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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">It is the great paradox of cancer treatment: High doses of chemotherapy
can effectively kill cancer cells, but too much radiation can ultimately
kill the patient before the tumor.However, a new study claims to have
found a way to keep patients healthy and alive while administering high
doses of chemotherapy a finding that could revolutionize cancer treatments.The
key to this cancer cure? The intestines.In a paper published in the
journal Nature, scientists from the University of Michigan School of Dentistry
detail the significance of a healthy gastrointestinal (GI) tract for patients
undergoing chemo and radiation therapy. They explained that if the GI tract
remains healthy and functions, a cancer patients chances of survival could
increase exponentially.According to lead author Jian-Guo Geng, an associate
professor in the department of biologic and materials sciences at the University
of Michigan, the two systems in the body most impacted by chemotherapy
are the GI epithelial cells in the intestines and the bone marrow
in the skeletal system. These two systems are constantly regenerating and
repairing themselves at a faster rate than other biological systems, making
them much more vulnerable to the toxic effects of chemotherapy and radiation.
This explains why major side effects of chemo include diarrhea, constipation,
nausea and vomiting, as well as various blood disorders.What we found is
a way to stimulate intestinal stem cells, Geng
useum, after
announcing the discovery.Wooly mammoths are thought to have died out around
10,000 years ago, although scientists think small groups of them lived longer
in Alaska and on Russia's Wrangel Island off the Siberian coast.A growing
chorus of scientists have been targeting the mammoth for so called de-extinction
in recent years, at the same time that others argue against tampering
with Mother Natures plans. Bringing back a dead species raises a host
of issues, wrote two ethicists recently.RELATED: Boy in Alaska Finds Mammoth
Tooth"The critical ethical issue in re-creating extinct species, or in creating
new kinds of animals, is to first determine through careful scientific study
what is in their interests and to ensure that they live good
lives in the world in which they are create," wrote Julian Savulescu,
who studies ethics at Monash University, and Russell Powell, a philosophy
professor at Boston University."If we are confident that a cognitively sophisticated
organism, such as a mammoth, would lead a good life, this may
provide moral reasons to create it whether or not that animal
is a clone of a member of an extinct lineage."                        
                                                                                                
                                                        17 animals scientists want to
bring back from extinction                                                                        
                                                                                                
        Giant Ice-Age Mammals Brought to Life
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