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Scientists turn human skin into blood
The breakthrough could mean that in the foreseeable future people who are in need of blood for surgery, cancer treatment or treatment of other blood conditions like anemia will be able to have blood created from a patch of their own skin.
SCIENTISTS AT McMaster University have discovered how to make human blood from adult human skin.
 
The breakthrough could mean that in the foreseeable future people who are in need of blood for surgery, cancer treatment or treatment of other blood conditions like anemia will be able to have blood created from a patch of their own skin to provide transfusions.
 
Mick Bhatia, scientific director of McMaster's Stem Cell and Cancer Research Institute in the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine, and his team of researchers have also shown that the conversion is direct.
 
Making blood from skin does not require the middle step of changing a skin stem cell into a pluripotent stem cell that could make many other types of human cells, then turning it into a blood stem cell.
 
"We have shown this works using human skin. We know how it works and believe we can even improve on the process," Bhatia was quoted as saying.
 
"We''ll now go on to work on developing other types of human cell types from skin, as we already have encouraging evidence," Bhatia added.
 
The discovery was replicated several times over two years using human skin from both young and old people to prove it works for any age of person.
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