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Τρίτη 29 Μαΐου 2012

Stem cell hope for hip patients

Hip replacements for some patients could be a thing of the past 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.
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, 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 one of the three main causes of arthritis alongside osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis.
Arthritis in general affects one in five people in the UK.


Source: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5jyE2oztd2kbJN_8hKY2cv-XUA-fQ?docId=N0002451338209170113A

Τετάρτη 23 Μαΐου 2012

Θεραπεύστε την καρδιά σας με τα δικά σας κύτταρα!

Δερματικά κύτταρα από ηλικιωμένους με καρδιακά προβλήματα πήραν Ισραηλινοί επιστήμονες και κατάφεραν να τα αναπρογραμματίσουν και να τα μετατρέψουν σε νέα υγιή κύτταρα του μυϊκού ιστού που κάνει την καρδιά να χτυπάει.

Αυτή η τεχνική δοκιμάστηκε σε πειραματόζωα και μένει να δοκιμαστεί επίσης στους ανθρώπους, κάτι για το οποίο θα χρειαστούν μερικά χρόνια ακόμα.

Η λήψη των κυττάρων από τους ίδιους τους ασθενείς φιλοδοξεί να παρακάμψει το συνηθισμένο πρόβλημα της απόρριψης των κυττάρων ως «ξένων» από το ανοσοποιητικό σύστημα των καρδιοπαθών.

Οι βλάβες του καρδιακού μυϊκού ιστού μπορεί να προέρχονται από διάφορες αιτίες, όπως έμφραγμα, υψηλή πίεση του αίματος, προβλήματα με βαλβίδες της καρδιάς, καρδιομυοπάθειες λόγω ασθένειας, υπερβολική κατανάλωση αλκοόλ, εκ γενετής δυσλειτουργίες κ.α. Όποια και αν είναι η αιτία, ο μυς της καρδιάς δυσκολεύεται να αντλήσει αρκετό αίμα και να τροφοδοτήσει ομαλά τον οργανισμό. Σε σοβαρές περιπτώσεις, καθίσταται αναγκαία η μεταμόσχευση καρδιάς.

Ο καθηγητής καρδιαγγειακής ιατρικής του University College του Λονδίνου Τζον Μάρτιν επεσήμανε ότι είναι σημαντικό οι ασθενείς να μην σχηματίσουν την εσφαλμένη εντύπωση πως επίκειται άμεσα μια νέα θεραπεία. «Αν η νέα τεχνική όντως έχει αποτέλεσμα, θα πάρει περίπου 15 χρόνια έως ότου εφαρμοστεί κλινικά», υπογράμμισε.

Πηγή:
http://www.newsbeast.gr/health/arthro/355719/therapeuste-tin-kardia-sas-me-ta-dika-sas-kuttara/

Τρίτη 22 Μαΐου 2012

Stem Cell Transplant Patients Show Long Term Improvement

An injection of a patient's own stem cells seems to help heal spinal cord injury in the long run, new research suggests. Thirty percent of stem cell therapy patients showed significant functional or other improvements after 6 months.
This study, following after an initial report of results on six patients, is the first attempt at direct spinal injection of a patient's own stem cells for the treatment of spinal cord injury in humans. The latest data was reported in the May 2012 issue of the journal Neurosurgery.
The stem cell transplantation was performed in 10 patients with permanent movement problems or paralysis after spinal cord injury. The researchers transplanted stem cells cultured from each patient's own bone marrow, grew them in the lab into spinal cord cells, and injected them into the patient's back.
The researchers monitored the patients for improvement in their ability to move their arms and hands and to perform key activities of daily living. Imaging scans and tests of muscle activity were performed as well....
 The report shows not only the promise of stem cell treatments, but their safety. None of the ten patients had any permanent complications related to the transplantation. This helps to alleviate concerns that stem cell injection could lead to later problems like the development of tumors or calcifications.

Read More: Live Science  http://www.livescience.com/20384-stem-cell-transplant-patients-show-long-term-improvement.html

Κυριακή 20 Μαΐου 2012

Making organ donation a thing of the past !!

