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Neil Barron seeks funds for adult stem cell therapy in China
By KATIE McCARTHY -
kmccarthy@ledger-enquirer.com
If you saw Neil Barron on the street, you might notice that he’s confined to a wheelchair. You might notice that his muscles are tight and rigid, and when he speaks to you, you might hear that his speech is slow and deliberate.
But you won’t see Neil Barron on the street. The 30-year-old Phenix City resident, who was diagnosed with cerebral palsy before he turned 2 years old, is home-bound.
The physical manifestations of CP are what people might first notice about Barron and they might make stereotypical judgements about who he is or what he is capable of. But once you start talking to him it becomes apparent that he is an intelligent, articulate, artistic and determined man who has gained knowledge and strength from his struggles.
You’ll learn that he loves to paint, draw and write poetry.
That he graduated summa cum laude from Chattahoochee Valley Community College with an Associate of Arts degree and he’s currently at a stand-still on his Bachelor of Science degree in psychology from Troy University due to transportation issues.
And you’ll learn that all Barron really wants is to be able to be a productive member of society.
According the Mayo Clinic’s website, cerebral palsy, or CP, “is a disorder of movement, muscle tone or posture that is caused by injury or abnormal development in the immature brain, most often before birth.”
There is no cure for CP, but over the past 4 years Barron’s research has led him to a company in China called Beike Biotech. The facility provides adult stem cell therapy in addition to various physical therapies that aim to improve the quality of life for people with cerebral palsy and other afflictions, such as multiple sclerosis and muscular dystrophy.
The biggest obstacle to Barron participating in the therapy is the cost. And the biggest obstacle in raising money is the stigma many associate with stem cell research and China, Barron said.
“There’s a lot of skepticism about China, but what people don’t realize is that China is only the location,” he said. “The Chinese really didn’t invent anything. They brought in scientists and researchers from all around the world and the Chinese government funded the research.”
The adult stem cell therapy that is used at Beike is not yet available in the United States because it has yet to be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, a process that involves testing and trials and can take years to become available to the public.
Barron and his grandmother, Hazel Willis, whom Barron lives with, said that he has already put down a $9,000 deposit for the year-long therapy program in Shenzhen, China; however, he still needs about $40,000 more to pay for the entire process.
To raise the funds, Barron is using his artistic talent by selling his art work.
About what inspires him to draw, paint and write poetry, Barron said, “One thing that has always fascinated me is human emotion and the human condition. One of the things that I find disturbing about current times is, especially now, everyone’s in survival mode and compassion seems to be in short supply. I lie awake thinking at night if I were out in the world all the good things I could do and all the lives I could touch.”
He currently has his paintings displayed on his Facebook page and is asking that potential buyers make him an offer.
Donations can also be made to the tax deductible Neil E. Barron Medical Expense Fund at Regions Bank, 1200 Broad St. .
Photos by Mike Haskey/mhaskey@ledger-enquirer.com Neil Barron, an artist with cerebral palsy, is trying to sell some of his paintings to raise money to travel to China for adult stem cell therapy. He currently lives with his grandmother, Hazel Willis, in Phenix City.
The treatment
In addition to the research that Barron has done online, he has also traveled to state-side conventions where he has spoken with doctors from Beike, as well as people who have undergone their therapy treatments.
“I’ve spoken to hundreds of people, both on Facebook and in person, who’ve received these treatments and four or five years after treatment, to this day, not one of the hundreds of people who I’ve spoken to have experienced any negative side effects of any treatment done by Beike Biotech,” Barron said.
He said that the year’s worth of 2-hour-a-day, 6-day-a-week therapy sessions would make him more mobile and strengthen his body, helping him to support his own weight.
“Even if I couldn’t walk, just the benefits from the rehab therapies alone, that much attention for one year in a hospital, the stem cell treatment aside, ... I know would probably give me the ability to stand up and to transfer into a car,” Barron said. “In addition to that my visual scanning and tracking abilities would improve.”
Barron knows it’s a lot of money to raise, but he’s hoping to appeal to people who will think about the long-term implications.
“I found out that for each person placed in a nursing home, for every single person, the federal government spends $50,000-$80,000 a year and that’s just on basic necessities,” Barron said. “I could potentially live 50 more years. If you multiple $50,000-$80,000 times 50 ... , it costs $6 million to $9 million to take care of me through the course of my remaining lifetime.”
