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Teaching the paralyzed to walk again

| Source: abclocal.go.com/wjrt

A California scientist was able to get paralyzed rats running again, but can he do the same thing for humans?

HealthFirst reporter Leslie Toldo tells us about a new treatment that could revolutionize treatment of spinal cord injuries.

This is all about 10 years of research and one man’s quest to use stem cell injections to cure these devastating injuries.

“I was just playing beach volleyball and I ran into the ocean for a swim to cool off,” Janne Kouri, 31, said, remembering how his life changed that day.

“Dove into a wave and hit a sandbar, and was instantly paralyzed.”

In a U-C Irvine lab not far away from where Janne’s accident happened, researcher Hans Keirstead says he may hold the key to helping spinal cord injury patients regain movement.

“This treatment I designed for individuals within two weeks of their injury. So it’s a scary thought that those individuals that will receive this trial haven’t even been injured yet,” Keirstead said.

Keirstead took human embryonic stem cells and coaxed them into becoming spinal cord cells. Then he injected the concoction into rats. The new cells traveled to the damaged spinal cord and wrapped themselves around the nerves, restoring function.

In six weeks, the previously-paralyzed rats walked.

Keirstead says human trials could start later this year. About 10 patients will get an injection of cells directly into their spinal cords. The hope is to see small movements with three months. “This is going to be an incremental advance.”

Since this is the first trial of its kind, there are still a lot of unknowns. Will the stem cells work as well in people as in animals? Will there be side effects?

“One day there will be a cure,” Kouri said, hopefully.

Kouri is too late for this trial, but could be a candidate for Keirstead’s next experiment — using stem cells to help those who have been injured years ago.

“Once they figure out a solution, we want to be in the best possible shape you can be in,” she said.

Critics say Dr. Keirstead is pushing this treatment on people too quickly.

TOPIC: STEM CELLS FOR SPINAL CORD INJURIES: MNBT?

FIRST IN THE FIELD: Nothing motivates Dr. Hans Keirstead more than the pleas from the paralyzed community. “The patient community screams, ‘Please develop treatments. We want them now. Choose me, not the rat,” he told Ivanhoe. In his lab at the University of California, Irvine, Dr. Keirstead is making strides in developing a treatment for spinal cord injuries.

Dr. Keirstead, a professor of anatomy and neurobiology at UC Irvine, developed a very high purity concoction of stem cells made from human embryonic stem cells and injected the mixture into the spines of paralyzed rats. The new cells he created traveled throughout the spinal cord area and wrapped themselves around nerves, enabling signals to once again flow through the body. In six weeks, the once paralyzed animals walked.

“My lab was the first lab in the world to take stem cells that can make any cell in the body and trick them to become one thing only: a high purity population of one particular spinal cord cell type,” Dr. Keirstead explained. “That’s important for human application: You can’t put toenails in the spinal cord.”

Later this year, Dr. Keirstead hopes to start human trials. The experiment — which would be regulated by the FDA — will involve about 10 spinal cord injury patients. They will be people who have suffered an injury within the past two weeks. “So it’s a scary thought that the individuals that will receive this trial haven’t even been injured yet,” said Dr. Keirstead. Doctors will inject the high purity stem cell directly into the spine, and the hope is that the patients will show subtle movements within three months. “It would be wonderful for these patients to get out of their wheelchairs and play soccer, but we do not — let me be clear — we do not expect that to happen with this treatment,” Dr. Keirstead stated. “This is going to be an incremental advance.”

Scientists don’t yet know if embryonic stem cells will integrate and function in the body as well as they did in animals. There’s also a fear of side effects, including the stem cells possibly forming abnormal cells or tumors. However, there is currently no other treatment to help SCI patients, and Dr. Keirstead says he believes this could be a huge step in helping these patients regain some movement.

“An incremental benefit is a huge deal for someone in a wheelchair,” Dr. Keirstead said. “The ability to take the thumb muscle and move it if one can’t move it is tremendous.”

Dr. Keirstead is overseeing several other experiments involving stem cells in his lab. Within the next one to two years, he hopes to start trials for people who suffered spinal cord injuries years ago. He’s also working on a stem cell experiment to help babies with spinal muscular atrophy, or SMA, the number one genetic killer of infants.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Office of Hans Keirstead, PhD
(949) 824-5352

Leslie Toldo WJRT
(Copyright ©2010 WJRT-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

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