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完全不同的2个研究小组

昨天那个是基因治疗科学家阿里.他是世界上第一个基因治疗RPE65的专家.他现在也在研究干细胞治疗RP.他的研究要慢一点.5年以后开始实验治疗.

今天这个是另外一个世界上很有名的专家科菲教授.他已经开始临床实验了.但不知道第一期的病人中是否有RP患者.

年底的适合英国有一个公司也会进行临床实验.对象是RP患者.
全世界都在研究,我们是不是把希望放在国内更实际?
把希望放在2014年!!!
谢谢飞狐的解释
谢谢飞狐大哥的说明。那今天的消息时间要快的多了。要不还要再等5年再开始人体实验,实验不知道还要多少时间,太长了。
谢谢分享!!!应该快啦
我希望世界和平
世界和平了我们才能治病
每年看到的消息都是【3-5年后就可以临床了】 医学进展真的比较慢啊
好消息呀。谢谢楼主分享。真的快了。
坚持终归否极泰来.坚信高科技一定会带我走出困境.走向我梦想的远方...........
BBC 報導
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-23374623
The prospect of reversing blindness has made a significant leap, according to scientists in the UK.

An animal study in the journal Nature Biotechnology showed the part of the eye which actually detects light can be repaired using stem cells.

The team at Moorfields Eye Hospital and University College London say human trials are now, for the first time, a realistic prospect.

Experts described it as a "significant breakthrough" and "huge leap" forward.

Photoreceptors are the cells in the retina which react to light and convert it into an electrical signal which can be sent to the brain.

However, these cells can die off in some causes of blindness such as Stargardt's disease and age-related macular degeneration.

There are already trials in people to use stem cells to replace the "support" cells in the eye which keep the photoreceptors alive.

Blind mice

Now the London-based team have shown it is possible to replace the light-sensing cells themselves, raising the prospect of reversing blindness.

They have used a new technique for building retinas in the laboratory. It was used to collect thousands of stem cells, which were primed to transform into photoreceptors, and injected them into the eyes of blind mice.

The study showed that these cells could hook up with the existing architecture of the eye and begin to function.

However, the effectiveness is still low. Only about 1,000 cells out of a transplant of 200,000 actually hooked up with the rest of the eye.

Lead researcher Prof Robin Ali told the BBC News website: "This is a real proof of concept that photoreceptors can be transplanted from an embryonic stem cells source and it give us a route map to now do this in humans.

"That's why we're so excited, five years is a now a realistic aim for starting a clinical trial."

Rods, blue, and cones, blue-green, detect light and create electrical signals which are sent to the brain.
The eye is one of the most advanced fields for stem cell research.

It is relatively simple as the light sensing cells only have to pass their electrical message on to one more cell in order to get their message to the brain, unlike an attempt to reverse dementia which would require cells to hook up with far more cells all across the brain.

The immune system is also very weak in the eye so there is a low chance of the transplant being rejected. A few cells can also make a big difference in the eye. Tens of thousands of stem cells in the eye could improve vision, but that number of stem cells would not regenerate a much larger organ such as a failing liver.

Prof Chris Mason, from University College London, told the BBC: "I think they have made a major step forward here, but the efficiency is still too low for clinical uses.

"At the moment the numbers of tiny and it will take quite a bit of work to get the numbers up and then the next question is 'Can you do it in man?'

"But I think it is a significant breakthrough which may lead to cell therapies and will give a much expanded knowledge on how to cure blindness."

Dr Marcelo Rivolta, from the University of Sheffield, said the study was a "huge leap" forward for treating blindness and could have implications across stem cell research.
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