Posts Tagged ‘arthritis treatment’

Young Boy Receives Miraculous Stem Cells For Arthritis

Tuesday, March 10th, 2015

By Melissa Wilson, Anchor & Health Reporter, Houston (Fox 26)

HOUSTON (FOX 26) – When you think about arthritis, you may imagine a middle-aged adult suffering from joint pain, but a toddler was suffering so severely, he couldn’t even eat and began fighting for his life. However, a new state-of-the-art stem cell procedure has him back on his feet and feeling well for the first time, in a long time.

Tucker Hyatt, from Pearland, was the first child in the U.S. to undergo stem cell therapy for arthritis. Tucker was born as healthy as can be, but when he turned two, his health suddenly declined.  That’s when his parents were told, ‘Your son has systemic juvenile arthritis.”

Click video link below to see Tucker’s journey back to wellness

FOX 26 News | MyFoxHouston

Stem Cell Procedure May Avoid Hip Replacements In Future

Saturday, June 2nd, 2012

Thousands of patients could avoid the need for a hip replacement after surgeons pioneered a new stem cell procedure to tackle a bone disease that leads to arthritis.

Doctors at Southampton General Hospital are extracting stem cells from the bone marrow of patients in need of hip repair due to osteonecrosis – a condition where poor blood supply causes significant bone damage leading to  severe arthritis.

These cells are mixed with cleaned, crushed bone from another patient who has had their own hip replaced and used to fill the hole made by surgeons after dead and damaged tissue has been removed from the joint.

Surgeons pioneer a new stem cell procedure to tackle a leading bone disease that leads to arthritis

The procedure has been developed by Doug Dunlop, a consultant orthopaedic surgeon at Southampton General Hospital, and Professor Richard Oreffo, a specialist in musculoskeletal science at the University of Southampton.

“Although this work is still ongoing, several patients who have had the procedure have reacted very well and, if we get the results we are hoping for, these patients won’t need to have their hip joints replaced – they should be fixed completely,” said Mr Dunlop.

Professor Oreffo added: “By using stem cells to send out chemical signals to blood vessels, we hope the body will continue to create new vessels in the hip which supply enough nutrients to maintain bone strength.”

Osteonecrosis is on the rise in the UK with around 4,000 cases a year but it   is much more widespread in Asia where it is the most common form of arthritis of the hip, a spokesman for the hospital said.

It can also be treated with drugs to help avoid arthritis and usually strikes between 30 and 50 years of age.

Osteonecrosis is a disease that results from the temporary or permanent loss of blood flow to bones.

This causes the bones to ‘die’ and ultimately leads to severe arthritis. If the osteonecrosis occurs at the bone joint, it can cause it to collapse and   the only option then is a hip replacement.

Common oesteoarthrits is caused by wear and tear of the bone.

Written by: By Rebecca Smith, Medical of www.telegraph.co.uk