Friday, November 30, 2012

What a pleasant surprise! Check out the latest review for us on Dealer Rater.

"I went in not expecting to drive off with anything either new or used, but wanted to see if there was anything I could get. I ended up driving off in a new car. Wow that was a surprise." --les12dive

Dr
Click here to read even more wonderful feedback!

You're about to fall in LOVE with your job!

Moreheadkingstonjobopening
We're currently looking to hire a cashier/receptionist at our dealership.  If you're responsible, reliable, and interested, click here to apply!

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Two cars in one week? Now THAT is impressive service. Keep up the hard work, Morehead Honda!

"The service was so great. I bought 2 cars in one week. One for myself and one for my daughter. Everyone was exceptionally nice and helpful." -HazelGray

Dr
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Copy, Paste, Print…Kidney?

Mhhok

By Adam Morehead

Surgeons all over the world are facing an organ shortage crisis. In the past century, we have learned how to treat diseases that were previously fatal, and as a result, we are living longer. However, as we age, our organs tend to fail more and must often be repaired or replaced. Right now, the need for spare healthy organs greatly outweighs the supply, and even in cases where replacements are available, the recipients must take a whole regiment of medicines to prevent the body from rejecting the transplanted organ.

What if doctors could grow back a perfect, functioning clone of a patient’s old, damaged organ? In the past decade, researchers in the field of regenerative medicine have brought this idea to life, using living cells as building blocks to grow tissues and certain whole organs outside the body that can later be transplanted into patients. But some researchers are pushing the boundaries even further, hoping to expedite the process through the technology of 3D printing.

Examples of the progress of this field can be seen across the globe and across the many parts of the body. In 2006, Dr. Anthony Atala, Director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, and his team of scientists nurtured samples of cells less than the size of a postage stamp to grow into functioning bladders that were implanted into human patients. They are now working on developing kidneys, heart valves, and even livers. In 2010, a team of Yale scientists led by Dr. Laura Niklason, Professor of Anesthesiology and Biomedical Engineering at Yale University, successfully engineered and implanted lung tissue into rats. One year later, Dr. Christopher Breur, a pediatric surgeon at Yale School of Medicine, implanted into a 4-year-old girl a degradable blood vessel scaffold that coaxed her own body into re-growing its own blood vessel. And in Stockholm just last year, a man’s cancerous windpipe was replaced with a lab-grown healthy replica that was grown from stem cells found in his bone marrow.

Tissue engineering: from stem cells to organs

Although the procedure itself is complicated, the principle behind most of all tissue engineering simplifies down to a few basic steps. First, researchers craft a scaffold of the tissue they are trying to reproduce. After the basic framework is created, researchers then flood the scaffold with autologous (patient’s own) stem cells, letting them grow all over the framework. Once the scaffold is coated with the new cells, it is then transplanted into a patient’s body, where the organ is accepted as a natural part of the body itself.

Given the huge benefits of perfecting such a technology, regenerative medicine research is one of the fastest growing fields in science today. “In the past year, our lab has tripled, and most of our efforts are related to this the lung project,” says Sashka Dimitrievska, a third-year graduate student in Niklason’s lab. She explains that in the case of Niklason’s team, they used the fibrous structure of existing lungs as a scaffold to hold anchor cells in their proper places places and helping them communicate with each other. The lung scaffolds were placed in an oven-like device (bioreactor) mimicking the aspects of a fetal lung environment. There, they were “seeded” with rat lung cells from a tissue culture, and after a week, the newly engineered lungs were then surgically implanted into rats. So far, these new lungs have performed acceptably well on very short time frames. Niklason’s team is currently working on trying the same process with human lungs.

However, because scientists still do not fully understand the factors of how stem cells change into other types of cells, growing tissues in a lab is currently a somewhat inefficient technology. “The problem with the vessel grafts this is that you cannot apply this approach in an emergency,” says Dimitrievska, explaining that the growth process of tissues needs to first be made faster. “You cannot just tell a patient, ‘Hold your breath now for a few weeks, while I I culture some cells.’”

3D Printing: Organ supply closets?

Some researchers, like Atala from Wake Forest University, believe that this growth process of tissues does not just need to be faster—it needs to take only a few hours. Last year, at a Technology Entertainment and Design conference, Atala boasted that one day doctors should be able to “print” out organs by using a device similar to a desktop printer. Instead of ink, he said, the organ would be printed with cells. It would work by culturing a sample of cells taken from a patient’s body, making a blueprint of the existing organ with a CT scan, and then using the cells mixed with a gel as “ink” to literally print out the new organ.

Atala and his team have been successful in printing out bones and are now experimenting with printing out kidneys. Even though these prototype kidneys are non-functional and years away from practical use, the Wake Forest team believes that a similar device, which would print out skin grafts directly onto a burn patient, is much closer to clinical use.

