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English Edition - People Daily - China
Thursday, June 21, 2001, updated at 08:39(GMT+8)
Sci-Edu
Surgeons Open Door to Human Brain Cell

A Shanghai hospital has opened the door for China or even the
world to make further steps in neurosurgery after a successful
ground-breaking operation.

Neurosurgeons in Huashan Hospital, attached to Fudan University,
are taking advantage of adult stem cells to treat neurologically
injured patients rather than using stem cells isolated from foetal
tissues, a controversial method.

Adult stem cells are the original cells from which others are formed.
In this operation, they were taken from the patient's own brain tissue.

To date, most operations of this nature have been carried out using
cells from foetal tissue taken from discarded placenta, sources from
the hospital revealed.

The operation, done 20 days ago, was the first attempt to perform
an adult neural stem cell transplant in which donor and recipient
were the same person, said hospital sources.

The patient was a 40-year-old local woman with an open-skull
fracture and brain laceration resulting from a head injury.

To graft the wound, doctors collected neural tissues from the
patient's own wound, isolating and cloning adult neural stem cells
from the primary cell culture.

After encouraging the cells to multiply, doctors re-inserted the
stem cells into the patient's brain.

The patient is currently recovering and regaining her cognitive
abilities, recognizing her family and becoming orientated, according
to Professor Zhu Jianhong, who led the adult neural stem cell study
in Huashan Hospital.

"The value of this successful surgery doesn't much lie in its
technology," said Zhu. "More importantly, it is a great opportunity
to evaluate the therapeutic potential of adult stem cells in treating
damaged brains.

"However, the effects of adult stem cell surgery cannot be
generalized from this simple surgery because conditions were
somewhat unusual."

"The adult stem cells cultivated this time for the patient came
from her own tissue, thus causing no immune response or
compatibility problem," Zhu said.

He implied that more research was needed before a definite
conclusion could be reached over whether adult stem cells
can replace those cultured from foetal tissues.

Since the beginning of research into stem cell surgery, the
worldwide use of foetal tissues has drawn widespread criticism
because of the ethical problems involved.

http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200106/21/eng20010621_73133.html

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