'This is a nose we’re growing for a patient next month,’ Professor Alexander Seifalian says matter-of-factly, plucking a Petri dish from the bench beside him.
Inside is an utterly lifelike appendage, swimming in red goo. Alongside it is another dish containing an ear.
‘It’s a world first,’ he says smiling.
‘Nobody has ever grown a nose before.’
His lab is little more than a series of worn wooden desktops strewn with beakers, solutions, taps, medical jars, tubing and paperwork, and looks like a school chemistry lab.
But it’s from here that Seifalian leads University College London’s (UCL) Department of Nanotechnology and Regenerative Medicine, which he jokingly calls the ‘human body parts store’. 
As he takes me on a tour of his lab I’m bombarded with one medical breakthrough after another.
At one desk he picks up a glass mould that shaped the trachea – windpipe – used in the world’s first synthetic organ transplant.
At another are the ingredients for the revolutionary nanomaterial at the heart of his creations, and just beyond that is a large machine with a pale, gossamer-thin cable inside that’s pulsing with what looks like a heartbeat. It’s an artery.
‘We are the first in the world working on this,’ Seifalian says casually.
‘We can make a metre every 20 seconds if we need to.’
‘Other groups have tried to tackle nose replacement with implants but we’ve found they don’t last,’ says Adelola Oseni, one of Seifalian’s team.
‘They migrate, the shape of the nose changes. But our one will hold itself completely, as it’s an entire nose shape made out of polymer.’
Looking like very thin Latex rubber, the polymer is made up of billions of molecules, each measuring just over one nanometre (a billionth of a metre), or 40,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair. Working at molecular level allows the material itself to be intricately detailed.
‘Inside this nanomaterial are thousands of small holes,’ says Seifalian.
‘Tissue grows into these and becomes part of it. It becomes the same as a nose and will even feel like one.’
When the nose is transferred to the patient, it doesn’t go directly onto the face but will be placed inside a balloon inserted beneath the skin on their arm.
After four weeks, during which time skin and blood vessels can grow, the nose can be monitored, then it can be transplanted to the face.
At the cutting edge of modern medicine, Seifalian and his team are focusing on growing replacement organs and body parts to order using a patient’s own cells. There would be no more waiting for donors or complex reconstruction – just a quick swap. And because the organ is made from the patient’s own cells, the risk of rejection should, in theory, be eliminated.......
....The UK is at the forefront of this research, with work on a £54 million MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine in Edinburgh completed earlier this year.
Until recently, regenerative medicine focused mostly on embryonic stem cells as these were the most versatile. They are called pluripotent, meaning they have the ability to become any cell type – blood, muscle, etc. By contrast, adult stem cells can replicate themselves endlessly, but only as the cell they began life as – skin cells replicate as skin cells, muscle cells as muscle cells.But the moral debate surrounding embryonic stem cell research is controversial. Stem cells are taken from human embryos, which are destroyed in the process. Despite the protests of pro-life groups, the UK government has supported stem-cell research since 2002, giving the UK a head start over other major players in the field like the U.S., where debate over the ethics of the process has delayed research, funding and progress.




Source: MailOnline (dailymail.co.uk )
See pictures and Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive/article-2138956/Organ-donation-Making-thing-past--British-lab-growing-human-spare-parts.html#ixzz1vOx8TkzV


 

Τρίτη 15 Μαΐου 2012

Stem Cell Study Shows Promising Results Against Heart Failure

By Denise Mann
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, May 10 (HealthDay News) -- A new treatment that involves spinning bone marrow stem cells to enhance their healing potential may help people with advanced heart failure feel and function better, a small study suggests.
Researchers developed the treatment by culturing a patient's own bone marrow for 12 days. This process helped increase the amount of immune cells and stem cells that can differentiate into several different cell types, including heart cells. Those cells were then injected into heart muscle. The study was funded by treatment manufacturer Aastrom Biosciences.
According to the findings, this treatment was safe, helped repair the damaged heart muscle and reversed some heart failure symptoms, when compared to a placebo injection. The findings were to be presented Thursday at the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions annual meeting, in Las Vegas....

