Injections of stem cells taken from patients blood may finally banish wrinkles if clinical trials of a new treatment are successful.
For some, wrinkles are seen as a sign of character. For most, they are an unwelcome reminder of ageing.
However, scientists are developing a method that may finally end the need for the routine of treatments and moisturisers used to try to keep facial lines at bay.
The first clinical trials are to begin shortly on a treatment that uses stem cells purified from a patients blood to combat their own wrinkles.
The cells will be injected beneath the skin where they will grow into new skin cells to help restore the elasticity, claims Pharmacells, the Glasgow-based company behind the technology.
Athol Haas, the companys chief executive, said: The skin has a natural elastic property which comes from cells known as fibroblasts.
The ability of the body to produce this elastic material slows down with age because the number of these fibroblasts decrease.
By introducing large numbers of stem cells into the right place, we are increasing the ability of the body to produce this material. It is still in its early stages but we hope to begin phase one trials within the next 12 months.
Until recently, anyone hoping to get rid of their wrinkles had to rely on cosmetic treatments that injected synthetic collagen under the skin as a filler to remove the lines.
Botox has now become popular for cosmetic treatments, where a neurotoxin from the bacteria Clostridium botulinum is injected to immobilise the muscles that can cause wrinkles.
Continue reading here:
Stem Cells Could Be The Next Anti-Aging Fad