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Scientists Improve Heart Function in Sheep with Mouse Stem Cells
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=F0BAEE:3919ACA

The researchers say the work has implications for human heart disease
patients Heart failure, a life-threatening condition long seen in 
developed countries, is quickly becoming more prevalent in emerging
countries. 

It can be caused by coronary artery disease, where the heart does not
get enough oxygen because the vessels that feed it are blocked by
plaque.  Heart failure can also be caused by conditions that overwork
the heart, like diabetes and kidney failure.  And the heart can begin
to fail after heart attack.

Whatever the cause, a heart that becomes diseased has to work harder
to pump blood throughout the body.  There are few remedies for heart
failure.  Current prescriptions include lifestyle changes or, in the
worst cases, surgery.

Now, in experiments they hope will eventually work in humans, French
researchers have repaired the diseased hearts of sheep using the
embryonic stem cells of mice. 

Stem cells are master cells that can be made to transform into any
cell in the body.  Embryos are a rich source of stem cells.

Using 18 sheep with heart failure, the researchers gave half the
animals a substance that did not contain the mouse stem cells.  The
rest of the sheep received stem cells grown from the mouse embryos.

One month after transplantation, scientists noted that the heart
function worsened by ten percent among sheep that did not get the stem
cells, compared to a six percent improvement in heart function among
the group of treated sheep. 

Another significant finding:  half of the sheep that got better did so
without drugs to suppress their immune systems.  So-called
immunosuppression drugs are given to organ recipients to keep them
from rejecting a donor organ.  But such drugs have many unpleasant
side effects.

Michel Puceat is director of research at the National Institute for
Health and Medical Research in France.  Dr. Puceat says the use of
mouse cells to treat sheep has implications for human heart patients.

"We think that if we can cross the species barriers with embryonic
cells, there is a good chance for human stem cells to be tolerated in
human patients, or at least to be tolerated with probably very little
immunosuppression treatment," he said.

Dr. Puceat and his colleagues are starting work using human embryonic
stem cells to repair the diseased hearts of baboons, which are
primates like humans.

Dr. Puceat acknowledges this is a controversial area of research. 
Removing stem cells from a human embryos for research results in the
destruction of the embryos, which opponents say amounts to the
destruction of human life even if it is at a very early stage.  But
Dr. Puceat believes the procedure, if successful, will gain support. 

"I think if somebody can prove that it can work, in terms of clinical
work, it will be easier for people who are against the use of human
embryonic stem cells to be convinced that it's worth trying," he
explained.

The study on the repair of sheep hearts with mouse embryonic stem
cells appears in the September 17 issue of the Lancet.