Archive for May, 2010

Charlestown boy’s sight improves after stem cell treatment

Friday, May 28th, 2010

IMPROVEMENT: Connor Wink, 11, and his mother Tracey.

By Donna Sharpe – The Herald  

18 May, 2010

A CHARLESTOWN boy is showing marked signs of improvement in sight after his first round of stem cell treatment. Connor Wink, 11, and his mother Tracey recently returned from China where he received a round of injections, which are not available in Australia.

The treatment appears to have had dramatic results.

Connor has gained light perception, a sign the treatment is working.

Born blind, he also suffers nystagmus, a condition which means Connor has poor muscle control causing his eyes to move frequently.

“That has slowed right down so it’s certainly a big plus,” Mrs Wink said.

Connor is the second Hunter child to undergo stem cell treatment in China.

Holly Arvidson, 12, of Denman, is having a second round of the procedure in a bid to restore her sight.

For the past 12 months, The Herald has been following the progress of Holly, who is in China with her family for the treatment which involves stem cell injections, acupuncture and bone marrow cultivation.

The treatment is only available in a handful of hospitals worldwide. It has an 80 per cent success rate but since Holly’s first round her condition has not changed.

Mrs Wink said she is praying Holly receives a positive result this time.

“Connor was lucky and we have seen improvements. We were sitting in front of a fire at the weekend and he could tell when someone was putting logs on it,” she said.

The Charlestown community and Connor’s school, Hillsborough Public, helped raise money for the China trip.

“We still have enough money to travel for Connor’s second round of treatment thanks to those earlier fund-raising efforts which Connor was a big part of, raising $6000 busking.”

 

Success from Adult Stem Cells

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Floyd

[As reported on OneNewsNow – 17/5/2010 5:20:00 AM]

Proof of success in using adult stem cells continues to flow in. About three years ago, Eddie Floyd, owner of Bark and Purr Pet Center in Austin, Texas, felt a severe pain in his chest and rushed to a hospital to find that he had had a heart attack. Afterwards, doctors asked him to participate in a trial that involved adult stem cells being injected into his heart.

While speaking with Texas Alliance for Life, Floyd reported that the adult stem cells were effective. “They did not cause any kind of rejection, so I didn’t have to have any rejection-preventive medicine or anything like that,” he explained “They were just generic stem cells that became heart.”

Doctors say that within days after a heart attack, damaged cells are sending a signal for help. Millions of stem cells injected into the system respond to those signals, “and it has apparently regenerated the muscle that died during my heart attack,” Floyd notes. He further reports that he has been able to resume normal activity. “There really isn’t anything that I can’t do because of my heart, that I’m aware of. [But] there are a few things I can’t do because of my belly…,” the pet store owner joked.

In this study, adult stem cells are harvested from adults between the ages of 18 and 30 and are processed to remove elements that cause rejection. About 1,000 patients have endured the process so far.

Adult stem cells are successfully treating , more than 70 diseases and conditions, while embryonic stem-cell research, involving the killing of human babies, has resulted in zero results.