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Thread: future cure for seb derm

  1. #1
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    Default future cure for seb derm

    If seb derm is caused by a variable (genetics, environments etc.) that stimulates to much cell division, then we are already in the process of developing a cure. The journal "Nature" (probably the most prestigious science journal on the planet) has published a report stating that a scientists have now figured out how to completely inhibit cell division! This is in today's news. Check it out:

    Gary J. Gorbsky, Ph.D., a scientist with the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, has found a way to reverse the process of cell division.

    The discovery could have important implications for the treatment of cancer, birth defects and numerous other diseases and disorders. Gorbsky's findings appear in the April 13 issue of the journal Nature.

    "No one has gotten the cell cycle to go backwards before now," said Gorbsky, who holds the W.H. and Betty Phelps Chair in Developmental Biology at OMRF. "This shows that certain events in the cell cycle that have long been assumed irreversible may, in fact, be reversible."

    Cell division occurs millions of times each day in the human body and is essential to life itself. In the lab, Gorbsky and his OMRF colleagues were able to control the protein responsible for the division process, interrupt and reverse the event, sending duplicate chromosomes back to the center of the original cell, an event once thought impossible.

    "Our studies indicate that the factors pointing cells toward division can be turned and even reversed," Gorbsky said. "If we wait too long, however, it doesn't work, so we know that there are multiple regulators in the cell division cycle. Now we will begin to study the triggers that set these events in motion."

    The findings may prove important to controlling the development and metastasis of certain cancers. It also holds promise for the prevention and treatment of birth defects and a wide variety of other conditions.

    "Dr. Gorbsky's results provide elegant proof that the cell cycle must be precisely controlled," said Dr. Rodger McEver, OMRF vice president of research. "Now he and his lab can work toward developing innovative methods to probe and better understand the complex process of cell division."

    Gorbsky heads the Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology Research Program at OMRF and holds both an M.A. and a Ph.D. in biology from Princeton University. He is also adjunct professor of Cell Biology at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and a member of the OU Cancer Institute. His research focuses on mitosis and cytokinesis, the processes involved in cell division, and he has earned international recognition for his work in the area of chromosomal movement and cell cycle control.[/code]

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    Oh yeah, that is the kind of news I like to hear.

    Thanks for posting this Hope.
    28 year old male from the United States in Minnesota. My self treatment of Rosacea is 10 grams vitamin C, 16 glasses of water, and moisturize with Eucerin everyday.

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    They also isolated the gene for eczema -- this is all fantastic and wonderful, but we'll probably be all old and grey by the time they develop the application for treatment and get it approved by the FDA for release to the public.

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    Quote Originally Posted by DukeCity
    They also isolated the gene for eczema -- this is all fantastic and wonderful, but we'll probably be all old and grey by the time they develop the application for treatment and get it approved by the FDA for release to the public.
    WOW, does it really take that long?

    so what would you say, do you think it will take another 20-30 years before was see an application approved by the FDA for treatment?

    How long do these things take on average?
    28 year old male from the United States in Minnesota. My self treatment of Rosacea is 10 grams vitamin C, 16 glasses of water, and moisturize with Eucerin everyday.

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    That's what we're trying to figure out with Sansrosa and Rambazole, -- but I would imagine many years..

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    I have been looking on the Internet and I found some information that says the average company spends 5.4 million and 11.6 years on research, development and testing before the clinical trials phase.

    Then the average company spends another 1.5 to 10 million on Clinical trials for an average of 6.7 years before drug comes to the market.

    So it would take an average of 17.3 years before new ground breaking advances happening now would be available to us. Not the best news.
    28 year old male from the United States in Minnesota. My self treatment of Rosacea is 10 grams vitamin C, 16 glasses of water, and moisturize with Eucerin everyday.

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    As medical practices advance in China and India, many experts agree that we are going to see clinical trials move along much faster than they would in the west. Check out this link for a much better understanding of the current situation: http://www.technologyreview.com/BioT...08,306,p1.html

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