Publication | Open Access
Adult bone-marrow stem cells and their potential in medicine
47
Citations
113
References
2004
Year
Adult Stem CellImmunologyBiomedical EngineeringRegenerative MedicineStem Cell MobilizationStem Cell TransplantationHematologyAdult Bone MarrowCell TransplantationStem CellsHealth SciencesHaematopoietic Stem CellsEmbryonic Stem CellsMesenchymal Stem CellCell BiologyStem Cell ResearchAdult Stem CellsStem-cell TherapyMedicine
An area of research that today generates great optimism is the use of stem cells for therapy of human diseases. Much of the excitement centres on embryonic stem cells, but this approach remains controversial for ethical reasons; moreover, routine clinical application of this strategy is many years away. By contrast, haematopoietic stem cells from adult bone marrow are well characterized and have long been used therapeutically.1 An adult weighing 70 kg has a functional haematopoietic marrow volume of about 1.75 L and upon increased demands such as infection or haemorrhage it can increase sixfold.1,2 No moral controversy surrounds the use of these cells since they are either autologous or collected from a consenting donor. The potential applications of adult bone marrow cells have gained momentum with discoveries relating to the mesenchymal stem cell.
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