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The Proteus Effect: Stem Cells and Their Promise for Medicine »

Book cover image of The Proteus Effect: Stem Cells and Their Promise for Medicine by Ann B. Parson

Authors: Ann B. Parson
ISBN-13: 9780309089883, ISBN-10: 0309089883
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: National Academies Press
Date Published: September 2004
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Ann B. Parson

Book Synopsis

To extract stem cell technology from the controversy surrounding it, Parson, a science journalist, focuses on the nature of stem cells and the history of scientific knowledge about them, beginning in 1740 through the present. While her account is well researched and balanced, Parson writes with a journalist's eye for the human interest story, personalizing the history with narratives about scientists' experiments and discoveries. She concludes the volume with a realistic view of the possible benefits of stem cell research. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Publishers Weekly

Arguably the most exciting, promising and controversial medical research being performed today explores the potential of stem cells, unique cells that, when dividing, can produce either more cells like themselves or other specialized cells, such as heart cells, skin cells and neurons. Since President Bush's highly publicized excursion into bioethics in the summer of 2001, when he limited government funding of stem-cell research, stem cells have been thrust into the public consciousness, bringing the promise of regenerative medicine and miracle cures for such conditions as multiple sclerosis, blindness, heart damage and male pattern baldness. Though most of what's written on the science and ethics of stem-cell research focuses on the cutting edge, in this study, science journalist Parson takes us through its history, ranging from 18th-century natural philosophers' discovery of seemingly immortal organisms to the exploration, two centuries later, of curious mouse tumors, called teratomas, that may unlock the secrets of the human embryo. If anything, the book is too thorough, and the never-ending succession of new scientists and new breakthroughs means that few, if any, stick in the reader's mind as particularly memorable. The real focus is the scientific process itself, with its incremental and distributed march forward. While not for the casual reader, this book will satisfy those looking to immerse themselves in the finer points of stem-cell history. Agent, Doe Coover. (Sept.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Table of Contents

1Plant or animal?13
2Mouse strain 12925
3The purple cell47
4Mystery in a dish67
5The embryo experiments83
6The canary's song101
7After the birth of Louise Brown123
8Monkeys to humans133
9Epic upon epic155
10Marrow to brain?179
11The art of cell replacement205
12After tomorrow235

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