Pumping Life Back Into The Heart With Adult Stem Cells

Now in his 50’s, Bobby didn’t want to lose his life to congestive heart failure. And his wife Gay, wanted her husband back.

Today, Bobby is a pioneer in a research study that — if the results continue to look promising — might transform heart treatment forever.

In an experimental procedure called myoblast cell transplantation, Bobby received injections in his heart of 100 million stem cells grown from his own leg muscle.

Since he received his own body’s cells, there is no rejection problems.

Many months and perhaps years stand in the way of having a stem cell procedure like this to enter mainstream medicine (after gaining approval by the FDA), but this much is a fact – Bobby’s scarred and dying heart muscle is regenerating.

Bobby, who has had four heart attacks, was the first one to receive 100 million cells out of the 24 people enrolled in the nationwide study. Testing safety through escalating doses, others have received 30 million, 300 million, and 600 million in phase one. Only patients with congestive heart failure caused by heart attacks were eligible for the experiment, keeping the study focus narrow.

Dr. Nabil, who performed part of this research at The Arizona Heart Institute in Phoenix said that Bobby’s results were extraordinary.

“I didn’t expect to see such improvement with 100 million cells. … Patients will respond differently, but the results are extremely encouraging, even with small doses.”

The procedure has nothing to do with embryonic stem cell research and instead uses cells cultured from the patient’s leg muscle.

“Over the last five years, we have developed a method to transplant the cells by catheter, like an angiogram. The patient can be awake and discharged the next day to go home,” Nabil said.

The researchers have proven they can isolate stem cells from the skeletal muscle and, “that the cells survive and make new muscle in a matter of three months,” he said.

The first two research centers in the United States to receive FDA approval to use 3-D guidance technology were The Arizona Heart Hospital and the Arizona Heart Institute. Allowing doctors to pinpoint the damaged areas of the heart with three-dimensional color mapping, the doctors can then inject myobalsts into the specific areas.

Cardiologists from around the world will visit Washington in February where Nabil will present a conference on the early study results.

Bobby traveled to Phoenix to be tested for the study after Gay’s research led her to Dr. Nabil in August of 2005. He was rejected for the study during an initial test due to a bad sunburn, but he was then accepted during a subsequent test and had a heart catheterization to map his heart.

A biopsy of his thigh muscle was taken in March of 2006. The cell culture was grown during the next four to six weeks in Boston from the marble sized sample of muscle.

His cells grew quickly and by April 6, he was back in Arizona for the injection of 100 million cells on April 7.

He doubled the amount he could walk in six minutes during tests last month. He had photos of his heart taken along with a stress test and an echocardiogram (pictured right). “After lunch I met with Dr. Nabil and Bee (a research coordinator) and they gave me my stats. They were as excited as they could be.

“He’s keeping an eye on me because they can’t figure out how I have so much stamina. I’m healthier than other patients he’s been working with,” Bobby said.

Bobby was referred to Vanderbilt University in 2002 where he met with Dr. Stacie, who was head of the cardiology and heart transplant unit at Vanderbilt. She said that Bobby was, “judged too weak for a heart transplant and his heart’s ejection fraction was down to 18 percent.” The ejection fraction is the rate at which the heart pumps.

55 percent is the average rate that a heart contracts.

His ejection fraction is up to 25 percent since his stem cell injections – a major improvement. “He’s in the early phases of something really big, and I view him as a pioneer,” Stacie said. “What Bobby is doing will help every patient who comes after him.”

Stem Cells Potential Cure for Muscular Dystrophy

With an advance that offers hope to hundreds of children crippled by the rare disease, scientists have successfully used stem cells to treat muscular dystrophy.

In a world first, dogs severely disabled by a canine variety of the condition, were able to walk freely, run, and even jump, after receiving stem cell injections.

Italian researchers said the first trials on children could commence within two years while British experts have described the results as “startling” and as a potential cure.

The most common form of the terminal condition is Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Affecting 100 babies born each year in the UK, the study focused on this particular form of the condition.

Youngsters become entirely incapable of walking by the age of 11 and most experience difficulty before the age of three. The muscle wasting disease is most common in boys.

Sufferers tend to die when they reach their 20’s due to the weakening of the heart and lung muscles. There is no known cure.

To regenerate wasted muscle, the study examined the ability of stem cells – master cells with the potential to develop into other types of cells.

