BRAIN INJURY
Source:
Reuters Health; October 3, 2002
Adult Stem
Cells Treat Brain Injuries in Mice
New
York, NY -- New research in mice raises hopes that stem cells may one day be
used to treat brain injuries. Mice that had neural stem cells injected into
their brains shortly after a brain injury experienced significant improvement in
motor skills, researchers report.
Since
there is currently no treatment for traumatic brain injury, the results of
the study provide "a great deal of renewed hope," the study's senior
author, Dr. Tracy K. McIntosh of
the Head Injury Center at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, told Reuters Health in an interview.
In
the interview, McIntosh explained that another set of researchers had developed
a line of neural stem cells from mouse fetal tissue. When injected into mice
that had a cerebral palsy-like
disorder, the cells had traveled toward the damaged area of the brain, so McIntosh and his colleagues decided to see whether
neural stem cells might be useful
for treating brain injury. The hope for the cells, he said, was that they would be
able to differentiate to replace nerve cells that had died.
That
is exactly what happened when the researchers injected neural stem cells into
the brains of mice with brain injury.
"These
cells are very, very clever," McIntosh said. They "appeared to travel directly
toward the site of injury." Not only did the cells differentiate to form neurons,
but they also formed the glial cells that support neurons.
Besides
surviving and differentiating, the stem cells seemed to help the mice recover
somewhat, the researchers report in the October issue of the journal Neurosurgery. Though the cognitive, or mental, abilities of
the mice did not improve after treatment,
their motor skills did get better.
"When
we see behavioral improvement, we say hooray," McIntosh said. The next
step, according to the Pennsylvania researcher, is to follow mice longer
than the 3-month study to monitor the long-term effects of treatment. Noting
that mice in the study were treated
a few days after brain injury, McIntosh said he would like to see how long the "window of opportunity" for
treatment lasts after injury, to determine if the
cells could help people who suffered traumatic brain injuries months or years
ago.
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