e-mail
4-1-05
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Save Baby's Umbilical Cord
Baby's chord has stem cells - Can
help with cures? |
What
happens to the cord after a baby is
born?
Well, with all the chemicals out
there to cause many of our
illnesses, if the truth be known,
It would be a good idea to do as Dr.
Andrew Weil on Larry King show some
months ago recommended: "freeze the
umbilical chord blood - It contains
stem cells!" and save for that child
or any siblings it may have
... in case they need stem cells for
illnesses such as leukemia, or the
red blood cell damage from the
proliferation of such chemicals as
2-butoxyethanol (ei hemolytic
anemia... premature destruction of
red cells ... cause of much fatigue
in America). It is said to cause
leukemias and lymphomas. Wouldn't
your own stem cells be helpful in a
bone marrow transplant, for
instance?
Then there is benzene harm (from
fresh oil, etc) that causes the
suppression of red or white or
platelet cells being made at all (aplastic
anemia)
Would bone marrow transplants really
help when one is harmed from
chemicals such as these? Any doctors
in the audience?
Isn't what the debate is about ...
using what could become human beings
... in an experiment. That life or
potential life shouldn't be
experimented with?
I'm sure that someone of influence
will take the issue forward of those
harmed by 2-butoxyethanol; but what
about a cure for the hemolytic
anemia?
With money allocated now for more
'gulf war syndrome' research, I've
shared with the doctor who is doing
CNS research that this is the
neurotoxin to study
Those exposed during the Exxon
Valdez oil spill cleanup have
valuable medical information for
society; so do other groups.
However, until people come forward
and share their information, the
chemical gets away with ... lots and
lots of harm.
Someone thought that there is a cure
out there on this chemical's harm,
but that so much money is made on
the illnesses, that it is not being
brought forward.
What a horrible thought
I wonder what help there would be in
just taking baking soda when the
'flu' like symptoms hit? (An acute
exposure) |
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Cord
Blood
Stem
Cells
Saving
Kids
With
Rare
Disorder
Hurler's
syndrome
typically
kills
victims
Before
they
turn 5
|
By E.J. Mundell
HealthDay Reporter
(HealthDayNews) --
Using umbilical cord
blood stem cells
taken from unrelated
donors, doctors are
saving the lives of
children with
Hurler's syndrome --
a rare congenital
illness that
typically kills
victims before they
reach the age of
five.
While experts have
been treating
Hurler's syndrome
with stem cells
taken from bone
marrow for years,
the use of cells
derived from cord
blood improves
treatment while
helping children
avoid painful and
debilitating
radiation therapy,
researchers say.
"It's ameliorating
all the symptoms,"
said study co-author
Dr. Joanne Kurtzberg,
director of the
Pediatric Bone
Marrow and Stem Cell
Transplantation
program at Duke
University's
Comprehensive Cancer
Center.
Her team's findings
appear in the May 6
issue of The New
England Journal of
Medicine.
Experts estimate
that between 40 and
100 American
children are born
annually with the
metabolic disease
mucopolysaccharidosis
type 1 (MPS-1),
commonly called
Hurler's syndrome.
The syndrome leaves
children unable to
produce an important
enzyme known as
alpha-L-iduronidase,
crucial to the
breakdown and
recycling of cells
that have outlived
their usefulness.
As a result,
unrecycled cells
gather in various
body sites,
resulting in damage
to bones, liver,
spleen, corneas,
cartilage and even
the brain. Children
affected by Hurlers
typically suffer
from slowed growth
and mental
retardation. Left
untreated, the
illness is usually
fatal by age five.
However, in the
early 1980s doctors
began making real
headway against
Hurler's. They
discovered that
transplanted stem
cells derived from
human bone marrow
allowed affected
children to begin to
produce small
quantities of the
much-needed enzyme.
Still, treatment
hurdles remained. As
with all
transplants, "some
patients who need a
donor can't find a
close enough match,"
Kurtzberg said, so
about 50 percent of
Hurler's patients
died before finding
a suitable donor. Of
those lucky enough
to receive
transplants, about a
third experienced
immune-system
rejection of the
transplanted cells.
Stem cells sourced
from umbilical cord
blood offer patients
more hope, Kurtzberg
said, because they
are at a more
immature stage of
development.
This means that cord
blood stem cells "do
not have to be
matched so closely,
and patients who
can't find a match
in bone marrow can
find suitable cells
in cord blood," she
added.
Stockpiles of
life-saving
umbilical cord blood
is now being
collected and stored
at special cord
blood banks across
the country.
In their study, the
Duke researchers
performed cord blood
stem cell
transplants in 20
Hurler's children
under two-and-a-half
years of age. So
far, 17 of the 20
children have
survived for more
than three years
after transplant,
and most have shown
remarkable
reductions in
symptoms, according
to the study.
Kurtzberg said, "It
looks as if kids who
get the cord blood
transplant have less
chance of the
disease in the brain
and outside the
brain," compared to
children who
received stem cells
derived from marrow.
"Their bones are
healing better,
their I.Q.s are
rising faster," she
said.
It's the benefit to
children's cognitive
abilities that
excites the
researchers the
most, since "in the
bone marrow
transplants, the
kids remain mildly
mentally
compromised. But in
these kids that we
are doing the cord
blood in, their
I.Q.s were actually
returning" to levels
closer to normal,
Kurtzberg said.
The researchers
speculated that stem
cells from cord
blood may be better
than other agents at
transporting
alpha-L-iduronidase
across the
blood-brain barrier,
effectively reducing
or reversing brain
damage.
There's one other
benefit to the new
therapy: because
risks for
immune-system
rejection are much
lower with cord
blood stem cells,
many children are
spared
immune-suppressing
radiation therapy,
according to the
study.
"We felt that was
very important in
this disease because
radiation therapy
causes later damage
to the brain and we
didn't want to add
to a problem that
children already had
based on the disease
itself," Kurtzberg
said.
Barbara Wedehase is
a genetic counselor
and executive
director of the
National MPS
Society, which works
on behalf of
families affected by
Hurler's syndrome
and similar
enzyme-deficiency
disorders. She said
research into stem
cell therapy and
other treatment
options is "offering
us tremendous hope"
in battling what was
once a uniformly
terminal illness.
Wedehase stressed
that while cord
blood stem cell
therapy marks a
breakthrough in
fighting Hurler's,
it is most valuable
in very young
children.
"If the transplant
is done in children
with MPS 1 under the
age of 2, there's a
very good likelihood
that there will be a
preservation of
intelligence," she
said. "If, however,
the transplant is
done with children
older than that,
neurological disease
progresses."
She said parents
often face great
"emotional distress"
when they learn
their child has any
of the dozen or so
MPS-related
syndromes.
"I encourage
families not only to
talk with the
specialists who are
doing these
procedures," she
said, "but to talk
with other families
who may have chosen
to have had a
particular
procedure, as well
as those who've
chosen not to, so
that they get as
much information as
they can before they
make their
decision."
More information
Information for
fighting MPS
syndromes can be
found at the
National MPS
Society. For more on
donating cord blood,
visit the National
Marrow Donor
Program.
Shared by Java Jane
Women's Forum
-
Forum Now deleted
April
1, 2005
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Could this be another
'late appearing' birth defect?
...such as 2-butoxyethanol would cause?
It is
an endocrine disruptor chemical
&
a teratogen
that upsets the endocrine system
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