Researchers at Edinburgh University in Scotland have announced  that they believe the type of artificial blood they are working on could  be ready for testing in humans in as little as two or three years. Made  from growing stem cells taken from adult human bone marrow, the blood  they create would be of the rare type “O-negative” that some 98% of  people in need could use.
Researchers have for years been experimenting with different  processes and materials to recreate what natures provides every  individual free of charge; a liquid material capable of carrying oxygen  and other nutrients through veins and arteries during times of blood  loss, generally due to injury or surgery. The reason the need is so  great is because of the great demand. People are injured every day, and  develop problems that require surgery to fix, and sometimes the supply  of blood from donors isn’t enough to keep up with demand, especially in  less developed countries. Plus, there is the always constant threat of  infections transferred via blood transfusions, such as HIV, Hepatitis  and vCJD, also known as mad cow disease when it infects people.
The team in Edinburgh, led by Professor Marc Turner, has been working  on a technique whereby stem cells are taken from the bone marrow of  healthy adults and are then grown in a lab into a material that very  closely resembles red blood cells grown normally in the human body. They  think their process has been sufficiently refined to predict that their  results will be ready for clinical trials in as little as two or three  years. The next step would be combing their results with the results of  others around the world who are working on ways create a form of  artificial hemoglobin. If all goes according to plan, the use of such artificial blood could become a routine part of emergency medical practices in about ten years time.
The problem with the artificial blood, however, is even if all works  out as planned it still wouldn’t be the perfect replacement everyone  really wants. Artificial blood, while clearly a lifesaver in medical  emergencies would not likely ever be a permanent replacement for blood;  it would still be just a stop-gap type measure. This is why research  will continue to focus on a true artificial blood that could in theory  completely replace all the blood a person needs and function just as  their natural blood does, without any advertise side effects or  complications.
That is not to say that a stop-gap temporary blood replacement  wouldn’t be important. If this new type of artificial blood pans out,  millions of lives would be saved the world over. And that certainly, is  no small thing.
 by "environment clean generations" 

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