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Lcyberlina
QUOTE
Paralyzed woman walks again after stem cell therapy

Sunday November 28, 1:21 PM   
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A South Korean woman paralyzed for 20 years is walking again after scientists say they repaired her damaged spine using stem cells derived from umbilical cord blood.

Hwang Mi-Soon, 37, had been bedridden since damaging her back in an accident two decades ago.

Last week her eyes glistened with tears as she walked again with the help of a walking frame at a press conference where South Korea researchers went public for the first time with the results of their stem-cell therapy.

They said it was the world's first published case in which a patient with spinal cord injuries had been successfully treated with stem cells from umbilical cord blood.

Though they cautioned that more research was needed and verification from international experts was required, the South Korean researchers said Hwang's case could signal a leap forward in the treatment of spinal cord injuries.

The use of stem cells from cord blood could also point to a way to side-step the ethical dispute over the controversial use of embryos in embryonic stem-cell research.

"We have glimpsed at a silver lining over the horizon," said Song Chang-Hoon, a member of the research team and a professor at Chosun University's medical school in the southwestern city of Kwangju.

"We were all surprised at the fast improvements in the patient."

Under TV lights and flashing cameras, Hwang stood up from her wheelchair and shuffled forward and back a few paces with the help of the frame at the press conference here on Thursday.

"This is already a miracle for me," she said. "I never dreamed of getting to my feet again."

Medical research has shown stem cells can develop into replacement cells for damaged organs or body parts. Unlocking that potential could see cures for diseases that are at present incurable, or even see the body generate new organs to replace damaged or failing ones.

So-called "multipotent" stem cells -- those found in cord blood -- are capable of forming a limited number of specialised cell types, unlike the more versatile "undifferentiated" cells that are derived from embroyos.

However, these stem cells isolated from umbilical cord blood have emerged as an ethical and safe alternative to embryonic stem cells.

Clinical trials with embryonic stem cells are believed to be years away because of the risks and ethical problems involved in the production of embryos -- regarded as living humans by some people -- for scientific use.

In contrast, there is no ethical dimension when stem cells from umbilical cord blood are obtained, according to researchers.

Additionally, umbilical cord blood stem cells trigger little immune response in the recipient as embryonic stem cells have a tendency to form tumors when injected into animals or human beings.

For the therapy, multipotent stem cells were isolated from umbilical cord blood, which had been frozen immediately after the birth of a baby and cultured for a period of time.

Then these cells were directly injected to the damaged part of the spinal cord.

"Technical difficulties exist in isolating stem cells from frozen umbilical cord blood, finding cells with genes matching those of the recipient and selecting the right place of the body to deliver the cells," said Han Hoon, president of Histostem, a government-backed umbilical cord blood bank in Seoul.

Han teamed up with Song and other experts for the experiment.

They say that more experiments are required to verify the outcome of the landmark therapy.

"It is just one case and we need more experiments, more data," said Oh Il-Hoon, another researcher.

"I believe experts in other countries have been conducting similar experiments and accumulating data before making the results public."
PaineInTheArse
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Politics/US/20.../18/674537.html

October 18, 2004

Edwards: Bush exploiting terror attacks

By LIZ SIDOTI

FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) -- Sen. John Edwards accused President Bush on Monday of "exploiting a national tragedy for personal gain" in a blistering speech preceding Bush's own address about terrorism in a state in the shadow of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

"George Bush today is making one last stand to con the American people into believing that he is the only one who can fight and win the war on terrorism," the Democratic vice presidential nominee said. "John Kerry defended this country as a young man. He will defend this country as president of the United States."

On a day that promised to be dominated by talk of terrorism, the North Carolina senator sought to put Bush on the defensive as the president headed into what his aides called a major speech on terrorism in southern New Jersey.

Edwards, speaking at a seaside park in this battleground state, argued that Bush "claims steady leadership but offers a steady stream of failure." He accused the president of "creating a new haven for terrorists" and assailed him for failing to capture the mastermind of the attacks, Osama bin Laden.

"He will fail in the war against terrorism because he does not know how to lead," Edwards said of Bush.

Accusing the president of using scare tactics, Edwards charged: "George Bush is playing on people's deepest fears. He's exploiting a national tragedy for personal gain -- and it's the lowest kind of politics.

"You don't win the war on terror by giving a speech. You win the war on terror based on what you do. And the facts show, the facts show that we haven't done all that we can to keep the American people safe and crush the terrorists before they can do harm to us. George Bush's failed actions speak much louder than his words.

"One of the greatest signs of weakness and failure is to resort to the politics of fear and that's what George Bush is doing today," Edwards said.

Since the terrorist attacks, the Taliban regime in Afghanistan has been toppled and the former leader of Iraq, Saddam Hussein, has been in U.S. custody since December. However, bin Laden still evades capture nearly three years after the attacks, and casualties of U.S. troops continue in Iraq.

In response, Steve Schmidt, a Bush spokesman, said, "John Edwards is a personal-injury attorney who last week told paralyzed people that they would be able to walk again if they voted for John Kerry. They have demonstrated they will say anything to get elected."

It was a reference to a comment made by Edwards last week while promoting stem-cell research that "if we do the work that we can do in this country, the work that we will do when John Kerry is president, people like Christopher Reeve will get up out of that wheelchair and walk again."
Cyndi
Wonderful news!

I am sure though the rights will point out it was stem cells from umbilical cord blood, not embryonic stem cells.
PaineInTheArse
QUOTE(PaineInTheArse @ Nov 30 2004, 02:00 PM)
In response, Steve Schmidt, a Bush spokesman, said, "John Edwards is a personal-injury attorney who last week told paralyzed people that they would be able to walk again if they voted for John Kerry. They have demonstrated they will say anything to get elected."

It was a reference to a comment made by Edwards last week while promoting stem-cell research that "if we do the work that we can do in this country, the work that we will do when John Kerry is president, people like Christopher Reeve will get up out of that wheelchair and walk again."

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Does anyone have a connection in to the White House press corps "gaggle", perhaps a way to reach Helen Thomas? I'd love to see Schmidt or Scott McClellan address this event and the evil, hateful words of October 18.
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