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Stemming incontinence: injected muscle cells restore urinary control.


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  taken from a woman's arm and used to rebuild a pivotal control muscle in her urinary tract can relieve incontinence, medical researchers report. For women, this replenishing of muscle cells offers "a revolutionary therapy," claims radiologist Ferdinand Frauscher of the Medical University of Innsbruck It is currently the largest education facility in the Austrian Bundesland of Tirol and third largest in Austria according to student population, behind Vienna University and Graz University.  in Austria.

Typical urinary incontinence Urinary Incontinence Definition

Urinary incontinence is unintentional loss of urine that is sufficient enough in frequency and amount to cause physical and/or emotional distress in the person experiencing it.
 in women, called stress incontinence, results from weakness in the sphincter muscle that seals the urethra urethra (yrē`thrə), canal in most mammals that carries urine from the bladder to the outside of the body; in the male it also serves as a genital duct.  at the base of the bladder. Age, childbirth, and other factors can make sphincter contraction less effective. Treatments such as surgery and implantable devices that control urine flow can be effective, but they both require hospitalization and the devices can be cumbersome.

The Austrian team's new technique is less likely to work in men, Frauscher says, because male incontinence often turns up after prostate surgery, and the scar tissue would be likely to prevent stem cells from rebuilding the muscle.

To repair the sphincter muscle, Frauscher and his colleagues removed tissue from the left biceps muscles of each of 20 women. The women, all of whom had urinary incontinence, ranged from 36 to 84 years old.

In the lab, the researchers extracted two types of muscle stem cells from the tissue. One type, cells that generate myoblasts, enables muscles to contract. The other type, fibroblasts Fibroblasts
A type of cell found in connective tissue; produces collagen.

Mentioned in: Skin Grafting
, forms connective tissue.

After cultivating the stem cells for 6 weeks, Frauscher's team had about 50 million of each type for each patient. To place the cells, they threaded an ultrasound probe up each patient's urethra. Using ultrasound imagery to provide anatomical guidance, the team's physicians then inserted a needle through the abdomen and injected the myoblasts into the sphincter and the fibroblasts into the urethral urethral

pertaining to or emanating from urethra.


urethral agenesis, urethral atresia
failure of development of all or part of the urethra: characterized by complete urine retention. A rare cause of neonatal uremia.
 wall.

Many patients noticed improved urine control within a day, and 18 of the 20 had normal control a year after the operation, Frauseher and his colleagues reported last week at a meeting of the Radiological Society of North America The Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), founded in 1915, has the purpose to "promote and develop the highest standards of radiology and related sciences through education and research".  in Chicago.

No patients needed to be hospitalized, and none experienced complications following the procedure, Frauscher says. Ultrasound tests indicated that most sphincter muscles treated in the study had thickened thick·en  
tr. & intr.v. thick·ened, thick·en·ing, thick·ens
1. To make or become thick or thicker: Thicken the sauce with cornstarch. The crowd thickened near the doorway.

2.
 and now contract more effectively, he adds.

Vikram Dogra of the University, Hospitals of Cleveland expressed surprise at how rapidly the stem cells reduced incontinence. He calls the recent work "a good start," noting that long-term success "remains to be seen."

Although the new study didn't directly compare the stem cell procedure to conventional surgery, the preliminary evidence suggests that the two treatments are about equally effective, at least in the short term, Dogra says, and the new method would avoid a hospital stay and reduce the risk of infection.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Harder, B.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:4EUAU
Date:Dec 11, 2004
Words:438
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