Research Will Focus on Finding Cures for Childhood Myelin Disorders
SANTA BARBARA, Calif., Sept. 20 /PRNewswire/ -- With funding provided by Children's Neurobiological Solutions Foundation (CNS) and the A-T Children's Project, Dr. Steve Goldman, MD, PhD, of the University of Rochester will be conducting studies needed to prepare for a clinical trial to repair the pediatric brain in one area of severe neurological disorders.
Dr. Goldman, Professor of Neurology and Neurosurgery at the University of Rochester Medical Center, was awarded the grant to fund his project entitled "Perinatal Implantation of Human Glial Progenitor Cells as a Treatment Strategy for Childhood Myelin Disorders." The purpose of this study is to analyze specific brain cells, known as oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) to learn more about their potential to treat myelin disorders in children.
Myelin, which is critical in the development of brain and spinal development, helps send impulses between cells. When the myelin sheath that surrounds cells does not form properly or is lost, brain and spinal function is severely inhibited. OPCs are known as a neural precursor cells; they give rise to oligodendrocyte which then produces the brain's myelin. Most cognitive myelin disorders are terminal, and there is still no effective therapy for such a disease.
Dr. Goldman and his team of researchers have established methods for isolating OPCs from human brain tissue and have noted that these cells are capable of widespread myelination of recipient brains. Dr. Goldman will use the funds he has been awarded to treat congenital myelin disorders in mice with three severe childhood diseases (Pelizaeus-Merzbacher Disease, Krabbe's Disease, and Tay-Sachs Disease) using OPCs which will be delivered at birth. The University of Rochester researchers hope, in the end, that their research will result in a safe and sound therapeutic option for children with severe neurological disorders.
Children's Neurobiological Solutions Foundation (http://www.cnsfoundation.org/) is a national non-profit organization whose mission is to expand knowledge about the developing brain through cutting edge, collaborative research and to expedite the creation of effective treatments and therapies for children across the broad spectrum of neurodevelopmental abnormalities, injuries to the nervous system, and related neurological problems. CNS also provides families and health care providers with user-friendly access to state-of-the-art information and education to support their decision-making processes.
For more information, visit CNS on the web at: http://www.cnsfoundation.org/ or call (866) 267-5580.
CONTACT: Children's Neurobiological Solutions Foundation, +1-866-267-5580
Web site: http://www.cnsfoundation.org/
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