Monthly Archives: November 2017

Benefit # 21 (of 71) from the California Stem Cell Program: FIGHTING SPINAL MUSCULAR ATROPHY

By |2021-11-06T10:01:19+00:00November 28th, 2017|

“How do you do?” The voice on the line was deep, confident, self-assured. I tried to think what to say. “Um, do you like sharks and dolphins?  Because I used to be a diver for Marine World Africa USA, and I would swim with them every day!” There was a polite pause, then: “Finding Nemo,

Benefit # 20 (of 71) from the California Stem Cell Program: CHALLENGING HEMOPHILIA

By |2021-11-06T09:16:27+00:00November 24th, 2017|

Imagine a cut that bleeds but does not clot. Untreated, a person with hemophilia can suffer extreme pain from internal bleeding in the joints, as well as suffering strokes from brain-bleeds, even death from continual blood loss. It is said the Russian Revolution of 1917 might not have happened, if there had been a cure

Benefit # 19 (of 71) from the California Stem Cell Program: Challenging Parkinson’s Disease

By |2021-11-06T08:59:03+00:00November 17th, 2017|

First, a shout-out to Michael J. Fox, undeniably the champion of Parkinson’s Disease (PD) fund raising. If I understand correctly, he has raised the astonishing sum of $750 million dollars…the world owes Mr. Fox a debt of gratitude. How much does Parkinson’s Disease cost America? Individually, someone with PD must come up with about $22,500

Benefit # 18 (of 71) of the California Stem Cell Program: ENGINEERING INTESTINES FOR A PREMATURE CHILD?

By |2020-12-02T21:26:26+00:00November 15th, 2017|

If Dr. Tracy Grikscheit’s work prevails, one day the world may know something most of us never think about— how to improve defective intestines. Why would we want to do such a thing? To save a baby’s life. First, consider the problem. A premature infant may weigh 500 grams. Born too soon, their intestines may

Benefit # 17 (of 71) of the California Stem Cell Program: BUILDING LUNGS

By |2021-11-06T08:43:55+00:00November 10th, 2017|

In 1951, I was six years old and living in a hospital bed. I had asthma/bronchitis, which may not sound like much, nowadays. But every inhalation was a separate wheezing effort, and a choice: to struggle and breathe, or relax and die. There were injections of adrenaline which burned like liquid fire, and experimental drugs

Benefit # 16 (of 71) from the California Stem Cell Program: CHALLENGING YOUNG PEOPLE’S BLINDNESS

By |2021-10-10T22:49:08+00:00November 7th, 2017|

As a child, I once tripped and fell while carrying a long thin bamboo rod. When I hit the ground, the stick penetrated my right eye. I put my hand up to my face and it came back full of blood. The hospital put a piratical patch on the injured eye. In a few days

Benefit # 15 (of 71) from the California Stem Cell Program: AVOIDING AMPUTATIONS?

By |2020-12-02T21:26:27+00:00November 2nd, 2017|

When my son Roman Reed was first paralyzed, and lying in the hospital bed, he developed a pressure sore on his right heel: harmless-looking, at first, just a black spot the size of a dime. But the darkness grew, spreading until it covered his foot, and higher. The doctor prescribed “moon boots” to take the

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