting from aborted babies who were born alive and then killed. (lifenews.com)
  • The videos show some of Planned Parenthood's top staff discussing compensation for the procurement of fetal body parts (Lamborghini, anyone? (texasrighttolife.com)
  • Over lunch at a Los Angeles restaurant, two antiabortion activists posing as employees from a biotech firm met with Deborah Nucatola, Planned Parenthood's senior director of medical research. (lifeeducationcouncil.com)
  • Armed with cameras, the activists recorded Nucatola talking about Planned Parenthood's work donating fetal tissue to researchers and pressed her on whether the clinics were charging for the organs. (lifeeducationcouncil.com)
  • Today's video may be the most disturbing of the seven videos exposing Planned Parenthood's fetal body part trade. (lifesitenews.com)
  • The Charlotte Lozier Institute claimed that fetal tissue was previously used for humanized mice experiments at NIH and Food and Drug Administration facilities, before the Trump administration's moratorium. (ncregister.com)
  • The youngest organ donor was a baby with anencephaly, born in 2014, who lived for only 100 minutes and donated his kidneys to an adult with renal failure. (wikipedia.org)
  • It's as if we stumbled across an adult who had been murdered, not for their organs, and took the opportunity to use their organs to save others. (brephos.org)
  • both fetal and adult brain tissue samples. (lu.se)
  • Ultrasound images showing fetal (left) and maternal (right) placental vasculature. (nih.gov)
  • By evaluating both fetal (left panel) and maternal (right panel) placental vasculature in 610 pregnant people starting at 13 weeks of gestation, the investigators aimed to identify early changes that predicted later complications. (nih.gov)
  • For example, an HPP research team led by scientists at the University of California, Los Angeles, adapted non-invasive prenatal testing methods to analyze genetic material shed from the placenta into the maternal bloodstream. (nih.gov)
  • Weaver's lab team is exploring the same mechanisms that the placenta uses to hide the developing fetus from the maternal immune system and applying them to cell and tissue transplantation. (asu.edu)
  • In contrast, the eutherian placenta is highly complex and comprises both maternal and fetal tissue. (scienceblog.com)
  • Our research is focused on investigating the missing heritability of type 2 diabetes through investigation of parent-of-origin effects (POE) on common variants and rare de novo and loss-of-function mutations, which could explain the maternal transmission and relate to developmental programming. (lu.se)
  • We apply a systems genetics approach integrating high-throughput -omics and machine learning in large family and population-based cohorts as well as tissues of interest to dissect such maternal and paternal effects and how they can affect risk of diabetes and its related comorbidities. (lu.se)
  • Problems with the placenta can lead to preeclampsia , gestational diabetes , poor fetal growth, preterm birth , and stillbirth . (nih.gov)
  • Although we were all connected to one, the placenta is the least understood, and least studied, of all human organs. (nih.gov)
  • Since 2014, this approximately $88 million collaborative research effort has been developing ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and blood-based biomarker methods to study how the placenta functions in real time and in greater detail. (nih.gov)
  • As shown in the video above, the researchers developed a way to account for the motion of the uterus and "freeze" the placenta to make it easier to study (left two panels of video) [2]. (nih.gov)
  • These are just a few examples of the cutting-edge work being funded through the HPP, which complements NICHD's longstanding investment in basic research to unravel the physiology of and real-time gene expression in the placenta. (nih.gov)
  • Half of the placenta is mother's tissue and half is the fetal tissue," says Mark Kristal PhD, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Buffalo. (refinery29.com)
  • This research basically shows that the placenta, while really different-looking in the marsupial, has many of the functions of the eutherian," said Julie Baker , PhD, professor of genetics at Stanford. (scienceblog.com)
  • To investigate the relationship between the marsupial placenta and the milk produced during lactation, the researchers homed in on 77 genes whose expression was shared among the tammar placenta, the eutherian placenta and the tammar mammary gland, but not the mouse mammary gland. (scienceblog.com)
  • In 2009, in a major reversal of U.S. policy, President Obama signed an executive order pledging to "vigorously support" embryonic stem cell research. (jcpa.org)
  • Experts from around the world are assessing the difficult issue of the extent to which embryonic stem cell research should be allowed to proceed, and to date there is little international consensus on this matter. (edu.au)
  • How, then, should embryonic stem cell research be regulated in Australia? (edu.au)
