Popular Articles
Teeth Whitening Products

New York State Compensation Policy For Egg Donors 'Seems Justifiable,' New York Times Editorial States
Although New York state"s decision to allow state-funded embryonic stem cell researchers to compensate women for donating their eggs "has provoked criticism from some ethicists and runs counter to guidelines issued by" NIH and the National Academy of Sciences, it still "seems justifiable" to pay the women "for undergoing an arduous procedure and to spur progress on potentially important research that has been slowed because of a lack of human eggs," a New York Times editorial states. The state"s Empire State Stem Cell Board last month made the decision to allow researchers to pay women up to $10,000 as compensation.According to the editorial, "[w]omen already get paid comparable sums to donate their eggs to help infertile women have a child through in vitro fertilization," so it "is hard to see why they should not be paid for contributing their eggs for research." The editorial notes that the "money is meant as reimbursement for travel, housing, child care or medical expenses," and it also would "compensate the women for the considerable time, burden and inconvenience of harvesting their eggs, a process that can take 56 hours spread out over many weeks.""The board set reasonable constraints, insisting that the research be rigorously reviewed and approved by oversight committees, that donors be fully informed of potential physical and psychological risks and that they give informed consent to the procedure," the editorial states. It adds, "One concern has been that payments could induce women, especially poor women, to provide eggs without fully considering potential risks." The editorial continues, "In an effort to mitigate that possibility, the stem cell board will follow the guidelines of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine, which require justification for payments of $5,000 or more and deem sums above $10,000 inappropriate."The editorial adds, "Human eggs are highly prized for some of the most promising research, notably studies that require matching embryonic stem cells to a particular patient with a particular disease," concluding, "It has proved almost impossible to recruit women to go through the arduous process for free," so the "board was right to allow fair compensation" (New York Times, 7/11).
generic viagra online
Non-Surgical Treatment For Pre-Cancerous Condition Of Esophagus Is Effective And Reduces Risk For Cancer Development
Results from a clinical study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine reveal that ablative therapy using the HALO system (BARRX Medical, Inc.) is highly effective for complete eradication of a pre-cancerous condition of the esophagus called Barrett"s esophagus afflicting more than 3.3 million Americans. Additionally, ablative therapy using the HALO system reduced the risk of progression to cancer in the highest risk cohort studied (compared to control) from 19.0% to 2.4%.
News of the day
Eight Miami-Area Residents Charged In $22 Million Medicare Fraud Scheme Involving Home Health Care Agencies
Eight Miami-Dade County, Fla., residents have been indicted in connection with an alleged $22 million Medicare fraud scheme operated out of Miami businesses purporting to specialize in home health care services, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division, Acting U.S. Attorney Jeffrey H. Sloman of the Southern District of Florida, and Daniel R. Levinson, Inspector General of the Department of Health & Human Services (HHS). A temporary restraining order freezing assets of the indicted defendants and their companies was also filed.
Mental Health

Link Between Light Touch And Merkel Cells Solves 100-year Mystery

Light touch - the sense that lets musicians find the right notes on a keyboard, a seamstress revel in the feel of cool silk, the artisan feel a curve in material and the blind read Braille - truly depends on the activity of Merkel cells usually found in crescent-shaped clusters in the skin, said researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and colleagues in a report that appears in the current issue of the journal Science. "Human, primates and any animal that relies on hands for dexterity use their Merkel cells to feel texture and shape," said Dr. Ellen Lumpkin, assistant professor of neuroscience, molecular physiology and biophysics and molecular and human genetics at BCM and a senior author of the report. "Merkel cells are not like pain fibers. They exist in special areas of the skin to feel light touch. We have a lot of them on our fingertips and also on our lips." However, while many scientists thought Merkel cells were key elements of light touch, they could never directly prove the link. The topic has been debated for more than 100 years, since the cell were first described in 1875 by German scientist Friedrich Sigmund Merkel (for whom they are named). In cooperation with Dr. Huda Zoghbi (another senior author), Lumpkin, first author Dr. Stephen Maricich (now of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio), and colleagues generated mice that lacked a gene called Atoh1 in some areas of the body and, as a result, had no Merkel cells in skin located below the head. Experiments on these mice directly demonstrate the link between Merkel cells and touch in way that can be seen and heard. That is probably the most significant thing about the paper, said Marichich. While Merkel himself first postulated the link between the cells and light touch, "this is the first direct evidence," said Maricich, who plans to continue working with the cells, determining the progenitor cells from which they arise and determining how they relate to human disease. A decade ago, Zoghbi, Dr. Hugo Bellen and other BCM researchers identified Atoh1 (also called Math1), and were the first to show it affects hearing and proprioperception - the sensing of where parts of one"s body are in space. (See figures 1 and 2) Zoghbi is professor of pediatrics, molecular and human genetics, neurology and neuroscience at BCM and is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. "To our knowledge, Atoh1 is the first gene shown to be necessary for the specification of Merkel cells," the authors noted in their paper. To further prove their point, the researchers used special equipment to record tiny electrical impulses that touch elicits from neurons in the skin. (See videos 1 and 2. Listen to audio recordings 1 and 2.) In mice that lacked Merkel cells, the skin was missing touch receptors with high spatial resolution (the hallmark of Merkel cells), but was still innervated by other touch-sensitive neurons. While Merkel cells are probably not involved in proprioperception, Merkel cells and hair cells (the sensory cells of the ear) "allow you to manipulate objects with high spatial resolution and discrimination of sound. That"s what I think is beautiful about Atoh1, the Merkel cell and the hair cell," said Lumpkin. "These cells are the first way our body interacts with the outside world," she said. "Both hair cells and Merkel cells tell us what and when at the finest level we humans relate to our environment." A decade ago, Lumpkin chose to study Merkel cells at the same time that Zoghbi and Bellen first announced their discovery that Atoh1 (Math1) is necessary for inner ear hair cells. She recognized that the two fields would someday have importance for one another. Merkel cells are not limited to fingertips or lips, where tactile sensitivity is highest. They are also found in hairier parts of human skin as well as on the bodies of all vertebrates, from fish to primates. In mice and other nocturnal animals, Merkel cells in the body might be important for maneuvering in the dark. Lumpkin and Maricich plan to use the mice lacking Merkel cells to directly test this possibility. This is another important component of the Atoh1 network that helps people realize where they are in space, said Zoghbi. While the specific activity of Merkel cells permit light touch and the "what and when" of activity, "Atoh1-dependent neurons are processing that information," she said. Lumpkin sees the finding as a stepping stone to even more basic answers. "Bigger than that, we don"t know how any mammalian touch receptor works," she said. "What genes allow them to function as light or painful touch receptors? This project gives us the experimental handle with which to start to dissect the genetic basis of touch." Notes: Others who took part in this research include BCM Neuroscience graduate students Scott A. Wellnitz and Aislyn M. Nelson, and Daine R. Lesniak and Gregory J. Gerling of the University of Virginia. Funding for this work came from the National Institutes of Health, the McNairs Scholars Program, the National Library of Medicine, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Full report. Graciela Gutierrez Baylor College of Medicine


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):