ipl-logo

Stem Cell Research Persuasive Essay

1184 Words5 Pages

Adult Stem Cell: A Benefit for All Hippocrates once said “Whenever the art of medicine is loved, there is also a love of humanity.” The biggest part of being in medicine is healing the sick and helping people, not finding the cure for a new disease or studying mice in a lab. Restricting scientists and researchers from doing their jobs—from helping people—helps no one. The controversial debate surrounding stem cell research can be solved if people view it from a pure view, without political and religious agendas. Hannah Warren, now five years old, is alive today because of stem cells. At the age of two, she had surgery to implant a windpipe made of stem cell from her bone marrow. Hannah was born without a windpipe and the doctors in Seoul had …show more content…

There are thousands of diseases that affect millions of people around the world that have no cure yet. However, as advances are being made in the medical field, hope is strong for all these people, especially because of the progress made by adult stem cell research. Parkinson’s disease affects around 10 million people world wide (Statistics on Parkinson’s), but this number can significantly decrease in the near future with the help of adult stem cells. U.S. researchers have been able to produce an unlimited amount of brain cells from adult stem cells, which can open a gateway for treatments and cures for diseases like Parkinson’s or Huntington’s. The studies done on mice have shown positive results where the stem cells grew into a cluster of functioning neurons. For multiple sclerosis, many clinical trials are being done using HSCT, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, by depleting the patient of their immune cells and then reintroducing the HSCT as new immune cells to stop the body from attacking itself ("Stem Cells in MS"). Diabetes, one of the most prevalent diseases around the world, will have a new treatment in the future that does not require insulin shots. Scientists are working to cultivate “insulin-producing cells using adult stem cells for patients with diabetes” (Editorial

Open Document