|
ITALY – Montalcini: Obama right
on stem cells
|
Currently
stem cell research is only a hope and a strong one at that, and
Obama was right to resume a promising line of research that could
also be useful for
multiple
sclerosis. This was a statement made by 1986 Nobel Prize for
medicine winner
Rita Levi Montalcini who spoke yesterday morning at a conference
sponsored by
Italian MS Society (AISM), of which she was Honorary President
for the First World Multiple Sclerosis Day.“Embryonic stem cell research is only one of the paths we are taking, and although we are far away, we must never surrender. I am certain that one day we will be able to defeat this disease, which strikes mainly young individuals,” said Montalcini. To proceed, research “needs public investments. But at the same time, private investments are just as important”. “Stem cell research is still at its beginnings, and it is only one possibility to find a treatment for muscular sclerosis,” said Gianvito Martino, of the Neuro-immunology unit at San Raffaele in Milan at the first World Multiple Sclerosis Day. “We have placed too much importance and created too many
expectations for stem cell research, which will not provide a
definitive solution for this disease.” “This is an opportunity that
cannot be missed out on”, added Martino. “We have observed that stem
cells can prevent damage, but they do not repair damaged tissue.
They cannot be used on people with the disease who have suffered
significant injuries”. |