......"The new study included 22 participants with advanced heart failure and an enlarged heart whose current medication regimen was no longer effective. They either received an injection of the stem cell therapy treatment into their heart muscles or a placebo shot. After 12 months, there were no complications and no difference in side effects among those who received the stem cells and the control group. That said, individuals who received the novel stem cell therapy did have a lower number of major heart-related events and were more likely to see improvements in their ability to walk without growing breathless. Those who received the stem cell treatment also showed marked improvements in their ejection fraction, which is a measure of how much blood leaves the heart with each pump.
"This study tells us that injecting stem cells into the heart muscle of a patient with chronic heart failure may be beneficial," says Dr. Sandeep Jauhar, director of the congestive heart failure program at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park, N.Y. Typically, these individuals are treated with multiple medications, put on a low-salt diet and encouraged to get some exercise.
"The available medications are very effective and people live a lot longer than they used to because of the drugs we have developed," he said. But many people reach a ceiling in terms of how effective the medications are, he added.
"We do need a new way of treating heart failure if we want more improvement," said Jauhar, who added that it is too early to say whether the new stem cell therapy will fill that role. .......


Source/Read More: USNews
http://health.usnews.com/health-news/news/articles/2012/05/10/stem-cell-study-shows-promising-results-against-heart-failure?page=2

Δευτέρα 14 Μαΐου 2012

Stem cell hopes to help stroke victims

An Adelaide doctor says his research shows that stem cells from human teeth could be used to repair the brains of stroke victims.
Simon Koblar is a neurologist at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and a neuroscientist at Adelaide University's Centre for Stem Cell Research.
He will present his findings from eight years of research to a public lecture at Adelaide University.
Associate Professor Koblar says the treatment has the potential to dramatically improve the quality of life for stroke victims.
"Often people even in their 70s with good hygiene still have teeth, so it would be plausible to consider that if we find the benefit with these types of stem cells that you could even take people's teeth and grow their own stem cells which would be a major advantage," he said.
"Just a small increase in function can mean the difference between someone being employed or unemployed on disability so, because we're starting at such a poor base that we can do so little, a small increment of improvement would be absolutely fantastic."
Professor Koblar says human trials are still needed.

ΤΑ ΒΛΑΣΤΟΚΥΤΤΑΡΑ ΣΤΗ ΘΕΡΑΠΕΙΑ ΤΩΝ ΕΓΚΕΦΑΛΙΚΩΝ ΕΠΕΙΣΟΔΙΩΝ

Είναι γνωστό ότι η αποκατάσταση του ασθενούς μετά από εγκεφαλικό επεισόδιο είναι πολύ βραδεία και παραμένει στάσιμη για μήνες μετά το επεισόδιο.
Ερευνητές από το Πανεπιστήμιο του Στάνφορντ ανακοίνωσαν τη χορήγηση βλαστοκυττάρων κατ ευθείαν στον εγκέφαλο έξι ασθενών που είχαν υποστεί εγκεφαλικό επεισόδιο. Επίσης εντός των επόμενων δύο ετών προγραμματίζουν τη χορήγηση σε άλλους δώδεκα ασθενείς. Η μέθοδος ήδη εφαρμόστηκε σε δώδεκα ασθενείς στην Ιαπωνία και παρατηρήθηκε σημαντική βελτίωση των ασθενών. Τα βλαστοκύτταρα λαμβάνονται από το μυελό των οστών και χορηγούνται στον εγκέφαλο των ασθενών κάτω από ελαφρά αναισθησία. Η πορεία των ασθενών παρακολουθείται τους επόμενους μήνες, ενώ παράλληλα πειράματα γίνονται και στο εργαστήριο κάτω από τις ίδιες ακριβώς συνθήκες. Έτσι παρατηρήθηκε ότι τα πειραματόζωα στα οποία χορηγήθηκαν τα βλαστοκύτταρα είχαν ταχύτερη αποκατάσταση και βελτίωση της κινητικότητας. Τα βλαστοκύτταρα αρχικά περιορίζουν την έκταση της βλάβης και στη συνέχεια δημιουργούν νευρώνες, αγγεία και το υποστηρικτικό σύστημα της νευρογλοίας.

