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STEM CELLS FIGHT LUPUS
We've all heard a lot about stem cells. In what's being called a huge development, researchers have now found stem cells can wipe out lupus in certain patients.

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Stem Cells Fight Lupus Edjuana Ross can once again enjoy shopping -- after beating lupus. She battled the disease for more than a decade.

Edjuana Ross
Had lupus
"Extreme joint pain, and every single day, sick and tired."

Lupus attacked her immune system and scarred her face. It damaged her heart and caused three strokes. The treatment was almost as hard as the disease. Cortisone caused her to gain 100 pounds!

Edjuana Ross
"It took a lot for me just to get out of bed."

Edjuana's doctor, Richard burt from Northwestern memorial hospital, recommended an adult stem-cell transplant. The goal? To fix her immune system.

Richard Burt, MD
Immunotherapist
Northwestern University
Northwestern Medical Faculty Foundation
Chicago, IL
"What we're doing is rebooting the computer. So the computer's gone on the blitz. And we've rebooted it and now it's working."

First, patients have blood removed to harvest the stem cells. Next, chemotherapy destroys the existing, "broken" immune system. Patients are then given stem cells to build a new immune system.

Richard Burt, MD
"The patients we've treated, many of them have their lives back."

In Doctor Burt's study, about half of patients who have the procedure are now lupus-free. Edjuana is one of them.

Edjuana Ross
"It changed my life and it made my life better, and it made me appreciate a lot of other things."

Slimmed down and feeling better, Edjuana is now looking forward to her future -- one free of lupus.

The treatment is now the subject of testing for individuals with other diseases -- like MS and diabetes. However, risks can include possible blood transfusions, infection, nausea and the risk of becoming sterile.





HEALTHY FOR LIFE EXTRA



BACKGROUND: Lupus is a chronic inflammatory disease that can affect various parts of the body, especially the skin, joints, blood, and kidneys. The body's immune system normally makes proteins called antibodies to protect the body against viruses, bacteria and other foreign materials. In lupus, these antibodies mistake normal cells in the body's tissues for foreign bodies and attack them. For most people, lupus is a mild disease affecting only a few organs. For others, it may cause serious and even life-threatening problems. The exact cause of lupus is unknown. More than 16,000 Americans develop lupus each year. According to the Lupus Foundation of America, between 500,000 and1.5 million Americans are living with lupus -- mostly women. Three-times as many African-American women develop lupus and die from it than white women. They also tend to develop the disease at a younger age and to develop more serious complications. Lupus is also more common in women of Hispanic, Asian and Native American descent.

SYMPTOMS: Although lupus symptoms vary widely among affected individuals., her are some tell tale signs: achy or swollen joints, persistent fever of more than 100 degrees, prolonged or extreme fatigue, skin rashes, including a butterfly shaped rash across the cheeks and nose, pain in the chest upon deep breathing, anemia, excessive protein in the urine, sensitivity to sun or ultraviolet light, hair loss, abnormal blood clotting problems, fingers turning white and/or blue in the cold, seizures, and mouth or nose ulcers lasting longer than two weeks.

TREATMENT: For the vast majority of people with lupus, effective treatment can minimize symptoms, reduce inflammation, and maintain normal body functions. Medications are often prescribed for people with lupus, depending on which organs are involved, and the severity of involvement. Commonly prescribed medications include: nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), acetaminophen, corticosteroids, antimalarials, and immunomodulating drugs. With current methods of therapy, between 80 percent and 90 percent of people with non-organ threatening lupus can look forward to a normal lifespan.

STEM CELLS: For patients with severe lupus, affecting organs like the heart, treatment may not do any good. Now, researchers are using stem cells to treat life-threatening, treatment-resistant lupus. Patients undergo a transplant of blood stem cells originated from their own marrow. The lupus then actually goes into remission. Of the 50 patients involved in the study out of Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, 50 percent were disease-free after five years. Overall, there was an 84-percent five-year survival rate. Rheumatologist Walter Barr, M.D., says, "Fortunately, the majority of patients with lupus can be successfully managed with our available medical therapies. However, for the very severely ill subset of lupus patients who have failed conventional therapies, stem cell transplantation provides a promising new alternative." The stem cell transplant literally saved the lives of some of the patients in the study. The procedure costs about $100,000 ...but insurance will sometimes cover it.

FOR MORE INFORMATION


Richard Burt, MD
Physician Referral
240 East Ontario St.
Ste 450
Chicago 60611
(321) 926-8400
rburt@northwestern.edu



Copyright © 2006 Ivanhoe Broadcast News, Inc.


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