Posts Tagged ‘process’

Bone marrow drive hopes to help student and save lives

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

When LSA senior Daniel Lee returned to the United States in December from a family trip to Italy feeling ill, he was rushed to the hospital where he received a life-threatening diagnosis — he had aplastic anemia, a disease that prevents bone marrow from producing red and white blood cells.

Upon hearing news of Lee’s dire need for a bone marrow transplant, students mobilized to encourage members of the campus community to donate marrow and raise awareness about the importance of joining the National Marrow Donor Registry.

As part of this effort, Sigma Kappa sorority members will work with DKMS Americas, a donor recruitment center, helping students, faculty and staff members register for the Be The Match Registry today from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Anderson AB Room in the Union.

LSA senior Samira Monavvari, Lee’s friend, has been working to promote today’s event via Facebook and has received more than 1,000 confirmed attendees. Monavvari said she hopes to be able to help someone else in need of a transplant, even if she doesn't find a match for Lee.

“The fact that Dan is going through this makes us want to donate to people who we don’t even know because it’s so hard seeing what he’s going through,” Monavvari said.

According to Monavvari, Lee is known jokingly by his friends as “the next Steve Jobs,” adding that he is extremely smart, driven and friendly.

“If you ask him what he wants to do, he’ll always say he wants to be known for something,” Monavvari said. “He is the kind of kid who gets along with everyone … that’s why (his diagnosis) has touched everyone so much.”

LSA junior Jessica Kaltz, a member of Sigma Kappa, started organizing the drive prior to Lee’s diagnosis. Kaltz worked with Christian Montgomery, a University alum and DKMS Americas employee, over the past few months to organize the registry at the University.

She wrote in an e-mail interview that she hopes that Lee’s story will inspire people to attend today’s event.

“When people hear about Dan’s story, I think they will see that by simply taking five minutes of their time by signing up to become a donor, they could possibly be the life-saving difference that Dan needs,” Kaltz wrote.

Montgomery explained that the process for joining the registry involves having potential donors fill out a short form and then submit a cheek swab to determine their tissue type.
Potential donors will then be added to the Be The Match Registry, a national list of potential bone marrow donors.

If the donor is contacted as a match and decides to continue with the process, he or she will be required to take a blood test in order to obtain the best match for the patient in need.

Between four and six weeks later, the donor will undergo a marrow extraction procedure or peripheral blood stem cell donation, depending on the patient’s condition. Contrary to popular belief, the donor typically does not experience significant pain, a common misconception about the two procedures, Montgomery said.

Montgomery is not only a DKMS employee, but also a bone marrow donor himself. In 2007, he registered at an event in the Diag, and in January 2008 he was contacted as a potential match for a 22-year-old female in New Jersey suffering from paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, a rare blood disease.

Nicole Mausteller, the patient to whom Montgomery made his donation, said her disorder was discovered through blood work that was required as part of the process of becoming a dental assistant.

Montgomery donated through marrow extraction in May 2008, a procedure that he said left him a bit stiff and sore for a few days. After receiving a one-month, six-month and one-year update, Montgomery and Mausteller agreed to exchange contact information. They have been in contact since February 2010 and remain good friends.

“He’s my hero,” Mausteller said.

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Bone marrow drive hopes to help student and save lives

Lomu needs new kidney transplant

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

Former All Blacks winger Jonah Lomu has said he needs a new kidney transplant and has lost 30kg since September.

Lomu, who scored 37 tries in 63 Tests for New Zealand between 1994 and 2002, had a first organ transplant in 2004 but the kidney stopped functioning in October 2011.

Continue reading the main story

“ For me, the important thing is to ask 'can you look in the mirror and say you've done everything to enjoy life?'”

Jonah Lomu

The 36-year-old has recently been having dialysis for 21 hours each week.

“Nothing has made any difference – the next step is to try to find a donor,” he told New Zealand Woman's Weekly  .

“I know I was fortunate to get the first transplant but there are more difficulties this time around.

“The match will be harder and the process of finding a suitable donor is difficult. The chances of my body rejecting this kidney are higher too.

“I'm really lucky – I've already lived more in one lifetime than many would in six or seven lifetimes. The thing about being human is that everybody has to die sometime.

“For me, the important thing is to ask 'can you look in the mirror and say you done everything to enjoy life?”'

Lomu was diagnosed with the kidney disorder nephrotic syndrome in 1995.

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Lomu needs new kidney transplant

Benefits of Food Biotechnology – CommonGround – Video

Friday, January 27th, 2012


24-01-2012 10:12 Suzanne Shirborun, a farmer from northwest Iowa, talks about the safety of biotechnology and why consumers are scared of it. Biotechnology speeds up the process of producing new hybrids which farmers can use

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Benefits of Food Biotechnology – CommonGround – Video

New Alternative Kidney Stones Therapy Dissolves Kidney Stone Effectively by Improving Blood Filtration States Fine …

Saturday, January 21st, 2012

New Thermobalancing Therapy invented by Dr. Simon Allen of Fine Treatment increases the blood flow in kidneys.

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New Alternative Kidney Stones Therapy Dissolves Kidney Stone Effectively by Improving Blood Filtration States Fine …

Kidney Dialysis Filtration Process – animation short demo – Video

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012


13-12-2011 09:18 DialySorb is an industry leader in portable, low water dialysis filtration using innovative sorbent cartridges which make simpler treatment process using less water and less equipment. For example, emergency medical teams in the military and at disaster sites where water is scarce. So, how to explain DialySorb to a variety of different end users

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Kidney Dialysis Filtration Process – animation short demo – Video

Healthy woman donates kidney to stranger

Friday, December 23rd, 2011

The Associated Press The Associated Press LOUISVILLE, Ky. A patient at Louisville’s Jewish Hospital got a priceless Christmas gift this year.

