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Ask a Sports Medicine Doc: Fact and fiction of stem cells

Q: I have been hearing a lot about stem cell injections and was wondering if this would help my painful, arthritic knee?

There is a lot of exciting research and great interest in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. However, there is also a lot of hype and misinformation out there. Tissue engineering is defined as the application of biological, chemical and engineering principles toward the repair, restoration, or regeneration of living tissues using biomaterials, cells, and factors, alone or in combination.1

The goal of tissue engineering is to regenerate damaged tissue. Tissue Engineering has three primary goals: Harvesting and isolating mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), providing a scaffold onto which these cells are seeded so that their growth is organized and structured in an effort to duplicate a given tissue that is damaged, and assisting and promoting the growth of these MSCs with growth factors that cause the MSCs to ultimately become the tissue of interest.

There are two types of stem cells: embryonic stem cells, which are derived from fetuses and postnatal stem cells derived from adults. Embryonic stem cells have the ability to proliferate indefinitely in a test tube and the ability to produce all tissue types such as bone, cartilage or muscle. However, in the clinical setting they can cause an immune response in the recipient and can also cause tumors to grow. Furthermore, there are significant ethical concerns with harvesting embryonic stem cells as they are derived from human embryos. Currently in the U.S., the only research that can be performed on embryonic stem cells is that using stem cell lines that were in existence before 2009.

Adult stem cells have the advantage of not having these ethical concerns as they are harvested from the patient. Moreover, there is no immunogenic response as they come from you and also do not cause tumors to develop. However, they do not develop into various tissues as easily as embryonic stem cells do. Adult stem cells can be harvested from a variety of tissues: fat, blood, bone marrow, muscle and other tissue types. The number of stem cells seems to correlate with how much blood flow there is to a given tissue.

MSCs derived from fat or adipose tissue have been primarily used by proponents of regenerative medicine as adipose tissue is easily harvested and has a reasonable concentration of MSCs compared to other sources. Bone cells actually have more potential to differentiate into multiple cell types than fat cells, but harvesting cells from bone is more painful and invasive than harvesting fatty tissue, which most of us would be happy to donate. Anyone who has had a bone marrow biopsy can attest to the pain involved.

Patients who see me in the office with knee pain or knee arthritis often ask me if they would benefit from a stem cell injection. Currently, there is no good evidence in the orthopedic literature to recommend this. Insurance companies do not pay for this procedure, as again, there is no good evidence showing it to be efficacious. Thus, patients have to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket for this procedure. Given the lack of evidence to support it and the cost and possible risks, I do not recommend it. When injecting stem cells harvested from fatty tissue into an arthritic knee for example, these cells are not directed to grow cartilage nor are they directed to grow cartilage in the areas where your knee lacks it. Instead, these stem cells could equally differentiate into fat, bone, scar tissue or cartilage. In turn, you could grown bone on your own remaining cartilage, you could grow scar tissue on your ligaments, etc.

Tissue engineering is an evolving field with many possible exciting applications whose day will come, but unfortunately its clinical applications continue to be quite limited at the current time.

1 Laurencin CT, Ambrosio AM, Borden MD, Cooper JA Jr.: Tissue engineering: Orthopedic applications. Annu Rev Biomed Eng 1999; 1:19-46.

Dr. Rick Cunningham is a Knee and Shoulder Sports Medicine Specialist with Vail-Summit Orthopaedics. He is a Physician for the US Ski Team and Chief of Surgery at Vail Valley Medical Center. Do you have a sports medicine question youd like him to answer in this column? Visit his website at http://www.vailknee.com to submit your topic idea. For more information about Vail-Summit Orthopaedics, visit http://www.vsortho.com.

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Ask a Sports Medicine Doc: Fact and fiction of stem cells

stem cell therapy treatment for spinal muscular atrophy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india – Video


stem cell therapy treatment for spinal muscular atrophy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india
improvement seen in just 3 months after stem cell therapy treatment for spinal muscular atrophy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india. Stem Cell Therapy done date...

By: Neurogen Brain and Spine Institute

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stem cell therapy treatment for spinal muscular atrophy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india - Video

stem cell therapy treatment for peripheral neuropathy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india – Video


stem cell therapy treatment for peripheral neuropathy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india
improvement seen in just 3 months after stem cell therapy treatment for peripheral neuropathy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india. Stem Cell Therapy done date 1...