Κ Κουζή-Κολιάκου Καθηγήτρια Ιατρικής ΑΠΘ

Παρασκευή 11 Μαΐου 2012

Νέες θεραπείες για ανίατες ασθένειες με βλαστοκύτταρα

Το πράσινο φως για τη θεραπεία ανίατων-με τα σημερινά δεδομένα-ασθενειών ανοίγουν οι επαναστατικές θεραπείες με βλαστοκύτταρα. Ο καθηγητής βιοχημείας του Αριστοτέλειου Πανεπιστημίου Θεσσαλονίκης και πρόεδρος της Τράπεζας Αρχέγονων Κυττάρων του Εθνικού Ιδρύματος Ερευνών κος. Γεώργιος Κολιάκος χαρακτηρίζει τα βλαστοκύτταρα φάρμακα του μέλλοντος και παρουσιάζει τις νέες κλινικές εφαρμογές τους σε μια πληθώρα  ιατρικών τομέων, από θεραπείες αντιγήρανσης και αλωπεκίας μέχρι την αντιμετώπιση της καρδιακής ανεπάρκειας, των πνευμονικών παθήσεων και της εγκεφαλικής παράλυσης. Σε ότι αφορά  την τελευταία ασθένεια, έγιναν πρόσφατα στην Ελλάδα οι δύο πρώτες αυτόλογες μεταμοσχεύσεις βλαστοκυττάρων (όπου δότης και λήπτης είναι το ίδιο άτομο) σε δύο μικρά παιδιά τα οποία παρουσίασαν εγκεφαλική παράλυση μετά από εγκεφαλική αιμορραγία και η εξέλιξη τους είναι  πολύ ικανοποιητική.

Βλαστοκύτταρα σε αυτόλογες μεταμοσχεύσεις

Αυτόλογες μεταμοσχεύσεις βλαστοκυττάρων γίνονται σε πνευμονικές παθήσεις, αυτόανοσα νοσήματα, καθώς και ασθενείς που έχουν υποστεί βλάβη από εγκεφαλικό επεισόδιο  ή υποφέρουν από τελικού σταδίου καρδιακή ανεπάρκεια και χρειάζονται τόνωση  της καρδιακής τους λειτουργίας, μαζί με την τεχνητή καρδιά που διαθέτουν. Ο κ. Κολιάκος εξηγεί γιατί οι αυτόλογες μεταμοσχεύσεις βλαστοκυττάρων-που έχουν βρεθεί συχνά στο στόχαστρο επιστημονικών συζητήσεων και πολλοί τις αντιμετωπίζουν με σκεπτικισμό αποτελούν κατάλληλη θεραπεία γι αυτά τα νοσήματα: «Όταν ο ασθενής πάσχει από σοβαρή και χρόνια  ασθένεια, όπως η εγκεφαλική παράλυση, δεν μπορούμε να του χορηγήσουμε βλαστοκύτταρα από άλλο δότη (αλλογενή μεταμόσχευση) γιατί είναι σαν να του δημιουργούμε ένα νέο ανοσοποιητικό σύστημα που θα αντιδράσει με τα όργανά του και θα τον σκοτώσει.  Για να μην γίνει αυτή η οξεία αντίδραση πρέπει παράλληλα να του χορηγήσουμε χρονίως ανοσοκατασταλτικά φάρμακα ή και χημειοθεραπεία, όπως κάνουμε στους ασθενείς που υποβάλλονται σε μεταμόσχευση ενός οργάνου (π.χ. νεφρού).

Βλαστοκύτταρα σε αλλογενείς μεταμοσχεύσει

Αντίθετα, οι αυτόλογες μεταμοσχεύσεις βλαστοκυττάρων δεν εφαρμόζονται σε κληρονομικά νοσήματα του αιμοποιητικού συστήματος όπως οι παιδικές λευχαιμίες ή η μεσογειακή και δρεπανοκυτταρική αναιμία. Σε αυτές τις περιπτώσεις  γίνονται αλλογενείς μεταμοσχεύσεις βλαστοκυττάρων (από άλλο δότη) γιατί τα βλαστοκύτταρα του λήπτη φέρουν και τα ίδια την βλάβη και συνεπώς είναι άχρηστα γι αυτόν.

