Sunday, February 12, 2012
 
 
  Home arrow Stem Cells & Cloning arrow Stem Cells: Research Archive arrow Transplanted Fetal Cells Fail to Treat Parkinson's Disease, Lead to Serious Side Effects (12/02)
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“Potential human lives” do not have a beating heart, the full human genome, perfectly formed fingers, nervous systems and genitalia, and do not develop and grow as do all human beings.

"Potential human lives" are only thought about in the mind...

REAL Human Lives are growing rapidly in the uterus (womb) for nine months, following fertilization.

They are unique, never to exist again.

Just because we may CALL them "Potential human lives" does not make it so, any more than calling Jews during the Nazi Holocaust and Blacks bound in slavery "subhuman" or "non-human" made it so.

The real truth is, they are all human lives with potential!

[adapted from an article by Arland Nichols, 16 Dec 11, LIfeSiteNews]

 
Transplanted Fetal Cells Fail to Treat Parkinson's Disease, Lead to Serious Side Effects (12/02) PDF Print E-mail

A second study of transplanted fetal cells has failed to show a therapeutic benefit in Parkinson's disease patients and produced serious side effects in some patients, the Wall Street Journal reports. The findings are "a blow" to researchers who had thought that transplants of brain tissue from aborted fetuses could stem the effects of the disease.

For the study, which involved 34 participants, Mount Sinai School of Medicine and University of South Florida researchers infused brain tissue from up to eight aborted fetuses, ranging from six to nine weeks old, into 23 patients with Parkinson's disease. Brain scans of the participants indicated that the transplanted cells functioned "normally," but researchers were unable to "find any measurable improvement on tests of motor and other skills," according to the Journal.

In addition, the "most severe setback" was side effects that included uncontrolled limb movement in 13 patients. Three patients experienced such severe side effects that they required additional surgeries to control them. The study -- the second of two federally funded studies to examine if fetal cells can repair brain tissue in Parkinson's patients -- could lead to a "winding down" for future fetal-cell transplants, the Journal reports.

Anthony Lang, a Parkinson's expert at Toronto Western Hospital in Canada, said, "This is a surprising result that forces reconsideration of transplantation without a great deal more research." The study could also have implications for embryonic stem cell research, which has recently "upstaged both politically and scientifically" research using fetal cells. Some researchers consider stem cells "more versatile" than fetal cells, according to the Journal (Regalado, Wall Street Journal, 12/3).

President Bush in August 2001 established guidelines limiting federal funding for human embryonic stem cell research to 78 stem cell lines that were created prior to his announcement (Kaiser Daily Reproductive Health Report, 11/20). Research using fetal cells, however, is covered by a separate rule established in 1993 under former President Clinton, and Congress passed legislation to ensure that women are not "paid or induced to have abortions to provide tissue" for the research.

Antiabortion groups are opposed to such research, the Journal reports (Wall Street Journal, 12/3).
[From Kaiser Daily Reproductive Report (not pro-life). 12/3/02]
 
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