As long as Barron is home-bound and unable to work, he will have to rely of Medicare, and therefore the tax-paying public, to cover his health care expenses.
“He wants to be a tax payer,” said Willis, his grandmother.
He also just wants a better quality of life.
“People can say what they want about the stem cell (therapy) — that it’s a placebo, that it doesn’t work — but it’s the combination of all these different elements that can really revitalize and renew a person’s life,” Barron said. “It cannot be denied that a lot of these patients that have traveled overseas, according to their own testimony, have experienced a renewed quality and improvement in life. And so big deal if someone says that it’s a placebo effect or that the doctors can’t explain exactly how it works, the improvement in a person’s given life speaks volumes. And that’s truly what is important beyond anything else.”
Katie McCarthy, 706-571-8515
Click here to visit Neil Barron's Facebook page
Click here to learn more about Beike Biotech
Posted:
7/19/2011 3:55:48 PM by
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Maureen Feighan/ The Detroit News
St. Clair Shores— Leaning against the coffee table in his family's living room, 8-year-old Kaden Strek has a joke up his sleeve.
Kaden, who has cerebral palsy and is legally blind, knocks on the table with a curled hand.
"Knock, knock," says his mom, Eddie. "Who's there?"
"Boo," says Kaden, eyes downcast, head bowed to his chest, his voice garbled.
"Boo hoo," responds Eddie, sending Kaden into a fit of giggles.
He was born three months early to an addict mom, and Kaden's short life has been anything but lighthearted. Doctors gave him just days to live and predicted he would be a "vegetable" if he survived.
Kaden had other plans. Today, he walks with a walker, uses a variety of words and some sign language to communicate, and is obsessed with the children's music group the Wiggles.
"It's his M.O. He proves people wrong," said dad Tom, who, with Eddie, has fostered Kaden since birth, adopting him at 2.
Now, Tom and Eddie, short for Elisabeth, are hoping Kaden will defy the odds again — this time with the help of controversial stem cell transplants for which they'll travel more than 6,000 miles to China later this month. The goal: to improve Kaden's vision, balance and speech.
Kaden will receive four transplants using umbilical cord stem cells at China's Beike Biotechnology, a company that treats more than 200 international patients every month. Kaden also will get six weeks of intense physical and occupational therapy during their stay.
"This has the possibility to change his life," said Eddie Strek, a former paralegal and executive assistant. "I have to try because that possibility exists. I don't think I could live with myself if I didn't try."
Since stem cell therapy for cerebral palsy is not available in the United States, insurers don't cover the treatment, meaning patients pay out of pocket.
The Strek family has already raised $45,000 of the $50,000 needed for their trip through fundraisers, but the family will need another $18,000 for equipment and therapy when they return home.
FOR THE FULL ARTICLE FROM THE DETROIT NEWS:
Posted:
6/7/2011 2:38:07 PM by
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Stem Cells of 10-Year-old Girl Used to Save Her Life
A 10-year-old girl with a deadly blood clot underwent a life-saving surgery that showed the power of using
stem cells to regenerate healthy organs.
The girl developed a clot in the blood vessel between her intestine and liver during her first year of life, creating the risk of potentially fatal bleeding.
Michael Olausson, a surgeon at
Sahlgrenska University Hospital at the University of Gothenburg took a blood vessel from a donor, chemically removed tissue and DNA from it, then seeded stem cells from the girl’s bone marrow to create a healthy, living blood vessel.
“We carried out the surgery over three months ago now, and the result was very good, with no serious complications,” Olausson, of the hospital in Gothenburg,
Sweden, said today in a statement. “The girl is in good health, and we believe that her prognosis is very good. Since the vessel was created with the girl’s own stem cells, she does not need to take drugs to prevent rejection.”
A similar procedure was used in 2008 by surgeons in Barcelona to create a new windpipe for a 30-year-old woman whose airway collapsed from a tuberculosis infection.
More research may lead to the ability to remake other organs and arteries, Olausson said. This might help patients who need
kidney dialysis or surgery on arteries leading to their heart, Olausson said.
While blood vessels from other parts of a patient’s body are sometimes used to repair such defects, liver failure can result if the vessels are inadequate, according to the hospital’s statement.
