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Friday, 13 March 2009 |
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The purpose of this website is to inform and connect the community of people affected by pediatric inflammatory bowel disease in British Columbia. Our website includes: - Health information in PDF files
- Current and upcoming research projects
- Links to other website with good information
- General information on the gastroenterology clinic at BC Children's Hospital.
Remember to subscribe to our newsletter to receive important information from the gastroenterology clinic at BC Children's Hospital. This includes updates to health information, upcoming events and new research projects. You can subscribe to the newsletter by entering your name and email address in the box on the right and clicking subscribe.
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The Children's Hospital Of Philadelphia: New Gene Searching Method Uncovers Possible New Targets For Crohn's Disease Drugs |
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Friday, 27 February 2009 |
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Discovering the different genes that contribute to a complex disease is like searching in the proverbial haystack for an unknown number of needles -- some much smaller than others, often blending into the background, and many of them widely separated from each other. But if some needles are linked to each other by fine threads, you might pull out clumps of them together.
Using a novel approach that combines a statistical tool that identifies genes interacting on the same biological pathways with highly automated gene-hunting techniques that scan the whole genome, an international team of researchers has discovered new genes involved in Crohn's disease. Crohn's disease is a chronic and painful condition caused by inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. The researchers, led by scientists at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, say their approach broadens the power of gene discovery studies to ferret out potential targets for disease treatments.
In a complex disorder such as Crohn's disease, many different genes interact to cause the illness. Research over the past few years have identified many of the genes with the strongest effects, but many other genes with important roles may produce weaker or ambiguous signals in the large-scale studies, and go overlooked. "Our pathway-based approach aggregates information from multiple sources to detect modest effects from genes associated with each other," said study leader Hakon Hakonarson, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Center for Applied Genomics at Children's Hospital. |
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Read more...
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Stem Cell Treatment For Crohn's Disease |
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Saturday, 21 February 2009 |
Cellular therapy with stem cells is revolutionizing the focus of treatment of many serious diseases. Replacing the cells of damaged tissue with other new cells from the same patient is already a reality. This is the basis of cellular therapy and regenerative medicine, the latest great advance in biomedicine. In this line, Hospital ClĂnic, Barcelona is leading the world in the application of an innovative cellular therapy that uses stem cells to treat Crohn's disease, a chronic genetic disease that affects 1% of the population in Spain and which has considerable impact on the quality of life of the patients. The procedure is based on an autologous bone-marrow transplant (when patients receive a transplant of their own stem cells) and now constitutes a treatment option to cure an intestinal disease that sometimes does not successfully respond to drugs and requires highly complex surgery that does not provide a cure.
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