Archive for the ‘adult stem cell nutrition’ Category

American Doctor Shows Age is No Barrier

Sunday, August 26th, 2012

Life Less Ordinary: Dr Walt Failor is right at home at Wairarapa Hospital.

At an age when many doctors are retiring to spend more time on the golf course, Walt Failor is just starting his new career in our home town, Masterton, New Zealand, and the Hospital where Maree worked for over 10 years.

The 63-year-old graduate doctor already has a lifetime of extraordinary experiences under his belt, and he’s now gone halfway round the world to work at Wairarapa Hospital, New Zealand.

American first-year house surgeon Dr Failor is working alongside colleagues younger than his own children and loving every minute of it.

“It’s amazing. I’m around talented people. When you have that opportunity you gain from it.”

Previously trained as a chiropractor, Dr Failor began his medical degree at the University of Health Sciences in Antigua when in his mid-50s.

In his third year of study, Dr Failor travelled around United States hospitals on training rotations, and through sheer persistence he procured a rotation at world famous Cook County Hospital in Chicago.

Determined to prove his competence, he volunteered for a six-week rotation at Cook County juvenile detention facility, performing HIV and STI checks on gang members and youth offenders.

His willing attitude earned him further work experience at the hospital.

He said on a trauma rotation he saw 27 gunshots in one night. “I’m more familiar with gunshots than a runny nose.”

But becoming a doctor is only part of his colourful career history. Dr Failor has been a reserve deputy sheriff, All-American footballer, pilot, commercial fisherman, chiropractor, hunter, shop worker and logging crew member.

He has clung to a tree for two days in Alaska while a brown bear circled the base, taken a childhood fishing trip with Senator Robert F Kennedy, and played on a college football team with O.J. Simpson.

He said at that time, University of Southern California Trojans teammate Simpson was “a great guy”. “It’s a dubious distinction now I realise but in college he had no peer. He’s the best player I’ve ever seen.”

Dr Failor was born in Aberdeen, Washington, where his father owned a sporting goods store but also became mayor of Aberdeen when his children were young.

In high school Dr Failor excelled at football and baseball, earning a place on the All-American football team and being drafted into the New York Yankees baseball team. However, his father decided he should go to college, so he didn’t tell him he had been drafted until years later.

After completing a degree in business and athletics, Dr Failor spent some time in Aberdeen working at his father’s store and patrolling beaches as a reserve deputy sheriff.

Deciding it was not his “cup of tea”, he left Aberdeen to train as a chiropractor in the American Midwest.

Upon his graduation in 1982 Dr Failor moved to Alaska to set up a practice and spent more than a decade there commercial fishing, dodging brown bears and flying Piper aircraft.

He arrived in Masterton in September 2011, fresh from driving a long-haul truck across the US to pay for his airfare to New Zealand.

Dr Failor said he chose New Zealand as a graduate job destination because he preferred the style of the entrance exams to that of other countries.

Before coming here, his only exposure to Kiwis was through 1972 All Black Duncan Hales who coached his chiropractic school rugby team to win the national championships in the 1970s.

He said Masterton reminded him of his home town Aberdeen for both its size and lifestyle. “Coming here is the best decision I made.”

Dr Failor would like to become a consultant in emergency medicine – a qualification he will reach by the time he is 68.

Adult Stem Cells – Stunning Recovery Two Years On

Friday, July 27th, 2012

By Lara Salahi – ABC News

The first child in history to receive a trachea fashioned by his own stem cells has shown remarkable progress since the initial transplant two years ago, marking a new record for the novel procedure.

Two Years On – a stunning recovery for Ciaran Finn Lynch following his trachea transplant using his own adult stem cells from his bone marrow.

Ciaran Finn-Lynch, the now 13-year-old boy (pictured above) from the UK who the world’s first child to receive the stem cell trachea transplant, is breathing normally and no longer needs anti-rejection medication, researchers reported in a paper published Wednesday in the journal Lancet.

The organ itself is strong, has not shown signs of rejection, and has even grown 11 centimeters since it had been transplanted, according to the researchers.

Ciaran was born with a rare condition known as Long Segment Tracheal Stenosis, marked by a small windpipe that does not grow and can restrict breathing. He underwent the stem cell transplant in March 2010 after a standard trachea transplant did not work.

Researchers at the Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm and the University College London, stripped cells from a donor trachea and then used Ciaran’s own bone marrow stem cells to rebuild the airways in the body. They also infused growth proteins to generate the tissue lining.

Using a patient’s own stem cells not only could help to rebuild the fragile tissue, but also potentially could bypass the risk of having the organ rejected. A trachea is considered a difficult tissue to grow and transplant since it has a limited blood supply, according to Dr. Bill Putnam, professor and chair of the department of thoracic surgery at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, who was not involved in the research.

“I don’t think there’s anything standard about a tracheal transplant,” said Putnam. “The fact that this single patient has survived for two years is worthy of notice.”

Full article can be viewed at ABC News