Distinguished Neuroradiologist, Dr Marc D Shapiro, MD is named a Patient Preferred Exemplar in Neuroradiology in the state of Florida prunderground.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prunderground.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Lobe Sciences Ltd.: Lobe Sciences Appoints Benjamin Kelmendi, MD from Yale University to Scientific Advisory Board
Vancouver, British Columbia (Newsfile Corp. - April 20, 2021) - Lobe Sciences Ltd. (CSE: LOBE) (OTC Pink: GTSIF) (
Lobe or the
Company ) is pleased to announce the appointment of Benjamin Kelmendi, MD, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine, to its Scientific Advisory Board.
Philip Young, CEO and Director of Lobe stated, We are extremely pleased to welcome Ben to our Scientific Advisory Board. Dr. Kelmendi will add significant relevant experience to the team as we move through preclinical studies into human clinical trials. We look forward to working with Dr. Kelmendi and the team at the Yale Psychedelic Science Group.
Lobe Sciences Appoints Benjamin Kelmendi, MD from Yale University to Scientific Advisory Board streetinsider.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from streetinsider.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Apr 15, 2021 04:02 PM EDT
Scientists injected dozens of human stem cells into the embryos of monkeys that are still developing. The resulting hybrids remained alive for up to 20 days in lab dishes, according to Live Science. These embryos of human-monkey could one day become helpful models for aging, embryonic development, and human disease, the study authors noted in a current report, released April 15 in the journal Cell.
(Photo : Getty Images)
Human-animal Chimeras
By zooming in on the interaction of animal and human cells in the embryos, experts could also gain knowledge on how to help human cells survive within animal cells, potentially boosting the attempt to grow organs of humans in models of living animals.
The “What could possibly go wrong” file is so full, it may be time to give China its own manila folder for its experiments with human-animal chimeras that not only cross the ethical line – they wipe it out completely with genetically-altered erasers. The latest entry in the file is an experiment that attempts to reach the unholy grail of hybrids – human-monkey chimeras, created under the ‘good intentions’ guise of developing ways to address the severe shortage of human organs for transplants. Before you start pointing fingers at China’s Kunming University of Science and Technology, the leader of this experiment was an American from the Salk Institute in California who has also been involved in creating human-pig chimeras. Do we need to start TWO files?