- Bedford Stem Cell Research Foundation
] . The institute also created the
Special Program of Assisted Reproduction (SPAR), a program that assists serodiscordant couples successfully achieve pregnancy [http://www.sementesting.org/ HIV Sperm Washing | Bedford Research Foundation - Overview ] ] . Dr.Ann Kiessling , the founder of Bedford Stem Cell Research Foundation, is the Laboratory Director.Bedford Research Foundation was founded to satisfy the need for a research and development clinical laboratory that could facilitate technology transfer from basic science discoveries to clinical test applications.cite web | url=http://sementesting.org//index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=32&Itemid=48 | title=SPAR History- Official website] BRF was founded and incorporated in 1996 by Dr. Ann Kiessling and through the efforts of men and women whose lives were altered by blood products tainted with the
AIDS virus (Human Immunodeficiency Virus,HIV ) andHepatitis C virus. Faced with unprecedented disease obstacles, the men and women insisted that biomedical technology be developed to fight their infections, and allow them to conceive children of their own. Research to ensure the safety of conception by assisted reproductive technologies in general was not funded by the National Institutes of Health because of the U.S. Congress decisions in 1996 and 1998 that research on fertilized human eggs "...is meritorious and should be done for society..., but will not be funded by taxpayer dollars."cite web | url=http://www.bedfordresearch.org/aboutus/aboutus.php | title=Bedford Stem Cell Research Foundation – Official Website]The Foundation conducts research within its own laboratories (
Stem Cell ,Prostate ,Infectious disease ) as well as in collaboration with other laboratories and raises money to award research grants to qualified investigators seeking to improve the safety and success of assisted reproduction to mothers and babies. Much of the research supported by the Foundation cannot be funded by federal grants-in-aid because of the U.S. moratorium on funding research on human eggs activated either artificially or by sperm.For this reason, the men and women themselves raised the money to fund the
Special Program of Assisted Reproduction (SPAR ). Within two years, technology was developed to protect against virus transmission at conception. As a result, Baby Ryan was born in 1999 to a healthy Mom and a Dad with hemophilia who was infected withHepatitis C andHIV by tainted blood factors. [http://www.americanradioworks.org/features/fertility_race/part5 Fertility Race Part Five: HIV and Fertility ] ]In conjunction with stem cell research, Foundation scientists also apply patented processes to help diagnose male reproductive tract disorders. Research done at the Foundation has led to the development of additional tests that may provide valuable information about overall men's health. A current focus is detection of bacteria in semen by molecular biology methods instead of standard laboratory culture. Studies to date reveal that semen contains bacteria not previously identified. Such studies hold the promise of developing new tests for the health of semen producing organs such as the prostate, which is a site of significant disease in men, including infection (prostatitis) and cancer.
References
External links
* [http://www.bedfordresearch.org Bedford Stem Cell Research Foundation]
* [http://www.sementesting.org Special Program of Assisted Reproduction (SPAR)]
* [http://www.bedfordresearch.org/aboutus/aboutus.php?item=about_director Dr. Ann A. Kiessling Biography]
* [http://www.americanradioworks.org/features/fertility_race/part5 Story on Baby Ryan, by Stephen Smith, Minnesota Public Radio, 1998]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.