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Healing Scar Tissue: Hope for Spinal Cord Injuries
Reported November 05, 2009
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Researchers have
developed a new enzyme to break down dense scar tissue that builds up on the
spinal cord after central nervous system damage.
Chrondroitinase ABC (chABC) is an enzyme that must be applied to damaged
areas after an injury to see degrade of scar tissue. In the past, chABC
functioned poorly inside the body because it was sensitive to temperature.
The enzyme would lose half of its activity within one hour and the rest by
five days.
Now researchers say they have developed a delivery system that allows chABC
to last weeks without implanted pumps or catheters. Researchers mixed the
chABC enzyme with sugar trehalose, which miraculously stabilized internal
body temperature and through vitro testing has lasted up to four weeks.
"This research has made digesting scar
clinically viable by obviating the need for continuous injection of the
chABC by thermally stabilizing the enzyme and harnessing bioengineered drug
delivery systems," Ravi Bellamkonda, lead author and a professor in the
Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and
Emory University in Atlanta, was quoted as saying.
SOURCE: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, November 2, 2009 |