Healing the heart from within.While some scientists work toward repairing injured hearts with stem cells stem cells, unspecialized human or animal cells that can produce mature specialized body cells and at the same time replicate themselves. Embryonic stem cells are derived from a blastocyst (the blastula typical of placental mammals; see embryo), which is very young , others wonder if they can coax human hearts into fixing themselves. After all, some nonmammalian animals regenerate heart tissue (SN: 11/1/97, p. 280). Challenging the dogma that human-heart cells don't divide, a research group reported in the June 7 NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE The New England Journal of Medicine (New Engl J Med or NEJM) is an English-language peer-reviewed medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world. that such cells proliferate in people who have suffered a heart attack, albeit not enough to heal the organ (SN: 7/7/01, p. 13). Now, through studies of a mouse strain with unusual powers to regenerate tissue, scientists have found that some mammals can indeed heal their own hearts. Several years ago, Ellen Heber-Katz Ellen Heber-Katz is professor at the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia. Education
Heber-Katz and her colleagues continue to look for genetic differences in the mice that might be behind the tissue regeneration. They're also finding hints that the rodents can regenerate nerve cells and bone. |
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