Injections of stem cells were administered to golden retrievers suffering from a condition comparable to the human variety.

After a series of injections, those that had been in the early stages of the disease had not developed any symptoms, while previously crippled animals were able to jump and run.

The effects have opened the door for human trials said the researchers from San Raffaele Scientific Institute in Milan who were writing in the journal Nature.

Treatment of other types of muscular dystrophy and even age-related muscle wasting could be an extended approach.

More ethically acceptable than taking cells from an embryo, the human trials will use adult stem cells taken from the child or teenager.

Professor Dominic, of Imperial College London, said: “This exciting study is a major step forward in demonstrating the potential of stem cells to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a fatal muscle wasting disease.”

Professor George, of the University of London, described the research as “startling in its simplicity and success”.

Dr. Peter, of Nottingham University, said: “The importance of this result is not only in providing a potential cure for a currently incurable condition but also in the use of adult stem cells.

“The use of these cells avoids the controversial use of embryonic stem cells. In addition, the relatively easy delivery of these cells via the blood stream makes this a viable method to treat human patients.”

Dr. Marita, of the Muscular Dystrophy Campaign charity, cautioned that research was still at an early stage.

She added: “If it does prove to be successful in humans, this technology has the potential to develop into an efficient and groundbreaking treatment not only for Duchenne, but also other muscular dystrophies.”

Womb Fluid Cells Used To Create Heart Valves

Offering a revolutionary advance that may be used to repair defective hearts in the future, scientists have grown human heart valves for the first time using stem cells from the fluid that cushions babies in the womb.

In order to have them ready to implant in a baby with heart defects after it is born, the thought is to generate these new valves in the lab while the pregnancy progresses.

The Swiss experiment suggests that people may one day be able to grow their own replacement heart parts — in some cases, even before they’re even born. Recent successes also include growing bladders and blood vessels.

The homegrown heart valves are more resilient and effective than artificial or cadaver valves; they are among several futuristic tissue engineering advances that could advance infant and adult heart treatment.

“This may open a whole new therapy concept to the treatment of congenital heart defects,” said Dr. Simon, a University of Zurich scientist who led the work, which was presented Wednesday at an American Heart Association conference.

In another first, Japanese researchers stated that they have grown new heart valves in rabbits using cells from the animals’ own tissue. It’s the first time replacement heart valves have been created in this manner, said lead author Dr. Kyoko.

“It’s very promising,” University of Chicago cardiologist Dr. Ziyad said of the two studies. “I don’t doubt” that it will be applied one day in humans, he said.

Killing more babies in the United States in the first year than any other birth defects, more than one percent, or 1 million babies, born worldwide each year have heart problems according to the National Institutes of Health.

Using ultrasound tests at about 20 weeks of pregnancy, the heart valve defects can be detected. And according to Simon, treatment with replacement valves would be feasible for at least one-third of afflicted infants have problems.

“It could be quite important if it turns out to work,” said Dr. Robert, a Northwestern University heart valve specialist.

There are drawbacks to conventional procedures for repairing faulty heart valves. Patients with artificial valves must take anti-clotting drugs for life because the valves are prone to blood clots. Repeating open-heart surgeries to replace heart valves is a problem with human cadaver valves or animal valves due to deterioration. And since cadaver and animals valves don’t grow along with the body, this is especially true in children, said Dr. Ziyad.

Valves made from the patient’s own cells are living tissue and might be able to grow with the patient, said Kyoko, a scientist at the National Cardiovascular Center Research Institute in Osaka.

The Swiss procedure has another advantage: Using cells the fetus sheds in amniotic fluid avoids controversy because it doesn’t involve destroying embryos to get stem cells.

“This is an ethical advantage,” Simon said at the meeting.

The experiment began with amniocentesis, which is a prenatal test for birth defects that is often offered to pregnant women aged 35 and older. The amniotic fluid was obtained this way by inserting a needle into the womb during this procedure.

Fetal stem cells were isolated from the fluid, cultured in a lab dish, then placed on a mold shaped like a small ink pen and made of biodegradable plastic. Growing each of the 12 valves created in the experiment took only four to six weeks.

The valves appeared to function normally during lab testes said researchers.

A new two-year experiment is underway involving valve transplants in sheep. Simon says it is the next step.

