Photo credit: Welcome Collection/Wikimedia Commons A Phase I clinical trial led by researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine has demonstrated the long-term safety and ...
Using neural stem cells could help treat spinal injuries once thought to be untreatable -- a new phase 1 trial has determined this approach is safe. A Phase I clinical trial led by researchers at ...
More information: Joel R. Martin et al, Long-term clinical and safety outcomes from a single-site phase 1 study of neural stem cell transplantation for chronic thoracic spinal cord injury, Cell ...
In mammalian species, neural tissues cannot regenerate following severe spinal cord injury (SCI), for which stem cell transplantation is ... Five test tubes were taken, and after addition of 100 μL of ...
Microscopy image of the surface of a trunk organoid (right) and a computer-generated image (left) with notochord in green, surrounded by outer neural ... spine and nervous system. This development ...
This development offers a new window into the early stages of human development and the origins of spinal and neurological ... containing developing neural tissue and bone stem cells.
17, 2024 — Using neural stem cells could help treat spinal injuries once thought ... a crucial protein in neural development, as a regulator that limits bone morphogenetic ...
A NEW Phase I clinical trial has demonstrated the long-term safety and feasibility of neural stem cell transplantation for chronic spinal cord injuries, with sustained neurological improvements ...
The study, which followed four patients with chronic spinal cord injuries for five years, found that two patients showed durable evidence of neurological improvement after treatment with neural ...
A clinical trial out of the University of California San Diego School of Medicine found that neural stem cell transplantation had shown long-term safety and feasibility for treating chronic spinal ...
It contained developing neural tissue and bone stem cells, arranged in a pattern that mirrors development in human embryos. This suggested that the notochord was encouraging cells to become the right ...