5 research outputs found

    A Biological Global Positioning System: Considerations for Tracking Stem Cell Behaviors in the Whole Body

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    Many recent research studies have proposed stem cell therapy as a treatment for cancer, spinal cord injuries, brain damage, cardiovascular disease, and other conditions. Some of these experimental therapies have been tested in small animals and, in rare cases, in humans. Medical researchers anticipate extensive clinical applications of stem cell therapy in the future. The lack of basic knowledge concerning basic stem cell biology-survival, migration, differentiation, integration in a real time manner when transplanted into damaged CNS remains an absolute bottleneck for attempt to design stem cell therapies for CNS diseases. A major challenge to the development of clinical applied stem cell therapy in medical practice remains the lack of efficient stem cell tracking methods. As a result, the fate of the vast majority of stem cells transplanted in the human central nervous system (CNS), particularly in the detrimental effects, remains unknown. The paucity of knowledge concerning basic stem cell biology鈥攕urvival, migration, differentiation, integration in real-time when transplanted into damaged CNS remains a bottleneck in the attempt to design stem cell therapies for CNS diseases. Even though excellent histological techniques remain as the gold standard, no good in vivo techniques are currently available to assess the transplanted graft for migration, differentiation, or survival. To address these issues, herein we propose strategies to investigate the lineage fate determination of derived human embryonic stem cells (hESC) transplanted in vivo into the CNS. Here, we describe a comprehensive biological Global Positioning System (bGPS) to track transplanted stem cells. But, first, we review, four currently used standard methods for tracking stem cells in vivo: magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), bioluminescence imaging (BLI), positron emission tomography (PET) imaging and fluorescence imaging (FLI) with quantum dots. We summarize these modalities and propose criteria that can be employed to rank the practical usefulness for specific applications. Based on the results of this review, we argue that additional qualities are still needed to advance these modalities toward clinical applications. We then discuss an ideal procedure for labeling and tracking stem cells in vivo, finally, we present a novel imaging system based on our experiments

    An efficient numerical tool for blunted bodies stagnation line rebuilding with weakly ionized thermochemical nonequilibrium flows

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    Communication to : 15th IMACS world conference, Berlin (Germany),= August 24-29, 1997SIGLEAvailable from INIST (FR), Document Supply Service, under shelf-number : 22419, issue : a.1997 n.125 / INIST-CNRS - Institut de l'Information Scientifique et TechniqueFRFranc

    Vibrational relaxation of CO_2 (m, n"1, p) in a CO_2 - N_2 mixture along a stagnation streamline

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    Communication to : 32nd AIAA Thermophysics conference, Atlanta, GA (USA), June 23-25, 1997SIGLEAvailable from INIST (FR), Document Supply Service, under shelf-number : 22419, issue : a.1997 n.94 / INIST-CNRS - Institut de l'Information Scientifique et TechniqueFRFranc
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