For the full article: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-05-09/stem-cells-of-10-year-old-help-create-blood-vessel-in-life-saving-surgery.html
Posted:
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ILL-ADVISED AND UNNEEDED STENT OPERATIONS FINALLY DECLINING – A SMALL VICTORY FOR PATIENTS OVER UNETHICAL MEDICAL PROFITEERS
EXTRACTED FROM MEDPAGE TODAY, MAY 2011
A marked decline in the rate of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery led the way to a 15% overall decline in coronary revascularization procedures from 2001 to 2008, a nationwide survey showed.
The annual rate of CABG declined by almost 40%, whereas the rate of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) held steady during the study period, as reported in the May 4 issue of JAMA.
"Our findings suggest the possibility that several thousand patients who underwent PCI in 2008 would have undergone CABG surgery had patterns of care not changed markedly between 2001 and 2008," Andrew J. Epstein, PhD, of the Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and co-authors wrote.
"Our data imply a sizable shift in cardiovascular clinical practice patterns away from surgical treatment toward percutaneous, catheter-based interventions."
Since the beginning of the 21st century, the technology, published evidence, and clinical guidelines for coronary revascularization have changed substantially. How the changes affected the overall volume of revascularization and the different types of interventions has not been studied extensively, Epstein and co-authors noted in their introduction.
To determine the impact of innovation and evolution of coronary revascularization, investigators looked at the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project-Nationwide Inpatient Sample for the years 2001 to 2008. The dataset contains patient-level discharge information from about 1,000 hospitals in 42 states.
Using standard procedure and diagnosis codes, the authors identified all coronary revascularization procedures, and then categorized them as CABG, PCI with stent deployment (further subdivided into drug-eluting and bare-metal categories), and angioplasty without the use of a stent.
The authors also identified outpatient PCI procedures from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services claims data.
Overall, the rate of coronary revascularization procedures declined from 5,569 per one million adults during 2001 to 2002 to 4,748 per one million adults during 2007 to 2008 (P<0.001).
During the same time period, the CABG rate declined from 1,742 to 1,081 per one million adults (P<0.001). The rate declined in a linear manner to 1,457 per one million during 2003 to 2004 and to 1,261 per one million adults during 2005 to 2006.
The total rate of PCI procedures did not change significantly from 2001 to 2002 (3,827 per one million adults) and 2007 to 2008 (3,667 per one million).
However, the rate of PCI procedures involving bare-metal stents declined 3,326 per one million in the first two years of the study period to 1,167 during the last two years (P<0.001). In fact, the rate reached a nadir of 468 per one million during 2005 to 2006 before increasing by more than twofold during 2007 to 2008.
No data were available for use of drug-eluting stents during the first two years of the study period. The rate increased from 2,040 per one million during 2003 to 2004 to a high of 3,507 per one million in 2005 to 2006 (P=0.001) before declining to 2,383 per one million during 2007 to 2008 (P=0.003).
Use of angioplasty without stents declined from 501 per one million during 2001 to 2002 to 117 per one million in the last two years (P<0.001).
The number of hospitals offering CABG increased by 12% (241 versus 212) from 2001 to 2008 (P=0.03), and the number of hospitals offering PCI increased by 26% (331 versus 246, P<0.001).
The median CABG caseload declined by 28%, from 253 per hospital in 2001 to 183 in 2008 (P<0.001). At the same time, the number of hospitals performing fewer than 100 CABG surgeries annually increased substantially from 23 in 2001 to 62 in 2008 (P<0.001).
The authors had no definitive explanations for the decline in CABG rate.
"The decreasing CABG surgery rate during this period of stable evidence and guidelines implies either overuse of CABG surgery in 2001, which has been progressively corrected by better patient selection, or increasing underuse of CABG surgery between 2001 and 2008 because patients who would have been optimally treated with CABG surgery were instead treated with PCI," the authors wrote in the discussion of their findings.
Primary source: JAMA
Source reference:
Posted:
5/6/2011 8:30:35 AM by
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Stem Cells are Treating TBI, but what then?
The Stem Cell Industry has madesome great strides, and 60% of stem-cell-treated Traumatic Brain Injury patients have their brain functions improved. But what happens after stem cells is at least as important, as this RN shows us.
Is It Possible To Heal After a Brain Injury?
