Korea  | Russia  |  Malaysia |   Kazakhstan
Indonesia  | Oman  | 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 > News > Article Content

NIH Awards Stem Cell Grant for the Study of Autism


http://www.cellmedicine.com/nih-autism-grant.asp

BusinessWire.com, August 11, 2009

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) have announced the awarding of a $3 million grant to Children's Hospital of Orange County (CHOC) in California to study stem cells in autistic children.

More specifically, ordinary fibroblasts (skin cells) will be derived from the autistic children, which will then be reprogrammed and de-differentiated into iPS (induced pluripotent stem) cells which in turn will be re-differentiated into neural cells. Scientists hope that properties of the neural cells will shed some light on the unique characteristics of autism, thereby ultimately leading to more efficacious forms of treatment for the disorder.

Funding from the NIH grant is to be distributed over 5 years and will result in the first repository of neural cells derived from living patients. Prior to the recent development of iPS technology, the only way to derived neural cells from someone was via autopsy after death. Now, however, any living person can easily donate an ordinary skin cell, which, from the intermediate stage of an iPS cell, can be reprogrammed into virtually any type of cell found within the human body.

The grant was awarded through the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. The specific recipient of the grant at CHOC is the National Human Neural Stem Cell Resource program, and the award constitutes the largest federally funded basic science research grant that any department within CHOC has ever received.

According to Dr. Philip Schwartz, principal investigator and founding director of the National Human Neural Stem Cell Resource at CHOC, "This is a completely novel approach to studying the neurobiology of autism and the first time we'll be able to do so with neural cells actually derived from large numbers of children living with the condition. We hope to confirm over the next several years that neural cells generated from these donated fibroblasts can provide a viable experimental model that will yield insights about the origins, diagnosis, and treatment of autism."

Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) constitute the fastest growing developmental disability in the United States, with approximately one child in every 150 being diagnosed with some form of ASD. According to the Autism Society of America, the rate of diagnosis increases between 10 and 17% every year. Although an indisputable, definitive etiology has not yet been proven, a certain amount of controversy continues to surround ASD, as a growing amount of evidence seems to implicate environmental causes as the initiating trigger of ASD, especially heavy metals such as the mercury that is traceable directly to thimerosal. Also known as sodium ethylmercurithiosalicylate (C9H9HgNaO2S), thimerosal was originally developed as an antiseptic and antifungal agent but continues to be routinely used as a preservative in childhood vaccines. The controversy surrounding thimerosal, however, and its possible link to autism, has resulted in the gradual phasing out of thimerosal in the U.S., the European Union and a few other countries. Nevertheless, by 2007 it was estimated that more than 5,000 families in the U.S. have filed claims in a federal vaccine court alleging that their children became autistic as a result of having been vaccinated with thimerosal-containing vaccines. Although most of the cases are still being adjudicated, the U.S. federal government did award damages in one case, to the family of a young girl with the pre-existing condition of mitochondrial enzyme deficiency, who subsequently developed autism after receiving a series of thimerosal-containing vaccines. Many parents regard this ruling as confirmation that thimerosal is indeed a cause of autism.

A number of prominent scientists have researched the autism-vaccine connection extensively, perhaps the most notable of whom was Bernard Rimland, Ph.D., of San Diego, who founded the Autism Society of America in 1965 and who also founded the Autism Research Institute (ARI) in 1967, which he directed until his death from cancer in 2006. Inspired by his autistic son, Mark, who was born in 1956 when autism was quite rare, Dr. Rimland dedicated the remainder of his life to finding a scientific explanation and cure for the disorder. After more than 40 years of research, he became increasingly convinced that the causes of autism can be traced directly to the increasing number of vaccines that are prescribed in childhood. Dr. Rimland was one of the first scientists to correlate the increasing number of autism diagnoses per year to the presence of mercury in vaccines, pointing out that in 1990 autism was diagnosed at a frequency of one child per every 10,000 (ten thousand) children, whereas by 2004 the frequency had risen to one child per every 150 children, which represents an increase of 6,670%. A prolific author and energetic lecturer on autism, Dr. Rimland garnered the attention of Hollywood who invited him to serve as primary technical advisor to the 1988 movie "Rain Man", in which Dustin Hoffman's character portrayed the disorder, thereby initiating a global awareness of autism at a time when it was not nearly as prevalent as it is today. Although Dr. Rimland was often at odds with the conventional medical establishment, to this day the ARI data bank, which Dr. Rimland created, remains the world's largest data bank on autism, containing over 40,000 detailed case histories of autistic children from more than 60 countries. Dr. Rimland's 1964 book, "Infantile Autism: The Syndrome and Its Implications for a Neural Theory of Behavior", remains a seminal, ground-breaking book in the field, and is credited by many with having changed the prevailing medical view of autism at that time from a disorder that was regarded as purely psychiatric in nature, to one that is now recognized as being distinctly biological.

Families of autistic individuals who are interested in donating cells to the CHOC for study under the NIH grant should contact CHOC directly for further information.

 



Related Information:

  • The Chinese Government Gives Top Priority to Stem Cell Research and Development   
  • The Washington Post report regarding our center and specialized stem cell treatment   
  • Stem cell therapy, a promising novel endeavor for neurological disorders   
  • Brain Imaging Differences Evident at 6 Months in High-Risk Infants Who Later Develop Autism   
  • New Treatment for Traumatic Brain Injury Shows Promise in Animals   
  • Stem Cell Treatments Improve Heart Function After Heart Attack   
  • Cognitive Stimulation Beneficial in Dementia   
  • New Imaging Methods Show Challenges of Identifying Cognitive Abilities in Severely Brain-Injured Patients   
  • Huntington Disease Breakthrough New Potential Therapy That Restores Motor Function Being Planned for Clinical Trial   
  • In Mouse Model Bexarotene Quickly Reverses Alzheimer's Symptoms   
  • Study of Live Human Neurons Reveals Parkinson's Origins   
  • New Drug Doesn't Improve Disability Among Stroke Patients, Researchers Find   
  • Anemia May More Than Triple Your Risk of Dying After a Stroke   
  • Researchers Visualize the Development of Parkinson's Cells   
  • Surprisingly High Number of Adults With Severe Learning Disabilities Also Have Autism   
  • Brain Glia Cells Increase Their DNA Content to Preserve Vital Blood-Brain Barrier   
  • Stem Cells   
  • PET Effectively Detects Dementia, Decade of Research Shows   
  • Neurons Grown from Skin Cells May Hold Clues to Autism   
  • Stem Cell Therapy Reverses Diabetes: Stem Cells from Cord Blood Used to Re-Educate Diabetic's Own T Cells   
  • Research Demonstrating Link Between Virus and MS Could Point the Way to Treatment and Prevention   
  • Low Vitamin D Levels Linked to Depression, Psychiatrists Report   
  • New Hope for Diseases of Protein Folding Such as Alzheimer¡¯s, Parkinson¡¯s Diseases, ALS, Cancer and Diabetes   
  • Autism May Be Linked to Abnormal Immune System Characteristics and Novel Protein Fragment   
  • Alzheimer's Damage Occurs Early   
  • Another Potential Risk Factor for Developing Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in Women   
  • Brain Cell Malfunction in Schizophrenia Identified   
  • Alzheimer's: Diet Patterns May Keep Brain from Shrinking   
  • 'Rare' Brain Disorder May Be More Common Than Thought, Scientists Say   
  • Turn 'Signals' for Neuron Growth Identified   
  • 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.