Nose cell transplant enables paralysed dogs to walk

EnglishLady

Veteran Expediter
Amazing result :)


Scientists have reversed paralysis in dogs after injecting them with cells grown from the lining of their nose.

The pets had all suffered spinal injuries which prevented them from using their back legs.

The Cambridge University team is cautiously optimistic the technique could eventually have a role in the treatment of human patients.

The study is the first to test the transplant in "real-life" injuries rather than laboratory animals.

In the study, funded by the Medical Research Council and published in the neurology journal Brain, the dogs had olfactory ensheathing cells from the lining of their nose removed.

These were grown and expanded for several weeks in the laboratory.
Treadmill

Of 34 pet dogs on the proof of concept trial, 23 had the cells transplanted into the injury site - the rest were injected with a neutral fluid.

Many of the dogs that received the transplant showed considerable improvement and were able to walk on a treadmill with the support of a harness.

None of the control group regained use of its back legs.

The research was a collaboration between the MRC's Regenerative Medicine Centre and Cambridge University's Veterinary School.

Professor Robin Franklin, a regeneration biologist at the Wellcome Trust-MRC Stem Cell Institute and report co-author, said: 'Our findings are extremely exciting because they show for the first time that transplanting these types of cell into a severely damaged spinal cord can bring about significant improvement.

"We're confident that the technique might be able to restore at least a small amount of movement in human patients with spinal cord injuries but that's a long way from saying they might be able to regain all lost function. '

Prof Franklin said the procedure might be used alongside drug treatments to promote nerve fibre regeneration and bioengineering to substitute damaged neural networks.
Partial repair

The researchers say the transplanted cells regenerated nerve fibres across the damaged region of the spinal cord. This enabled the dogs to regain the use of their back legs and coordinate movement with their front limbs.

The new nerve connections did not occur over the long distances required to connect the brain to the spinal cord. The MRC scientists say in humans this would be vital for spinal injury patients who had lost sexual function and bowel and bladder control.

Prof Geoffrey Raisman, chair of Neural Regeneration at University College London, who discovered olfactory ensheathing cells in 1985 said: "This is not a cure for spinal cord injury in humans - that could still be a long way off. But this is the most encouraging advance for some years and is a significant step on the road towards it."

He said the clinical benefits were still limited: "This procedure has enabled an injured dog to step with its hind legs, but the much harder range of higher functions lost in spinal cord injury - hand function, bladder function, temperature regulation, for example - are yet more complicated and still a long way away."

Jasper, a 10-year-old dachshund, is one of the dogs which took part in the trial.

His owner May Hay told me: "Before the treatment we used to have to wheel Jasper round on a trolley because his back legs were useless. Now he whizzes around the house and garden and is able to keep up with the other dogs. It's wonderful."

Jasper can be seen in the video at the top of the page before and after his treatment.

BBC News - Nose cell transplant enables paralysed dogs to walk
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Well, I always knew the...

The toe bone's connected to the foot bone,
The foot bone's connected to the ankle bone,
The ankle bone's connected to the leg bone,
Now shake dem skeleton bones!

and...

The leg bone's connected to the knee bone,
The knee bone's connected to the thigh bone,
The thigh bone's connected to the hip bone,
Now shake dem skeleton bones!

and...

The hip bone's connected to the back bone
The back bone's connected to the neck bone,
The neck bone's connected to the head bone,
Now shake dem skeleton bones!

But I had no idea the nose membrane lining was
connected to the spinal cord.

Dem bones, dem bones, gonna walk around
Dem bones, dem bones, gonna walk around
Dem bones, dem bones, gonna walk around
Now shake dem skeleton bones!
 

asjssl

Veteran Expediter
Fleet Owner
Its good ole science.. people dont like to believe it exists..dont thank god..thank the scientists..

Sent from my Etch-A-Sketch
 

xiggi

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Its good ole science.. people dont like to believe it exists..dont thank god..thank the scientists..

Sent from my Etch-A-Sketch

If a person believes god created man and beast it makes absolutely perfect sense to thank him.



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Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Except when man does something really, really bad. Then they leave God out of it. :D
 

asjssl

Veteran Expediter
Fleet Owner
My point is when people have major operations or procedures..they always thank god for the procedure and getting through it...thank the very smart doctors,staff and science that did it for you..

Sent from my Etch-A-Sketch
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Satan does come into play.
Of course, Whenever you want to avoid laying blame on God, Ta-da! enter Satan. :D


My point is when people have major operations or procedures..they always thank god for the procedure and getting through it...thank the very smart doctors,staff and science that did it for you..
I can honestly say that I've never thanked God because of what someone else has done for me. Stitches, several times, thanked the doctor. Broken bones, thanked the doctor. Stent, thanked the doctor.

That Occupational Medicine Hellhound doctor that made me take a stress test that even the cardiologist thought was a waste of time and money, that dood is all Devil, though.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
"Of course, Whenever you want to avoid laying blame on God, Ta-da! enter Satan."


One cannot believe in a living God without believing in Satan. There is good and there is evil. Belief, or not belief, in the "leaders" of those forces is a personal choice.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Oh, I get that, to be sure. It's just that all too often when God does something that people don't agree with, or like, they all-too conveniently blame Satan.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Oh, I get that, to be sure. It's just that all too often when God does something that people don't agree with, or like, they all-too conveniently blame Satan.

Some do, some don't. Everyone is an individual and looks on these issues based on their own lives, backgrounds and upbringing.
 

EnglishLady

Veteran Expediter
AND ....... now back to OP please, and this amazing result that hopefully one day might be able to restore movement in human patients with spinal cord injuries.

Ta very much ! :p
 

xiggi

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
My point is when people have major operations or procedures..they always thank god for the procedure and getting through it...thank the very smart doctors,staff and science that did it for you..

Sent from my Etch-A-Sketch

I am sure a lot of smart people thank god and their doctors. Others thank just the doctors others thank just god. Nothing wrong with any of those choices really. Some thank the charity that helped in research some probably these days probably even thank obama.

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xiggi

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Oh, I get that, to be sure. It's just that all too often when God does something that people don't agree with, or like, they all-too conveniently blame Satan.

I think that is nothing more than stereotypes. Many people question god when tragedy occurs in their life. Some even to the point of dropping religion from their life's. Others it draws closer to god. I personally can never remember blaming satan except jokingly.

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Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
That's true, but then again, stereotypes don't invent themselves. There's an underlying truth to all stereotypes, as painful as some of them may be.


"Ta very much !"

Ta?
 
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