Registered Nurse Reveals What’s In Store
Janet Cromer has a good idea of what Mark Kelly will be doing when he gets back from outer space.

Soon Kelly will be leaving his wife, Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords – who is recovering from being shot in the head more than a month ago – to lead the Space Shuttle Endeavor’s last mission. However, one expert knows that the shuttle mission isn’t the only thing on Kelly’s mind. The way she knows is that she lived through a similar experience.

“My husband, Alan, suffered a severe brain injury as the result of a heart attack and cardiac arrest,” said Janet Cromer, a career RN and healthcare writer who specializes in brain injury. “Mark is going to have a dual role as spouse and caregiver and he is going to be as much a part – if not more – of his wife’s recovery as any doctor working on her case. I know that as he prepares for his mission in space, he is likely also thinking about his mission for when he gets home – what he will do to help his wife recover.”

Cromer is also author of the book
Professor Cromer Learns to Read: A Couple’s New Life after Brain Injury (
www.janetcromer.com),a chronicle of how she tended to her husband’s recovery, and how it affected them in terms of both their emotional health and their physical health, as well as their marriage
. “Her 35 years in the healthcare field, along with her personal journey as wife and caregiver, led her to create the following tips for helping a brain injury victim learn how to read, write and think again.
· Prepare for a Long Mission -- Cognitive rehab usually starts in the hospital or outpatient setting. But that’s just the beginning. Healing and recovering from a brain injury can take a long time. Many people can continue to make progress in specific ways for months and years after a brain injury with ongoing treatment, motivation, and practice.
· Take Breaks -- The brain consumes an enormous amount of energy while concentrating and relearning material. Build frequent rest breaks into sessions. Take days off from intensive rehab work. We stopped our “rehab week” on Friday at 5 PM and just enjoyed the weekend. The brain also benefits from time to let new information settle in and integrate.
· Set Realistic Goals -- Set a few realistic goals. Alan cared most about learning to read and write, so our goals reflected his priorities. Make your goal measurable. For example, “Alan will write three sentences in his log book five days a week.”
· Prepare Training Materials -- We set up a table in Alan’s office as his new “learning center.” I put away his work as a physics professor. Then we added a children’s computer, children’s dictionary, and two reading books at a time. It can be humiliating to start learning basic skills as an adult, so we selected computers and puzzles that looked like they were made for adults. V-Tech makes such products. As long as the tool looked grown-up, Alan was willing to try it.
· Make Rehab a Routine -- Doing cognitive and physical rehab became part of our “new normal” life. We scheduled time for certain practice sessions in a distraction-free room. Then we practiced spelling at the grocery store or reading comprehension while talking over a newspaper story. Sometimes I asked Alan to read me a poem before bed. We memorized poems together and enjoyed reciting them.
· Use Music -- The brain stores and accesses music in different ways than spoken words. Alan loved to sing, and sang long lyrics much easier than he spoke sentences. We sang TV commercials as cues to brush his teeth. Alan remembered the lyrics to camp songs and Broadway musicals, so I asked him to teach me. Playing an instrument and listening to music stimulate several parts of the brain and can be a lot of fun.
· Enjoy -- Revel in hope and love- a new relationship and life can flourish when nurtured with hope and love.
About Janet Cromer
Janet Cromer, RN, MA, LMHC
, has a career that spans thirty-five years as a medical and psychiatric RN, twenty-three years as a licensed psychotherapist, and seven years as an award-winning healthcare writer, most recently from the American Medical Writers Association New England Chapter. Janet held clinical and leadership positions in hospitals and community mental health programs, and managed her successful private psychotherapy practice for ten years. Janet is a brain injury and family caregiver support group facilitator, educator and advisory board member.

To interview Janet Cromer or request a review copy of Professor Cromer Learns to Read contact Ginny Grimsley at Ginny@newsandexperts.com.

Ginny Grimsley
National Print Campaign Manager
News and Experts
1127 Grove Street · Clearwater, Florida 33755
TBI IN YOUR FAMILY? Right now treatments are running about $25k. Let us know if you wish more info: don@RepairStemCells.org
Posted:
5/5/2011 8:24:02 AM by
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LIES & MISDIRECTION
There are HUGE problems with this article. In no particular order…
IT’s A LIE!
