CVS/pharmacy® for all the ways you care
Pharmacy
Shop
Photo
ExtraCare
Health Information
Health
Resources Home
Medical Info
Medical Library
Health Info A-Z
Ills & Conditions
Self-Care Centers
Healthy Living
Fitness & Nutrition
Weight Control
Lifestyle & Wellness
Emotional Health
Alternative Health
Work & Health
Dental Health
Personal Health
Men’s Health
Women’s Health
Pregnancy
Children’s Health
Health After 60
Cool Tools
Multimedia
Calculators
Quizzes
View All Tools
WEB SITE PRIVACY
POLICY
In the News


Stem Cells May Offer Alternative to Lung Transplants

Novel protocol could provide new lung tissue for certain patients, researchers say

FRIDAY, Nov. 6 (HealthDay News) -- Belgian scientists who used embryonic stem cells to create lung tissue say this technique could provide an alternative to lung transplants for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cystic fibrosis.

This is the first time it's been shown that embryonic stem cells can be converted into airway epithelial-like cells without the use of specific growth factors or embryoid body formation. The researchers achieved this using an "air-liquid interface" system that mimics the conditions found in an adult trachea.

"Efforts will be made to further improve this novel culture protocol, trying to increase the number of differentiated cells or to guide the differentiation into particular cell types by adding certain growth factors to this system," Lindsey Van Haute, of the department of embryology and genetics at the Free University of Brussels, said in a news release.

She and her colleagues may start with fibroblast growth factors, which play an important role in lung development.

Human embryonic stem cells "have the capacity to differentiate in vivo and in vitro into cells from all three germ lineages, making them particularly important in developmental biology, regenerative medicine and in vitro pharmacological studies," Van Haute said.

The study was published Nov. 5 in the journal Respiratory Research.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

SOURCE: BioMed Central, news release, Nov. 4, 2009


Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.


Or Find More On:

Back to top of page