CROHN DISEASE
ADULT STEM CELLS
SUCCESSFUL IN TREATING CROHN'S DISEASE IN HUMANS
CHICAGO, Aug 16, 2001 (LSN.ca)
- While the proponents of embryonic stem cell research lay empty promises about
cures from their unethically derived stem cells, another landmark in the
advancement of adult stem cell research has been reached. Reuters reports
that adult stem cells extracted from the blood of two Crohn's patients have been
used to rebuild their faulty immune systems.
Doctors at Northwestern
Memorial Hospital in Chicago announced August 9 that a 22-year-old female
Crohn's patient, whose white blood cells were attacking her digestive system,
was doing ''phenomenally well'' 2-1/2 months after undergoing the procedure.
Immunologist Richard Burt of Northwestern, who performed the procedure on the
Crohn's patients, said "This is a patient who had bloody, watery diarrhea
about 10 times a day for nine years, with a lot of abdominal pain. Since the
procedure, she has had no diarrhea, is eating and is in no pain." The
procedure was repeated with a second Crohn's patient, a 16-year-old boy earlier
this month.
According to Reuters, the
process involves destroying the patient's defective immune system with
chemotherapy and a protein that drives down the number of infection-fighting
white blood cells. A growth factor is introduced to stimulate the bone
marrow to produce stem cells, which are then harvested from the bloodstream.
Finally, the stem cells are injected into a central vein, either in the neck or
arm. The whole process, including recovery, takes three weeks.