Archive for the ‘stem cell supplements’ Category

Adult Stem Cell Research Now Outpacing Embryonic

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

[As reported in the NY Daily News – 2 August 2010]

The best cure for what ails you may come from your own body.

Adult stem cells, already used in lifesaving treatments for hundreds of thousands of people with leukemia and other blood diseases, may one day serve as a therapy to restore sight to damaged eyes, treat diabetes and mend broken ankles, according to CBS News. Scientists have even fashioned beating hearts and bladders using adult stem cells, and the Pentagon and biotech companies are spending hundreds of millions of dollars to devise potential treatments that use adult stem cells.

Even as a broad array of potentially lifesaving therapies are developed using adult stem cells, research with embryonic stem cells hasn’t been as high-profile. These cells have long been controversial, with opponents saying that human embryos must be destroyed in the process of obtaining them, and former President George W. Bush permitted only restricted federal funding for unlocking the potential cures for these cells. It now appears likely that in the short term at least, embryonic stem cells may be used more as lab tools and as a way to learn about the origins of various disorders.

It’s the adult stem cells that are being researched as a treatment for individuals who have health conditions like heart disease, diabetes and multiple sclerosis. Adult stem cells are collected from a person’s bone marrow and blood, rather than from embryos, and they can then be infused back into a patient.

Stem cell transplants for bone marrow transplants have been used for decades.

“That’s really one of the great success stories of stem cell biology that gives us all hope,” Harvard University’s Dr. David Scaden told CBS News. “If we can recreate that success in other tissues, what can we possibly imagine for other people?”

Boston University Medical Center’s Dr. Thomas Einhorn  recently treated a patient’s broken ankle, which refused to heal, by injecting bone marrow containing adult stem cells into the ankle. The bone healed within four months. While Einhorn’s treatment was not part of a large study, it exemplifies some of the innovative ways researchers are starting to use adult stem cells.

Some day embryonic stem cells may be used in lifesaving treatments, too. Stanford University law professor Hank Greely, a stem cell expert who works in bioethics, told CBS News: “Give it another five years and I’ll be surprised if we don’t have some substantial progress” besides the first safety studies.

One aspect of adult stem cells that makes them so promising is that they appear to have the ability to stimulate tissue repair and to suppress the immune system.

“That gives adult stem cells really a very interesting and potent quality that embryonic stem cells don’t have,” the University of Pittsburgh’s Rocky Tuan told CBS News.

Windpipes made with Adult Stem Cells Help Cancer Patients

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Friday, July 30, 2010; 11:35 AM

ROME — Doctors have successfully transplanted windpipes into two cancer patients in an innovative procedure that uses stem cells to allow a donated trachea to regenerate tissue and create an organ biologically close to the original, they said Friday.

The 31-year-old Czech and 19-year-old British patients are in good condition and have been released from the hospital in Florence just weeks after the surgery. The British woman was speaking after only three or four days, said Dr. Walter Giovannini, the director of the AOU Careggi hospital where the surgeries took place on July 3 and 13.

“This is a unique solution for a problem that had none, except the death of the patient,” Giovannini said.

Surgeons have been making advances in the transplant of windpipes, but previous cases have mostly focused on patients whose windpipes have been physically damaged due to trauma.

While trachea cancer is rare, it is very difficult to treat because it is resistant to chemotherapy and radiation and transplants of mechanical devices to replace the windpipe have not been effective, Giovannini said.

The new technique is extraordinary, said Alessandro Nanni Costa, the director of Italy’s National Transplant Center, who was not involved in the research. “What is new about this procedure is combining a surgical technique with biotechnology, through the use of stem cells,” he said.

The hospital did not release the patients’ identities or more details about their cases due to privacy concerns. Giovannini said the Czech woman is the mother of a 6-month-old.

The surgical team was headed by Dr. Paolo Macchiarini, who participated in a windpipe transplant in Spain nearly two years ago. In that case, doctors gave a Colombian woman a new windpipe with tissue grown from her own stem cells, eliminating the need for anti-rejection drugs.

A similar procedure was followed in this case. The donor windpipe was stripped of all cells until it was just a tube with no organic material. Just before being transplanted, Dr. Macchiarini injected the donor trachea with the stem cells. In the Spanish case, the stem cells were grown on the trachea before the transplant.

It takes two to three months for the stem cells to completely cover the trachea, creating a new organ, Giovannini said.

In the meantime, the windpipe is functional without the cells – acting as a sort of mechanical device before the stem cells transform it into an organ, Giovannini said.

Because the new trachea contains no organic substance foreign to the patient, no anti-rejection drugs are needed.

Macchiarini told a press conference in Florence the procedure could in the future be applied to other organs.

“I’m thinking about the larynx or surgeries involving lungs,” Macchiarini said.

[As reported By COLLEEN BARRY – The Washington Post]