He and co-researcher Dorthe called their method “a promising, low-risk approach enabling the prenatal fabrication of heart valves ready to use at birth.”

Simon said amniotic stem cells also can be frozen for years and could potentially be used to create replacement parts for aging or diseased valves in adults

Experts say implanting tissue-engineered human valves in human hearts is likely years away, but the research is only preliminary. Despite the experts, the treatment is not as far-fetched as it sounds.

Earlier this year, U.S. scientists used tissue grown from the patient’s own cells to re-engineer seven diseased bladders.

And last year, created from their own skin and vein tissue, two kidney dialysis patients from Argentina received the world’s first tissue-engineered blood vessels.

Dr. John, a Children’s Hospital Boston heart surgeon and tissue engineering pioneer, said scientists are optimistic that this area of research will revolutionize how people with valve disease will be cared for in the future.

According to John, each year more than 250,000 patients worldwide have surgery to replace heart parts.

In one of John’s experiments, sheep were implanted with heart valves fashioned from stem cells harvested from sheep bone marrow. The valves appeared to function normally. Cells harvested from sheep arteries were used in a similar experiment.

Amniotic fluid has the potential to be a richer supply of stem cells in contrast to other sources says Simon.

The real test will be to see whether or not valves created from amniotic fluid will be superior to those made from other cell types said John.

“I’m pretty sure the ball will continue to be advanced down the field,” John said. “We’ll get there one way or the other.”

Heart Transplants Could Become History With The Use of Adult Stem Cells

According to a study on how to repair the effects of cardiac failure, stem cells taken from a patient’s own body could help restore the health of a malfunctioning heart.

To replace damaged heart tissue, scientists have shown that it is possible to grow cardiac stem cells in the laboratory prior to transplanting them back into a patient.

Offering an alternative treatment to a complete heart-transplant operation, the findings demonstrate the prospect of rebuilding cardiac muscle that had been destroyed during a heart attack.

Since a pig’s heart is so similar to the human heart, the experiment was conducted on pigs. But the researchers involved said that clinical trials on people could begin in 12 months’ time.

The technique involves taking a small biopsy – a sample of living heart muscle – that is no bigger than a grain of rice said Professor Eduardo, head of cardiology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.

Using a standard method of accessing the organ through a catheter inserted into an artery in the leg, an infusion of stem cells was put into the animal’s heart. The stem cells were derived from a biopsy and then grown in the laboratory prior to infusion.

“This is a relatively simple method of stem cell extraction that can be used in any community-based clinic, and if further studies show the same kind of organ repair that we see in pigs, it could be performed on an outpatient basis,” Professor Eduardo said.

“Starting with just a small amount of tissue, we demonstrated that it was possible, very soon after a heart attack, to use the healthy parts of the heart to regenerate some of the damaged parts,” he said.

The stem cells in the experiment were labeled with a colored dye so that the scientists could see where they became integrated into the structure of the heart. The cells were cultured for up to a month in the laboratory.

About 10 million cells were injected back into the heart after growing them in the laboratory. The preliminary biopsy extracted about a million stem cells initially. After infusion, the stem cells were still embedded in functioning tissue two months later.

Professor Eduardo said that rather than measuring the physical benefits, the purpose of the experiment was to see whether or not the integration occurred. An examination of the therapeutic qualities of the infusion will form the next stage of the experiment.

“But we have proof of principle, and we are planning to use larger numbers of cells implanted in different sites of the heart to test whether we can restore function as well,” Professor Eduardo said.

“If the answer is yes, we could see the first phase of studies in people in later 2007,” he said.

As the undifferentiated cells of the body, stem cells are capable of forming specialized tissues, such as cardiac muscle.

Taking adult stem cells from a patient’s own heart could provide an alternative to using stem cells taken from a cloned human embryo.

Among other advantages, the transplanted tissue will not be rejected by the body’s immune system since the patient will be using his or her own cells. This will eliminate the need for potentially damaging drugs.

“The goal is to repair heart muscle weakened not only by heart attack but by heart failure, perhaps averting the need for heart transplants,” said Peter of the Hopkins’ Heart Institute.

“By using a patient’s own adult stem cell rather than a donor’s, there would be not risk of triggering an immune response that could cause rejection,” he said.

The results of the study were released yesterday at the American Heart Association’s annual meeting in Chicago.

