The Family Research Council suggests more causes for Thanksgiving:
Liver Repair. Doctors at Imperial College, London, have shown treatment benefits from using adult stem cells collected from the patients' own blood to treat cirrhosis of the liver. Three of the nine patients treated showed almost complete repair after 12 weeks.
Cerebral Palsy. Duke University scientists have treated a young girl for cerebral palsy using her umbilical cord blood, which the parents had saved. Two months after receiving her own stem cells, the girl is reported to have made a 50 percent recovery.
Windpipe Reconstruction. A Colombian woman whose windpipe was destroyed by tuberculosis received a transplant using donated tissue and her own adult stem cells to form the replacement organ. The international team that conducted the work included scientists in Italy and the United Kingdom and surgeons in Spain. The surgery occurred in June, there is still no rejection of the new tissue, and she can now walk flights of stairs and go dancing.
Clinical Trial to Treat Heart
Failure. The University of Utah is enrolling patients in a new clinical
trial that
uses their own bone marrow adult stem cells to treat two types of heart
failure. The trial is the first of its kind for a condition,
cardiomyopathy,
which is not susceptible to other forms of treatment besides a heart
transplant.
Knee
Repairs for Ruggers. British scientists have used
adult stem cells to develop the equivalent of a "living bandage" that
can be applied to difficult-to-treat knee injuries caused by a torn
meniscus. This ligament in the knee often suffers damage from sharp
twisting motions such as those incurred in rugby and other sports. The
adult stem cells are
applied to a spongy collagen material and have proven capable of
pulling together torn pieces of meniscal tissue.
Heart
Valve
Construction. German researchers have enjoyed success (not yet used in
human trials) in building heart valves using the "scaffolding concept"
and
adult stem cells derived from umbilical cord blood. The scientist in
charge of the research noted that the valves might be used to replace
defective
ones in children, perhaps even growing along with them and allowing
them to avoid the multiple surgeries required by traditional valve
replacement.
There
are over 2,000 FDA-approved clinical trials underway in the U.S.
deploying stem cells. All are using adult sources of these tissues.
None involve the killing of embryos. Additionally, there are no FDA
approved trials for stem cells derived from embryos.
Additional Resources
Adult Stem Cell
Success Stories
Stem Cell Research,
Cloning and Human Embryos
Adult Stem Cell
Treatments- 9 Faces of Success