By: Neurogen Brain and Spine Institute

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stem cell therapy treatment for peripheral neuropathy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india - Video

stem cell therapy treatment for beckers muscular dystrophy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india – Video


stem cell therapy treatment for beckers muscular dystrophy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india
[gujarati] improvement seen in just 5 days after stem cell therapy treatment for beckers muscular dystrophy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india. Stem Cell Thera...

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stem cell therapy treatment for beckers muscular dystrophy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india - Video

Stem cell treatment hope for York Parkinson’s Disease sufferer

James DeLittle, 49, of Broadway West in Fulford, to travel to Kiev for stem cell treatment

11:27am Wednesday 1st January 2014 in News By Mike Laycock, Chief reporter

James DeLittle

A PARKINSONS Disease sufferer from York is to travel to Kiev for pioneering stem cell treatment, in a last-ditch bid to tackle his worsening condition.

James DeLittle, 49, hopes the two-day treatment in the Ukrainian capital will lessen his symptoms, which include poor balance, tremor, difficulties controlling his limbs and slurred speech.

Jamess mother, relatives and customers at three pubs in the York and Selby area have scraped together about 7,000 to pay for foetal stem cells to be injected into his stomach and arms.

His condition has worsened significantly in recent months, causing him to fall several times, suffering injuries including a broken nose, ribs and thumb joint.

James, of Broadway West in Fulford, said: As far as I know, Im the first person from the UK to go to the clinic and I would love to come back with an improvement in my condition to show all the other people with Parkinsons how they might benefit too.

The NHS doesnt support the treatment at this stage so weve had to raise the money.

More than 700 has been raised by bottles on the bars at the Huntsman at Drax, and the Plough Inn and the Bay Horse at Fulford.

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Stem cell treatment hope for York Parkinson's Disease sufferer

Local woman in need of donor

In 2013, doctors nationwide diagnosed 49,000 people with Leukemia. This past April, Cathy Habeeb Sheehan, of Boxford, was one of them.

Last June, she had a sibling stem cell transplant. However, it failed and her only other brother is not a match. Currently, there is no donor match in the National Register. She is in need of a second stem cell transplant.

Latitude Sports Club in Methuen is hosting a stem cell donor drive in January. Her friends and family are asking for people to volunteer to be tested as a possible donor match.

Sheehan is a mother of two daughters and a son. In her spare time, shes a spin instructor at Latitude Sports Club in Salisbury.

In the past Latitude has helped Sheehan with other stem cell donor drives but no match was found.

The family is beside themselves, family friend Ruth Ann LeHane said. LeHane has worked for Sheehans mother for more than 30 years.

The ideal match for Sheehan is someone in between 18 and 44 years old and is in good health.

To find out if you are a match for Sheehan is simple says LeHane.

It just takes a swab inside your cheek, she said. Its quick and painless.

People should be notified within a couple of weeks if they are a match.

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Local woman in need of donor

Stem cells, juicing, Piloxing, triathlon, workout apps–health and wellness on overdrive

Back to basicsCaveman workout is the choice for functional training.

Swim, bike and runtriathlon became even more popular in 2013.

It was the year stem cell therapy became a household name.

Although the science has been around for half a century in Europe, it was not until the Asian Institute of Longevity Medicine (AILM) opened its doors to Filipinos in 2009 that stem cell therapy took off in the country.

Today, AILMs German-based partner, Tissue and Cell Banking (Ticeba), headed by its founder and managing director Dr. Christoph Ganss, is one of the countrys most sought-after stem cell therapy consultants.

If you think that, because of its exceedingly high price tag, stem cell therapy would catch on only among the well-heeled, think again. Entrepreneurial Pinoys saw the potential moneymaker in the name, and soon peddlers began brandishing everything from stem cell water to stem cell fertility kits.

Another top hit of 2013 is juicing/detox. Now a multibillion-dollar industry in the United States, juicingwhile it has been practiced by many vegans and vegetarians in the Philippines since the early 2000sbecame big this year when the Australian documentary filmmaker and juicing advocate Joe Cross visited the country.

Today, there are three major competing organic juice brands on the market.

Organic produce

Vegan food the five-star way

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Stem cells, juicing, Piloxing, triathlon, workout apps–health and wellness on overdrive

Stem Cell Research – Stem Cell Treatments – Treatments Using …

COMPARE CORD BLOOD BANKS

Choosing the right stem cell bank for your family is rarely a quick decision. But when you review the facts, you may find it much easier than you expected. Keep Reading >

1. The collection of cord blood can only take place at the time of delivery, and advanced arrangements must be made.

Cord blood is collected from the umbilical cord immediately after a babys birth, but generally before the placenta has been delivered. The moment of delivery is the only opportunity to harvest a newborns stem cells.

