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Madan
Vasishta 2529 Spring Garden Street Apt 6A Greensboro, NC.
27403 I will appreciate the Disability 2000 and copies of
your esteemed magazine as I want to make sure my presentations
are up do date! Madan.
Engineered
cells may allow the deaf to hear
British
experts say new cells could be in use within 5 years
LONDON
- Within the next five years, scientists may be able to engineer
and replace damaged cells in the ears of deaf people to help
them hear again.
The
engineered cells will work in tandem with cochlear ear implants
to restore hearing to long-term deaf people, Professor Matthew
Holley, an expert on sensory physiology at the University
of Bristol, told a London medical conference on Monday.
Cochlear
implants are small devices that are surgically implanted in
the ear to stimulate the auditory nerve.
They
have helped young children and the newly deaf to hear but
are not suitable for long-term deaf people with very damaged
auditory nerves. One child in every 2,000 is born deaf from
genetic causes.
Scientists
have already used stem cells - master cells that can be trained
to form virtually any cell in the body - to make brain and
muscle cells for transplant.
But
they were not sure whether they would be able to engineer
cells in the ear, a tiny and specialised organ.
'What
we have done is engineer them from the mouse and we have shown
that you can actually make the different cell types in the
ear. Therefore, it is theoretically possible to do that with
human cells,' said Prof Holley.
'The
idea is that you can genetically modify sensory cells from
the embryonic ear and you can then grow them in culture and
switch them to make the necessary cell types.'
The
technique is already being used by British biotechnology company
ReNeuon Holdings, a spin-off from the Institute of Psychiatry,
to regenerate damaged parts of the brain. It plans to begin
human trials later this year.
In
a presentation at Monday's conference on genetics and deafness,
Prof Holley said the ear cells could improve contact between
the cochlear implant and the brain to restore hearing.
'This
opens up the prospect of making implants more effective and
using them on a much wider scale. We may be in a position
to make these advances in three to five years' time.'
--Reuters
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