Right now, many researchers — including Dimitrievska — find the idea of a 3D organ printer that can engineer any functioning organ on demand extremely optimistic. In addition to the cell differentiation problem, scientists are still learning how to supply blood to more complex and solid organs. In fact, science has still not even been able to grow liver, nerve, or pancreas cells. Furthermore, the inside of the printer would have to mimic the human body’s conditions in order for the cells to grow properly — and these conditions would have to differ depending the organ.

Although there is much progress to be made before creating a 3D organ printer, Atala and his colleagues remain hopeful. The last several years have seen massive strides in the study of tissue engineering, so perhaps science fiction is not too far from reality. Perhaps one day in the future, doctors may be able to pull ready-made organs off of their supply shelves just as easily as gauze pads.

 

--Courtesy of Yale Scientific

Monday, November 26, 2012

Skyler - Customer Testimonial - Morehead

Skyler, from Montgomery, purchased a vehicle from Morehead Honda. She had a great experience at our dealership and are glad that she decided to see us. Thank you again, Skyler!

Monday, November 19, 2012

Many thanks to Charlie, the author of this amazing review! Keep up the hard work, Morehead Honda.

"I'm very pleased with the set-up of the design of the dealership. I hope they continue to do as good as they are now.  Eileen, should be a top salesperson within a short period of time. Keep up the good work!" --Charlie

Dr
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Richard M. - Customer Testimonial - Morehead

Here is Richard M. who just purchased a 2012 Honda Odyssey from us here at Morehead Honda. We are glad that he came in to our dealership to see us and he had a great experience!

Thursday, November 15, 2012

HPD Desert Pilot Baja 1000: Good Luck Gavin

Gavin Skilton is preparing to compete in one of the oldest and most grueling off-road races in North America, the SCORE Baja 1000, in his Honda Performance Development Desert Pilot. Wish him luck!

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

WE GET IT... money is tight this time of year!

Mh_hok
Between pulling off the perfect pumpkin pie, decking the halls, and stuffing those stockings with all the perfect gifts, your wallet can suffer as much as your nerves.  Enter our contest and you just might be able to alleviate some of that holiday stress!  You can win a $250 mall gift card!


Click here to enter.

 

Monday, November 12, 2012

Thank you.

Happy Veterans Day, fans!  No thanks we could offer would be huge enough to equal the incredible sacrifice you brave men and women have made for our country.  Our sincere gratitude goes out to those who have served.  You have fought for something priceless: the freedom of millions.

Mh

Thursday, November 8, 2012

More wonderful things to read on our Edmunds reviews page! Check it out, fans. Thank you to the author of this very kind feedback.

"I have had my new Pilot for a month now...it was one of the easiest and best car buying experiences I have had! It was so easy I though something must be wrong...but it wasn't! Thank you to all of the honest and hard working staff at Morehead!" --MelissaD129

Ed
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Ray A. - Customer Testimonial - Morehead

Here is Ray A. who just purchased a vehicle with us at Morehead Honda. He has been to our dealership five times and we love it! Ray loves Hondas and he loves Morehead! Thank you so much, Ray!

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

2013 Honda N-One Debuts

Honda
The 2013 Honda N-One is the latest model in Honda's N Series of mini vehicles.

The Honda N-One went on sale on Friday in Japan, with no production plans on tap for the U.S.

The N-One lineup includes a premium model that riffs off the Mini Cooper, with a two-tone treatment for the body and roof. There are five color combinations for the two-tone treatment.

The N-One moves Honda's mini vehicles further into upscale territory with a new Emergency Stop Signal system as standard. The system responds to sudden braking and automatically starts the hazard lights to alert vehicles behind the N-One.

The N-One joins the Honda N Box and N Box+ in Honda's home market.

 

Courtesy of Inside Line

Monday, November 5, 2012

Every little bit counts.

Mhhok

Our dealership is a drop-off location for relief items that will be donated to the families affected by Hurricane Sandy. Our hearts go out to those who have lost their homes, possessions, and loved ones. Please give what you are able; it could change someone’s day.

Friday, November 2, 2012

How would you like an extra $250 in your pocket?

Mhhok
Simply click this link, fill out the form, and you are on your way to winning a $250 gift card to any Premium Outlets location. Use it towards stocking stuffers, holiday decorations, or a treat for yourself-- you deserve it!

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Check out the latest feedback for us on Dealer Rater! Many thanks to the author of these very kind words.

"Pleasant, friendly, knowledgeable, accommodating, it just goes on & on. The whole experience was refreshingly pleasant. I just can't say enough nice things about these people! As long as they keep this up they have a lifetime customer with me!" --ralphieboy

Dr
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Honda Marks 30 Years of U.S. Manufacturing

On Nov. 1, 1982, the first U.S.-built Honda Accord rolled off the manufacturing line in Marysville, Ohio. Now, more than 17 million vehicles later, Honda is commemorating its 30th anniversary of U.S. auto operations.