Friday, July 22, 2011

Stem Cells Produce New, Functional Brain Cells

"Radiation treatment for brain cancer can be lifesaving, but it can come at a terrible cost. The radiation that kills cancer cells also kills brain cells, destroying memories, impairing intelligence, and causing confusion.

"Charles Limoli and colleagues at the University of California, Irvine, have shown that stem cells could help reverse some of this damage. In a new paper in the journal Cancer Research, Limoli shows that it's possible to cause new brain cells to grow by injecting human neural stem cells into the brains of mice whose cognitive abilities had been damaged by radiation. The mice regained lost skills after the stem-cell treatment.

"Stem cells have long been used to repair the damage caused by cancer treatment. Bone-marrow transplants for leukemia rely on stem cells to replenish blood cells, for instance. But Limoli says his team is the only one using neural stem cells to treat symptoms in the brain.

"Several peers praised his work, calling it an important proof of the idea that human stem cells can repair neuronal damage.

"The results are very promising," says Howard B. Lieberman, professor of radiation oncology and environmental health sciences at Columbia University. "If the findings continue to be as positive as what's published in this paper, I would assume Dr. Limoli will take great effort to try to move it into the clinic as quickly as possible."

"Limoli's team irradiated three groups of mice, later treating two of them with human neural stem cells. The third, a control group, received a shttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifham surgery, but no cells were implanted. One month after the damage, 23 percent of implanted stem cells were active in the brains of the first group of mice. After four months, 12 percent were still active in the second group. Using cellular labeling, Limoli's team also showed that tens of thousands of new neurons and astrocyte cells had grown in the brains of the treated mice. The treated mice performed better than the untreated ones on cognitive tests, and recovered their preradiation abilities.

"Protein activity in the treated mice suggests that the implanted stem cells are integrating into the brain, Limoli says, replacing cells that have been lost or damaged."


Technology Review, MIT

2 comments:

Chris said...

Would it be a fair statement to say that the modern/postmodern world is built upon the following:

Science
Relativism
Democracy

I know this has been said before, but I was just musing. Perhaps without realizing it, everyone to a lesser or greater degree, absorbs, almost my osmosis, the principles of modernism. It's all about becoming and not being. Anything "stable" inevitably leads to the loss of freedom and tyranny.

Consequently, modern man abolishes absolute Truth (of any kind) and in doing so, he contends, human freedom is vouchsafed. Coupled with the "will of the majority" and technological progress, our civilization stands.

Chris said...

No Other Name, Martin, or whoever,

How would you explain the difference between the atheistic and the agnostic positions?

Do these terms deal in two totally different matters? Or is an agnostic simply an "undeclared" atheist or theist?