Three Blind Mice No Longer, Adult Stem Cells Restore Sight

Scientists from the Institutes of Ophthalmology and Child Health (University College London) and Moorfield’s Eye Hospital in London performed retinal stem cell transplants on blind mice in an attempt to restore their vision. The procedure was successful and reversed their condition. Humans blinded by diabetes or age-related macular degeneration have renewed hope as the results of this study could ultimately lead to sight restoration for those individuals.

The journal Nature has published the complete study.

The mice suffered from a type of eye damage which is a common cause of human blindness – photoreceptor loss.

Preventing or delaying the loss of the cone and rod photoreceptors is the existing focus of treatment for individuals who are losing their eyesight. But for people who have already lost their vision, there is no present medical procedure to restore their sight. The study may help blind individuals regain the cone and rod photoreceptors in the retina – and see again.

Connections to the brain are there even when the photoreceptors are gone, so in the world of cell transplant, the retina is considered to be a good candidate. Some of the parts may be missing, but he wiring is still there. Previous trials were unable to develop photoreceptor cells because the cells were too immature.

This time, the cells were set up so that they would develop into photoreceptors. The transplant cells were still immature, but less so than before in the new study. 3-day-old mice provided the cell samples from the retina. The blind mice were then given the cells via transplant directly into the eyes.

Gradually, the mice began to recover their eyesight. Scientists were able to conclude this because when the mice were exposed to light, their pupils contracted.

The scientists aim to find a way of using adult stem cells in order to see whether this can be done with humans. Another method would be to use cells from a fetus that is 3-6 months old; however, the scientists will not pursue this avenue for ethical reasons.

The scientists say that adult retinas have areas with cells that might be usable. They also added that there will be extensive research before and reliable medical procedure is offered to patients.

Stem Cell Treatment Final Hope For Two Dying Children

Read another article about Batten Disease.

Sheldon’s mission has nothing to do with the November 13th municipal election, but he still spent all day yesterday campaigning.

More imperative that winning office, wielding power over people or even a whole city are the stakes for Sheldon and his wife Lori.

Without some sort of miraculous medical intervention, the couple’s two young children are destined to die before they reach their teens. Thus, the couple embarked on a campaign to help save their lives.

Eventually robbing its young victims of their speech, sight and motor abilities, Batten disease is a fatal inherited nervous system disorder that causes the brain to shrink and shut down over time. Time is passing by everyday for five-year-old Jamie and two-and-a-half-year-old Carson. As of now, there is no prevention for it nor a known cure.

The only hope for the two children may be a radical stem cell procedure in China. So Sheldon, who is a millwright, and his wife have been knocking on the doors of corporations in just about every city to find donors to raise the $150,000 needed for treatment.

“We thought, ‘Shoot, that’s pretty expensive,'” Sheldon said of the experimental brain surgery.

“And I’m really nervous about it, I won’t deny it. But it’s the only thing we’ve got left to do. There’s nothing else out there for them.”

Jamie has to be fed through a tube and carried wherever she needs to go, and she cannot see, speak, or move, much on her own anymore.

Carson can still see and move, but he has begun to lose the few words that he had learned thus far in his life, including “mom.”

The couple read about an eight-year-old city boy who underwent the stem cell procedure in Beijing last Wednesday in an issue of The Spectator.

They have spoken by telephone to a British woman whose eight-year-old daughter had the treatment. Spending time visiting a website documenting the progress of young patients at the Beijing hospital is also part of the agenda.

“The pictures we’ve seen of her daughter, she looks more alert,” said Lori.

“And before, she couldn’t walk at all but since the procedure, she’s been able to walk with someone helping her.”

At first, doctors thought Jamie was epileptic when she had seizures just after her third birthday. Lori was eight months pregnant with Carson at the time.

The diagnosis became autism when Jamie stopped making eye contact and began to lose words.

Autism changed to Batten disease when Jamie stopped eating and drinking and stopped walking.

Carson was diagnosed last September.

Another child, Preston, died on January 1st, 2000, at the age of one month. He was born with a heart defect.

Both parents also have children from previous relationships. Sheldon has an eight year old daughter who has been diagnosed with Lupus, a chronic disorder of the immune system. Lori has a son named Zackery who is healthy.

