An Indian American cardiologist in Wisconsin is running a pioneering trial of using stem cells to treat heart diseases.
An Indian American cardiologist in Wisconsin is running a pioneering trial of using stem cells to treat heart diseases, the initial results of which have been "encouraging".
Amish Raval, of the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and his team of cardiologists began their trial on March 7."If it (using stem cells for cardiac disease) works, it could revolutionize cardiology," said Raval.
Stem cells are primal cells common to all multi-cellular organisms that retain the ability to renew themselves through cell division and can differentiate into a wide range of specialised cell types.
"The initial results from phase I of the trial were encouraging. Subjects reported feeling better with reductions in chest pain and improved exercise capacity during the early stage of the trial. That's encouraging to us," Raval said.
Injecting stem cells isolated from a person's own blood into an ailing heart can repair years of accumulated decay.
So far, clinical studies have produced mixed results; but with ongoing trials scientists and cardiologists like Raval hope to nail down the precise set of conditions needed to effectively heal a sick heart, according to IndoLink, an ethnic Indian newspaper.
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Nearly five million people in the US suffer heart failure caused by damage to the heart that interferes with its ability to pump blood, and nearly a million people suffer heart attacks each year.
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Source-IANS
SRM