Israeli innovation saves Romanian girl´s life (YNetNews.Com -Yedioth Internet) Dudi Goldman Published: 05.12.12, 18:40)
Source: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4228036,00.html
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Dying Romanian girl suffering from rare genetic flaw survives thanks
to unique Israeli treatment
After doctors in Romania gave up and declared there was no chance to
cure a local seven year old girl, her mother was advised to go to
Israel to treat the rare genetic flaw, which prevented her daughter’s
body from producing blood cells.
The gamble paid off and saved her daughter’s life, Yedioth Ahronoth
reported.
The mother of the ill child, only identified as B, lives with her
family in a small Romanian village. After her second marriage she
gave birth to a son who was ill with the same syndrome and died at
age seven. After there was no longer a chance to save B’s life in
Romania the family decided to send her to the bone marrow transport
department in Hadassah Ein Kerem Hospital in Jerusalem.
For long months the girl slept in isolation, inside a bubble, in an
attempt to prevent infection from viruses and germs that exist in the
hospital. “Her condition worsened and we decided to undertake a bone
marrow transplant,” said the department chief, Prof. Reuven Or. They
found a donor, the transplant was performed, but sadly the girl’s
condition continued to worsen…Another transplant of bone marrow also
did not succeed, and the doctors were helpless."
Inventor: I was right after all
But at the last moment, Prof. Or remembered that he read about a
revolutionary process developed by the Haifa-based Pluristem
Therapeutics that succeeded in injecting stem cells taken from a
fetus directly into the muscle.
“The problem was that they had not yet done experiments on people,
and there were only reports of success on animals,” Prof. Or
said. “As the girl’s body rejected all possible treatment, and there
were no other possible treatments, we decided as a last step to turn
to Pluristem, which ultimately saved her life.”
This week, B was released from the hospital and next week will return
with her mother to the village in which they live in Romania. The one
who is celebrating the success now is the process developer, Zami
Aberman, father of three and grandfather to three.
“I am just a mechanical engineer who tends to think out of the
scientific paradigm," he said. “They laughed at me at the beginning -
but just look, I was right after all.” (Copyright 2012 © Yedioth
Internet 05/12/12)
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