We have to watch this;

This could be THE game changer!!!

Dalton


From: Akua <a...@artfarm.com>
Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 18:31:46 -0400
To: <tmic-list@eskimo.com>, <transversemyelitissupp...@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [TMIC] First human injected in human embryonic stem cell trial
Resent-From: <tmic-list@eskimo.com>
Resent-Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 15:35:00 -0700


http://pagingdrgupta.blogs.cnn.com/2010/10/11/first-human-injected-in-human-
embryonic-stem-cell-trial/?hpt=T2

First human injected in human embryonic stem cell trial

"After years of animal trials, the first human has been injected with
cells from human embryonic stem cells, according to Geron
Corporation, the company which is sponsoring the controversial study.

"This is the first human embryonic stem cell trial in the world,"
Geron CEO Dr. Thomas Okarma tells CNN.

Geron is releasing very few details about the patient, but will say
that the first person to receive cells derived from human embryonic
stem cells was enrolled in the FDA-approved clinical trial at the
Shepherd Center, a spinal cord and brain injury rehabilitation
hospital in Atlanta, Georgia.  This person was injected with the
cells on Friday.

The FDA first approved this clinical trial in January 2009, but later
required further research before the study could proceed. The FDA
gave final approval in July of this year.  This allowed the company
to begin searching for the first patients who might qualify for this
phase 1 clinical trial, which means scientists are trying to
determine the safety of introducing these cells into a human.

To be eligible, patients have to have suffered what's called a
complete thoracic spinal cord injury, which means  no movement below
the chest. While patients can still move their arms and breathe on
their own, they are complete paraplegics; they have no bowel or
bladder control and can't move their legs, Okarma explains.

The injury to the spinal cord would have to have occurred between the
third and tenth thoracic vertebrae and the patient has to be injected
with the stem cell therapy, called GRNOPC1, within seven to 14 days
after the injury.   "At the time of the injection, they [the cells]
are programmed to make a new spinal cord - they insulate the damage
[to the spinal cord]," says Okarma.  The cells work just like they
would if they were in the womb and building a spine in a fetus,
Okarma explains.

Embryonic stem cells are only four to five days old and have the
ability to turn into any cell in the body.  But the cells that the
patient receives aren't pure human embryonic stem cells anymore.  The
cells in the GRNOPC1 therapy have been coaxed into becoming early
myelinated glial cells, a type of cell that insulates nerve cells.

"For every cell we inject, they become six to 10 cells in a few
months," says Okarma.  These cells can still divide some but will not
become any type of cell other than glial cells, he explains.

The Geron CEO likens what these cells are doing to repairing a large
electrical cable.  If the outer layer is damaged and the wire is
exposed, it causes a short-circuit and the cable doesn't work
anymore.  In the case of a spinal cord injury, these new stem-cell
derived glial cells creep in between all the fibers and rewrap the
nerve with myelin, which is like patching the cable.  The goal is to
permanently repair the damage that caused the paralysis from the
spinal cord injury.

"We're not treating symptoms here -  we're permanently regenerating
tissue," says Okarma.

He adds that the goal of this stem cell therapy is to shift the
outcome for someone who has just suffered a serious spinal cord
injury, and go from a place where there's no hope for improvement to
a situation where they can respond to physical therapy.  "If we could
do that, this would be a spectacular result," Okarma says."


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