2. There is no risk and no pain for the mother or the baby.

The cord blood is taken from the cord once it has been clamped and cut. Collection is safe for both vaginal and cesarean deliveries. 3. The body often accepts cord blood stem cells better than those from bone marrow.

Cord blood stem cells have a high rate of engraftment, are more tolerant of HLA mismatches, result in a reduced rate of graft-versus-host disease, and are rarely contaminated with latent viruses.

4. Banked cord blood is readily accessible, and there when you need it.

Matched stem cells, which are necessary for transplant, are difficult to obtain due to strict matching requirements. If your childs cord blood is banked, no time is wasted in the search and matching process required when a transplant is needed. 5. Cells taken from your newborn are collected just once, and last for his or her lifetime.

For example, in the event your child contracts a disease, which must be treated with chemotherapy or radiation, there is a probability of a negative impact on the immune system. While an autologous (self) transplant may not be appropriate for every disease, there could be a benefit in using the preserved stem cells to bolster and repopulate your childs blood and immune system as a result of complications from other treatments.

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Stem Cell Research - Stem Cell Treatments - Treatments Using ...

Stem cell treatment set for launch in Japan

A treatment owned by Mesoblast Pharmaceutical is set to become the first stem cell treatment to be available in Japan, following an application by its local partner, JCR Pharmaceutical, to launch the product in that market.

According to Japanese reports, JCR Pharmaceutical will lodge its application to market a treatment for so-called graft versus host disease (GVHD), which is a side effect of bone marrow or umbilical cord blood transplant surgery, by the end of December.

Recently, the Japanese government changed the law to fast-track approvals for stem cell treatments, an area where some other countries in the region, such as South Korea, have made similar changes, spawning a great deal of end-market activity.

Earlier this year, Mesoblast agreed to pay up to $US100 million to buy a suite of stem cell patents and products from US drug company Osiris Therapeutic, which brought with it entry into the Japanese drugs market.

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According to the reports, the Japan Society of Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation estimates about 1200 people annually develop acute GVHD in that country.

In recent research, broker Bell Potter estimated this could be a $US59 million-a-year market and, with the number of transplants growing, this should see a rise in demand for the treatment. If approved, this would be the first allogeneic stem cell product to be launched in Japan, according to the broker.

JCR could obtain approval within a year from filing to launch the treatment, which would rank it as one of the first of Mesoblast's products to be launched.

Instead of phased clinical trials, the law changes enable regenerative medicines to demonstrate efficacy in pilot studies of as few as 10 patients if the change is dramatic enough, or a few hundred with more marginal treatments.

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Stem cell treatment set for launch in Japan

Stem cell treatment set for Japan

A treatment owned by Mesoblast Pharmaceutical is set to become the first stem cell treatment to be available in Japan, following an application by its local partner, JCR Pharmaceutical, to launch the product in that market.

According to Japanese reports, JCR Pharmaceutical will lodge its application to market a treatment for so-called graft versus host disease (GVHD), which is a side effect of bone marrow or umbilical cord blood transplant surgery, by the end of December.

Recently, the Japanese government changed the law to fast-track approvals for stem cell treatments, an area where some other countries in the region, such as South Korea, have made similar changes, spawning a great deal of end-market activity.

Earlier this year, Mesoblast agreed to pay up to $US100 million to buy a suite of stem cell patents and products from US drug company Osiris Therapeutic, which brought with it entry into the Japanese drugs market.

Advertisement

According to the reports, the Japan Society of Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation estimates about 1200 people annually develop acute GVHD in that country.

In recent research, broker Bell Potter estimated this could be a $US59 million-a-year market and, with the number of transplants growing, this should see a rise in demand for the treatment. If approved, this would be the first allogeneic stem cell product to be launched in Japan, according to the broker.

JCR could obtain approval within a year from filing to launch the treatment, which would rank it as one of the first of Mesoblast's products to be launched.

Instead of phased clinical trials, the law changes enable regenerative medicines to demonstrate efficacy in pilot studies of as few as 10 patients if the change is dramatic enough, or a few hundred with more marginal treatments.

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Stem cell treatment set for Japan