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Life Gave Reeve A Chance To Shed The Cape And Put Superhuman Effort Toward
Research
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE - The Associated Press

October 14. 2004 6:10PM

Christopher Reeve often said he wanted to be known for something other than
playing Superman. But it was real life - not another movie role - that gave the actor
the chance to star in his biggest drama: as a spinal cord injury victim championing
research in hope that people like him would someday be able to walk again.

"He put a human face on the dreams," said Daniel Perry, president of the Coalition
for the Advancement of Medical Research. "He used his star power as a celebrity
for a great good that transcends anything that most of us will ever achieve."

Reeve died Sunday after developing a serious bloodstream infection from a
bedsore, a common problem for paralyzed people. He went into cardiac arrest
Saturday at his home in Pound Ridge, N.Y., then fell into a coma, dying the next day
at a hospital.

As an actor and a man, Reeve embodied strength and athleticism and performed
his own movie stunts, including his 1978 starring role as Superman. It made him
famous but he longed to, as he often put it, "escape the cape" and take on other
characters.

Other movies and plays gave him that chance, but nothing compared to the
horseback riding accident in 1995 that left him with a broken neck. His passionate
efforts for science, often as he wheezed from a respirator in his wheelchair, are his
greatest legacy, admirers said. Reeve never walked again but his dream of doing so
is now a plausible one for thousands of others who are paralyzed.
"The biggest hope is in biological research to allow the spinal cord to heal itself and
even regenerate. That's just over the horizon but closer than ever before. Most
people feel within the next 10 to 15 years, somewhere within our lifetimes," said Dr.
Jack Ziegler, president of the American Spinal Injury Association.

Some even thought it would come in time for Reeve.

"I thought it was going to happen," said Dr. Doug Kerr, a Johns Hopkins University
neurologist who works with stem cells - controversial research that Reeve
advocated.

"It was Star Wars science fiction, this concept of rewiring the nervous system," but
Reeve "thrust this field forward by leaps and bounds," Kerr said.

Reeve endured years of therapy to allow him to breathe for longer periods without a
respirator while seeking a cure that would allow him to walk again. He sparked hope
even in many skeptics in 2000, when he was able to move an index finger. He thrust
himself harder into workouts to strengthen his legs and arms, and electrical
stimulation of his muscles allowed him to sporadically regain sensation in some
other parts of his body.

As Reeve transformed his body, he also morphed into an advocate, first for better
benefits for people with long-term disabilities, and then for science to help the
250,000 Americans who suffer paralysis. The Christopher Reeve Paralysis
Foundation has given $40 million to spinal cord research since he merged it with
the American Paralysis Foundation in 1999.

Some of that has been for embryonic stem cell research, a promising but
contentious field of medicine that the Bush administration has severely restricted
because it involves destroying embryos. Scientists think these early, all-purpose
cells can be coaxed to form nerves and specialized tissues to repair a host of woes.

Reeve and fellow actor Michael J. Fox, who has Parkinson's disease, have helped
make stem cells a major campaign issue between President Bush and Sen. John
Kerry. Kerry even mentioned Reeve during the second presidential debate on
Friday and praised him Monday in remarks before a speech in Santa Fe, N.M.

"He was an inspiration to all of us and gave hope to millions of Americans who are
counting on lifesaving cures that science and research can provide," Kerry said. "In
part because of his work, millions will one day walk again."

At Hopkins, research a few years ago demonstrated that stem cells could allow
paralyzed mice and rats to do just that.

"This is one of the most difficult tasks you can ask a stem cell to do - to rewire, to
extend axons and to form new connections at great distances to restore function,"
said Kerr. "We're clearly getting there."

Reeve "appropriately brought a sense of urgency to this issue," said Perry head of
the research coalition, which favors stem cell science. "On Capitol Hill he was such
a highly regarded figure and was so focused on the message."

A research center on paralytic spinal cord injuries, the Reeve-Irvine Research
Center, was established in Reeve's name at the University of California, Irvine.

"He was such an immense personality, such a force in the field," said Dr. Oswald
Stewart, the center's director. "He created an enthusiasm for what we do in the lab."

Reeve also reached out to people beyond those with spinal cord injuries.

"He was able to inspire hope in patients with diabetes, Alzheimer's, cancer,
Parkinson's disease, Lou Gehrig's disease ... tragic and life-threatening conditions
that face tens of millions of Americans," Perry said.

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE

SOURCE: The Associated Press / Concord Monitor, NH
http://tinyurl.com/4f3by

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