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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.

Hospital Trials using Adult Stem Cells offer MS Patients Hope

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

8 May 2010

Scientist examining tissue culture 

Clinical trials on six multiple sclerosis (MS) patients who have had stem cell injections have produced “encouraging” results, scientists say.

The trials, which are thought to be a world first, are taking place at Frenchay Hospital in Bristol, England.

The six were injected with stem cells harvested from their own bone marrow. Research found this increased nerve function by up to 20%.

The team is planning a much larger trial of the technique.

MS is a nervous system disorder that affects around 40 in every 100,000 people in the UK.

It can lead to a variety of symptoms, including muscle weakness, fatigue, loss of co-ordination, visual and speech difficulties.

Long-term hopes

The Bristol study, undertaken by a team from the University of Bristol, collected and filtered hundreds of thousands of the patients’ PCT stem cells from their bone marrow while they were under general anaesthetic.

The cells, which are known to transform into other forms of cell and repair damage, are injected en masse into the patients’ bloodstream.

Because the cells come from the patients’ own bodies there are no ethical issues surrounding their use.

‘My long-term hope is that stem cell research will be a cure for MS and will be available for everyone who is afflicted with this disease’ says Liz Allison, an MS sufferer.

Study leader Prof Neil Scolding stressed to the BBC that the research was still in its infancy.

“We didn’t see patients throwing away their wheelchairs, throwing away their walking sticks, the symptoms that the patients had didn’t change a great deal.

“They didn’t get a lot worse over the 12-month period – and you might have expected them to – but neither was there a great difference in what patients could actually do. So this is just a beginning.”

Liz Allison, one of the volunteers being studied, said: “My long-term hope is that stem cell research will be a cure for MS and will be available for everyone who is afflicted with this disease.

“It has the added benefit of being a relatively pain-free procedure and having no side effects.”

Prof Scolding said he was encouraged by this early study, the data from which may indicate that stem cells can stabilise MS.

“A larger study is required to assess the effectiveness of bone marrow cellular therapy in treating MS.

“We are hopeful that recruitment to this phase 2/3 study may begin towards the end of this year.”

[As reported on BBC News – Wednesday 5 May 2010] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/bristol/somerset/8663628.stm