Print

Print


:These are the people who should be lobbying their senators and reps. to
explain stem cell theories and results, this is what congress needs to see, it
doesn't matter whether the president vetoes anything, our system provides for
an  over ride, that is the point.
Gerry Haines

"We're  going to India! Thank you!" Amanda Boxtel wrote in a mass e-mail  on
Christmas Eve.
It was the best Christmas present three local  paraplegic women could have
hoped for - a fundraiser at the Aspen Club and  Spa raised more than $100,000
for them to travel to India for human  embryonic stem cell therapy.
More than 600 people came through the doors on  the evening of Dec. 18 to bid
on silent and live auction items, enjoy a  band, buy drinks and contribute to
the cause - raise enough money for  Boxtel, Kasie Burtard and Leah Rowland to
spend several weeks in Delhi  receiving groundbreaking treatment that is
still illegal in the United  States. Now, armed with $33,000 apiece, the
women - who each expressed  their profound gratitude for the community's
support - will have the  opportunity to do more than one of the lengthy
treatments, and thus  increase their chances of healing.
"I'm so thankful we live in such a great  valley - without it I would not
have this opportunity that could change my  life," said 25-year-old Burtard,
who is confined to a wheelchair from a  serious car accident in which she
fractured multiple bones and crushed  three vertebrae. A 2000 Roaring Fork
High School graduate, Burtard was 19  when the accident happened; Friday is
the sixth anniversary of the  accident.
Burtard, who works at the Colorado Division of Wildlife in  Glenwood, is
leaving March 1 for her first nine-week treatment. Up until  now, she's only
done physical therapy, and for the past two years has been  traveling to
Texas almost every other month for that.
Embryonic stem  cell treatment has been on her mind "since day one," she
said, but  something she wasn't sure she or her family were prepared for or
could  afford.
"Knowing Amanda did it and had huge success really helped," she  said. "I'm
so blessed that Amanda is in our valley and introduced it,  because otherwise
it probably would be five more years before I could  convince my family to
let me try it."
Boxtel, a 15-year paraplegic and  co-founder of Challenge Aspen, was the
first American to ever receive human  embryonic stem cell treatment, and her
experience - told on her Web site  and in a forthcoming book - has drawn
intense curiosity and numerous  inquiries locally and from all across the
country. Both Rowland and Burtard  said they have been following Boxtel's
story through her blog.
"Now the  community has the chance not only to watch my journey but to be
there for  Leah and Kasie," said Boxtel, who leaves for India for a month on
Jan.  11.
Boxtel, who on her first trip to Delhi underwent two months of  stem-cell
injections, will also go back in May and October. She explains  that while
each treatment introduces millions of stem cells into the body,  many cells
naturally die off over time, and patients ideally should get  "top-off"
treatments every few months, depending on their progress and  individual
situation. In the same vein, embryonic stem cells, like human  embryos, take
nine months to grow to their full capacity and complete their  jobs.
Human embryonic stem-cell treatment has been used to treat a number  of
disorders, including terminal ones, as well as people like Boxtel who  were
seriously injured. Dr. Geeta Shroff, who is treating the three women,  is a
pioneer in the field who developed one embryo in a lab from which  she
created multiple stem cell lines.
Recently, scientists announced a  breakthrough when they were able to make
skin stem cells mimic embryonic  stem cells, but Boxtel doesn't believe such
a treatment - which is still  several years away from reality - is for her.
"Nothing in my opinion will  replace the divine human embryonic stem cell,
nothing man-made," she said.  "While it's a huge step forward in scientific
technology, it's still  something man-made. I wouldn't go with something
being altered by a human  being in that sense."
On her second trip to India this year, Boxtel's time  will overlap with
Rowland's, who plans to leave April 15 for her first two-  to three-month
stint. Rowland says that while she's both excited and  nervous to go, the
time will allow her to prepare her body properly. A  walking quadraplegic,
Rowland has already defied doctors' expectations that  she'd never walk
again.
"This is so exciting, I'm already on another  level just because of the
support from the community," said Rowland, who  broke her neck in a skiing
accident nine years ago. "I'm just hopeful ...  it's going to be a miracle.
2008 is going to be a good year."
Rowland  plans to spend four to five months total in India this year.
"I'm putting  my life on hold, but this is what I do 24/7," she said. "I feel
like it's  my path and I'm a student."
While all three women have high hopes, none  will carry specific expectations
to India with them. Having lived so long  with their injuries and knowing how
painfully slow each step forward can  be, they know better than to expect to
miraculously walk again. They also  know that there will be a lot of work
ahead after India: intense physical  therapy and whatever other kind of work
the doctors prescribe.
"I don't  know if there will be any improvement from where I am now," said
Boxtel,  who said that many people she runs into on the street expected her
to be  walking after her first set of treatments. "But I'm stronger now than
when  I came back from India - I'm able to do so much more than on Aug. 18.
If I  accept my body now it can open up the realm of possibilities. It's
critical  to go with that thought rather than the expectation of walking,
then you  set yourself up for  disappointment."
[log in to unmask]

----------------------------------------------------------------------






**************************************See AOL's top rated recipes
(http://food.aol.com/top-rated-recipes?NCID=aoltop00030000000004)

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn