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Tapping an unlikely source: scientists use mouth membrane to construct corneal-surface transplants.


Japanese researchers have repaired the corneas in four people whose vision had been nearly wiped out by eye disease. But rather than transplant corneal corneal

pertaining to the cornea. See also keratitis, keratopathy.


corneal anomaly
includes microcornea, coloboma, megalocornea, dermoid, congenital opacity.

corneal black body
see corneal sequestrum (below).
 tissue, the scientists fashioned a new outer layer for the damaged corneas from bits of tissue taken from each patient's own mouth. More than a year later, the transplants are providing much enhanced sight for the patients.

Cornea cornea: see eye.  replacement is the foremost success story of the transplant era, thanks largely to the tissue's characteristics. Being transparent, the cornea lacks blood cells blood cells,
n.pl the formed elements of the blood, including red cells (erythrocytes), white cells (leukocytes), and platelets (thrombocytes).


blood cells

See erythrocyte and leukocyte. Platelets are classed separately.
 and so doesn't prompt immune rejection. Still, cornea transplants from dead donors have thrived only when a recipient has a reserve of corneal 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 , which reside where the cornea meets the white of the eye.

Normally, these cells continuously renew a clear layer over the rest of the cornea--a shield over a shield. While inadequate to rebuild a damaged cornea from scratch, lingering corneal stem cells can often team with a transplanted cornea to maintain the outer layer and preserve sight.

However, a person whose outer corneal layer corneal layer
n.
See stratum corneum.
 is severely damaged by heat, chemicals, or certain diseases may have no stem cells in reserve. In these patients, corneal transplants typically fail. To help this group, ophthalmologist ophthalmologist /oph·thal·mol·o·gist/ (of?thal-mol´ah-jist) a physician who specializes in ophthalmology.

oph·thal·mol·o·gist
n.
A physician who specializes in ophthalmology.
 Kohji Nishida of Osaka University Medical School and his colleagues turned to a stem cell that forms the membrane that lines the mouth.

The researchers collected tiny sections of membrane from inside the cheeks of four people who had extensive damage in both eyes from complications of a rare ailment called Stevens-Johnson syndrome. The tissues were cultured in the lab, where they grew into sheets about 25 millimeters across.

After removing the damaged outer-corneal layer of one eye of each patient, the scientists transplanted a membrane sheet onto the remaining corneal tissue. In all four people, the transplants immediately took hold, growing across the cornea's surface, the researchers report in the Sept. 16 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. .

All the patients had started with vision of 20/2,000 or worse. Within 10 weeks after surgery, the transplants restored vision to 20/300, 20/100, 20/50, and 20/25 in the transplanted eyes. The improvements remain 14 months after surgery.

Attempts to replace corneal stem cells with similar cells from a patient's good eye or from that of a related donor have shown promise, but many have failed after a few years, says ophthalmologist Ivan R. Schwab Ivan Roy Schwab is a professor of ophthalmology at the University of California Davis School of Medicine.

Dr. Schwab completed his undergraduate degree at West Virginia University and received his M.D. from the West Virginia University School of Medicine. Dr.
 of the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905.  Medical Center in Sacramento. "While I applaud the [new] research," he says, 'I'm only cautiously optimistic."

Meanwhile, scientists don't know why the oral stem cells might take on the role of corneal stem cells. Schwab suspects that cells and signaling molecules that the lower corneal layers naturally send to the surface influence the transplanted cells. It may be an example "of the body talking to itself," he says.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Seppa, Nathan
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:9JAPA
Date:Sep 18, 2004
Words:474
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