The title of the article is a bold faced, straight up LIE. “First patient to get stem cell therapy is identified”. For the record, ADULT stem cells have safely and effectively treated tens of thousands of patients to date (SAFELY AND EFFECTIVELY!), some with their own stem cells from their own bone marrow or fat tissue, some with stem cells from umbilical cords, etc. In fact, bone marrow transplants have been used for about 40 years. If you want to consider this a “stem cell therapy” then you should consider BMT’s a “stem cell therapy” also which adds thousands more to the tally.
IT”s MISDIRECTION!
Embryonic stem cells have been known to cause cysts and tumors that can become cancer. Embryonic stem cells require immunosuppressiv drugs. But wait a second folks! this isn’t even embryonic stem cell therapy….cue the magician!
What else:
Let’s not get too excited too soon…drugs have been known to have side effects. At this stage, they are merely testing for safety. If it is deemed safe or should I say: “safe” (and nobody turns on their TV to see the drug commercials with their allowable side effects followed by the commercials by the lawyers suing drug companies for heart, attack, death, stroke, and ED.) then perhaps one day you can get some at a drug store near you. Lucky you!
What’s with all the secrecy? Secret teams? secret training? secret volunteer? secret results? When there is this much secrecy shrouding a medical treatment, watch out! One of 2 things is happening. This is a huge marketing ploy to generate hype so the most insignificant information released will be heralded with fanfare OR something is going to be hidden. Bank on it!
Or perhaps Geron, who is not mentioned until halfway down the page, finally got tired of announcing HUGE MEDICAL BREAKTHROUGH WITH EMBRYONIC STEM CELL TREATMENTS for 6 years in a row only to end up with egg on their face when nothing panned out, nobody got healed, nothing worked as well as adult stem cells. Of course, they were able to artificially pump up their stock with every announcement so: “while nobody got any closer to getting healed, the execs made a killing and the shareholders got screwed.” For more on Geron, scroll down to the list of articles at the bottom of this one-http://repairstemcell.wordpress.com/2010/07/31/fda-oks-first-embryonic-stem-cell-research-trial-on-humans-despite-concerns/
First patient to get stem cell therapy comes forward
By Rob Stein, Thursday, April 7, 12:22 AM
In the six months since scientists announced they had infused a drug made from human embryonic stem cells into a partially paralyzed patient’s spine, the identity of the recipient has been shrouded in secrecy.
Recently, rumors began circulating in Internet chat rooms that details about the closely guarded experiment were finally about to be revealed.
Now, a 21-year-old Alabama nursing student who was paralyzed from the chest down in a car crash in September has come forward to identify himself as the volunteer.
“I was the first patient,” Timothy J. Atchison of Chatom, Ala., said in a telephone interview with The Washington Post on Wednesday evening. “I’m doing well.”….
Posted:
4/13/2011 9:30:27 AM by
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Stem Cells Help Grow Live Human Heart – Health News – redOrbit
Stem Cells Help Grow Live Human Heart
Posted on: Tuesday, 5 April 2011, 07:19 CDT
Scientists are growing human hearts in laboratories with the help of stem cells, giving hope to millions of cardiac patients around the world.
Researchers at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis believe the lab-developed organs could start beating in a matter of weeks. It’s a huge step towards the first ‘grow-your-own’ heart, and could lead the way into producing other organs such as livers, lungs and kidneys.
The researchers created the organs by removing muscle cells from donor organs. They injected stem cells which multiplied and grew around the structure, eventually forming healthy heart cells.
“The hearts are growing, and we hope they will show signs of beating within the next weeks,” said Dr. Doris Taylor, an expert in regenerative medicine at U of M, according to the Daily Mail.
“There are many hurdles to overcome to generate a fully functioning heart, but my prediction is that it may one day be possible to grow entire organs for transplant,” she added.
The artificial organs have been created using immature ‘master cells’ which have the ability to turn into other types of tissue. This latest experiment follows a series of successful experiments researchers have accomplished in the goal to create artificial organs for potential use in transplants.
Taylor and colleagues have already created beating rat and pig hearts. Although the organs were not strong enough to use in animals, the research proved to be a major step in the goal of producing tailor-made organs.
The researchers reported their latest study results at the American College of Cardiology’s annual conference in New Orleans.
