Grow your own body parts?

Grow your own body parts? Grow your own body parts? The future is now: Technology is bringing big changes in health care - ending transplant organ shortages and blunting the effects of aging. Will baby boomers or their kids reap the benefits?


Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
11-30-09
Nov. 30--Amid all the noise of health care reform, a real revolution is happening.
Medical advancements that sound like science fiction -- growing your own organs, being cared for by robotic nurses, popping anti-aging pills -- are either at or near reality already. No matter what is decided about how we deliver and pay for health care in the future, the manner in which bodies and diseases are treated is about to change dramatically.
At least that's the opinion of the innovators in medicine and technology -- scientists, doctors, engineers and philosophers -- who gathered last month at a TEDMED, (that's Technology, Entertainment, Design Medicine) conference in San Diego to unveil solutions to some stubborn health care problems. These innovations are likely to be embraced not only because they could save money, but also because a large, vocal group is going to want them -- the baby boomers.
DIY body parts
Don't wait for an organ donation -- grow your own. Here's how.
Cells from an organ to be replaced are put into nutrients, where they multiply and create a "soup," explained Dr. Anthony Atala, director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine in North Carolina. The "soup" of cells is "painted" on a form or scaffolding in the shape of the organ, say a bladder, and placed into an incubator. A new bladder grows in about six weeks.
"It used to be that the patient's pelvis was extensively X-rayed to get the right-sized bladder," Atala said, "but now [scientists are doing so many that] bladders come in three sizes: small, medium and large."
Ears, arteries, heart valves, fingers and toes are being grown in this manner. Recent news stories have described the successful growing of new penises in lab animals. Atala's group is experimenting with the ink-jet technology of a printer/scanner that will be able to "print out" a copy of skin, or even a heart, for replacement.
This could spell the end of transplant organ shortages and, because they use the patient's own tissue, make organ rejection a thing of the past.
How soon will you be able to grow your own parts? Lab-grown bladders have already been transplanted into patients in the United States, a precursor to FDA approval, said a Wake Forest Institute spokeswoman. In 10 years, it could be out with the old and in with the new, at least with some organs. And they'll be your own organs.
Monitoring the boomers
An age wave is about to hit health care. Baby boomers are graying, developing chronic diseases, disabilities and just plain wearing out. About 70 million aging boomers could mean bulging nursing homes and depleted resources.
It doesn't have to be that way, said Eric Dishman, director of Health Innovation at Intel's Digital Health Group. Put smart phone technology to work in medicine and people stay independent longer, he said. Intel's Health Guide, a laptop-like device already in use in some parts of the country, monitors patients' health from home.
With a touch screen and side ports for attachments, the device uses a friendly female voice to prompt users to measure blood pressure, blood sugar, lung function and more. Results go directly to a health care provider. If a follow-up call is necessary, a camera allows the patient and care provider to see each other as they talk. Closer supervision means better results for the patient, who can avoid trips to the doctor, hospitalizations and nursing home stays.
Other smart, button-sized devices can be worn on the body to sense gait, tremors and other vital signs, telling doctors if medication is working or if patient's condition is changing, without having to wait for a crisis.
"It's about aging gracefully in the home," said Greg Hooper, with Intel Digital Health Group.
Look for more medical home-monitoring products and services to hit the market soon.
Nurse robot
How about an in-home helper who never gets tired?
The iRobot company, the one that put robotic vacuum cleaners into homes, is working on creating Grandma's little helper -- a robot nurse. Just getting underway, the idea is a helper strong enough to carry Grandma up a flight of stairs, but gentle enough to hand her the proper medicine at the right time. If Grandma doesn't answer the phone, the robot could roam the house, looking for her.
Colin Angle, chairman and CEO of iRobot, said a family caregiver can easily put in three hours a day caring for an elderly person, and more than six if the person is frail. "Elder care and a full-time job are not compatible," he said.
Robotic help in the home could add years to independent living. Development of the robot nurse might come in stages, with a robotic arm or other devices debuting before the full-fledged robot.
Beyond red wine
"Aging is a disease and it's mainly treatable," says David Sinclair, a Harvard professor and a leading researcher on aging who discovered resveratrol, the anti-aging ingredient in red wine, in 2002. Now, a newer compound, many thousands of times stronger than resveratrol, is being studied. It works on genes that regulate aging.
The substance, in pill form, is being studied as a treatment for the diseases of aging: diabetes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, cardiovascular disease and many cancers. The results are promising, Sinclair said, and there appear to be no side effects.
More will be known in the next two years. If current results are any indication of the outcome, "anti-aging drugs will permeate the public," he said. "Aging is a set of diseases. If we can slow them down or cure them, we will live longer healthier lives."
It may well be that the boomer generation will be the last generation with a "natural" life span. It's the children and grandchildren of boomers who are likely to reap the most benefits.
Living well is the best revenge, it's said -- and what could be better than living well longer?
Karen Youso --612-673-4407
-----
To see more of the Star Tribune, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.startribune.com/.
Copyright (c) 2009, Star Tribune, Minneapolis
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.
NASDAQ-NMS:INTC, LSE:RTS,


