Neil Riordan, PhD will Present “Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the Treatment of Autoimmune Diseases” at the 22nd Annual World Congress on Anti-Aging, Regenerative and Aesthetic Medicine at the Gaylord Palms Hotel in Orlando, Florida as…
Neil Riordan, PhD Presents at American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine’s 22nd Annual World Congress on Anti-Aging, Regenerative and Aesthetic Medicine in Orlando, May 15
Medistem Panama Awarded ISO 9001 International Global Certification
Awarded this:
CERTIFICATION
for the Quality Management System of:
MEDISTEM PANAMA
Offices included in the scope:
Ciudad del Saber, Edificio # 221, piso # 2,
Clayton, Ancón
Panama City, Republic of Panama
The scope includes the following activities:
- Isolation of stem cells from adipose tissue(ADSC) and mononuclear cells from bone marrow.
- Expansion and harvest of mesenchymal stem cells from umbilical cord, adipose tissue and its derivatives.
ISO 9001:2008
Valid from 19, June 2016
Granted from Panama 20, June 2013
Antonio Martin
Director
Stem cell treatment in Panama benefits autistic Glenburn youth

As Kenny Kelley of Glenburn awaits an infusion of adult stem cells at a Panamanian city in November 2011, a Panamanian physician holds two syringes containing the cells. Autistic since birth, Kenny has undergone several such infusions since 2009.
By Dale McGarrigle, Of The Weekly Staff
Bangor Daily News
Posted Sept. 14, 2012, at 12:17 p.m.
GLENBURN — Now Kenny can read.
Kenny Kelley can now also do many things that other 11-year-olds take for granted. According to his mother, Marty Kelley, that’s because injections of adult stem cells, taken from umbilical cord blood, have helped Kenny to shake off the shackles of autism, with which he was first diagnosed at age 2.
“The results from stem cells can be seen everyday in his amazing thoughts and vast imagination!!,” Marty Kelley wrote in her blog, http://www.kensjourneytorecovery.blogspot.com/. “How lucky we are for such a miracle treatment!”
Autism is a brain disorder found in children that interferes with their ability to communicate and relate to other people. Autism affects 1 in 88 children and 1 in 54 boys. What causes autism has not been established.
Stem cells are the body’s internal repair system and can fix and replace damaged tissue. These unspecialized cells are a blank slate, capable of transforming into muscle cells, blood cells, and brain cells. Stem cells can also renew themselves by dividing and giving rise to more stem cells.
Stem cells taken from umbilical cord blood, such as Kenny received, are the least likely to be rejected.
The stem-cell treatment is the latest effort by Marty and her husband, Donald, to find ways to improve Kenny’s life. The Kelleys also have two other children: Philip, 13, and Caroline-Grace, 6.
First was in-home treatment in a mild hyperbaric oxygen chamber, three hours a day equaling 800 hours over the course of two years, beginning when Kenny was 5 ½ to 6 years old. This was coupled with a Specific Carbohydrate Diet, which restricts the use of complex carbohydrates and eliminates refined sugar and all grains and starch from the diet.
“We saw results right away with the chamber,” Marty recalled in a recent interview. “He made slow gains, such as tracing the alphabet.”
Then the Kelleys discovered on the Internet the story of Matthew Faiella, a New York boy who has been making great strides after stem-cell treatment in Panama for his autism. They decided to follow suit.
Why take this path, when there has been little scientific research into the use of stem cells to treat autism?
“We were willing to do it as long as it’s safe, and I’ve researched this,” Marty said. “Stem cells are very natural. I’m not a scientist, but I care much more than any scientist would, and I would never do anything to hurt my baby.”
When Kenny went for his first stem-cell treatment in July 2009, at the Stem Cell Institute in Costa Rica, Marty assessed the condition of her then 8-year-old son in her blog http://www.kensjourneytorecovery.blogspot.com:
• Behavior: Screaming, aggressive, giggles/silly/inappropriate with his brother or new people, running around, destructive, uncooperative while being dressed, hitting, not potty trained (still wearing diapers).
• Speech: Vocabulary of a 4-year-old. He can talk, but it is difficult for strangers to understand him. Answers some questions, but he does not understand or like why, when, or how questions.
