Where does life begin. I'm thinking somewhere between conception and birth, I really don't know though. Also, sould embryoes be used for the research? I think that we should use what's availible, but not go crazy with it.
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Do you have some scientific backing for this, if so that would be really cool! I'm discussing the matter with my bio teacher and would like to share that with her.There are far more stem cells in the umbilical cord of a live birth child then in a tiny, aborted fetus.
http://www.betterhumans.com/Errors/index.aspx?aspxerrorpath=/searchEngineLink.article.2003-06-16-5.aspxEnigma'07 said:
Do you have some scientific backing for this, if so that would be really cool! I'm discussing the matter with my bio teacher and would like to share that with her.
Couple of critisisms. 1, I've heard that over 80% of fertilized eggs do not
actually every grow into a fetus, and that most all of
the times, the egg leaves the uterus before the woman
even noticesses she's pregnant. If that's so, then
isn't that alot of persons dying before they reach the
age of accountability? 2, there's alot of
embryoes that are just frozen, the majority of them
will never develop into a fetus. If that's so, then
why not use them for something; or is it that a person
cannot be treated as a resource such as an animal?
I heard this also. This woman was one of the first cases that they tried it on and its WORKING!JVD said:Just two days ago I listened to an interview on PBS of all things the owner of a company that took adult stem cells and used them to help that adult. This is a company that does not yet have products on the market but is coming close Apparently there are stem cells in most of our organs. Even in our skin. We can become self-donors and this will greatly reduce the rejection problem. The interviewee said that science was moving away from embyonic research into adult stem cell research and that was where the future of stem cell technology was headed.
I think the radio program was call Technation
I won't get into the graphic details.
A bit of information here. Embryonic stem cells are taken from 5 day blastocysts. That is, 5 days after conception. Far too early for any woman to know she's pregnant. And no abortion could find the blastocyst; it's way too small. So you don't have to worry about this.daveleau said:I think the problem arises in the fact that abortion farms would possibly pop up and just like there are places where men and women can donate their gametes for money, people would turn their unwanted pregnancy into a profit.
Where does scripture mention babies pre-birth?I believe that life begins at conception. The world wants us to believe otherwise, but Scripture does not differentiate between a baby of 2 days post conception versus a baby of 2 months post conception or a baby 2 months after birth.
Again, a bit of info. Umbilical stem cells are hematopoietic stem cells. That is, they make blood cells. And only blood cells. Not all stem cells are alike. Like I said above, embryonic stem cells come from blastocysts way too small to get by abortion. There is some research into stem cells from fetuses, but with the ability of stem cells to grow in culture, you wouldn't need to have abortions to get enough.Holly3278 said:I'm for stem cell research as long as they don't encourage abortion so they can use the aborted fetuses for the research. I think a good source of stem cells for stem cell research would be cord blood that is collected from the umbilical cord after birth.
I'm not sure of that (and my research is in adult stem cells, so I'm more than passing familiar with the field). Numbers aren't important, since you can always expand the numbers of stem cells in culture. What is critical is the capability of the stem cells -- the tissues that the stem cells can turn into.TwinCrier said:There are far more stem cells in the umbilical cord of a live birth child then in a tiny, aborted fetus.
The information is basically correct. Altho the number is about 50%. Fully 25% of fertilized ova (egg) never implants in the uterus and comes out in the menstrual blood. The woman never even knows she was pregnant. Of the remaining 75%, about half don't develop properly. Embryonic development is a tricky thing and there's lots that can go wrong. Most of it goes wrong in the first month and the embryo spontaneously aborts. Late periods.Enigma'07 said:Couple of critisisms. 1, I've heard that over 80% of fertilized eggs do not
actually every grow into a fetus, and that most all of
the times, the egg leaves the uterus before the woman
even noticesses she's pregnant. If that's so, then
isn't that alot of persons dying before they reach the
age of accountability? 2, there's alot of
embryoes that are just frozen, the majority of them
will never develop into a fetus. If that's so, then
why not use them for something; or is it that a person
cannot be treated as a resource such as an animal?
Not all of them. You can find a list of studies at PubMed.lambslove said:Virtually every experiment using embryonic cells in humans has gone awry, sometimes with very bad effects.
Can you cite the study, please?One trial using embryonic stem cells to treat parkinson's diease went so bad that the people were actually much worse off than the people who had no treatment whatsoever. All of the subjects who got the treatment are now dead, after suffering greatly with the aftereffects of having the stem cells go wild inside their brains. I won't get into the graphic details.
Again, a citation, please?Another one in Pittsburgh was supposed to "cure" juvenile diabetes. Everything had worked perfectly in mice and other animals, so they moved on to human trials. everyone of the subjects who received the stem cell treatmenst developed severe deformities in their pancreases. The trail was abandoned after only a few months because the outcomes were so prevalent and so bad.
The question has always been: when does human life begin? It appears that your belief is at conception. Others have different beliefs.Human beings are not disposable, and that's my final answer.
FYI, the cells used were not embryonic stem cells, but fetal stem cells. Different cells. I haven't found the original article on PubMed yet, but did find a news article in Science about it. Here it is:TwinCrier said:Evidence continues to mount that medical techniques using adult stem cells show greater promise in treating diseases than techniques using stem cells extracted from destroyed human embryos.
In a study on Parkinson's patients, cells from human embryos and fetuses were injected into the brains of Parkinson's patients. 56 percent of the patients developed severe uncontrollable movements, like jerking of their heads and swinging or writhing of their arms. This was in the New England Journal od medicine in 2001.