Grow your own body parts? The future is now: Technology is bringing big changes in health care - ending transplant organ shortages and blunting the effects of aging. Will baby boomers or their kids reap the benefits?


Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
11-30-09
Nov. 30--Amid all the noise of health care reform, a real revolution is happening.
Medical advancements that sound like science fiction -- growing your own organs, being cared for by robotic nurses, popping anti-aging pills -- are either at or near reality already. No matter what is decided about how we deliver and pay for health care in the future, the manner in which bodies and diseases are treated is about to change dramatically.
At least that's the opinion of the innovators in medicine and technology -- scientists, doctors, engineers and philosophers -- who gathered last month at a TEDMED, (that's Technology, Entertainment, Design Medicine) conference in San Diego to unveil solutions to some stubborn health care problems. These innovations are likely to be embraced not only because they could save money, but also because a large, vocal group is going to want them -- the baby boomers.
DIY body parts
Don't wait for an organ donation -- grow your own. Here's how.
Cells from an organ to be replaced are put into nutrients, where they multiply and create a "soup," explained Dr. Anthony Atala, director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine in North Carolina. The "soup" of cells is "painted" on a form or scaffolding in the shape of the organ, say a bladder, and placed into an incubator. A new bladder grows in about six weeks.
"It used to be that the patient's pelvis was extensively X-rayed to get the right-sized bladder," Atala said, "but now [scientists are doing so many that] bladders come in three sizes: small, medium and large."
Ears, arteries, heart valves, fingers and toes are being grown in this manner. Recent news stories have described the successful growing of new penises in lab animals. Atala's group is experimenting with the ink-jet technology of a printer/scanner that will be able to "print out" a copy of skin, or even a heart, for replacement.
This could spell the end of transplant organ shortages and, because they use the patient's own tissue, make organ rejection a thing of the past.
How soon will you be able to grow your own parts? Lab-grown bladders have already been transplanted into patients in the United States, a precursor to FDA approval, said a Wake Forest Institute spokeswoman. In 10 years, it could be out with the old and in with the new, at least with some organs. And they'll be your own organs.
Monitoring the boomers
An age wave is about to hit health care. Baby boomers are graying, developing chronic diseases, disabilities and just plain wearing out. About 70 million aging boomers could mean bulging nursing homes and depleted resources.
It doesn't have to be that way, said Eric Dishman, director of Health Innovation at Intel's Digital Health Group. Put smart phone technology to work in medicine and people stay independent longer, he said. Intel's Health Guide, a laptop-like device already in use in some parts of the country, monitors patients' health from home.
With a touch screen and side ports for attachments, the device uses a friendly female voice to prompt users to measure blood pressure, blood sugar, lung function and more. Results go directly to a health care provider. If a follow-up call is necessary, a camera allows the patient and care provider to see each other as they talk. Closer supervision means better results for the patient, who can avoid trips to the doctor, hospitalizations and nursing home stays.
Other smart, button-sized devices can be worn on the body to sense gait, tremors and other vital signs, telling doctors if medication is working or if patient's condition is changing, without having to wait for a crisis.
"It's about aging gracefully in the home," said Greg Hooper, with Intel Digital Health Group.
Look for more medical home-monitoring products and services to hit the market soon.
Nurse robot
How about an in-home helper who never gets tired?
The iRobot company, the one that put robotic vacuum cleaners into homes, is working on creating Grandma's little helper -- a robot nurse. Just getting underway, the idea is a helper strong enough to carry Grandma up a flight of stairs, but gentle enough to hand her the proper medicine at the right time. If Grandma doesn't answer the phone, the robot could roam the house, looking for her.
Colin Angle, chairman and CEO of iRobot, said a family caregiver can easily put in three hours a day caring for an elderly person, and more than six if the person is frail. "Elder care and a full-time job are not compatible," he said.
Robotic help in the home could add years to independent living. Development of the robot nurse might come in stages, with a robotic arm or other devices debuting before the full-fledged robot.
Beyond red wine
"Aging is a disease and it's mainly treatable," says David Sinclair, a Harvard professor and a leading researcher on aging who discovered resveratrol, the anti-aging ingredient in red wine, in 2002. Now, a newer compound, many thousands of times stronger than resveratrol, is being studied. It works on genes that regulate aging.
The substance, in pill form, is being studied as a treatment for the diseases of aging: diabetes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, cardiovascular disease and many cancers. The results are promising, Sinclair said, and there appear to be no side effects.
More will be known in the next two years. If current results are any indication of the outcome, "anti-aging drugs will permeate the public," he said. "Aging is a set of diseases. If we can slow them down or cure them, we will live longer healthier lives."
It may well be that the boomer generation will be the last generation with a "natural" life span. It's the children and grandchildren of boomers who are likely to reap the most benefits.
Living well is the best revenge, it's said -- and what could be better than living well longer?
Karen Youso --612-673-4407
-----
To see more of the Star Tribune, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.startribune.com/.
Copyright (c) 2009, Star Tribune, Minneapolis
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.
NASDAQ-NMS:INTC, LSE:RTS,