• Physical: A body the size of a 5-year-old boy.
Kenny has had stem-cell treatments in 2009, 2010, and May and November of 2011. The repeated treatments are required because adult stems cells will work repairing cells for a period of time, about six months, then leave the body.
“When I think I’ve seen his skills level out, we’ll go for another treatment,” explained Marty.
What are some of the changes that Kenny has undergone in the past three years? First came the ability to read and clearer speech.
“When he got back, he just picked up a book and started reading, and I could understand every word,” said Mike Hughes, Marty’s brother. “It was like a light just turned on.”
Other gains: Kenny is talking about past events for the first time, and he’s conversational now. He expresses opinions and looking ahead to the future. He was finally potty trained at age 9. He’s doing math now. He’s calmed down considerably. This summer, he went to summer camp, staying overnight for three nights, in the same cabin as Philip.
“There’s no doubt in my mind how much he’s progressing,” Marty said. “We’re working on catching up right now, and how do we best do that?”
The costly treatment, which isn’t covered by insurance, hasn’t been approved yet by the Food and Drug Administration. Despite the fact that the stem cells come from the human body, the cells are considered a new drug by the FDA and are subject to stringent research and testing that can take years.
So this leaves the Kelleys and others like them seeking stem-cell treatment, going overseas to get it.
“It’s just a matter of how much are you going to spend,” Marty said. “There’s no treatment here that was going to do this much for him.”
Immune Cells Killing Stem Cells and Stem Cells Killing Immune Cells
Knight et al. J Neurol Sci.
Several studies have demonstrated that stem cells are useful in the treatment of multiple sclerosis. The Cellmedicine clinic published previously in collaboration with the University of California San Diego that 3 patients treated with their own fat derived stem cells entered remission. Other studies are ongoing, including a study at the Cleveland Clinic in which bone marrow stem cells differentiated into mesenchymal stem cells are being administered into patients with multiple sclerosis. Unfortunately the mechanisms by which therapeutic effects occur are still largely unknown. One general school of thought believes that stem cells are capable of differentiating into damaged brain cells. The other school of thought believes that stem cells are capable of producing numerous growth factors, called trophic factors, that mediate therapeutic activity of the stem cells. Yet another school of thought propagates the notion that stem cells are merely immune modulatory cells. Before continuing, it is important to point out that stem cell therapy for multiple sclerosis involving autologous hematopoietic transplants is different than what we are discussing here. Autologous (your own) hematopoietic stem cell therapy is not based on regenerating new tissues, but to achieve the objective of extracting cells from a patients, purifying blood making (hematopoietic) stem cells, destroying the immune system of the recipient so as to wipe out the multiple sclerosis causing T cells, and subsequently readministering the patient’s own cells in order to regenerate the immune system. This approach, which was made popular by Dr. Richard Burt from Northwestern University.
In order to assess mechanisms of how stem cells work in multiple sclerosis it is necessary to induce the disease in animals. The most widely used animal model of multiple sclerosis is the experimental allergic encephalomyelitis model. This disease is induced in female mice that are genetically bred to have a predisposition to autoimmunity. These animals are immunized with myelin basic protein or myelin oligodendrocyte protein. Both of these proteins are components of the myelin sheath that protects the axons. In multiple sclerosis immune attack occurs against components of the myelin sheath. Therefore immunizing predisposed animals to components of the myelin sheath induces a disease similar to multiple sclerosis. The EAE model has been critical in development of some of the currently used treatments for multiple sclerosis such as copaxone and interferon.
