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Health Contents: Medical notes
Monday, 18 November, 2002, 00:00 GMT

Natural pacemaker 'within 10 years'

The days of the artificial pacemaker may soon be over for millions of people with serious heart problems.

Scientists in the United States believe it may one day be possible to use a person's own body tissue to repair damage around the heart.

Tests on rats suggest that implanting manipulated tissue back into the body could help people's hearts to beat regularly.


" We may be able to use such cell-based technologies in humans to free them from cardiac pacemaker devices "

Dr Douglas Cowan, Children's Hospital Boston

About 22,000 people in Britain are fitted with pacemakers every year. The electronic devices are mostly used to speed up heart rates.

The pulse slows down if the electrical connections between the different chambers of the heart are damaged. This can occur as a result of disease or a heart attack.

Pacemakers can restore a regular rhythm. Without them many people would die.

Natural alternative

But Douglas Cowan and colleagues at the Children's Hospital in Boston believe they may have found a more natural way to solve the problem.

They extracted small amounts of muscle from rats to obtain myoblasts. These are immature cells which will grow into muscle.

However, unlike normal muscle they can create the same proteins that heart muscle cells use to connect with one another to transmit the electronic signals that regulate the pulse.

The scientists mixed this tissue with other cells and then transplanted it back into the rats.

This engineered tissue, which was implanted into the rats' hearts, has rebuilt the connections between the different chambers of the heart.

"The cells have survived in rats for more than a year and they appear to have made connections with cardiac cells," said Dr Cowan.

Mores research needed "The electrical pathway developed within 10 weeks of implantation."

Dr Cowan said further research is needed before they could even contemplate carrying out the procedure on humans.

"We need rigorous, state-of-the-art experiments to confirm that the tissue is functioning and that the same can happen in larger animals."

But he added: "Ultimately, maybe a decade down the road, we may be able to use such cell-based technologies in humans to free them from cardiac pacemaker devices."

The findings were presented at the American Heart Association meeting in Chicago.


Related to this story:
Bio-pacemaker offers patients hope (12 Sep 02 | Health) Clever pacemaker rings the doctor (12 Jul 02 | Wales) 40 years of the heart pacemaker (06 Apr 00 | Health)


Internet links: Children's Hospital Boston | American Heart Association | British Heart Foundation
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