October 2017 Discover

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October 2017^ DISCOVER^37

MARK RIGHTMIRE


across the street and navigate her
cozy art deco-style apartment with
surprising nonchalance. This year,
Macdonald received another stem
cell shot, this time in her right eye,
and she is hopeful her vision will
continue to improve. “This has
made my whole life brighter,” she
says, “and I mean that literally.”
For Henry Klassen, an oph-
thalmologist at the University of
California, Irvine, and the director
of the retinitis pigmentosa project,
the experiment is the fruition of a
dream he’s had since his student
days. While in graduate school in
the mid-1980s, he transplanted
retinal tissue into a newborn rat
with impaired vision. After the
rat grew to adulthood, he shined
a light over the graft site. The ani-
mal’s pupil constricted. “The first
time it happened, I almost fell off
my chair,” Klassen recalls. “The
only way the rat could see the light
was through the transplant.”
But it was another three decades
before Klassen — who has used
retinal progenitor cells to restore
vision in mice, cats, dogs and
pigs — could conduct human tri-
als involving retinitis pigmentosa.
While no one in the study has fully
regained sight, quite a few of them,
like Macdonald, have experienced
improvements in their visual acu-
ity. “Even if we could slow down
the progression and postpone it so
they never actually go completely
blind,” Klassen says, “that alone is
significant.”

RELIEF FOR STROKE PATIENTS
In recent years, stem cell research has made such dra-
matic leaps that what once seemed like science fiction
is becoming reality. In a paper published in June 2016,
Canadian scientists revealed that a combination of
chemotherapy, which wipes out the patient’s diseased
immune system, and stem cells, which regenerate the
immune system, halted or lessened symptoms of mul-
tiple sclerosis.
The trial, which began in 2001 and spanned 13
years, involved 24 people with a severe form of MS.
During that period, the positive results endured. One
patient, who could barely walk or feed herself before
treatment, has been symptom-free and now drives,
kayaks, dances and skis. Still, experts sounded a
cautionary note because the chemo can be toxic: One

patient died of liver failure, and a second had serious
liver complications.
In another paper published in June 2016, a Stanford
team led by Steinberg proclaimed that injecting adult
stem cells directly into the brains of 18 stroke patients
substantially restored motor function in many cases.
In the study, a small hole was drilled into the skull of
the patient, who was awake and under local anesthesia.
Stem cells were injected into regions bordering the
damaged brain area. Stroke recovery usually plateaus
after six months. After the experimental treatment, the
patients’ improvements in daily-activity skills contin-
ued for up to three years after their strokes.
One of the people in the study was a 71-year-old
woman, paralyzed on her left side. After the procedure,
she lifted her left arm at Steinberg’s instruction. “I was
astonished,” Steinberg recalls, sitting in his office at

Sonia Coontz of Long Beach, Calif., received stem cell treatment two years ago after
a severe stroke impacted movement in her right arm and leg and garbled her speech.
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