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The quest for a cure: Stem cells' potential for 10 vexing illnesses
By Lindsay Lyon
Premium Health News Service
Posted: 04/20/2009 12:30:00 AM MDT
Updated: 04/20/2009 07:28:01 AM MDT

Osteoarthritis occurs when protective cartilage in joints wastes away. 
Scientists are looking at how best to use stem cells to rebuild lost 
cartilage and repair damaged joints. ( Premium Health News 
Service/shutterstock.com )

With President Barack Obama's recent lifting of the ban on federal funding 
for embryonic stem cell research, scientists now have new prospects for 
developing medical treatments. Excitement over the embryonic cells comes 
from their remarkable ability, as biological blank slates, to become 
virtually any of the body's cell types. Many observers believe the 
president's move will accelerate the hunt for cures for some of our most 
vexing diseases.

However, the benefits are largely hypothetical, given the infancy of the 
field, and are offset by some real obstacles: The risks of embryonic stem 
cells, as well as cells programmed to become like them, include the 
possibility they will actually cause cancers in people who receive them. 
Nonetheless, here's a look at 10 health problems that stem cells might 
someday cure - or at least help treat:

1. Spinal-cord injury. In January, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration 
approved its first-ever human study of a medical treatment derived from 
human embryonic stem cells. The objective: Help people with acute spinal 
cord injuries. While expected to assess only the safety of the treatment, 
the study also might show if the paralyzed volunteers can regain some 
feeling in and control over their lower extremities.

2. Diabetes. For the many Americans with Type 1 diabetes, whose 
insulin-making pancreatic cells have been killed by their immune system, 
stem cells may be the answer. Last year, scientists reported that they had 
coaxed human embryonic stem cells into becoming insulin-producing, 
blood-sugar-regulating cells in diabetic mice. The aim is to someday do the 
same for people.

3. Heart disease. It's the leading cause of death in the United States, and 
stem cells may provide some relief. Research is underway to see if injecting 
the cells into the heart could help regenerate heart muscle damaged by, for 
example, a heart attack. Again, researchers have reported success in 
rodents.

4. Parkinson's disease. Stem cells may also help those who suffer from 
Parkinson's, a neurodegenerative disorder that can cause tremors, stiffness, 
and other movement and speech problems. Studies show that embryonic stem 
cells can give rise to the dopamine-making neurons that Parkinson's patients 
lack. When transplanted into rodents with a Parkinson's- like disorder, 
those replacement brain cells improved the animals' motor function.

5. Alzheimer's disease. Likewise, embryonic stem cells may come in handy 
against Alzheimer's disease, a progressive and deadly disorder that degrades 
and kills brain cells, leading to memory loss, cognitive decline and 
behavioral problems. Stem cells may give rise to new treatments or even, 
some say, a cure; other experts have expressed skepticism.

6. Lou Gehrig's disease. There's hope that stem cells could help those with 
Lou Gehrig's disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS. 
The crippling disease comes with a grim prognosis: Many die in three to five 
years of diagnosis, as the disease progressively damages muscle-controlling 
motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord. Scientists are exploring ways to 
coax stem cells into becoming motor neurons that could be transplanted into 
ALS patients, restoring their ability to move.

7. Lung diseases. From human embryonic stem cells, researchers in Texas have 
created transplantable sources of lung cells in the lab. Those lung cells 
could potentially be used to repair damage brought on by a variety of 
pulmonary conditions or by lung trauma resulting from a car accident, bullet 
wound or sports injury. Unpublished studies using such cells have shown 
promise for tissue repair in mice with acute lung injury, the group reports.

8. Arthritis. Also called degenerative joint disease, osteoarthritis - the 
most common form of arthritis - results when protective cartilage in joints 
wastes away. Once it's gone, it's gone for good. Stem cells could change 
that. Scientists are examining how best to use them to rebuild lost 
cartilage and repair shot joints.

9. Sickle cell anemia. Stem-cell researchers are exploring ways to correct 
numerous blood disorders, including sickle cell anemia. Mice have been cured 
of the sometimes-deadly condition after receiving transfusions of stem cells 
made from their own skin cells.

10. Organ failure. What better way to ease the shortage of organs for 
transplantation than to grow new ones? That's what some scientists think, 
and with stem cells, that vision may become more than a pipe dream. Last 
year, researchers grew a beating rat heart in the lab with the help of heart 
cells from newborn rats, preliminary proof of the concept.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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