  • In this article we examine embryonic stem cell research and explore the current regulatory framework associated with this research in Australia, with particular reference to the Andrews Report . (edu.au)
  • In recent years, several competing viewpoints have emerged about embryonic stem cell research. (ipl.org)
  • All of this debate raises an important question, Should embryonic stem cell research be conducted for treatment of present and future diseases? (ipl.org)
  • People who believe that an embryo should not be destroyed tend to say that embryonic stem cell research should not be conducted. (ipl.org)
  • On the other hand, people who believe that embryonic stem cell research creates means of curing diseases reply that the research should be conducted. (ipl.org)
  • Here, courtesy of the National Institutes of Health, in taxpayer-funded black and white, is the reality of America's culture of death: commercial cannibalism of the young of the human species, a business about to break into the mainstream as a coalition of major medical and health organizations, businesses, and associations press for federal funding of lethal embryo research. (blessedquietness.com)
  • Assisted reproductive technology (ART) and embryo research have posed many challenges to the different timeframes of science, ethics and law. (edu.au)
  • As of February 2, 2019, there were 120,000 people waiting for life-saving organ transplants in the US. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said in a notice to the "extramural research community" - researchers who are not at NIH facilities - that it would be removing the Trump administration's 2019 requirement that a federal ethics advisory board review all proposals for fetal tissue research. (ncregister.com)
  • In 2019, former President Trump put new restrictions on the use of fetal tissue in projects funded by the federal government. (npr.org)
  • Researchers were able to develop a novel way to transplant human fetal kidneys into anephric rats to overcome a significant obstacle in impeding human fetal organ transplantations. (wikipedia.org)
  • The human fetal kidneys demonstrated both growth and function within the rats. (wikipedia.org)
  • Live Science reports that "in the new study, Gu and his colleagues obtained human fetal kidneys from StemExpress, a Placerville, California-based company that supplies researchers with tissue from deceased adults and fetuses. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • A1M is mainly produced in the liver, where it is secreted into the blood and quickly transported to all tissue before it is finally broken down in the kidneys. (lu.se)
  • In order to better appreciate the role of stem cell research in reproductive medicine, there is a need to understand the critical biological principles of stem cell research and its potential applications to medicine. (jcpa.org)
  • While there is a great deal published on the potential medical applications of stem cell research to treat or cure diseases such as diabetes, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, cancer, and heart disease, much less has been published on the future impact of stem cell research in reproductive medicine. (jcpa.org)
  • The Biden administration and HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra have dismantled the process of making researchers meet any ethical standards when it comes to harvesting the body parts of aborted children for research. (christianpost.com)
  • We applaud the Biden administration and Secretary Xavier Becerra for prioritizing science and reversing the Trump administration's arbitrary barriers to both extramural and intramural researchers on the use of fetal tissue in scientific research," Reps. Suzan DelBene, D-Wash., Mark Pocan, D-Wis. (christianpost.com)
  • Instead of probing the alarming allegations, the Biden Administration said that the NIH Office of Extramural Research had "been in discussions" with the University of Pittsburgh that resulted in the commissioning of an "independent, third-party firm" whose report could be found publicly posted on the University's website. (lifenews.com)
  • These organoids resemble miniature human brains , in that their structure and function is similar to that of the full-size organ. (livescience.com)
  • CDC scientists found Zika virus RNA persisted in fetal brains and in placentas for more than seven months after the pregnant women contracted Zika. (cdc.gov)
  • The lead surgeon, Joseph Murray, and the Nephrologist, John Merril won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1990 for advances in organ transplantation. (wikipedia.org)
  • Brain banks typically source tissue from donors that had directly registered with them before their passing, since organ donor registries focus on tissue meant for transplantation. (wikipedia.org)
  • Weaver and researchers in the Weaver Lab are focused on developing a unique way to make transplantation possible without suppressing the immune system - something that can ultimately reduce the risks associated with transplantation and potentially increase the longevity of transplant recipients' new organs. (asu.edu)
  • Weaver says this could train the patient's immune system to accept foreign tissue and eliminate the need for immunosuppressive drugs in transplantation. (asu.edu)
  • Organ transplantation saves the lives of thousands of Americans each year. (nih.gov)
  • For the first time, we can now use cell-free DNA for practical diagnostic questions in organ transplantation," says Quake, adding that the approach may apply to other organs. (nih.gov)
  • Similarly, there was interest in using the procedure to produce cloned tissue and organs for possible future transplantation in the nuclear donor and perhaps other tissue- compatible recipients. (who.int)
  • The obvious issue with this study is that it was performed on mice and in tissues grown on dishes in laboratories, so it can't show us the true effects of painkillers on pregnant women. (zana.com)
  • Afterward they transplanted the thawed strips into mice that, thanks to genetic engineering, lacked an immune system and so couldn't reject the foreign tissue. (discovermagazine.com)
  • Following the release, last May, of a powerful LifeTalk video featuring "Kelly," a fetal tissue procurer for the Maryland-based Anatomic Gifts Foundation, Life Dynamics has released documentation obtained from fetal tissue wholesalers, that is, companies which place their employees in abortion facilities to harvest tissue, limbs, organs, etc. (blessedquietness.com)
  • They observed that such changes can start in the first trimester and affect both the vasculature and placental tissue. (nih.gov)
  • While further research is needed, these findings suggest that placental ultrasound monitoring can inform efforts to prevent and treat pregnancy complications. (nih.gov)
  • To the best of her knowledge, Weaver says no other researchers have attempted to use placental mechanisms to prevent transplant rejection via biomaterials and tissue engineering approaches. (asu.edu)
  • Stem cell research is, in part, a quest to understand cellular differentiation, the process by which a human being develops from one fertilized cell into a multicellular organism composed of over 200 different cell types - for example muscle, nerve, blood cell, or kidney. (jcpa.org)
  • Collaboration between researchers from the University of Illinois, Notre Dame University and the Huazhong University of Science and Technology in China has resulted in astounding advances in the field of stem cell research. (ivanadedomenico.org)
  • Embryonic stem cell technology is still at a preliminary research stage and announcements about its potential may be premature. (edu.au)
  • This issue was considered by the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs in its report entitled Human Cloning: Scientific, Ethical and Regulatory Aspects of Human Cloning and Stem Cell Research (hereafter the Andrews Report , after the Chair of the Committee, Mr Kevin Andrews, MP) released in September 2001. (edu.au)
  • Stahl teamed up with Kevin Healy, professor of bioengineering, and postdoctoral researcher Amit Jha to develop a system of physical cues to guide stem cell differentiation. (futurity.org)
  • STEM CELL RESEARCH is a very controversial topic in today's time. (ipl.org)
  • Stem cell research is not worth supporting. (ipl.org)
  • One of the greatest controversies triggered tissue, a stem cell encoding for heart tissue by the rapid pace of evolution in biology, will eventually develop into heart tissue particularly in genomics and biotechnology, and so on. (who.int)
  • The foetal tissue samples were obtained from elective terminations of pregnancy, with the written consent of the mothers. (zana.com)
  • Organ donation is the process when a person allows an organ of their own to be removed and transplanted to another person, legally, either by consent while the donor is alive or dead with the assent of the next of kin. (wikipedia.org)
  • Donation may be for research or, more commonly, healthy transplantable organs and tissues may be donated to be transplanted into another person. (wikipedia.org)
  • While views of organ donation are positive, there is a large gap between the numbers of registered donors compared to those awaiting organ donations on a global level. (wikipedia.org)
  • To increase the number of organ donors, especially among underrepresented populations, current approaches include the use of optimized social network interventions, exposing tailored educational content about organ donation to target social media users. (wikipedia.org)
  • Every year August 13 is observed as World Organ Donation Day to raising awareness about the importance of organ donation. (wikipedia.org)
  • Organ donors are usually dead at the time of donation, but may be living. (wikipedia.org)
  • For living donors, organ donation typically involves extensive testing before the donation, including psychological evaluation to determine whether the would-be donor understands and consents to the donation. (wikipedia.org)
  • For dead donors, the process begins with verifying that the person is undoubtedly deceased, determining whether any organs could be donated, and obtaining consent for the donation of any usable organs. (wikipedia.org)
