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DanCa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-14-05 07:28 AM
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Stem Cell Treatments help Lafayette Twins

Umbilical Stem cell treatments help Lafayette twins-The Daily
Advertiser

August 13. 2005 1:20PM

Umbilical Stem cell treatments help Lafayette twins

By JUDY BASTIEN
The Daily Advertiser
Thibodaux, Lafourche Parish, Louisiana | August 13, 2005


Just a little more than a year ago, 9-year-old Tyler Frye could say
only two or three words at a time.Because of spastic quadriplegia cerebral palsy, he would wake up almost every night with severe leg cramps. He couldn't control his hands well enough to point.His twin, Trent, whose cerebral palsy is not as severe, couldn't sit
on the floor unassisted and couldn't catch a ball.Today, thanks to one injection each of umbilical cord blood stem cells in July 2004, the boys' lives have changed dramatically. "Tyler's biggest thing is that he's talking, now," said his mother, Christy Frye. "Before, he could get out maybe two or three words at a time. ... There was a lot of crying because he couldn't communicate. "Now, he's speaking in complete sentences. The first time it happened, I had to do a double-take."Within about six weeks of taking the injections, the spasticity had lessened for both boys, Frye said. Although they are both still wheelchair-bound, Tyler's leg cramps disappeared and Trent can now sit up unassisted for short periods of time and can catch a ball. "These kids were on nine different medications," Frye said. "They were getting Botox injections," to ease the spasticity of their muscles, she said."We don't have to do that anymore."The effects of the umbilical cord blood stem cells are permanent, said Anthony Payne, a researcher at the Steenblock Research Institute, a nonprofit facility in San Clemente, Calif., that arranged for the twins to get the injections.

"The only people who regress are people with progressive diseases,
like multiple sclerosis or Lou Gherig's disease," he said.Although the twins have benefited dramatically from the treatments,
more are needed to bring them closer to being well.The only obstacle for Frye and her husband, Ron, is the cost. The first injections would have cost $14,000 each, but they were donated
to the boys by a North Carolina doctor who had purchased seven
injections for his wife, whose multiple sclerosis was too advanced
to respond to the treatments.

"He said he would give two of the injections he had purchased for
his wife to the boys," Frye said. "I just about dropped the phone."
Frye is determined to find a way to get second injections for her
sons. The treatments worked better than anything else they had tried
to date, she said, including hyperbaric oxygen treatments in which
the patient is exposed to highly concentrated oxygen in a
pressurized chamber.

"They've each had 125 treatments of hyperbarics at (Our Lady of
Lourdes Regional Medical Center) and we did some in New Orleans."
While the family's insurance policy will cover hyperbaric
treatments, it will not cover treatments that are still considered
experimental, such as stem cell injections, Frye said.People seeking the injections for certain conditions have to leave the United States to get them because, although they are FDA-approved for some conditions, neurological disorders are not yet on
the approved list.The couple are now trying to raise the money for two injections, which are now about $6,000 each. They recently held a fund-raiser, but it yielded only $1,400, Frye said. She plans to hold another event soon, either here or in her hometown of Lumberton, Texas.Trying to obtain state-of-the-art treatment for her children is the only option Frye will consider.

"Some people think, 'I can't afford this. We won't even search.'
But, I feel that God always provides for these boys."




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DanCa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-14-05 07:29 AM
Response to Original message
1. If you know any fundies who are opposed to this treatment
Edited on Sun Aug-14-05 07:30 AM by DanCa
Please copy and paste and email this too them.
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HysteryDiagnosis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-14-05 08:52 AM
Response to Original message
2. Similar results have been seen with key nutrients... new research center
http://www.news-medical.net/?id=9616

New centre launched to investigate link between human sugars and disease
Medical Research News
Published: Thursday, 28-Apr-2005


A multidisciplinary centre launched today will promote a far broader understanding of the role sugars play in human disease, scientists say.
Focused on glycobiology, the study of how sugars in human cells affect our biology, researchers hope it will accelerate the development of therapies for diseases such as HIV, cancers and muscular dystrophy.

The Glycobiology Training, Research and Infrastructure Centre (GlycoTRIC), established at Imperial College London, will promote research at the interface between biochemistry and medicine with the aim of pushing forward both knowledge in this area and its application. This in turn will foster an ideal environment for training the next generation of researchers, according to the head of the Centre, Professor Anne Dell, who explains:

"Glycobiology is an extremely broad subject, since the way sugars work can only be fully understood within the context of the whole body. This is the first centre in the UK to bring together experts in areas such as biochemistry, genetics and physiology and promises to revolutionise our understanding of human disease."

The study of glycobiology is based on understanding the specific biological functions of the complex mixtures of sugars found in cells. The key focus of GlycoTRIC will be to increase our understanding of what these functions are and how they are performed, leading ultimately to concrete applications in medicine and biotechnology
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