News, 15 July 2003
Researchers at Tommy's Hospital in London are to carry out a study into
the possible benefits of giving vitamin supplements to pregnant women
who are at risk of pre-eclampsia. The condition causes a pregnant
woman's blood pressure to rise to dangerous levels and is thought to
affect up to 25 thousand women in the UK each year. According to a BBC
report, pre-eclampsia killed 50 babies in England and Wales in 2001 and
caused 119 stillbirths. However, an initial study found that taking
vitamin supplements early in pregnancy halved the rates of
pre-eclampsia in high-risk women. Professor Lucilla Poston, one of the
researchers, said: "Finding a way of preventing pre-eclampsia could
save many lives, both of babies and mothers, as well as dramatically
reducing health costs." [
BBC, 15 July]
Research published in this month's edition of Stem Cells has found that
brain stem cells are immune privileged, meaning that they do not
trigger an immune response from the recipient, alleviating the need for
tissue typing in transplants of stem cells from the central nervous
system. Ultimately, this could mean improving transplants to treat
diseases of the eye, brain and spinal cord. "These findings are very
exciting," said Michael Young, the author of the study and assistant
professor at Harvard Medical School. "Though we suspected brain stem
cells might be protected in this way, this is the first documented
evidence." [
Science Blog, 15 July]
Immature frog eggs could be used to rejuvenate adult stem cells,
according to a report in Nature. John Gurdon and his team at Cambridge
University, hope to isolate molecules in the amphibian nucleus and use
them to re-programme adult cells so as to yield a limitless supply of
donor-matched stem cells that could then be used to treat diseases such
as multiple sclerosis. [
Nature, 15 July]
The family of a Florida woman, who has been reliant on tube
feeding for 13 years, has appealed to state governor Jeb Bush to
prevent her from being starved to death. Terri Schiavo collapsed at her
home with what was initially thought to be a potassium imbalance. She
is able to breathe unaided but needs artificial nutrition to stay
alive. According to her family, she responds to them through head
movements, smiles and tears, but her husband and guardian argued that
she would not want to be kept on life support. The courts have ruled in
his favour, but the family claims that he is motivated by a $700,000
medical insurance policy and the desire to marry another woman. They
have also requested that an investigation be held into the reasons for
Terri's collapse. [
LifeNews.com, 14 July]
Church officials have urged the Slovak president to veto the recently
passed legislation liberalising the abortion law. The coalition
government is divided over the new law and a cabinet crisis has been
declared, with the Christian Democrats (KDH) accusing the New Citizen's
Alliance (ANO) of breaking the coalition agreement under which none of
the four ruling partners are permitted to unite in opposition against
another. If President Schuster vetoes the law, another vote will have
to be held and an absolute majority reached for it to be passed. [
The Slovak Spectator, 14 July]
In an article published in The Scotsman, a woman who has undergone six
IVF treatments at the controversial London Fertility Centre has
criticised the way she was treated, in particular by Professor Ian
Craft. Slavica Dmitrasinovic claims that they lost embryos, threatened
to confiscate her passport when payment was slow and failed to notice a
serious fertility problem which resulted in her being put through three
treatment cycles that were costly and useless. She says that the
experience made her suicidal and has brought her marriage to the verge
of collapse. "I will never get over how appallingly I have treated,"
she said. "I hope no one else suffers as I have." [
The Scotsman, 14 July]
Scientists at Aberdeen University have warned that men who smoke
cannabis could be damaging their fertility by reducing the amount of
testosterone produced by the body. [Metro, 15 July]
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2012