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Rick Perry's Back Surgery Included Adult Stem Cells (VIDEO)

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE   08/19/11 08:54 AM ET   AP

-- He calls it innovative. Others call it a big risk. In any case, the stem cell procedure that Texas Gov. Rick Perry had last month was an unusual experiment to fix a common malady: a bad back.

Perry, the newest GOP presidential candidate, has access to the best possible care and advice. Yet he and his doctor chose a treatment beyond mainstream medicine: He had stem cells taken from fat in his own body, grown in a lab and then injected into his back and his bloodstream during a July 1 operation to fuse part of his spine.

The treatment carries potential risks ranging from blood clots to infection to cancer and may even run afoul of federal rules, doctors say. At least one patient died of a clot hours after an infusion of fat-derived stem cells outside the United States. It's not clear how much of this Perry might have known.

His doctor and friend, orthopedist Dr. Stanley Jones, could not be reached for comment despite repeated requests to the spokeswoman for his Houston-area hospital. Jones told the Texas Tribune that he went to Japan for a stem cell treatment that helped his arthritis and that he had never before tried the procedure he used on Perry. He also said it had no side effects or risks.

However, some top scientists are questioning the safety and wisdom of Perry's treatment, especially because it was not part of a clinical trial in which unproven therapies are tested in a way that helps protect patients and advances medical knowledge.

Perry "exercised poor judgment" to try it, said Dr. George Q. Daley, of Children's Hospital Boston and the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. "As a highly influential person of power, Perry's actions have the unfortunate potential to push desperate patients into the clinics of quacks," who are selling unproven treatments "for everything from Alzheimer's to autism."

Daley is past president of the International Society for Stem Cell Research, a group of 3,000 scientists and others in the field. He consults for several biotech companies and favors stem cell research. But of Perry's treatment he said: "I would never in a million years accept for one of my family members to undergo this."

On the campaign trail Thursday in New Hampshire, Ray Sullivan, Perry's chief of staff, said: "The governor consulted with his physician and decided the best course of action for him. He's very pleased with the results of the surgery, with the rapid recovery and with the procedure that he had. And he feels like that is certainly his right to determine the best course of treatment for him."

Perry's treatment was first reported by the Texas Tribune. The procedure was done by Jones, who works at Foundation Surgical Hospital – a private, doctor-owned orthopedics center in suburban Houston – but Perry spokesman Mark Miner would not say where it took place.

"The governor chose this procedure to repair a reoccurring back ailment" and has confidence in the team that did it, Miner told The Associated Press. "The governor believed in this innovative approach."

It used Perry's own "adult" stem cells – not embryonic stem cells, a controversial technology that involves destroying an embryo, which the governor opposes. Adult stem cells have long been used to treat cancers such as leukemia and lymphoma – it's what doctors are using when they do bone marrow transplants. The cells are being studied for everything from heart disease to diabetes, but it's too soon to know if these approaches are safe or effective.

Some orthopedic surgeons, including Dr. Christoph Meyer at Jones' hospital, are experimenting with stem cells to help bones heal. The cells usually are taken from bone marrow and injected or implanted in the trouble spot, such as a knee or shoulder. The theory is that these "master cells" will follow cues from cells around them and form bone or cartilage, though scientists worry they also might spur unwanted growth and cancer.

Perry, however, had an even more experimental procedure: stem cells from fat removed by liposuction and grown in a lab for some time before they were put into his spine and bloodstream.

"It's a new technology that doesn't have the track record of the older ones," Meyer said. "Doctor Jones and Governor Perry made a bold move but that's how all advances in medicine have been made. I think it says a lot about Governor Perry that he was willing to try something like this that was new and untested. I mean that in a positive way."

However, Dr. George Muschler, an orthopedic surgeon at Cleveland Clinic, said fat-derived stem cells are "an unusual choice" because they don't form bone as readily as those from marrow.

Using them as was done for Perry is "quite experimental and it's quite controversial because there isn't good evidence yet, at least in the medical literature, that fat cells work better or even work at all in repairing bones," Muschler said. "It's out there, a little past the edge of what mainstream medicine would generally accept."

The Cleveland Clinic has three patents on cell-related technologies Muschler developed, and he has consulted for Medtronic Inc. and the federal Food and Drug Administration.

Dr. Thomas Einhorn, orthopedics chairman at Boston University, has tested some experimental stem cell therapies himself. He said one concern is that Perry's cells were grown in a lab dish with other ingredients where there is more of a risk they will transform into cancer and any breach in sterility could lead to an infection once they were put into a vein.

He also took issue with infusing the cells into Perry's bloodstream. "I can't think of any reason to do that. I wouldn't want to cause a blood clot."

It also enters a gray area with the FDA, which does not regulate how doctors practice medicine but does oversee medical products. Growing the cells in culture and possibly mixing them with other substances may make these modified cells a product. The FDA got an injunction barring a Colorado company from growing marrow-derived stem cells in this way; lawsuits over that are pending.

FDA spokeswoman Shelly Burgess said that the agency could not comment on Perry's treatment and that each case must be evaluated individually.

Besides safety concerns, little is known about whether such cell therapies work.

Patients may believe cells helped them, but there's no way to know they did unless a study is done comparing those who did and did not receive such treatment, said Dr. Scott Rodeo, an orthopedic surgeon at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York. He was a physician to the USA Olympics Teams in 2004 and 2008 and is associate team physician for the New York Giants football team.

Perry still wears a back brace sometimes now on the campaign trail, but he wasn't available for an interview Thursday. On July 12, less than two weeks after his surgery, he told an AP reporter: "Every day has been better. Not quite ready to go run a marathon in July but I feel great, wear a little brace and good to go. Everything is awesome."