  • Your donation helps us continue to provide world-class research in defense of life. (lozierinstitute.org)
  • By including consent for the donation of fetal tissue in the same form used to secure consent to the abortion, SWO presented to Duran the distinct question of whether she wanted to donate her baby's body parts as part and parcel of her decision to have an abortion. (lozierinstitute.org)
  • SWO not only failed to provide a separate consent form for fetal tissue donation to Duran, it also neglected to present her with several important pieces of information bearing on her decision. (lozierinstitute.org)
  • In short, the clinic failed to disclose its vested interest stemming from its collaboration with UNM on fetal tissue research in securing not only Duran's abortion, but also her donation of fetal tissue. (lozierinstitute.org)
  • SWO presented the two distinct decisions to her as a package deal, without informing her that donation of fetal tissue was voluntary, and refusal to donate the baby body parts would not prejudice consent for the abortion. (lozierinstitute.org)
  • The report on Gu's study acknowledges that "the research raises a number of ethical questions" but glosses over the problems with "fetal tissue donation. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • Also, the question arises for many people of how many mothers would willingly consent to the possibility of their child's organs being implanted into rodents and pigs for experimentation. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • And why do scientists say it's necessary for medical research? (npr.org)
  • What is fetal tissue research - and why do many scientists say it's necessary? (kzyx.org)
  • During a House Appropriations subcommittee hearing on Thursday, HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra had indicated that the NIH's fetal tissue policy could change, The Hill reported . (christianpost.com)
  • U.S. SENATE - U.S. Senator Steve Daines today sent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland, HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra and NIH Director Francis Collins asking for a thorough investigation into the University of Pittsburgh's inhumane abortion procedures and research. (senate.gov)
  • Fetal tissue is uniquely valuable to medical researchers. (npr.org)
  • MCCAMMON: Well, fetal tissue is uniquely adaptable, and so it's useful for a lot of different types of scientific inquiry. (npr.org)
  • In addition to translating research from "bench to bedside," our surgeon-scientists are uniquely situated to meet clinical challenges with a "bedside to bench" approach. (bcm.edu)
  • Fetal tissue is uniquely valuable to medical researchers - useful for developing treatments and better understanding diseases like HIV, Parkinson's, and COVID-19. (kzyx.org)
  • Fetal tissue is uniquely adaptable and useful for many types of scientific inquiry. (kzyx.org)
  • Records indicate that UNM picked up two fetal tissue specimens from SWO on October 17-one week after Duran's abortion-including an 11.5-week-old baby and a 12.7-week-old baby. (lozierinstitute.org)
  • Specimens are obtained within minutes of passage and tissues are aseptically identified, staged, and immediately processed according to the requirements of individual investigators. (blessedquietness.com)
  • Consultative and Diagnostic Pathology, Inc., will be asking to obtain tissue specimens from your patient's medical procedure. (blessedquietness.com)
  • By extracting material fractions with well-separated ruthenium and hydroxyapatite signals, the researchers generated 3D renderings that closely resembled specimens obtained through clearing and staining. (news-medical.net)
  • Live Science quotes Cate Dyer, founder of StemExpress, who claims that all donors are fully informed about the possible uses of the baby organs they are donating. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • HHS has gotten re-affirmations from government researchers and government-funded researchers that their tissue procurement is done in accordance with the tissue laws. (politico.com)
  • His claim was based on chick-heart tissue cultures in his laboratory that seemed to be able to proliferate forever. (asu.edu)
  • In an effort to develop tissue culture techniques for long-term tissue cultivation, French surgeon and biologist Alexis Carrel, and his associates, produced and maintained a series of chick heart tissue cultures at the Rockefeller Institute in New York City. (asu.edu)
  • From 1912 to 1946, this series of chick heart tissue cultures remained alive and dividing. (asu.edu)
  • Products related to fetal material can be broken down into three categories: artificial flavors, cosmetics, and medicines/vaccines. (hli.org)
  • The Vaccine Chart of the Sound Choice Pharmaceutical Institute (SCPI) lists dozens of vaccines and medical products that contain aborted fetal cell lines. (hli.org)
  • The first living organ donor in a successful transplant was Ronald Lee Herrick (1931-2010), who donated a kidney to his identical twin brother in 1954. (wikipedia.org)
