Stem Cell Authority Offers Ethical Alternative to Alleviate Political Stem Cell Deadlock Between U.S. Congress and President

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The U.S. Senate passed the controversial Bill # H.R. 810 to amend the Public Health Service Act to provide federal funding for human embryonic stem cell research.
President Bush exercised his first ever presidential veto in the Rose Garden to block that legislation.
Stem Cell Authority Ltd. offers an ethical and non- controversial alternative to the national embryonic stem cell debate.
The use of embryonic stem cells is hotly debated because many scientists believe that embryonic stem cells have the potential to develop into all of the tissues of the body.
The ethical alternative offered by Stem Cell Authority Ltd. is the use of Wharton's Jelly matrix stem cells.
Recent evidence indicates that the Wharton's Jelly matrix stem cells can differentiate into neurons, glia, skeletal muscle cells, heart muscle cells, bone cells, cartilage cells and liver cells.
Published work indicates that the human umbilical cord Wharton's Jelly matrix stem cells are therapeutically useful in an animal model of Parkinson's disease.
Therefore, the Wharton's Jelly matrix stem cells may have the potential for treating neurological diseases.
In contrast, umbilical cord blood stem cells are used clinically to treat conditions calling for bone marrow stem cell transplant. These diseases include certain cancers and in-borne errors in metabolism.
Stem Cell Authority Ltd.'s subsidiary company, OB/GYN CellSECURE, Inc., presents an ethical alternative to embryonic stem cells, as the company is the exclusive licensee of technology developed by KSU, which allows for the collection of the matrix stem cells from the Wharton's jelly which is within the human umbilical cord.
The collection is accomplished safely and painlessly without risk to the child after birth, and the collection of the matrix stem cell is compatible with collection of umbilical cord blood stem cells.
Thus, Stem Cell Authority Ltd. presents a non-controversial alternative to obtain human stem cells for cryogenic storage of umbilical cord blood and the matrix stem cells.
The Kansas State University Research Foundation (KSURF) has filed an application for a patent pertaining to the methods for the collection, storage, biotechnology and therapeutic use of umbilical cord matrix stem cells.
Stem Cell Authority Ltd., through its subsidiary OB/GYN CellSECURE, Inc., has the exclusive license granted by KSURF to collect and cryogenically store human pluripotent umbilical cord matrix stem cells.