Lori’s aunt Suzy help out with Carson’s and Jamie’s care along with two home care workers

“I try not to dwell on it,” Lori said. “I try not to look at my kids like they’re sick. I know they have a problem but I try not to look at them that way. I try not to treat them any different than any mother treats her children.”

Man Gains Strength and Confidence After Adult Stem Cell Heart Procedure

With the hope of extending his stay in this world a little longer, Dick has finished a journey of a lifetime; a trip to the opposite end of the world and back.

The 70 year old Dick received treatment with a new procedure in which adult stem cells extracted from his own blood were injected directly into his ailing heart to strengthen it. A heart specialist in Bangkok, Thailand, performed the procedure on September 26th. Prior to Dick’s operation, the Bangkok Heart Institute had only done 80 of these operations.

Accompanied by his son Dusti, the two of them stayed in Bangkok for almost four weeks as Dick underwent and recovered from the process.

Gaining strength and in good spirits, Dick returned home on October 10th. He is hoping the operation will give him more energy and extend his life by rejuvenating his heart.

“Things weren’t going well,” says Dick.

He still loves to go inline skating, play golf, and is a life long athlete. But as a child, he was afflicted with rheumatic fever twice. His heart was weakened, and after getting two artificial valves and then a pacemaker during operations in recent years, he suffered a stroke this spring on a golf course in Florida. Dick’s heart was only functioning at about 11 percent of its total capacity by late summer.

“For the last year or so my dad’s been talking about having the stem cell procedure done,” Dusti said. “He had read articles and was fascinated with it. Finally we were to the point where his cardiologist in Springfield said we had done all we can. My dad had had two mechanical valves and a pacemaker put in. Things weren’t going well at all.”

Three out of the four Bangkok doctors that Dick asked to perform the procedure on him, refused, due to his age and frailty. There are two types of procedures done – a direct injection where they are injected directly into the heart, or a coronary procedure where stem cells injections are administered directly into the arteries.

Dick was accepted and approved for the direct injection procedure by a Bangkok cardiologist named Dr. Permyos. The next step was making the 30-hour flight to Bangkok on September 15th.

After blood was drawn and the stem cells harvested, the doctors began administering the injections. It was not easy due to a large quantity of scar tissue surrounding his heart from past surgeries.

“Normally they do 10 injections, but mine took 30,” Dick said. “The operation normally takes about 15 minutes, but for me it was over two hours.”

For now, the Watson family is encouraged by Dick’s continued recovery. Just before the surgery he weighed 96 pounds and now he has gained another 15. Three times a week, he goes to physical therapy sessions in Galesburg. He should have a better idea as to how his body is handling the cells injected into his heart in late December, three months after the surgery. According to his doctors, his heart should be working at a about a 21 percent rate at the three month mark – this would be considered a success.

“We were very optimistic,” Dusti said. “Before we went, he felt he was at the point where he was sitting around at his home with his head down, very tired. We felt he was down to a month or two left to live. He was not doing well at all, but we were very optimistic. They told us there was a 10 percent chance of death from the procedure and that there was no guarantee this procedure will work. But they said of the 80 procedures they’d done, it had been effective on 85 percent on them.”

Now, within a days drive all over the Midwest, Dusti is back at his job fixing pipe organs. The third-generation family company, Watson Pipe Organ Sales and Service, was started by his grandfather in 1929. Dick is retired from the company, but Dusti still works on about 95 organs regularly. The normal routine is starting to settle in. Dusti and his wife Julie, along with their two children met up with Dick and his wife Patti for pizza a week ago.

“I think (this procedure) is remarkable,” Dusti said. “There are other methods of harvesting stem cells but when they come from your own blood, the compatibility issues would be great.”
The procedure is the future of cardiac treatment said Dick’s doctors.

“Though stem cell procedures still are not commonly done, people like me will help change it,” Dick said. “I think it will cut way down on heart transplants.”

Dick’s attitude and faith have been helpful with his recovery.

“He has a very strong faith and always had a very positive attitude,” Dusti said. “He knew thousands of people were praying for him and he was so grateful. Every day I’d read the comments people would post on the Web site. I think a strong faith and a positive attitude are paramount. It definitely helped him. I know as he gets stronger he hopes to share his story with people to help them.”

