Sunday, 20 December 2009

Marigold the miracle?

Is marigold the new miracle supplement for macular degeneration? A story from the United Kingdom has been stunning the world of macular degeneration lately, after a British man claimed that taking marigold extracts have pretty much cured him of age-related macular degeneration.


The British media has been hailing him as possibly the first person in the country to recover from the devastating condition that causes blindness.

Mr Harry Marsland, 73, is a retired optician and he had lost most of his sight in his right eye to AMD. He was even considering learning Braille, with his left eye also heading down the same route as his right.

After trying various treatments without success, he decided to try a vitamin supplement called
Macushield, which contains mesozeaxanthin, derived from marigolds. He said he has since recovered 95 per cent of his sight in his left eye.

"It was in August my wife Nina picked up my magnifying glass and realised it was dusty,' he said. "She was the first to realise I no longer needed to use it.

"A few months later we were walking in the dark and I suddenly realised I was no longer holding on to my wife. It's miraculous, considering at one point I was literally blind in the dark.'

Click here and here to read more about this amazing story.

Saturday, 12 December 2009

First human trials for stem cells?

Macular degeneration patients could soon become the world's first to benefit from a new transplant operation using embryonic stem cells. Scientists from an American biotechnology company has applied for a licence to begin clinical trial on those with macular degeneration. They are confident that it would be approved and the trials could start as soon as early next year.

Embryonic stem cells are stem cells derived from human embryos that are only a few days old. They are believed to have the ability to develop into any of the scores of specialised tissues of the body. The hope is that they could be used to repair the damaged organs and tissues of patients with a relatively simple transplant procedure. In the case of macular degeneration sufferers, repair the macula.

Scientists are optimistic, citing positive results from tests on animals. Transplants of the human cells into rats with macular degeneration resulted in a "100 per cent improvement" in vision with no side-effect.

For the complete story, click here.