  • The oldest altruistic living organ donor was an 85-year-old woman in Britain, who donated a kidney to a stranger in 2014 after hearing how many people needed to receive a transplant. (wikipedia.org)
  • While the goal of treating infants and children who would benefit from an organ transplant is admirable, the means Gu suggests are unquestionably wrong. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • Essentially, the fetus is like an organ transplant to the mother, yet her body does not reject it while it grows. (asu.edu)
  • But recipients are at risk for transplant rejection, in which the immune system attacks and damages the donated organ. (nih.gov)
  • Heart transplant recipients undergo at least 12 tissue biopsies during the first year after their transplant and 2 or 3 each year for about 4 additional years. (nih.gov)
  • Dr. Amatruda, who holds the Dr. Kenneth O. Williams Chair in Cancer Research, studies solid tumor cancers in children, including liver and kidney cancers and sarcomas (cancers of the bone, muscle and connective tissue). (chla.org)
  • Currently, there is no standardized workflow for reliable separation and intensity-based visualization of skeletal tissues , allowing simultaneous isotropic 3D imaging of cartilage and bone with similar quality. (news-medical.net)
  • Their innovative approach involves selectively labeling the cartilage matrix, providing adequate contrast compared to other tissues for automated visualization and segmentation while preserving the bone mineral. (news-medical.net)
  • However, a challenge they faced was the overlap in X-Ray attenuation between fetal bone and cartilage. (news-medical.net)
  • Recent reports from the NIH show the University of Pittsburgh may have violated federal law by altering abortion procedures solely for the purpose of obtaining fetal tissue. (senate.gov)
  • In what was supposed to be some sort of "bombshell," antiabortion crusaders claimed that Nucatola admitted harvesting aborted fetal parts, changing abortion procedures to accommodate the harvesting of aborted fetal parts, then illegally selling the aborted fetal parts to medical researchers. (latimes.com)
  • This organ, which is responsible for providing nutrients and oxygen to your growing baby and filtering the baby's blood, is unlike any other organ in the body because it is transient. (refinery29.com)
  • Some organs and tissues can be donated by living donors, such as a kidney or part of the liver, part of the pancreas, part of the lungs or part of the intestines, but most donations occur after the donor has died. (wikipedia.org)
  • The oldest known organ donor for an internal organ was a 95-year-old West Virginia man, who donated his liver after he died. (wikipedia.org)
  • The notice adds, "NIH reminds the community of expectations to obtain informed consent from the donor for any NIH-funded research using human fetal tissue … and of continued obligations to conduct such research only in accord with any applicable federal, state, or local laws and regulations, including prohibitions on the payment of valuable consideration for such tissue. (christianpost.com)
  • By comparing the proportions of DNA derived from the organ donor and recipient, the scientists determined that, when patients were healthy, donor DNA made up less than 1% of the total free-floating DNA in the blood samples. (nih.gov)
  • The other step was a requirement that external applicants for NIH funds who wanted to use fetal tissue would have to go through a new ethics advisory board review process. (npr.org)
  • Furthermore, while there is concern for the mother's consent, the issue of the actual organ donor's consent is never addressed: The child being dismembered in the mother's womb cannot give consent. (texasrighttolife.com)
  • But if you're trying to get quality fetal tissue, you probably don't want to be tearing the unborn baby apart in his mother's womb. (lifesitenews.com)
  • A1M Pharma - Professors of Medicine Bo Åkerström and Stefan Hansson discovered that free fetal hemoglobin is harmful if it leaks into the mother's blood circulation. (lu.se)
  • Human embryonic and fetal tissues are available from the Central Laboratory for Human Embryology at the University of Washington. (blessedquietness.com)
  • Under the supervision of Dr. Scott A. LeMaire , director of research for the Division and Vice Chair for Research in the Department, and Dr. Ying H. Shen , the research team within the Aortic Disease Research Laboratory maintains one of the world's most extensive and well-cataloged aortic tissue banks. (bcm.edu)
  • The Aortic Disease Research Laboratory is now working to further identify the mechanisms that drive aortic degeneration. (bcm.edu)
  • While this type of laboratory research can provide preliminary data, it does not necessarily translate to what would happen in the human body. (zana.com)
  • Donated brain tissue is a valuable resource for research into brain function, neurodiversity, neuropathology and possible treatments. (wikipedia.org)