Amputation Prevented Due to Adult Stem Cells

Suffering from critical limb ischemia, a diabetic faced the loss of a lower limb. But a private hospital in Chennai saved the patient by using bone marrow stem cell treatment.

“The 68-year-old woman, hailing from Andhra Pradesh and suffering from critical ischemia, with a very large ulcer at the left calf and foot and advised amputation of the left lower limb, successfully underwent autologous (one’s own) bone marrow stem cell treatment at the vascular department of Chennai’s Vijaya Hospital,” the hospital’s chief vascular surgeon, Dr. Subrammaniyan, said recently.
New blood vessel formation improved circulation to the affected leg and the women’s ulcer healed in 60 days.

A team of doctors assisted Dr. Subrammaniyan as bone marrow was injected into the affected portion of the woman’s calf muscle after it was tapped under general anesthesia. Due to the patients advanced condition, bypass surgery to salvage the limb was ruled out. The 100ml dose of bone marrow was repeated a month later.

Health granulation started covering the previously ischemic portion as the healing process commenced very rapidly said the doctors. Close to 40 per cent of the foot area, 20 per cent of the calf area and 100 per cent of the lateral wound had been covered with skin. The remaining portion healed successfully and was treated with skin grafting.

“The patient is now able to use her left foot,” he said.

Dr. Subrammaniyan claimed that 20 percent of the country’s population would be diabetic by 2015. The treatment alone would cost about INR 50,000 (about $1,100 U.S. dollars) he added.

Adult Stem Cell Research Provides Breakthrough For Lung Diseases

Patients with lung diseases have hope for new treatments in the future due to an advance in adult stem cell research. Embryonic stem cells have once again been trumped by adult stem cells as the advance shows that they continue to be more ethical and effective. Embryonic cells, on the other hand, have not helped any patients and are only obtained by destroying human embryos.

According to a statement released by the University of Minnesota, for the first time, researchers have been able to coax umbilical cord blood stem cells to differentiate into a type of lung cell.

The cord blood cells differentiated into a type of lung cell called type II alveolar cells. The cells allow air sacs in the lungs to remain open (which allows air to move in and out of the sacs) by secreting surfactant.

Helping to repair the airway after injury is another responsibility the cells have.

“In the future, we may be able to examine cord blood from babies who have lung diseases, such as cystic fibrosis, to do more research to understand how these diseases evolve as well as to develop better medical treatments,” said Dr. David, M.D.

David is the medical director of the Clinical Cell Therapy Lab at the University of Minnesota Medical Center and an assistant professor of lab medicine and pathology.

The discovery is a “step toward developing treatment for various lung diseases” David said.

The journal of Cytotherapy will publish David’s findings in their November 7th, 2006 issue.

Some premature babies are born with underdeveloped lungs and this is because Type II alveolar cells develop late in fetal development. Through a child’s first few years of life, the cells and the air sacs as a whole continue to mature and develop.

The cells could be used as a research aid to enhance our understanding of lung development and disease as the researchers will try to better characterize the cells for the future. Testing for new drugs could also be another potential use for the cells.

David and his team first derived the Multi-Lineage Progenitor Cell from umbilical cord blood during the process of differentiating the lung cells from the cord blood.

This particular stem cell is a precursor cell that can be expanded in culture, then differentiated into different types of tissue representative of all three embryonic lineages, mesoderm, ectoderm, and endoderm.

The MLPC differentiated into the lung cells, an endoderm-type cell, after they were cultured by David and his group in a series of experiments. They were able to find cells that exhibited key markers present in type II alveolar cells by testing them using various methods.

Human Liver Grown From Umbilical Cord Stem Cells

In a breakthrough that will one day supply entire organs for transplants, British scientists have grown the world’s first artificial liver from stem cells.

The technique will be developed to ultimately create a full-size functioning liver. The liver that was grown, dubbed the “mini-liver”, is currently the size of a one pence piece.

The tissue was created from blood taken from babies’ umbilical cords just a few minutes after birth and the Newcastle University researchers called it a “Eureka moment”.

Preventing disasters such as the recent “Elephant Man” drug trial is a possibility since the mini organ can be used to test new drugs. Animal experiments would also be reduced by using the lab-grown liver tissue.

Repairing livers damaged by disease, injury, alcohol abuse, and paracetamol overdose could be possible within the next 5 years.

Entire organ transplants could take place using organs grown in a lab in only 15 years.

