Hi all
I found a news for which the text is as under:
September 14, 2014

A team of Japanese scientists Day 12/9 was successfully transplanted
retinal cells developed from pluripotent stem cells (iPS) to a woman
about 70 years old and this is the first time cells iPS stem is put
into the human body through surgery.

Ca clinical trials - the researchers from the Riken Research
Institute, Institute of Biomedical Research and Innovation Hospital in
Kobe, using iPS cells, a type of stem cells by Professor Shinya
Yamanaka of Kyoto University discovered development, can grow into
different tissues in the human body.

Day 12/9 surgeries first to test risk of progression, including
cancer, after retinal cell transplant for patients with wet macular
degeneration due to age, a forms of retinal degenerative diseases
cause blindness.

Before surgery, the researchers at the Center for Developmental
Biology, Riken was first created iPS cells by introducing genes into
skin cells controls taken from the patient's body. Then, this group
has created a pigment epithelial membrane, a layer of protection in
the form of retinal cells by developing iPS cells into retinal pigment
epithelium.

According Riken, during the two-hour surgery at a hospital in Kobe,
plate retina were transplanted into the patient's eyes after removal
of membrane abnormalities in retinal tissue of female patients.

The team said after the surgery that nothing serious or harm caused to
patients, namely the loss of blood.

The first patient volunteers transplant surgery is a woman living in
Hyogo Prefecture, central Japan. If nothing changes, patients can be
discharged within 3-7 days.

Speaking at a press conference in Kobe, head of the research team
Masayo Takahashi said: "I am reassured that the surgery has ended
successfully. I hope this will be a significant step forward. "

The team is expected to carry out surgery for six patients. Maybe it
will take about a year to determine the safety and the impact of
transplant surgery.

At a separate news conference in Kyoto, Professor Yamanaka
congratulate the team successful surgery for that: "This is a result
of long efforts by which the group has made a step forward in a period
short approximately seven years from the iPS cells are created. I want
to express admiration for the group ".

Nobel Prize winning scientist, said: "Phase practical applications of
medical research has started from now on. I feel the responsibility of
a technological development ".

People with the disease wet macular degeneration can often undergo
deterioration or distortion of vision or retinal damage due to
abnormal proliferation of blood vessels.

In Japan, approximately 700,000 people are currently affected by the
disease. Japanese Ministry of Health considered as an incurable
disease.

Professor Yamanaka won the Nobel Prize in 2012 together biomedical
researcher John Gurdon for groundbreaking work on iPS cells.



-- 
Regards

(Deepak Kumar Singla)

"Help Ever Hurt Never"



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