Experimental Russian stem cell treatments for spinal injury credited for woman's progress
Experimental Russian stem cell treatments for spinal
injury credited for woman's progress
by Beth Loechler | The Grand Rapids
Press
Monday April 07,
2008, 5:14 AM
When Kadi DeHaan took her first steps in
December, two years after a car accident forced her into a wheelchair, she did
it in typical Kadi style: low-key, nonchalant and with a confident grin.
Apparently, she knew all along she would walk
away from her pink and black wheelchair and her customized leg braces, despite
a spinal cord injury at chest level and a grim prognosis that she would never
walk again.

Press Photo/Katy BatdorffTherapists help guide Kadi
DeHaan's legs and feet as she walks through the hallway at MVP gym in Rockford. The movements must be
"ingrained neurologically" before they will become automatic, said
therapist Sandy Burns.
"Whenever it happens, it happens," she
would tell her mom.
It happened after two years of intensive therapy
and six trips to Russia, where her stem cells were harvested and then
injected into her spinal cord to restore nerves.
She chucked the bulky leg braces and, with only
the aid of a walker and therapists to guide her feet, she began putting one
foot in front of the other three months ago.
Kadi's progress is "very much a unique and
wonderful thing," said physical therapist Sandy Burns, director of the
Center for Spinal Cord Injury Recovery in Rockford, a clinic affiliated with the Detroit Medical Center
No one can say for sure if nearly two years of
experimental treatments or hours upon hours of physical therapy -- a trio of
three-hour sessions every week -- led Kadi to where she is today.
Probably both, said Burns, whose clients
sometimes head to Russia or Portugal or China for treatments that aren't approved in the U.S. and generally aren't covered by insurance.
The physical therapy is a very important
component, "but it's definitely Russia," that put Kadi back on her own two feet,
Kadi's mom, Bonnie, insisted. "There are just too many coincidences. Kadi
knows that what she's got she got from Russia."
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Kadi's
timeline
October
2004: Car accident renders Kadi, 16, paralyzed from the
chest down.
February 2005: Kadi returns to school in a wheelchair.
June 2005: Intensive physical therapy begins.
May 2006:

Customized leg braces, a walker and help from a friend allow Kadi to walk
across a stage to receive her high school diploma. She heads to NeuroVita
Clinic in Russia
a few days after graduation for her first stem cell treatment.
September 2006: Kadi begins classes at Davenport
University,
where she received a full-ride scholarship. Stem cell treatments and physical
therapy continue.
December 2007: Kadi takes her first steps without leg braces.
February 2008: On her sixth trip to NeuroVita, the clinic's founder
assures Kadi she will walk independently again, without the aid of
therapists, braces or a walker.
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After fundraising dollars ran out more than a
year ago, Kadi's parents took out a loan to pay for the trips to Russia. The three-year protocol recommended by Moscow doctors will cost in excess of $150,000.
"We told Kadi that she'll have to get a
really good job and she can support us," joked her mom, who is a freelance
photographer and part-time house-cleaner. Kadi's dad, Randy, is a truck driver.
The family, which also includes 18-year-old Allie, lives in Gaines Township.
In October 2004, Kadi lost control of her car on
rain-slicked 84th
Street
in front of Byron Center High School. Her Pontiac struck an oncoming van and Kadi, who was not
wearing a seat belt, was ejected. Within a minute, the car burst into flames.
She returned to school four months later and
graduated with her Byron Center classmates in 2006. Days later she headed to Russia for her first stem cell treatment.
At the time, Kadi had just a bit of feeling in
her feet and could walk only with lots of help from custom-built leg braces and
a walker.
Since then, she's given up the braces and is
"tons stronger" and "a lot more independent," she said.
She's a full-time student at Davenport University who quaffs Mountain Dew and confesses to
sending text messages during class.
"Kadi's very social. Sometimes that can
work against somebody if they want to be totally committed to this. I'm sure
there are days when she's burned out," said Burns. "But I can see
she's in it for the long haul. I attribute that to her family as well."
Kadi's mom, dad or sister accompany her to every
therapy session.
Her mom remembers the early days when she had to
style Kadi's hair because Kadi couldn't lift her arms high enough to do
herself. Now, Kadi has the strength and dexterity to do that and so much more,
such as move herself from her wheelchair to her bed.
"I've seen a lot of changes. I've seen
motor return, sensory return, everything," Kadi said.
She's so convinced of the gains made at the
NeuroVita Clinic that she's planning her seventh trip there in August. Quite a
change of attitude after she declared the first trip "the worst three
weeks of my life."
Kadi discusses her stem cell treatments
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The Neurovita Clinic

Where: Moscow, Russia
What: Treats spinal cord injuries, degenerative disorders and some
cancers with patient's own stem cells, which are harvested, grown and
re-injected. Clinic moved away from use of embryonic stem cells because of
compatibility issues.
Insurance: Because treatment is experimental and not performed here, U.S.
insurance policies don't cover it.
Online: neurovita.ru/eng_index.html
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The NeuroVita clinic was founded by neurologist
Andrey S. Bryukhovetskiy in 2002. It's located on the campus of the Russian State Medical University and can accommodate 35 patients.
The clinic dabbled in embryonic stem cell
treatments but now uses only autologous material -- that which is obtained from
the patient -- because there are no problems with compatibility, not to mention
politics and religion, according to the Web site.
Kadi and her mom met with Bryukhovetskiy, who
speaks only Russian, during their last visit in February. An employee who
doubles as translator told them Bryukhovetskiy predicted that not only will
Kadi walk unassisted some day, she'll run.
"It was exciting to hear him say it,"
Kadi recalled.
"You had the biggest smile on your face.
And the doctor had the biggest smile on his face," Bonnie DeHaan reminded
her daughter.
About 11 of every 100 patients with spinal cord
injuries walk again after the stem cell treatments, Bryukhovetskiy told them.
Burns, who is quick to say her clinic does not
endorse any of the alternative treatments, acknowledged that the stem cell
injections do seem to make a difference, at least for Kadi.
"Folks that have gone there have, I think,
consistently reported that they are noticing changes. They are feeling
more," Burns said.
She tempers her optimism with the reality of
what she sees every day: some of her clients will never accomplish half as much
as Kadi has. Progress often depends upon the severity of the spinal injury, not
just the region of the spine that was damaged.
That's why Burns doesn't make predictions about
what her clients will eventually accomplish. But of course, she hopes Kadi
continues to make great strides.
"You have to have hope. If you don't have
hope you truly don't have anything," Burns said.
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