Stem Cell Therapy for dogs is a reality and will allow dogs crippled by arthritis to live a normal life!
By BRIAN ROONEY and PETER IMBER BURBANK, Calif., Jan. 9, 2008
Meet Hunter, a golden retriever with a serious problem: severe arthritis in his left hip is so painful that he can't run or leap like a healthy dog.
"His leg, it's almost like it's lifeless and it'll drift back," referring to Hunter's tendency to favor his right leg.
X-rays show that Hunter has hip dysplasia, a common ailment in purebred dogs that causes the ball of the leg bone to loosen from its socket, causing painful wearing on the joint.
"You can see that the edges of the bone are very worn away. They're not nearly as smooth," said veterinarian Jerry Bausman.
Facing the possibility of a shortened life for Hunter, the Rihas were considering a $10,000 hip replacement when the doctors offered something new, different and much less expensive. For only about $2,500, they could treat Hunter with his own stem cells, the healing and regenerative cells that live in both humans and animals.
"This is an excellent in-between that may mean he may never need a total hip," Bausman said.
Making Strides Without Red Tape
In the race to perfect "regenerative medicine," stem cell therapy for animals is ahead of treatment for humans because it is not so strictly regulated. It's not experimental -- it's here.
And while the debate rages over the ethics of embryonic stem cell research, doctors have made stunning progress with "adult" stem cells recovered from body fat.
They are less powerful than embryonic cells, but they don't require the destruction of an embryo. There are no side effects and no problems with rejection, because the patient is also the cell donor.
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