The team used human hearts taken from dead bodies to create the lab-grown hearts. They stripped the cells from the dead hearts using a powerful detergent, leaving ‘ghost heart’ scaffolds made from collagen protein.
The researchers injected the ghost hearts with millions of stem cells — extracted from patients — and supplied with nutrients. The stem cells recognized the collagen heart structure and began to turn it into heart muscle cells.
Although the hearts have yet to begin beating, the team believes that when they do, they could be strong enough to pump blood.
However, there are many obstacles obstructing scientists from creating working hearts.
One of the biggest obstacles is getting enough oxygen to the heart through a complex network of blood vessels. Scientists will also need to ensure that the heart cells beat normally.
“We are a long way off creating a heart for transplant, but we think we’ve opened a door to building any organ for human transplant,” Taylor told the Sunday Times.
Posted:
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‘Chemical found which ‘makes bone marrow repair skin’
Skin grafts trigger repair by bone marrow cells
The chemical which summons stem cells from bone marrow to the site of a wound has been discovered by scientists in the UK and Japan.
The authors believe it can be used to put “a megaphone in the system” to improve the treatment of injuries such as burns and leg ulcers.
Another UK expert said the research had potential.
Bone marrow was thought to play a role in repairing damaged skin, but the exact process was unknown.
Scientists at Osaka University and King’s College London gave mice bone marrow cells that glow green – which can be tracked while moving round the body…
Posted:
4/11/2011 9:39:21 AM by
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Higher bleeding risk seen in J&J, Bayer clot drug – Reuters Health Report
Higher bleeding risk seen in J&J, Bayer clot drug |
April 05, 2011 09:35 AM ET |
NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) – A blood clot preventer from Johnson & Johnson and Bayer caused a surprisingly high rate of bleeding in a trial of patients with acute illnesses, representing a significant setback for the drugmakers. | Full Article |
Gmail – Reuters Health Report – dsgrano@gmail.com.
Posted:
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In the movie, “A Beautiful Mind,” John Nash discusses the merits of he and his friends all vying for the attentions of a very beautiful woman. (click photo to view video scene)
It is at this moment that he has his epiphanal revelation on “Governing Dynamics”…
Jonh Nash: “If we all go for the blonde, we block each other. Not a single one of us is gonna get her. So then we go for her friends, but they will all give us the cold shoulder, because nobody likes to be second choice. Well, what if no one goes for the blonde? We don’t get in each other’s way, and we don’t insult the other girls. That’s the only way we win. That’s the only way we all get laid. Adam Smith said the best result comes from everyone in the group doing what’s best for himself, right? That’s what he said…Incomplete. Incomplete, okay? Because the best result will come from everyone in the group doing what’s best for himself and the group.”
Likewise, we find ourselves in this same situation in the stem cell industry. Stem cell treatment and banking is a relatively new industry and everybody is vying for position on licenses , patents and market share. This naturally results in
law suits, attacks and industrial infighting.
Too bad life can’t imitate art. If the stem cell industry could condense it’s efforts towards a common goal a la Robert Nash’s theories on Governing Dynamics, just think of how many more patients we could help.
Oh well. Maybe it will never happen, but…“You see things; and you say, ‘Why?’ But I dream things that never were; and I say, ‘Why not?‘” - George Bernard Shaw
Cord Blood America: Court Grants Motion to Dismiss at Lawsuit Aimed at Blocking Acquisition
LAS VEGAS, April 5, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — Cord Blood America, Inc. (http://www.cordblood-america.com) (OTC Bulletin Board: CBAI), the umbilical cord blood stem cell preservation company focused on bringing the life saving potential of stem cells to families nationwide and internationally, is pleased to announce that the Pinellas County Circuit Court granted a motion to dismiss the lawsuit filed by Cryo-Cell International against Cord Blood America, which CBAI management believed was an attempt to inhibit the pending deal between Cryo-Cell Mexico and CBAI.
“We’re delighted. When I first addressed this issue publicly on Dec 17th, I stated that this was a suit without merit, and we knew we needed to defend ourselves; even at great time and cost to the company. The lawsuit was a menace and we are pleased with the outcome. Hats off to our counsel for a job well done and to the judicial system for seeing this through to a motion to dismiss,” said Matthew Schissler, Cord Blood America’s Chairman, CEO and co-founder.
Posted:
4/10/2011 9:33:16 AM by
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