New Research Shows Progress Towards Reversing Nerve Damage
Main Category: Neurology / NeuroscienceAlso Included In: Multiple Sclerosis
Article Date: 15 Sep 2008 - 2:00 PDT
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For the first time researchers at the Krembil Neuroscience Centre, Toronto Western Hospital have successfully transplanted adult spinal cord stem cells into mice and rats to produce the protective cover, known as myelin, which is necessary to insulate the nerves in the central nervous system.
"We know that patients who suffer from multiple sclerosis or experience spinal cord injuries can lose the ability to produce myelin," said lead researcher Dr. Andrea Mothe, Krembil Neuroscience Centre. "By successfully transplanting cells that will produce myelin this shows great progress towards potentially reversing the devastating effects of disease and injury caused by the loss of myelin."
Myelin provides the covering or insulation for nerves, which is necessary for normal conduction of electrical impulses and protects the nerve. Without myelin, impulses become slower and the nerves themselves are damaged. As more nerves are affected, a patient can experience progressive interference with functions that are controlled by the nervous system such as vision, speech, walking, and memory.
Scientists believe stem cell therapy is a promising approach for remyelination. This study showed that transplanted cells from the adult rat spinal cord can replace the lost myelinating cells and produce new myelin around the nerve fibers (axons).
"With continued research in this area we will one day be able to take this knowledge out of the lab and directly to patients," said Dr. Charles Tator, Krembil Senior Scientist and co-author of the study. "With every breakthrough and positive study we become closer and closer to battling spinal cord injuries and diseases that affect the nervous system."
The full study is published in the September issue of Experimental Neurology.
About Krembil Neuroscience Centre
The Krembil Neuroscience Centre (KNC), located at Toronto Western Hospital, is home to one of the largest combined clinical and research neurological facilities in North America. Since opening in 2001, KNC has been recognized as a world leader through its research achievements, education and exemplary patient care. The centre focuses on the advancement, detection and treatment of neurological diseases and specializes in movement disorders, dementias, stroke, spinal cord injury, blinding eye diseases, epilepsy and cancer-related conditions
Krembil Neuroscience Centre
About University Health Network
University Health Network consists of Toronto General, Toronto Western and Princess Margaret Hospitals. The scope of research and complexity of cases at University Health Network has made it a national and international source for discovery, education and patient care. It has the largest hospital-based research program in Canada, with major research in cardiology, transplantation, neurosciences, oncology, surgical innovation, infectious diseases, and genomic medicine. University Health Network is a research hospital affiliated with the University of Toronto.
University Health Network
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Nerve Damage/Myelin
posted by Ursula Swain on 31 Oct 2008 at 9:25 amPeople who suffer from nerve damage usually feel stabbing and burning, but the answer is different than is currently medically understood.
The natural design of nerves is to spin to the right, but if do to injury or surgery, nerves begin to spin to the left, than they have entered their destructive cycle.
Destructive cycles move at much higher speed than creative cycles, consequently they create more light, heat and electricity, which causes Myelin to become dry, melt off, as well as spin off.
When Myelin no longer covers the nerves, we will feel the brutality of these metallic coils, but it gets much worse when these metallic nerves begin to overheat and burn us, shock us, cause tremors and vibrations, shift, knot, become entrapped, cross wire and collide do to high speed spinning.
Overheated metallic nerves will expand and coils will become strait wires much thinner than a human hair.
The stabbing comes from a metallic net, destructive cycles will affect all nets and webs, which will disconnect and fold.
If we do not understand the metals within us, than we clearly do not understand the functions within the brain.
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