Hundreds of Britons are in desperate need of a new liver each year; the breakthrough provides renewed hope for the future.

72 people died waiting for a suitable donor in 2004. And 336 patients are currently waiting for a liver transplant.

The liver tissue is created from stem cells – blank cells capable of developing into different types of tissue – found in blood from the umbilical cord.

The stem cells were successfully separated from the blood removed from the umbilical cord minutes after birth by the Newcastle scientists working in partnership with US experts.

The stem cells were placed inside a piece of electrical equipment developed by NASA to mimic the effects of weightlessness, called a “bioreactor”. The cells multiplied more quickly than usual because they were free from the force of gravity.

The cells were then coaxed into becoming liver tissue using various hormones and chemicals.

So far, tiny pieces of tissue, less than an inch in diameter have been created.

Sections of tissue, large enough for transplant into sick patients will eventually be possible given some time.

The tissue could be used to test new drugs within the next two years say the Newcastle scientists. Prior to animal and human trials, the current method of testing drugs is conducted within a test tube.

However, the testing procedure is not without risk. Six healthy volunteers were left fighting for their lives during Northwick Park drug trials earlier this year.

Before new drugs are given to humans, lab-grown human tissue could be used to determine if there are any flaws in the formula that need to be corrected.

“We take the stem cells from the umbilical cord blood and make small mini-livers,” said Colin, a professor of regenerative medicine at Newcastle University.

“We then give them to pharmaceutical companies and they can use them to test new drugs on.

“It could prevent the situation that happened earlier this year when those six patients had a massive reaction to the drugs they were testing.”

The number of animal experiments could also be reduced with the use of mini-livers.

The artificial liver could be used to directly benefit people’s health within 5 years.

In much the same way a dialysis machine is used to treat kidney failure, the researchers envision sections of artificial liver being used to keep patients needing liver transplants alive.

The liver’s remarkable ability to quickly regenerate itself would be taken advantage of with this technique.

All of the functions that are usually carried out by a patient’s own liver would be taken over by an artificial liver that the patient would be hooked up to.

The patients own liver would be afforded enough resting time to regenerate and repair any damage while the artificial liver would do the work during several “dialysis” sessions a day over a period of several months.

The search for a suitable donor for transplant could also be extended by prolonging the health of the individual patient.

For those whose livers have been damaged beyond repair, it is hoped that it will be possible to create sections of liver suitable for transplant within the next 15 years.

This procedure would eliminate the need for an entire liver transplant in many cases.

Whole livers created in a lab for transplant use would come several years later.

The Newcastle team is the first to create sizeable sections of tissue from stem cells from the umbilical cord. Other researchers have created liver cells from embryonic stem cells.

However, the latter process leads to the death of the embryo. This makes the Newcastle team’s breakthrough incredibly appealing given that it will be ethically acceptable.

The Newcastle researchers foresee a time when cord blood from millions of babies born each year is banked, creating a worldwide donor register for liver dialysis and transplant.

For patients with liver problems, computerized registries could then match the cord blood with their tissue type or immune system to minimize the risk of rejection.

There are approximately a dozen cord blood banks around the UK and more than 11,000 British parents have so far chosen to preserve their children’s cord blood. It is already used to treat leukemia.

“One hundred million children are born around the world every year – that is 100 million different tissue types,” says Professor McGuckin.

“With that number of children being born every year, we should be able to find a tissue for me and you and every other person who doesn’t have stem cells banked.”

Co-researcher Dr. Nico said that their, “dream is that every metropolitan city would have such a bank.”

“If you could type the blood all, you would have to do is dial it up on your computer and fly it from Bristol to Newcastle or even Newcastle to Kuala Lumpur,” he added.

Many liver experts have welcomed the breakthrough.

“The stem cell is going to change the way we deliver treatment,” said Professor Nagy, of London’s Hammersmith Hospital.

Alison, Chief Executive of the British Liver Trust said that, “stem cell technology represents a huge leap forward in treating many diseases. With liver disease in particular it has the potential for tremendous advances.”

A spokesman for UK Transplant, which runs the country’s organ donor register, added that, “there is a lot going on in research that may have benefits for transplant patients. But, in the here and now, the obvious way to help these people is by more people adding their names to the organ donor register and to make their wishes known to their family.”