  • President Clinton added a new twist when he approved government-funded research using brain tissue from aborted children. (str.org)
  • it also produces a cash crop: fetal brain tissue. (str.org)
  • A baby who is born dead," Dr. James Dobson notes, "is of less value to researchers because brain tissue and other organs quickly deteriorate when deprived of oxygen. (str.org)
  • With its head still in the birth canal and its legs, arms and the rest of its body dangling on the outside of the mother, the brain tissue is extracted, usually while the baby is still alive. (str.org)
  • With the addition of new composition media, nutrients and growth factors, they grew large enough to eventually develop the tissue out of which the brain forms, called the neuroectoderm. (scienceblog.com)
  • This upset seems to occur around the time that the "neural tube" - a hollow tube of tissue that later becomes the brain and spinal cord - forms and closes. (livescience.com)
  • The brain is the body's most complex organ. (tfri.ca)
  • It is also one of the most difficult to study because access to human brain tissue is limited. (tfri.ca)
  • To overcome this limitation, the researchers used small three-dimensional brain-like organs in the lab called cerebral organoids. (tfri.ca)
  • They found that the profiles of proteins in cerebral organoids were very similar to those found in fetal brain tissue. (tfri.ca)
  • Ontario-based researchers led by Terry Fox New Investigator Dr. Phedias Diamandis are researching the possibility of harnessing the power of brain wea. (tfri.ca)
  • Until relatively recently, the pineal gland was considered a vestigial organ lacking function, i.e., the brain s appendix. (healingtherapies.info)
  • The human brain is an incredibly intricate organ that regulates everything from our motor skills to our memories. (lu.se)
  • A new study by CDC is the first to show Zika virus RNA replicating in brain tissues of infants with microcephaly who later died and in placentas of women who suffered pregnancy losses after Zika infection during pregnancy. (cdc.gov)
  • However, immune suppression is needed to prevent a recipient's immune system from rejecting the donated tissue, and immune suppression comes with a host of serious potential side effects. (asu.edu)
  • The biggest problem with using cancer's techniques to hide from the immune system is that cancer is your own tissue. (asu.edu)
  • Research using abortive fetal tissue is unethical, wrong, and has also been proven ineffective. (senate.gov)
  • The NIH is the US's biomedical research agency. (ncregister.com)
  • A paper describing the research was published today in Translational Psychiatry by scientists at the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB and other institutions. (scienceblog.com)
  • SUMMARY The Indian Council of Medical Research formulates, coordinates and promotes biomedical research in India. (who.int)
  • The awards are given to support biomedical and behavioral researchers who are working on promising techniques to overcome some of the biggest challenges in the field. (asu.edu)
  • Exploiting the body parts of aborted children for research purposes is repulsive and should stop, regardless of the outcome hoped for by researchers. (senate.gov)
  • Although Nucatola's conversation may have been unsavory - who wants to talk about fetal body parts over salad? (latimes.com)
  • The researchers said their results 'raise concerns' about the use of painkillers during pregnancy, as they could cause the unborn child to have fertility problems. (zana.com)
  • Later research in rodents and monkeys suggested that, when taken in the first few weeks of pregnancy, the drug might disrupt the earliest stages of nervous system formation. (livescience.com)
  • Pregnancy is the only biologically normal example of immune acceptance of completely foreign tissue. (asu.edu)
  • However, she says pregnancy actually induces a specific immune tolerance toward the fetal tissue. (asu.edu)
  • Now researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and the University of Melbourne in Australia have collaborated to learn that marsupials have evolved a clever trick to support their need for a shortened pregnancy and a long lactation period. (scienceblog.com)
  • The Organization of Teratology Information Specialists is a network of risk-assessment counselors in the United States and Canada who specialize in researching and communicating the risks associated with drug exposures in pregnancy. (medscape.com)
  • Although not as well researched as smoking, there is evidence that snus can cause both reversible and irreversible oral tissue damage and that consumption during pregnancy increases the risk of prematurity and intrauterine foetal mortality. (cancercentrum.se)
  • On the Permanent Life of Tissues outside of the Organism' reports Alexis Carrel's 1912 experiments on the maintenance of tissue in culture media. (asu.edu)
  • In one set of experiments, begun in 1994, he removed ovaries from ewes, froze strips of the ovarian tissue, then later reimplanted the tissue in the same animals. (discovermagazine.com)