Cell transplants for hearts

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Nancy

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Doctors test heart repair with cells from muscle
Cardiac failure afflicts an estimated 5 million Americans

November 18, 2002

By DANIEL Q. HANEY



of the Associated Press


CHICAGO - Doctors testing a new treatment for heart attacks said Sunday they have restored life to seemingly dead heart muscle by seeding it with cells borrowed from patients' own thigh muscles or bones.

The idea is to find an alternative to transplants for people whose hearts are so damaged that they fail to pump blood forcefully enough. This condition, called heart failure, is a growing health problem that afflicts an estimated 5 million people in the United States alone.

Two years ago, a French doctors described a novel alternative: He put millions of immature skeletal muscle cells into the badly damaged heart of a 72-year-old man. His heart began to pump more powerfully, although it was unclear whether the benefit came from the new cells or from coronary bypass surgery he received at the same time.

That physician, Dr. Philippe Manasche of Bichat Hospital in Paris, has now repeated the approach on 10 patients, and similar experiments are being conducted by teams in the United States, Germany, England and Poland.

Preliminary but encouraging data on these experiments were reported Sunday at the annual scientific meeting in Chicago of the American Heart Association. Doctors said the shifted cells can live inside the heart's dead scar tissue and show at least some signs of contracting like the original heart muscle.

"This is quite exciting and definitely new," said Dr. Timothy Gardner of the University of Pennsylvania, who is not involved in the studies.

For now, all that researchers can say for sure is that the transferred cells take root and flourish in dead areas of the heart. Whether they make the heart pump more forcefully remains to be proven, although researchers say they see encouraging evidence this may happen.

"The results so far support the hypothesis that these cells will do some good. It gives us a reason to go on," said Dr. Francis Pagani of the University of Michigan.

Pagani is working with Dr. Nabil Dib of the Arizona Heart Institute, whose team tested the approach on 16 patients getting either coronary bypasses or temporary pumps to keep them alive until they could have heart transplants.

Ordinarily, the heart pushes out more than half of its blood with each beat. Dib's patients had such bad heart failure that their hearts pumped just 23 percent. After the bypasses and cell injections, this improved to 36 percent, although it was impossible say how much, if any, of the new strength resulted from the extra cells.

Like Manasche, Dib's team begins with immature muscle cells, called myoblasts, obtained from the patients' own thighs. These are grown in test tubes until millions are available. Then they are injected into parts of the heart that died during heart attacks.

"We clearly showed living tissue in the injected scar," Dib said. "If this proves efficacious, we will improve the quality of life of our patients and their survival. This will replace heart transplants."

Dr. Tomasz Siminiak of the University School of Medical Science in Poznan, Poland, tested the same approach on 10 patients. Improved contraction was seen in scarred areas of the heart within a month of the procedure.

Both Manasche and Siminiak found that patients needed drugs to prevent potentially lethal heart rhythm disturbances in the months following the injections, although this hazard appeared to go away with time.

Drs. Manuel Galinanes of the University of Leicester in Great Britain and Christof Stamm of Rostock University in Germany are using primitive bone marrow cells instead of thigh muscle, and both say their results are similar.

Using heart scans, Galinanes found no change in the way the scarred tissue moved after receiving solely bypass surgery or marrow cell injections. However, he said, "when the two treatments were applied in combination, we saw a very, very significant improvement."
 
Nancy:
What a coincidence. Yesterday I saw a half-page add in our Arizona Republic newspaper about this procedure. They are seeking people for clinical trials.

"Myoblast Therapy
At Last, A New Treatment Potential For Damaged Heart Muscle

What Causes Damaged Heart Muscle?
Many things can change heart muscle, including heart attack, congestive heart failure or coronary artery disease. Myoblast cells allow most muscles, such as those in the leg or arm to heal themselves when they become injured. Unlike other muscles in the body, cardiac muscle has no myoblast cells. Because of the absence of myoblast cells in the deart, damage to the heart muscle was thought to be permanent...until now.

Exciting Research at Arizona Heart
Doctors at Arizona Heart have come up with a way to help heart muscle heal itself following a heart attack. Myoblast cells are taken from the patient's thigh muscle, cultured to grow in a laboratory, and then injected into the heart. Once there, they actually begin growing new heart muscle. This allows the damaged area to begin to heal.
The procedure, WHICH FOLLOWS standard coronary artery bypass surgery, is considered low risk to the patient because the patient's own myoblast cells are used, decreasing the chance of rejection.

Clinical Studies Now Underway
We are seeking patients to continue clinical trials in myoblast cell therapy. To find out if you may be a candidate, call Arizona Heart today. Arizona Heart Institute-Hospital-Foundation (800-345-4278)" www.azheart.com

This information has a particular slant because because their purpose is to find candidates for continuing research. I found it interesting that they were doing the procedure after standard bypass surgery. You post added much detail to the sketchy info provided in the ad. Many thanks.
 

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