Two significant advances in cell therapy, the notion of treating diseases with human cells instead of drugs, have been made by scientists at the National Institutes of Health and the University of Minnesota. One advance shows how embryonic stem cells can be converted into copious quantities of the exact type of brain cell that is lost in Parkinson's disease, a technique that might have possible use in therapy. The other research reports that cells surprisingly similar to embryonic stem cells can be isolated from people's bone marrow. Scientists Make Two Stem Cell Advances |