___

Associated Press writers April Castro in Austin, Texas, and Steve Peoples in Dover, N.H., contributed to this report.

___

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-- He calls it innovative. Others call it a big risk. In any case, the stem cell procedure that Texas Gov. Rick Perry had last month was an unusual experiment to fix a common malady: a bad back. Per...
-- He calls it innovative. Others call it a big risk. In any case, the stem cell procedure that Texas Gov. Rick Perry had last month was an unusual experiment to fix a common malady: a bad back. Per...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hydra8
CEO, Monkey Business
10:08 PM on 08/27/2011
I see the other lame stream media are piling on the Gov. for having the smart idea of using his own DNA cells to heal his own body, not foreign cells. How very unique, in a politician, he knows his stuff about science and treatments that work. Not the same situation with The Obama, who just ignores his own Exec. Order. Both Adult and embryo stem cells were supposed to be funded, he's only funded embryo. Why bother, its not going to work as quick as adult stem cells. Time is a factor, people are dying, we don't have tax dollars to waste on making embryo stem cells work because they need rejection drugs. That delays it all. Read up on this, I think you got a load of boloney from somewhere: http://www.politicolnews.com/rick-perrys-stem-cell-treatment/ The politics of medicine, more like the profits of medicine is more important than curing diseases.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hydra8
CEO, Monkey Business
10:03 PM on 08/27/2011
Where on earth do you dig up this tripe, Marilynn Marchione? You must be reading pharmaceutical talking points that are developing embryo stem cells so they can sell rejection drugs along with the treatments. If Rick Perry can use his own stem cells, why do Americans have to travel to China, Europe and S. America to get this treatment? You have your facts wrong, using your own DNA cells is safe, embryo cells are another persons' DNA which the body will never accept and could cause serious harm. The drug co's are funding embryo so they can sell more rejection drugs which is expensive and for a life time.

Adult Stem cells use your own cells is not an experiment, its a cure for diseases.
Read about Adult Stem Cells: http://www.politicolnews.com/rick-perrys-stem-cell-treatment/

A little girl in Alabama, Aspen Brown must die according to a Forbes Magazine writer who thinks her parents should not give her life saving treatments, from her own stem cells. The FDA bans using your own stem cells in America, which is both unethical, immoral and wrong on so many levels. Read Aspen Brown's story if you want the truth:
http://www.politicolnews.com/aspen-brown-and-forbes-magazine/

Forbes Magazine believes there is no hope for her, the FDA working against her, too -it is a battle she doesn't need. If only Pres. Obama's Executive Order meant something, but it was ignored and not followed up by him.
06:11 PM on 08/24/2011
If the use of adult stem cells to treat back pain is only half as effective as it is thought to be, it could help over 20 million people in the United States alone. The medical implications are phenomenal. An excellent resource of back pain suffers is http://BackPainReliefSecrets.com
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
03:22 PM on 08/23/2011
Was this the type of surgery where he needed hormone supplements.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mimix3
All dogs go to heaven
03:20 PM on 08/23/2011
I think they tied the optical and rectal nerve together
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rosey7
01:47 PM on 08/23/2011
oldstudent10,
Plastic surgery is NOT covered under any insurance policy unless it's reconstructive like being shot in the head as Gabby Gifford's was.. Better luck next time with insults. It does pay to do your research. FYI actors and actresses can deduct plastic surgery on their taxes but rarely do since that gives their secret away.. I notice you don't attack Sarah Palin and the fifty year old repubs who use botox. And, no, they are not getting it at tax payer's expense either. Everyone pays out of pocket for botox, face lifts etc. That's why it pays so well to be a dermatologist and plastic surgeon. Even mild facial deformities are not covered under insurance.
01:44 PM on 08/23/2011
Why did they not try to remove his head from his anus when they did this procedure? Seems like it would have been the perfect time to do it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mike Wrona
01:25 PM on 08/23/2011
What, no good old fashioned, Texas style, hands on, slap 'em on the head, knock 'em on the ground, shout out loud, hands to the heavens faith healing?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JbVnSkj6g3c

Another Pray for show, Heal for dough Evangelical Christian politician.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ramsha
01:02 PM on 08/23/2011
I think some of that 'Fat Cells ' migrated to his brain and managed to replace normal brain cells in his brain.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donna1224
12:11 PM on 08/23/2011
This is the one distinction between Perry and Bush! Bush refused to even consider anything to do with stem cells while Perry must have been desperate enough to try this procedure! I still don't like or trust Rick Perry though.
01:30 PM on 08/23/2011
Correction: Bush was opposed to FETAL stem cell research. The stem cells used for Perry's procedure were harvested from his own body, not from a dead fetus.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
centsable
are u smarter than a republicant..
04:46 PM on 08/23/2011
Correction: Bush was opposed to NEW stem cell research, not opposed to the stem cells already available.
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LeeMon
Who's a good boy?
11:33 AM on 08/23/2011
Maybe he's trying to grow a titanium spine like Michele's.
satyrday
If my micro-bio is way too long, will it be trunca
11:32 AM on 08/23/2011
Couldn't he have just prayed away his problems? Or is that just for poor people?
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Gestas
Mountain Man
11:14 AM on 08/23/2011
See...Sarah...Death Panels are only for Poor People.
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
10:28 AM on 08/23/2011
oh no !! that means they ground up baby fetuses and injected them into Rick's back ....

Jeebus is gonna be plenty disappointed with the man .....
01:33 PM on 08/23/2011
Not according to this article. They harvested his own cells, much like they do with leukemia patients.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rosey7
10:17 AM on 08/23/2011
But, if Perry wasn't governor with health care provided him by taxpayers, he would not have had the choice. Health insurers routinely turn down experimental procedures unless the patient agrees to pay for it, which Perry did not. He is a classic example of the charade tea party republicans play.