Πηγές για βλαστοκύτταρα

Πηγές βλαστοκυττάρων είναι  ο ομφάλιος λώρος από όπου-κατά τον τοκετό-συλλέγονται τα ομφαλοπλακουντιακά και τα μεσεγχυματικά βλαστοκύτταρα  στη γέννηση  του παιδιού, καθώς και ο νωτιαίος μυελός, ο λιπώδης ιστός και προσφάτως ο πολφός των δοντιών. Ο νωτιάιος μυελός ο λιπώδης ιστός και ο πολφός των φοντιών χρησιμοποιείται για τους σημερινούς  ενήλικες ασθενείς καθώς δεν υπήρχε παλιότερα η  δυνατότητα να κρατηθούν βλαστοκύτταρα κατά τη γέννησή τους.  Ο κ. Κολιάκος επισημαίνει ότι μόνο 10% των μονάδων βλαστοκυττάρων από τον ομφάλιο λώρο συλλέγεται στην Ελλάδα  και  διατηρείται σε τράπεζες βλαστοκυττάρων, ενώ το 85-90%  των μονάδων βλαστοκυττάρων που θα μπορούσαν να συγκεντρωθούν από τους τοκετούς καταλήγει στην αποτέφρωση με τα υπόλοιπα νοσοκομειακά απόβλητα.  Καθώς πρόκειται για πολυδύναμα βλαστοκύτταρα με μεγάλες θεραπευτικές δυνατότητες στη νέα εποχή της αντιγραφικής ιατρικής που ανοίγεται μπροστά μας,  κ. Κολιακός απευθύνει έκκληση στους γονείς να κρατούν τα βλαστοκύτταρα του παιδιού τους ή να τα δωρίζουν στις δύο δημόσιες τράπεζες της Αθήνας και της Θεσσαλονίκης ώστε να μην πηγαίνουν  χαμένα.

Τα βλαστοκύτταρα στην αντιγήρανση

Όπως επισημαίνει ο καθηγητής Terry Grossman  το μεγάλο στοίχημα για τα βλαστοκύτταρα είναι η αξιοποίηση τους σε αντιγηραντικές θεραπείες:  «Αν στο μέλλον και σε ένα φουτουριστικό σενάριο που ωστόσο θα επαληθευτεί μετά από 50 ή 100 χρόνια η ιατρική θα διαθέτει νανοβακτήρια (nanobugs), που θα κυκλοφορούν μέσα στον οργανισμό μας ελεύθερα εξοντώνοντας μικροοοργανισμούς και θεραπεύοντας λοιμώξεις, τότε με τα σημερινά δεδομένα τα  πολυδύναμα βλαστοκύτταρα είναι αυτά τα νανοβακτήρια».   Εδώ και χρόνια ο λιπώδης ιστός που είναι 1000 φορές πλουσιότερος σε μεσεγχυματικά βλαστοκύτταρα από τον νωτιαίο μυελό  χρησιμοποιούνταν σε θεραπείες αισθητικής για το γέμισμα των ρυτίδων. Τέτοιου είδους θεραπείες θα αποτελέσουν το μέλλον της επιστήμης της ομορφιάς, ενώ ήδη εφαρμόζονται και για την αντιμετώπιση της φαλάκρας.

Κόστος για  θεραπείες με βλαστοκύτταρα

Το κόστος αυτών των θεραπειών με βλαστοκύτταρα κυμαίνεται στα κέντρα του εξωτερικού από 7.500 ευρώ έως 25.000 ευρώ, ενώ 25.000 ευρώ κοστολογείται και η μεταμόσχευση μιας μονάδας αλλογενών ομφαλοπλακουντιακών βλαστοκυττάρων από δότη σε άλλο λήπτη. Τα ίδια τα βλαστοκύτταρα δεν έχουν τιμή, καθώς δεν είναι προς πώληση αλλά δωρίζονται όπως ισχύει με το σπέρμα, τα ωάρια και το βιολογικό υλικό. (Η πώλησή τους θεωρείται ιατρικώς ανήθικη). Ωστόσο κόστος έχει η συντήρηση, μεταφορά και επεξεργασία τους στο εργαστήριο ώστε να βεβαιωθεί ότι είναι «καθαρά», απαλλαγμένα από ιούς και μικρόβια και συνεπώς κατάλληλα για θεραπευτική χρήση.

Της Αλεξίας Σβώλου

Πηγή: http://www.healthview.gr/node/17937

Πέμπτη 10 Μαΐου 2012

Response to articles in the press concerning banking of stem cells in Greece.

1. The possibility today for someone to use his own stem cells throughout the whole course of his/her life is 1:200, Nietfeld et al 2008, Bio Blood Marrow Transl 14 (3), 316-322.  This analogy in 1997 only for patients who suffered from  the hematopoietic  system diseases and for ages under 20 years old was 74:200000.  According to a study of the University of Arizona today one in three patients over 60 may benefit from the new applications of stem cells with his own cells for the therapy of cardiovascular, ophthalmologic, orthopedic, neurologic and endocrine diseases, Harris et al; 2007, Exper Opin Biol Biological Therapy 7 (9), 1311.

