8d
Futurism on MSNParalyzed Man Standing, Learning to Walk Again After Injection of Hacked Stem CellsIn the first clinical study of its kind, researchers at Tokyo's Keio Unviersity have developed a stem cell treatment that ...
Keio University doctors said they have taken a promising step toward using human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells to ...
1d
Sinar Daily on MSNStem cell treatment helped improve spinal cord injuries: Japan scientistsResearchers at Tokyo's Keio University are conducting their study using induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) -- created by ...
Researchers at Tokyo's Keio University are conducting their study using induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) — created by stimulating mature, already specialized, cells back into a juvenile state.
A Japanese patient paralyzed for years can now stand unaided after participating in a groundbreaking clinical trial using ...
The Keio University/William & Mary Cross-Cultural Collaboration is a program centered on experiential learning which allows both Japanese and American students to study questions of cultural ...
To support an expansion of personalized medicine for cancer, under the leadership of Yuko Kitagawa, a director general at Keio University Hospital, Keio clinicians are now spearheading one of the ...
A team of Japanese researchers reports that two out of four patients who received stem cell transplants showed improvements in motor function, marking a potential breakthrough in the treatment of ...
Keio may have had to wait for more than a century ... It was also the first time for a Kanagawa school to win the championship since Tokai University Sagami Senior High School did so eight ...
Emirates News Agency on MSN15d
Japan team says stem cell treatment helped improve spinal cord injuriesA team of researchers in Japan says two of four patients who received transplantation of special stem cells showed motor function recovery in a clinical study to repair spinal cord injuries.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results