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Hi All,
I just read Phil Tompkin's post re: "essential background and
clarifying facts are omitted, leaving much to the imagination."

I hope this NEWS piece better represents the whole situation.

Cheers .............. murray

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Hope for new treatments in check ahead of adminstration's action on
stem cell research
Copyright © 2001 Nando Media
Copyright © 2001 Scripps Howard News Service
By LEE BOWMAN, Scripps Howard News Service
SAN FRANCISCO
(February 18, 2001 11:09 a.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) -

The prospects for using immature stem cells to cure Parkinson's
disease and perhaps other degenerative brain illnesses are growing
brighter, researchers told a scientific meeting here Friday.

But optimism at the American Association for the Advancement of
Science was tempered by concern that new federal support for research
on cells derived from discarded embryos may be withdrawn by the Bush
administration.

"At this point, we don't know for sure that we can get embryonic
stem cells from humans to generate the kind of dopamine-producing
cells we need to treat Parkinson's," said Ronald McKay, a
neuroscientist at the National Institutes of Health. "But we do know
these cells offer us the best hope of producing enough cells to treat
the growing number of Parkinson's patients out there."

"A substantial number of the new grant proposals we're seeing from
young investigators involves the use of stem cells," said William
Langston, president and senior scientist with The Parkinson's
Institute, a private research group. "But if the door to federal
support for this research is closed, we'll lose 90 percent of them."

Parkinson's occurs when most of the cells that produce the
brain-signaling chemical dopamine die in a part of the brain stem
called the substantia nigra. The chemical shortage causes loss of
control over body movement. People with the disease become rigid,
have tremors and find it difficult to stand, walk or even eat. More than
1.2 million Americans are thought to have the disease, mainly those
over 60, although it strikes some people much earlier. The disease can
be slowed by artificial dopamine drugs, but there is no known cure.

Neuroscientists in Sweden, the United States and elsewhere have
been successfully treating the disease using transplants of
dopamine-producing cells taken from fetuses for more than a decade.

"There are patients who have been living well with these
transplants now for 11 or 12 years," said Ole Isacson, an associate
professor of neuroscience at Harvard Medical School. But the supply of
such cells is limited, which is why researchers have seized on the
prospect of stem cells.

Stem cells are the body's blank slates. In the earliest stages of
development, they have the potential to become any type of tissue; in
more developed fetuses, stem cells become more restricted to certain
organ systems, while in adults, the spare-parts-in-waiting are limited
mainly to organs where they reside, although some experiments
suggest they can be reprogrammed to develop into other types of cells.

Teams led by McKay, Isacson and others have used different
techniques to get embryonic stem cells from mice to mass-produce cells
that function as dopamine cells. "We believe this line of cells would
be the easiest to handle, but we need to do a lot more research before
we're ready to transplant them into humans," said Isacson.

Much of that research could come from a new round of federal grants
authorized, but not yet approved, by the National Institutes of Health
last year. Under research guidelines, federal money would go to the
study of embryonic stem cells, but not for directly obtaining the
cells. Several institutions have or soon will have "immortal" lines
of stem cells available for research that were originally obtained
from fertilized human eggs that would otherwise have been destroyed
by fertility clinics.

Researchers believe stem cells could also be used to treat muscular
dystrophy, Huntingdon's disease and heart disease.

But President Bush has indicated he will not allow federal money to
go toward research on tissue from such embryos or aborted fetuses.

Jeffery Martin, a Washington lawyer and a Parkinson's patient who
advocates for research, said he remains hopeful that a review of the
research program by Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy
Thompson will recommend the studies go forward.

http://www.nando.com/noframes/story/0,2107,500311208-500500542-503523845-0,00.html

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