2. From 1995 the blood of the umbilical cord has the same therapeutic applications as bone marrow, Jenney et al 1995, Lancet 346 (8980), 921-2, with more however advantages that derive from the young age of these cells.

3. From 2006 according to the announcement of the European Group for Blood and Marrow the blood of the umbilical cord is included in the program of autologous transplantations for the therapy of autoimmune diseases with mentions to juvenile  rheumatoid arthritis, lupus erythematosous and multiple sclerosis, Bone marr trans 2006, 37(5):434-449.  From the Clinic of Hematology at  Papanikolaou Hospital there have been repeatedly published studies in international medical journals for the therapy of multiple sclerosis with the use of stem cells of the patient himself.  These studies were refer to Greek patients and to patients from collaborating European countries.  The results of this therapy according to these studies are encouraging although the cells of the patients are of greater age and suffer from the disease the moment of the receipt, Kimiskidis et sl 2008, Mult Scler 14 (2): 278-83, Fassas et al 2004, J Neurol Sci 15, 223 (1): 53-8, Fassas et al 2003, J Hematother Stem Cells Res 12(6): 701-11.  If the patient had stem cells derived from the umbilical cord blood that he/she should have cryopresreved from the time of his/her birth the results would be better.

4. Until today in Europe there have been performed 25000 transplantations with the use of hematopoietic primary cells.  70% of these transplantations were autologous, the stem cells were derived from the patient himself, and 30% were allogeneic, they were derived from a donor.  In the 70% of these cases the donor within the family, Watt et al 2007, Methods Mol Biol 368: 237-259.

5. The therapy of solid malignant tumors of youth (sarcoma, neuroblastomas, lymphomas) is performed with the use of cells of the child himself.  The yearly frequency of occurrence  of cancer in children is 130 per million, so the probability of a child to present leukemia or cancer until the age of 16 is 1/500 and for 1 in four children a hematopoietic transplantation is required, Smith et al 2002, Principles and Practice of Pediatric Oncology, 4th edition Philadelphia PA Lippincott.  The probability of use of the graft is doubled, if one conciders the blood relatives that may make use of the graft.

6. Cancer and leukemia are expressed through a series of mutations in cells that eventually result in carcinogenesis.  For the expression of leukemia two continual mutations in the nuclei of hematopoietic stem cells  are required.  The first mutation results in the formation and circulation in the  blood,  the preleukemic clones.  So if the mutation occurs in the first stages of the development of the embryo prior to birth, then also in the umbilical cord blood  preleukemic clones   will circulate.  From 100 cases of children will preleukemic clones eventually only one child will advance to the second mutation and develop leukemia, Mori et al 2002, Proc Natl Acd Sci USA, 99:8242-8247.  The preleukemic clones in the rest of the children are eventually destroyed from the immune system and disappeared from the blood circulation. For older children and adults there is no issue of detection of preleukemic clones because even in the hypothetical case of birth of a child with preleukemic clone a great period of time has passes from birth to the onset of the disease and the autologous transplantation will give the patient the same period of survival without the fear of rejection of an allogeneic, and not completely compatible graft.  The genes that are responsible or coexist with leukemia can be detected with PCR method on the  stem cells and it will lead to the detection of those pathogenic genes and will resolve the problem of the use of the stem cells of the child or not.
In public banking no test is performed for the presence of preleukemic clones in the stem cells of the donor. For the samples that come from unknown donors a test should be performed also for the detection of inherited diseases. If the probability of 1% of a preexisting malignancy in the stem cells of the umbilical cord is considered significant, the public bank would perform the essential tests for the determination of the existence or not of the malignancy in all grafts that it collects.

7. Mesenchymal stem cells from Wharton’s Jelly are collected today only for autologous use and due to their mutual origin with the primary hematopoietic  stem cells any transfer of inheritance or mutation in these, concerns also the messenchimal cells.  So cryopreservation and autologous transplantation of mesenchymal stem cells of the Warton’s Jelly from the public bank sets under dispute its objection for the autologous administration of hematopoietic  stem cells derived from the placenta, in cases of child leukemia.