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Healthy woman donates kidney to stranger

Genetic study of black chickens shed light on mechanisms causing rapid evolution in domestic animals

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

( Uppsala University ) The genetic changes underlying the evolution of new species are still poorly understood. For instance, we know little about critical changes that have happened during human evolution. Genetic studies in domestic animals can shed light on this process due to the rapid evolution they have undergone over the last 10,000 years

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Genetic study of black chickens shed light on mechanisms causing rapid evolution in domestic animals

What Unusually Long-Lived Animals Tell Us about Human Aging

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

As I was editing David Stipp’s article “ A New Path to Longevity ” for the January 2012 issue of Scientific American, Stipp told me about some intriguing research into unusually long-lived mammals. Investigators are studying such animals to better understand why the adult human body deteriorates with age and how to intervene in the process. David examined that research in his 2010 book The Youth …

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What Unusually Long-Lived Animals Tell Us about Human Aging

Scientists use animal-free reagents to create clinical-grade neurons from skin cells

Friday, December 9th, 2011

(Medical Xpress) — Using a specially designed facility, UCLA stem cell scientists have taken human skin cells, reprogrammed them into cells with the same unlimited property as embryonic stem cells, and then differentiated them into neurons while completely avoiding the use of animal-based reagents and feeder conditions throughout the process.

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Scientists use animal-free reagents to create clinical-grade neurons from skin cells

Surprise role of nuclear structure protein in development

Thursday, November 24th, 2011

( Carnegie Institution ) Scientists have long held theories about the importance of proteins called B-type lamins in the process of embryonic stem cells replicating and differentiating into different varieties of cells. New research from a team led by Carnegie’s Yixian Zheng indicates that, counter to expectations, these B-type lamins are not necessary for stem cells to renew and develop, but …

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Surprise role of nuclear structure protein in development

Getting Stem Cell Therapies Approved: Ann Tsukamoto – CIRM Science Writer’s Seminar – Video

Friday, November 18th, 2011


(Part 7 of 9) Ann Tsukamoto, Ph.D., spoke at the Scientific Writer’s Seminar, a workshop presented on September 17, 2008 at CIRM headquarters in San Francisco. Tsukamoto is the Chief Operating Officer at Stem Cells, Inc., a Palo Alto based company that has begun a stem cell based human clinical trial for the treatment of Batten disease

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Getting Stem Cell Therapies Approved: Ann Tsukamoto – CIRM Science Writer’s Seminar – Video

Long-time Victor vet honored for his work

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

By J.O.

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Long-time Victor vet honored for his work

Stem Cells Repair Joint Cartilage – Video

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011


UConn Health Center researchers are developing stem cell therapies to repair joint cartilage. Associate professor Caroline Dealy discusses the process for developing these stem cell therapies, and the future commercialization of the research. And while Dealy’s work predates Bioscience Connecticut, it is an example of the type of job-creating and cure-promoting project that will flourish under the new state-sponsored initiative.

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Stem Cells Repair Joint Cartilage – Video

CNC to Art Video 10 – Mach 3 G-Code Verify – CNC … – Video

Thursday, October 27th, 2011


CNC to Art Video Series Video 10: This is the CNC Video series on how to take an image to a CNC File. This process is one that many CNC Users want to know, but there is not much info on. Here is your chance to get the inside scoop

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CNC to Art Video 10 – Mach 3 G-Code Verify – CNC … – Video

CNC Basics E-Course 4 | CAM | Learn CAM Video | CAD/CAM … – Video

Thursday, October 20th, 2011


Here on the 4th day we talk about CAM.

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CNC Basics E-Course 4 | CAM | Learn CAM Video | CAD/CAM … – Video

Cryo-Cell International, Inc. Reports Third Quarter 2011 Results

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

Company Begins the Process of Building a Brighter FutureOldsmar, Fla.

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Cryo-Cell International, Inc. Reports Third Quarter 2011 Results

After The Angiography – Video

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011


The stem cell treatment for my dad’s diabetes was different than the stem cell treatment I had for Multiple Sclerosis. For diabetes, my dad first had a bone marrow aspiration to extract his own stem cells. After the cells are collected and cultured, they are then placed into the pancreas through the main artery in the groin

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After The Angiography – Video

Living Better and Longer: Lessons From an 8-Decade Study

Monday, September 26th, 2011

The Longevity Project followed 1,500 people over their entire life spans and learned a few things about living healthfully in the process

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Living Better and Longer: Lessons From an 8-Decade Study

Dogged by pain — stem cell therapy for dogs

Monday, May 23rd, 2011


Visit: tinyurl.com for more pet stories — A new technique for fighting the crippling effects of severe hip dysplasia is catching the attention of many large breed dog owners. Anne Marie Ogle of Napanoch, the owner of Dasha, a 9 year-old German Shepherd, hopes stem cell therapy will improve her pet’s quality of life.

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Dogged by pain — stem cell therapy for dogs

Banking Your Newborn's Cord Blood – Stem Cell Therapy

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

These treatments kill good cells too and this also causes the necessity of using a stem cell therapy .

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Banking Your Newborn's Cord Blood – Stem Cell Therapy





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