Home Treatments Destinations Resources FREE Quotes Packages Roadmap Contact Us
         Search:  
Find Medical Procedures
Treatment
Region/Country
Find Wellness Programs
Treatment
Region/Country
Find Packages
Treatment
Region/Country
Free Quotes
Free Health e-NEWS
Enter E mail Address
Enter First & Last Name
Popular Health & Wellness Requests
Affordable Cosmetic Surgery Packages Latin America
Affordable Stem Cell in Mexico
Affordable Stem Cell Therapy Abroad
Amazing Dental Holidays in Cancun, Mexico
Anti-Aging in Bad Ragaz, Switzerland
Eye Surgery Package for Corneal Transplant, Panama
Gastric Bypass Surgery Package in Mexico for $10,000
Spine Surgery in Korea
Sports Medicine in Switzerland
World Class Cosmetic Surgery in Latin America
 
Article/Press Releases   
Search:
Last Hope Clinic
by BBC | Emcell

Stem cell transplants could offer the prospect of "science fiction-like" treatments to repair the human body in the future. But some desperately ill people are looking for a cure now.

Stem cells are the factory of our entire body.

They can reproduce themselves by dividing and multiplying into identical cells, giving them the potential to form any type of tissue.

On this basis, if stem cells offer the possibility of repairing every tissue in the body, does stem cell therapy have the potential to cure diseases where the problem is at cellular level, such as Parkinson's, multiple schlerosis, muscular dystrophy and many more?

Quite possibly, but this treatment is controversial because the cells are harvested from fertilised embryos and aborted foetuses.

Leading researchers in the US have had their funding cut by the Bush administration because of these ethical issues.

But with the science still unproven, many desperately ill people are seeking help in other countries where clinical work with embryonic stem cells is permitted, such as Ukraine.

Stem cell bank
Twenty-year-old Stefano Tricarico makes the journey from his home in Italy to a clinic in the Ukraine that he thinks will help to save or improve his life.

He has terminal muscular dystrophy and feels he must go. "I realised that it was the only chance I had if I wanted to continue to have a decent life," he says.

In a private clinic in Kiev he meets Professor Alexander Smikodub who is offering Stefano stem cell therapy for 15,000 euro (£10,000).

Some of Professor Smikodub's patients say he is helping them and changing their lives, but his critics say the work has not been properly scientifically tested.

Please Click Here to request more information from EmCell Clinic.

 
Search Keywords 
 
  Resources
 
Articles
Destinations
Events
Industry News
Medical Tourism Blog
Partners
Travel Planning
Treatments
Videos
 
 
placidway.com 2008. All Rights Reserved