8. If chemotherapy was the solution for therapy of cancer or leukemia, one of the greater problems in medicine today would be resolved; the therapy of cancer.

9. In 2007 a case of a 3 year old child suffering from acute lymphoblastic leukemia was published. At 2003 chemotherapy failed twice in this child and finally with his own stem cells, that the family had cryopreserved for percussion burring birth in a private bank, Hayani et al 2007, Pediatrics 119, 296-300.  Today 4 years post transplantation the child is free of symptoms. In leukemia the total survival among patients that received their own stem cells or allogeneic compatible grafts don’t differ significantly, Loy Ys et al 2007 Leuk Lymphoma , 48 (1), 72-9.  So what is the problem if the patient posses his own autograft or a graft compatible from a sibling, because the patients had preserved the umbilical cord blood?

10. Lately there have been posed some journalistic opinions that with one small biopsy of the skin one could have stem cells for use in  autologous transplantations.  Today for the       transformation of the cells of the skin into stem cells an alteration in 4 genes must be performed and also a simultaneous entry of 4 different viruses in the cell, with unexpected results. Gene therapy is not safe neither with the use of just one virus.  This kind of therapy was abandoned after the death of children with cystic fibrosis, due to the revival of the virus that had been used for gene therapy. Another reason is that with this way adult cells can be transformed into embryonic with the fear of ignition of tumor genes and the formation of teratomas.

11. The legal guidelines were published in Greece in March 2008 in the presidential order 26/2008.  Until the full application of the greek legislation the greek private cryobanks must follow the European legislation and must be certified from greek and international bodies as the national system of certification (ESYD)
12. For many years and even today, stem cells of greek families travel to countries abroad.  The foundation of the greek banks and the remain of stem cells in Greece ensures better quality grafts.
13. The uses of stem cells in medicine today refer to all 17 medical specialties and for this reason the validation of the operation of private and public banks the Greek government has assigned the Central Council of Health and not to specific specialties.

President of the Scientific Board of Biohellenika
Dr. Kouzi- Koliakou

Σάββατο 5 Μαΐου 2012

4-Hour, Whole-Body ‘Face-Lift’ Uses Patient’s Own Fat, Stem Cells

ABC News’ Paula Faris reports:
It is a medical claim that sounds like science fiction.  Walk into a plastic surgeon’s office for a face-lift and walk out roughly four hours later with a whole-body makeover that required no incision and leaves you with no scars.
But some doctors say that fiction is now reality in the form of a stem-cell makeover, a procedure that uses the fat and stem cells from one part of the body to revamp another part of the body, all in a single office visit.
Such a claim convinced Debra Kerr to try the procedure herself in hopes of achieving a younger look. “My eyes are looking heavier, and the lines are so pronounced and gravity’s really taken over,” Kerr, 55,  said.  “I want to look as good and as young as I really feel.”
Kerr, a skin-care specialist from Ohio, underwent a stem-cell makeover in which fat was removed from her waist via liposuction.  The fat was then spun in the lab to concentrate its stem cells and, hours later, injected into Kerr’s face and breasts.
“We’re taking a patient’s own fatty tissue, and we are just repositioning it in another part of their body,” said Dr. Sharon McQuillan, a physician and founder of the Ageless Institute in Aventura, Fla., where Kerr had her procedure done.
Because the makeover uses a patient’s own stem cells, there is virtually no risk that the body will reject the transfer, according to doctors like McQuillan who perform the procedure.
“This enhancement will be enough to make her [Kerr] happy,” McQuillan said.  “She won’t have any scars.  She doesn’t really have any of the risks associated with general anesthesia or a full face lift.”
The procedure takes roughly four hours and costs vary widely. McQuillan said some places on the West Coast and in New York City charge between $10,000 and $15,000 for the procedure.

Experts warn, however, that procedures such as stem-cell makeover need more study to prove that they are safe. Because the stem cells are harvested and inserted into the same patient, and only minimally manipulated in the process, they are not considered drugs and therefore not regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
For Kerr, the results of her own procedure speak for themselves.
“I’m so happy I don’t have to look at that anymore,” she said of her “before” picture.  “It’s been a natural and subtle face-lift.  I finally feel like I look as good as I feel.”


Source: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2012/05/04/4-hour-whole-body-face-lift-uses-patients-own-fat-stem-cells/