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Old 10-25-2006, 01:29 PM
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Thelma Thelma is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Burnaby British Columbia
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Thelma Thelma is offline
Member
Thelma's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Burnaby British Columbia
Posts: 795
15 yr Member
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Steve

Let the rushs in the bushs rant and rave all they want as they are a fading entity. Just blowimg im the wind

Use them but don't abuse them.


They can not stop the coming of either the treatment or the cure. Life goes on and we will progress.

Remember if they stress you then you have given them a weapon.

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Stem cell research centre attracts leading scientist back to Canada
Last Updated: Wednesday, October 25, 2006 | 2:10 PM ET
CBC News
Dr. Gordon Keller, one of the world's leading stem cell scientists is coming back to Canada to head up a new research centre in Toronto.
Keller will be the director of the McEwen Centre for Regenerative Medicine at the University Health Network, which was launched on Wednesday.
Keller left his native Saskatchewan 16 years ago to work in the U.S. Earlier this year, New York magazine called the embryonic stem cell researcher one of the top six medical minds the city didn't want to lose.
Stem cells are immature cells that do not yet have a specialized function and are able to form cells of any tissue in the body.
As for why he's coming back, Keller cited the opportunity to work with leading stem cell researchers with a broad range of expertise in areas including biology, cancer research and organ repair.
"One of the unique features, I think, is the existing strength of both stem cell biology and regenerative medicine in Toronto in a very defined area," Keller said. "A lot of the institutes are close to each other … with each of them housing really superb scientists."
Dr. Gordon Keller, one of the world's leading stem cell scientists is coming back to Canada to head up a new research centre in Toronto.
Keller will be the director of the McEwen Centre for Regenerative Medicine at the University Health Network, which was launched on Wednesday.
Keller left his native Saskatchewan 16 years ago to work in the U.S. Earlier this year, New York magazine called the embryonic stem cell researcher one of the top six medical minds the city didn't want to lose.
Stem cells are immature cells that do not yet have a specialized function and are able to form cells of any tissue in the body.
As for why he's coming back, Keller cited the opportunity to work with leading stem cell researchers with a broad range of expertise in areas including biology, cancer research and organ repair.
"One of the unique features, I think, is the existing strength of both stem cell biology and regenerative medicine in Toronto in a very defined area," Keller said. "A lot of the institutes are close to each other … with each of them housing really superb scientists."
Keller's lab has shown how to turn stem cells into many kinds of specialized cells, the starting point for trying to cure diseases, said Dr. Christopher Paige, vice-president of research at the University Health Network.
"There is hope in a very, very broad set of diseases," Paige told CBC Newsworld.
"The diseases of the brain, the diseases of the heart, even the diseases of hip and knees, because if stem cells can be turned into the kinds of cells that make the cartilage, that would reduce the need for hip and knee replacement."
The research already has one clinical application: bone marrow transplants for cancer patients. High doses of chemotherapy kill cancer cells but blood cells also die off. By giving patients an infusion of adult stem cells, the blood-forming cells can be saved, Paige said.
The centre was given $10 million in startup funding by Rob and Cheryl McEwen. The centre's initial staff of 15 researchers hope their work will advance the treatment of disease.
To launch the centre, 10 internationally renowned scientists gave a symposium highlighting their research. Singer and Live 8 concert organizer Bob Geldof also attended the opening.
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