| Korea | Russia | Malaysia
Indonesia | All Others

eg.stem cell, stem cell treatment
Stem cell treatment | Parkinson's Disease | Multiple Sclerosis | ALS | Brain Injury | Spinal Cord Injury | Cerebaral Palsy | Batten Disease | Stroke
MSA | Muscular Dystrophy | Epilepsy | Optic neuritis | Encephalomyelitis | SMA | Huntingdon's disease | Friedrich ataxia | Diabetes
HOME > Research & Advances > Article Content

Nine Lives: Cats' Central Nervous System Can Repair Itself And Restore Func


http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/03/090330200722.htm

ScienceDaily (Mar. 31, 2009)

Scientists studying a mysterious neurological affliction in cats have discovered a surprising ability of the central nervous system to repair itself and restore function.

In a study published March 30, 2009 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a team of researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison reports that the restoration in cats of myelin - a fatty insulator of nerve fibers that degrades in a host of human central nervous system disorders, the most common of which is multiple sclerosis ''- can lead to functional recovery.

"The fundamental point of the study is that it proves unequivocally that extensive remyelination can lead to recovery from a severe neurological disorder," says Ian Duncan, the UW-Madison neuroscientist who led the research. "It indicates the profound ability of the central nervous system to repair itself."

The finding is important because it underscores the validity of strategies to reestablish myelin as a therapy for treating a range of severe neurological diseases associated with the loss or damage of myelin, but where the nerves themselves remain intact.

Myelin is a fatty substance that forms a sheath for nerve fibers, known as axons, and facilitates the conduction of nerve signals. Its loss through disease causes impairment of sensation, movement, cognition and other functions, depending on which nerves are affected.

The new study arose from a mysterious affliction of pregnant cats. A company testing the effects on growth and development in cats using diets that had been irradiated reported that some cats developed severe neurological dysfunction, including movement disorders, vision loss and paralysis. Taken off the diet, the cats recovered slowly, but eventually all lost functions were restored.

"After being on the diet for three to four months, the pregnant cats started to develop progressive neurological disease," says Duncan, a professor of medical sciences at the UW-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine and an authority on demyelinating diseases. "Cats put back on a normal diet recovered. It's a very puzzling demyelinating disease."

The afflicted cats were shown to have severe and widely distributed demyelination of the central nervous system, according to Duncan. And while the neurological symptoms exhibited by the cats are similar to those experienced by humans with demyelination disorders, the malady does not seem to be like any of the known myelin-related diseases of humans.

In cats removed from the diet, recovery was slow, but all of the previously demyelinated axons became remyelinated. The restored myelin sheaths, however, were not as thick as healthy myelin, Duncan notes.

"It's not normal, but from a physiological standpoint, the thin myelin membrane restores function," he says. "It's doing what it is supposed to do."

Knowing that the central nervous system retains the ability to forge new myelin sheaths anywhere the nerves themselves are preserved provides strong support for the idea that if myelin can be restored in diseases such as multiple sclerosis, it may be possible for patients to regain lost or impaired functions: "The key thing is that it absolutely confirms the notion that remyelinating strategies are clinically important," Duncan says.

The exact cause of the neurological affliction in the cats on the experimental diet is unknown, says Duncan, who was not involved in the original study of diet.

"We think it is extremely unlikely that [irradiated food] could become a human health problem," Duncan explains. "We think it is species specific. It's important to note these cats were fed a diet of irradiated food for a period of time."

In addition to Duncan, authors of the new PNAS study include Alexandra Brower of the Wisconsin Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; Yoichi Kondo and Ronald Schultz of the UW-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine; and Joseph Curlee, Jr. of Harlan Laboratories in Madison.



Related Information:

  • The Limitations Of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells May Be Due To Gene Silenc   
  • Stem Cell Therapy Removes Cell Receptor That Attracts HIV   
  • Alzheimer's-Like Memory Loss Reversed In Fruit Flies   
  • Stem cell therapy, a promising novel endeavor for neurological disorders   
  • Efficacy Study Of Olesoxime In Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis   
  • Clinical Trial Of CK-2017357 For Patients With Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosi   
  • Use Of Heart Failure Treatment Nationwide Stems From Rochester-Led   
  • Scientists find "mother" of all skin cells   
  • U.S. stem cell expert is "hottest" researcher   
  • Body's Anticipation of a Meal Can Be a Diabetes Risk Factor   
  • What Is Kidney Infection? What Causes Kidney Infection?   
  • Men May Be At A Higher Risk Of Sudden Cardiac Death Than Women   
  • A Cure For Down Syndrome Could Be Just Around The Corner   
  • What You Need To Know About Pregnancy And Multiple Sclerosis   
  • Have Scientists Found Another Cause Of ADHD?   
  • Increase In Babies Born With Down Syndrome   
  • New Developments In Stem Cell Research   
  • How the Internet is Helping Those with Multiple Sclerosis   
  • Mental Illness and Children   
  • Green Tea Fights Depression   
  • Evidence-Based Care For Childhood Epilepsy Follows Comparative Effectivenes   
  • China leading worldwide Stem Cells Research to help nervous disease patient   
  • Computer Simulation of Protein Malfunction Related to Alzheimer's Disease   
  • Stress Raises Risk of Mental Decline in Older Diabetics, Study Shows   
  • Multiple Sclerosis Onset: Could Mycobacteria Play a Role?   
  • Detecting Asthma   
  • Idea of Restoring 'Natural Systems' Misses Mark as Response to Climate Chan   
  • Belief in a Caring God Improves Treatment for Depression   
  • Damaged Protein Identified as Early Diagnostic Biomarker for Alzheimer's Di   
  • The key to cancer, mybe stem cells are what makes tumors so serious?   
  • Treatment
    The Parkinson's Clinical Center
    Doctor Blogs
    Treatment Data
    Contact Us

  • What are stem cells and how do they work to treat various diseases?   
  • How do stem cells know where to go and what to do?   
  • What kinds of stem cells does your medical center use and are they safe?   
  • Where do the stem cells come from?   
  • Is stem cell treatment safe? Is it really effective?   
  • How do I know if I am a good candidate for stem cell therapy?   
  • How long should I expect to stay in Beijing for the treatment?   
  • Can you use adult stem cells from my own bone marrow?   
  • What methods do you use to transplant stem cells into the patient's body?   
  • What should I expect to experience during the stem cell treatment?   
  • Do the doctors use anesthesia during the operation?   
  • What other drugs does the doctor combine with the stem cells for therapy?   
  • How long after surgery will it be before I can bathe or shower?   
  • For Batten disease treatment, what type of stem cells are used?   
  • About the neural growth factors that your medical center use   
  • If your hospitals have an age restriction on patients?   
  • What medications do you use on Batten disease patients?   
  • Is it possible for you to manufacture the TPP1 enzyme and deliver it?   
  • When I send my records to your hospital, does a doctor read them?   
  • Is general anesthesia used?   
  • Is other therapy done in addition to stem cell infusion?   
  • What types of rehabilitation training is done?   
  • What will my treatment schedule be like?   
  • Does the doctor have to penetrate the spinal canal to infuse the stem cells   
  • If I have to have surgery, how long will it take for the wound to heal?   
  • Will I lose very much blood?   
  • If there is surgery, can I fly back home before the wound has healed?   
  • Does your medical center also offer conventional treatment?   
  • What is the most effective way to contact us?   
  • Are stem cells pre-tested for HIV and Hepatitis? What else do you test?   
  • Send Inquiry Contact Us Sitemap Help

    Link:Like Cell Research Center | stemcellshezhong.com
    Copyright © 2011 unistemcells.com All rights reserved.