Nov. 30--Amid all the noise of health care reform, a real revolution is happening.

Medical advancements that sound like science fiction -- growing your own organs, being cared for by robotic nurses, popping anti-aging pills -- are either at or near reality already. No matter what is decided about how we deliver and pay for health care in the future, the manner in which bodies and diseases are treated is about to change dramatically.
At least that's the opinion of the innovators in medicine and technology -- scientists, doctors, engineers and philosophers -- who gathered last month at a TEDMED, (that's Technology, Entertainment, Design Medicine) conference in San Diego to unveil solutions to some stubborn health care problems. These innovations are likely to be embraced not only because they could save money, but also because a large, vocal group is going to want them -- the baby boomers.

DIY body parts
Don't wait for an organ donation -- grow your own. Here's how.
Cells from an organ to be replaced are put into nutrients, where they multiply and create a "soup," explained Dr. Anthony Atala, director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine in North Carolina. The "soup" of cells is "painted" on a form or scaffolding in the shape of the organ, say a bladder, and placed into an incubator. A new bladder grows in about six weeks.
"It used to be that the patient's pelvis was extensively X-rayed to get the right-sized bladder," Atala said, "but now [scientists are doing so many that] bladders come in three sizes: small, medium and large."

Ears, arteries, heart valves, fingers and toes are being grown in this manner. Recent news stories have described the successful growing of new penises in lab animals. Atala's group is experimenting with the ink-jet technology of a printer/scanner that will be able to "print out" a copy of skin, or even a heart, for replacement.

This could spell the end of transplant organ shortages and, because they use the patient's own tissue, make organ rejection a thing of the past.
How soon will you be able to grow your own parts? Lab-grown bladders have already been transplanted into patients in the United States, a precursor to FDA approval, said a Wake Forest Institute spokeswoman. In 10 years, it could be out with the old and in with the new, at least with some organs. And they'll be your own organs.
Grow your own body parts? The future is now: Technology is bringing big changes in health care - ending transplant organ shortages and blunting the effects of aging. Will baby boomers or their kids reap the benefits?


Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
11-30-09
Nov. 30--Amid all the noise of health care reform, a real revolution is happening.
Medical advancements that sound like science fiction -- growing your own organs, being cared for by robotic nurses, popping anti-aging pills -- are either at or near reality already. No matter what is decided about how we deliver and pay for health care in the future, the manner in which bodies and diseases are treated is about to change dramatically.
At least that's the opinion of the innovators in medicine and technology -- scientists, doctors, engineers and philosophers -- who gathered last month at a TEDMED, (that's Technology, Entertainment, Design Medicine) conference in San Diego to unveil solutions to some stubborn health care problems. These innovations are likely to be embraced not only because they could save money, but also because a large, vocal group is going to want them -- the baby boomers.
DIY body parts
Don't wait for an organ donation -- grow your own. Here's how.
Cells from an organ to be replaced are put into nutrients, where they multiply and create a "soup," explained Dr. Anthony Atala, director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine in North Carolina. The "soup" of cells is "painted" on a form or scaffolding in the shape of the organ, say a bladder, and placed into an incubator. A new bladder grows in about six weeks.
"It used to be that the patient's pelvis was extensively X-rayed to get the right-sized bladder," Atala said, "but now [scientists are doing so many that] bladders come in three sizes: small, medium and large."
Ears, arteries, heart valves, fingers and toes are being grown in this manner. Recent news stories have described the successful growing of new penises in lab animals. Atala's group is experimenting with the ink-jet technology of a printer/scanner that will be able to "print out" a copy of skin, or even a heart, for replacement.
This could spell the end of transplant organ shortages and, because they use the patient's own tissue, make organ rejection a thing of the past.
How soon will you be able to grow your own parts? Lab-grown bladders have already been transplanted into patients in the United States, a precursor to FDA approval, said a Wake Forest Institute spokeswoman. In 10 years, it could be out with the old and in with the new, at least with some organs. And they'll be your own organs.
Monitoring the boomers
An age wave is about to hit health care. Baby boomers are graying, developing chronic diseases, disabilities and just plain wearing out. About 70 million aging boomers could mean bulging nursing homes and depleted resources.
It doesn't have to be that way, said Eric Dishman, director of Health Innovation at Intel's Digital Health Group. Put smart phone technology to work in medicine and people stay independent longer, he said. Intel's Health Guide, a laptop-like device already in use in some parts of the country, monitors patients' health from home.
With a touch screen and side ports for attachments, the device uses a friendly female voice to prompt users to measure blood pressure, blood sugar, lung function and more. Results go directly to a health care provider. If a follow-up call is necessary, a camera allows the patient and care provider to see each other as they talk. Closer supervision means better results for the patient, who can avoid trips to the doctor, hospitalizations and nursing home stays.
Other smart, button-sized devices can be worn on the body to sense gait, tremors and other vital signs, telling doctors if medication is working or if patient's condition is changing, without having to wait for a crisis.
"It's about aging gracefully in the home," said Greg Hooper, with Intel Digital Health Group.
Look for more medical home-monitoring products and services to hit the market soon.
Nurse robot
How about an in-home helper who never gets tired?
The iRobot company, the one that put robotic vacuum cleaners into homes, is working on creating Grandma's little helper -- a robot nurse. Just getting underway, the idea is a helper strong enough to carry Grandma up a flight of stairs, but gentle enough to hand her the proper medicine at the right time. If Grandma doesn't answer the phone, the robot could roam the house, looking for her.
Colin Angle, chairman and CEO of iRobot, said a family caregiver can easily put in three hours a day caring for an elderly person, and more than six if the person is frail. "Elder care and a full-time job are not compatible," he said.
Robotic help in the home could add years to independent living. Development of the robot nurse might come in stages, with a robotic arm or other devices debuting before the full-fledged robot.
Beyond red wine
"Aging is a disease and it's mainly treatable," says David Sinclair, a Harvard professor and a leading researcher on aging who discovered resveratrol, the anti-aging ingredient in red wine, in 2002. Now, a newer compound, many thousands of times stronger than resveratrol, is being studied. It works on genes that regulate aging.
The substance, in pill form, is being studied as a treatment for the diseases of aging: diabetes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, cardiovascular disease and many cancers. The results are promising, Sinclair said, and there appear to be no side effects.
More will be known in the next two years. If current results are any indication of the outcome, "anti-aging drugs will permeate the public," he said. "Aging is a set of diseases. If we can slow them down or cure them, we will live longer healthier lives."
It may well be that the boomer generation will be the last generation with a "natural" life span. It's the children and grandchildren of boomers who are likely to reap the most benefits.
Living well is the best revenge, it's said -- and what could be better than living well longer?
Karen Youso --612-673-4407
-----
To see more of the Star Tribune, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.startribune.com/.
Copyright (c) 2009, Star Tribune, Minneapolis
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.
NASDAQ-NMS:INTC, LSE:RTS,




http://www.lef.org/news/LefDailyNews.htm?NewsID=9071&Section=AGING&source=DHB_091201&key=Body+Title
 

barbara

Pioneer Founding member
Really interesting article and some great thoughts on how to reduce health care costs. I want an iRobot. Sounds awesome. I wonder if the robot can shop too. I hate shopping!!!!!!!!!!! I would probably get one that wanted to get up early and get me going. Then I would have to seriously damage it. Maybe, they have a night owl model.
 
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