By Jeffrey M. O'Brien, contributor  
      Stem cells stored in liquid nitrogen at Advanced Cell      Technology in Marlborough, Mass.    
    FORTUNE -- Imagine yourself the proud but rueful owner of an    ancient Jaguar. Every day you dread the uncertainty that comes    with trying to get from here to there -- there, more often than    not, being the shop. No sooner does one ailment find repair    than another appears. At best, it's a slow, uncomfortable ride.    Lonely too. There's really no one around who fully understands    your plight.  
    That is how Patricia Riley describes life in a 95-year-old    body. Riley, who reached that milestone birthday last St.    Patrick's Day, lives alone in the same 1,100-square-foot house    in Plainfield, Conn., that she's called home for 64 years,    having survived her husband (heart disease), a daughter (breast    cancer), and every friend she ever had. "All the people I knew    have all gone, Jeffrey," she says in a quivering voice laced    with melancholy. "They've all died. I go to church and I never    see people my age." Her remaining family includes two    daughters, five grandchildren, and eight great-grandchildren,    including my two young sons. In a nod to her French-Canadian    heritage, we call her Mme.  
    Mme attributes her longevity to good genes, but she clearly    owes a debt to modern medicine. Over the years she's had a    cholecystectomy, a hysterectomy, esophageal surgery, a stroke,    and ulcerative colitis. Lately she relies on a cane and a    walker, and her daily regimen includes pain pills for    arthritis, two inhalers for asthma, high-blood-pressure meds, a    statin, vitamins, digestion aids, and an anti-anxiety drug that    she calls "my nerve pill." Her vision also comes courtesy of    medical science. Three years ago Mme was diagnosed with a form    of age-related macular degeneration, or AMD, a disease of the    back of the retina that is the leading cause of vision loss in    the developed world. The ophthalmologist gave her a choice: a    needle into her eyeballs every six weeks, or blindness. Mme    opted for the injections and now receives shots of an off-label    cancer drug called Avastin, which has demonstrated efficacy in    halting the progress of her type of AMD. Holding the ailment at    bay is all she can hope for. "I'll have to go for as long as I    live," she says. "It's just a treatment -- it's not a cure."  
    Treatments, not cures. This, in a nutshell, is the MO of our    health care system, and it's precisely the reason that    regenerative medicine -- and stem cell therapy in particular --    has been the subject of so much hope and hype over the past    decade or so. Stem cell therapies promise to empower a body to    fight ailments by enabling it to build new parts. Think about    growing new neurons or heart tissue. Think about the difference    between perpetually slathering that old Jag with Bondo and    having it heal itself overnight in the garage.  
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    While stem cells have ignited plenty of religious outrage and    political grandstanding, behind the headlines the underlying    science has been advancing the way science often does -- by    turns slowly and dramatically. To be clear, the earliest stem    cell therapies are almost certainly years from distribution.    But so much progress has been made at venerable research    institutions that it now seems possible to honestly discuss the    possibility of a new medical paradigm emerging within a    generation. Working primarily with rodents in preclinical    trials, MDs and Ph.D.s are making the paralyzed walk and the    impotent virile. A stem cell therapy for two types of macular    degeneration recently restored the vision of two women. Once    they were blind. Now they see! Some experts assert that AMD    could be eradicated within a decade. Other scientists are    heralding a drug-free fix for HIV/AIDS. Various forms of    cancer, Parkinson's, diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and ALS    have already been eradicated in mice. If such work translates    to humans, it will represent the type of platform advancement    that comes along in medicine only once in a lifetime or two.    The effect on the economy would be substantial. Champions of    stem cell research say it would be on the order of the Internet    or even the transistor.  
    The obstacles along the road from lab rat to human patients are    many, of course, but the biggest by far is money. With the    dramatic events in the lab, you might think that a gold rush    would be under way. That's far from true. Long time horizons,    regulatory hurdles, huge R&D costs, public sentiment, and    political headwinds have all scared financiers. Wall Street    isn't interested in financing this particular dream. Most stem    cell companies that have dared go public are trading down 90%    or more from their IPOs. Sand Hill Road is AWOL. The National    Venture Capital Association doesn't even have a category to    track stem cell investments.  
    Big Pharma would seem to be the most obvious benefactor. The    drug companies understand the complexities (and billion-dollar    outlays) involved in bringing therapies to market. A few drug    companies have kicked the tires on stem cells over the years,    but waiting for them to undo the current model is akin to        banking on Big Oil to rethink energy. They may do it, but    it's unlikely to be by choice. Which leaves stem cell    researchers begging for state and federal grants at a time    scientific funding is under siege.  
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The great stem cell dilemma