An injection of stem cells given
alongside a kidney transplant could remove the need for a lifetime of drugs to
suppress the immune system, say scientists.
Early tests of the technique at US hospitals were successful in a small
number of patients.The journal Science Translational Medicine reports how the majority no longer
need anti-rejection medication.Researchers said it could have a "major impact" on transplant science.
To prevent this, patients take powerful drugs to suppress their immune
systems, and will have to do this for life.The drugs come at a price, preventing organ rejection but increasing the risk
of high blood pressure, diabetes and serious infection.The study, carried out at the University of Louisville and the Northwestern
Memorial Hospital in Chicago, involved eight patients.Their transplant came from a live donor, who also underwent a procedure to
draw stem cells, the building blocks of their immune system, from the blood.The transplant recipient's body was prepared using radiotherapy and
chemotherapy to suppress their own immune system.
Although the patients started off with the same anti-rejection drugs, the aim
was to reduce these slowly, hopefully withdrawing them completely over time.
Five out of the eight patients involved in the trial managed to do this within a year.
One of those is 47-year-old Lindsay Porter, from Chicago.
She said: "I hear about the challenges recipients have to face with their medications and it is significant.
"It's almost surreal when I think about it because I feel so healthy and normal."
http://salmankhanthekingofbollywood.blogspot.com/
http://latestbollywoodshits.blogspot.com/Five out of the eight patients involved in the trial managed to do this within a year.
One of those is 47-year-old Lindsay Porter, from Chicago.
She said: "I hear about the challenges recipients have to face with their medications and it is significant.
"It's almost surreal when I think about it because I feel so healthy and normal."
http://salmankhanthekingofbollywood.blogspot.com/

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