Original studies have demonstrated that administration of bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells protects mice from development of EAE. This protection was associated with regeneration on oligodendrocytes as well as shifts in immune response. Unfortunately these studies did not decipher whether the protective effects of the stem cells were mediated by immune modulation, regeneration, or a combination of both. Other studies have shown that MSC derived from adipose tissue had a similar effect. One interesting point of these studies was that the stem cell source used was of human origin and the recipient mice were immune competent. One would imagine that administration of human cells into a mouse would result in rapid rejection. This did not appear to be the case since the human cells were found to persist and also to differentiated into human neural tissues in the mouse. One mechanism for this “immune privilege” of MSC is believed to be their low expression of immune stimulatory molecules such as HLA antigens, costimulatory molecules (CD80/86) and cytokines capable of stimulating inflammatory responses such as IL-12. Besides not being seen by the immune system, it appears that MSC are involved in actively suppressing the immune system. In one study MSC were demonstrated to naturally home into lymph nodes subsequent to intravenous administration and “reprogram” T cells so as to suppress delayed type hypersensitive reactions. In those experiments scientists found that the mechanism of MSC-mediated immune inhibition was via secretion of nitric oxide. Other molecules that MSC use to suppress the immune system include soluble HLA-G, Leukemia Inhibitor Factor (LIF), IL-10, interleukin-1 receptor antagonist, and TGF-beta. MSC also indirectly suppress the immune system by secreting VEGF which blocks dendritic cell maturation and thus prevents activation of mature T cells.
While a lot of work has been performed investigating how MSC suppress the immune system, relatively little is known regarding if other types of stem cells, or immature cells, inhibit the immune system. This is very relevant because there are companies such as Stem Cells Inc that are using fetally-derived progenitor cells therapeutically in a universal donor fashion. There was a paper from an Israeli group demonstrating that neural progenitors administered into the EAE model have a therapeutic effect that is mediated through immune modulation, however, relatively little work has been performed identifying the cell-to-cell interactions that are associated with such immune modulation.
Recently a paper by Knight et al. Cross-talk between CD4(+) T-cells and neural stem/progenitor cells. Knight et al. J Neurol Sci. 2011 Apr 12 attempted to investigate the interaction between immune cells and neural stem cells and vice versa. The investigators developed an in vitro system in which neural stem cells were incubated with CD 4 cells of the Th1 (stimulators of cell mediated immunity), Th2 (stimulators of antibody mediated immunity) and Th17 (stimulators of inflammatory responses) subsets. In order to elucidate the impact of the death receptor (Fas) and its ligand (FasL), the mouse strains lpr and gld, respectively, were used.
The investigators showed that Th1 type CD4 cells were capable of directly killing neural stem cells in vitro. Killing appeared to be independent of Fas activation on the stem cells since gld derived T cells or lpr derived neural stem cells still participated in killing. Interestingly, neural stem cells were capable of stimulating cell death in Th1 and Th17 cells but not in the Th2 cells. Killing was contact dependent and appeared to be mediated by FasL expressed on the neural stem cells. This is interesting because some other studies have demonstrated that FasL found on hematopoietic stem cells appears to kill activated T cells. In the context of hematopoietic stem cells this phenomena may be used to explain clinical findings that transplanting high numbers of CD34 cells results in a higher engraftment, mediated in part by killing of recipient origin T cells.
The finding that neural stem cells express FasL and selectively kill inflammatory cells (Th1 and Th17) while sparing anti-inflammatory cells (Th2) indicates that the stem cells themselves may be therapeutic by exerting an immune modulatory effect. One thing that the study did not do is to see if differentiated neural stem cells would mediate the same effect. In other words, it is essentially to know if the general state of cell immaturity is associated with inhibition of inflammatory responses, or whether this is an activity specific to neurons. As mentioned above, previous studies have demonstrated that mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are capable of eliciting immune modulation through a similar means. Specifically, MSC have been demonstrated to stimulate selective generation of T regulatory cells. This cell type was not evaluated in the current study, however some activities of Th2 cells are shared with Treg cells in that both are capable of suppressing T cytotoxic cell activation. In the context of explaining biological activities of stem cell therapy studies such as this one stimulate the believe that stem cells do not necessarily mediate their effects by replacing damaged cells, but by acting on the immune system. Theoretically, one of the reasons why immature cells are immune modulatory in the anti-inflammatory sense may be because inflammation is associated with oxidative stress. Oxidative stress is associated with mutations. Conceptually, the body would want to preferentially protect the genome of immature cells given that the more immature the cells are, the more potential they have for stimulation of cancer. Mature cells have a limited self renewal ability, whereas immature cells, given they have a higher potential for replication are more likely to accumulate genomic damage and neoplastically transform.