This week's issue of Questions On Dogs and Cats will be an abbreviated one due to Desperado and Helpful Buckeye just returning from the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Helpful Buckeye completed the 24-mile rim-to-rim hike, most definitely a once-in-a-lifetime experience. The experience was interesting, informative, harrowing, frightening (a few times), intense, and...above all, awesome!
Thank you for your indulgence just this week as I get back into a more normal pattern. I think you will enjoy this article from the NY Times from a couple of weeks ago that depicts the ever-increasing cooperation between the fields of human and animal medicine...that results in a better world for all species.
Veterinarians and Physicians Find Research
Parallels
Three
times in the last two months, researchers from St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital
Center in Manhattan headed across town to the Animal Medical Center to look at
dogs.
Doctors
at the hospital’s Vascular Birthmark Institute were enticed by the chance to
study anomalies of the arteries and veins that are rare in humans but common in
dogs. And the traffic between human and animal hospitals flows in the other
direction, too: Late last month, veterinarians from the Animal Medical Center
began meeting with their counterparts at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
to set up trials of a noninvasive device for removing tumors of the urinary
tract with electrical impulses.
Exchanges
of this sort are becoming increasingly common. Once a narrow trail traveled by
a few hardy pioneers, the road connecting veterinary colleges and human medical
institutions has become a busy thoroughfare over the last five years or so,
with a steady flow of researchers representing a wide variety of medical
disciplines on both sides.
One
reason is a growing frustration with the inefficiency of using the rodent model
in lab research, which often fails to translate to human subjects. So
researchers are turning their attention to the naturally occurring diseases in
dogs, horses, sheep and pigs, whose physiology and anatomy more closely
resemble those of humans.
“The
drugs cure the mice and keep failing when we try them on humans,” said Dr. John
Ohlfest, an immunotherapist at the University of Minnesota Masonic Cancer
Center, who began working with the university’s veterinary school in 2005 to
study canine brain cancers. “The whole system is broken.”
Dr.
Laurence J. N. Cooper, who develops immune-based therapies at the M. D.
Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and recently started making canine T cells
for lymphoma research at Texas A&M’s veterinary school, said: “There’s got
to be a better way. Canine biologies look like ours, and the treatments look like
ours.”
The
growing realization that vets and medical doctors may have very good reasons to
talk to one another has led to a host of collaborative research projects aimed
at speeding the journey from lab to human clinical trials and, in the end,
producing a result that can be applied to human and animal patients alike.
These
projects often emanate from partnerships like the National Cancer Center’s
comparative oncology program, created in 2006 to coordinate canine cancer
trials among 20 oncology centers across the United States, or the Center for
Comparative Medicine and Translational Research at North Carolina State
University’s veterinary college, which recently signed a partnership agreement
with the Institute for Regenerative Medicine at Wake Forest Baptist Medical
Center to do research on regenerating organs in humans and pets.
“In
the past I might have gone over to the medical school with a specific problem
and ask advice,” said Dr. Larry D. Galuppo, an equine surgeon at the University
of California, Davis, who has been experimenting with the latest stem-cell
therapies to repair tendon injuries in horses. “But it wasn’t programmatic the
way it is now.”
It
is not unusual, these days, for veterinary surgeons to call in their
human-medicine counterparts for consultations or even to take part in tricky
operations. Vets go on rounds at hospitals for people, and vice versa. Both
sides attend each other’s conferences. “It’s still grass roots, it’s still
early days, but it’s very exciting,” Dr. Ohlfest said.
In
part, the proliferation of partnerships reflects a philosophical movement known
as “one health,” or “one medicine,” the recognition that about 60 percent of
all diseases move across species and that environmental pollution, animal
diseases and human diseases constitute a single interlocking problem.
This was the subject of
a joint declaration by the American Medical Association and the American
Veterinary Medical Association in 2006 aimed at encouraging information sharing
and joint projects among the far-flung branches of veterinary and human
medicine.
More concretely, the
completion of the canine genome map, in 2005, set off an explosion in basic
research. Although less celebrated than the Human Genome Project, the canine
map gave researchers a blueprint with clear potential for human use, since the
gene codes for canines could be matched, one for one, with their human
counterparts.
Cooperation can take the
form of advanced research into new forms of diagnostic imaging, or gene
manipulation. Or it can be as humble as fitting a dog with a shoe.
Dr. Robert Hardie, a
surgeon at the University of Wisconsin’s school of veterinary medicine, turned
to the orthotics lab at the university’s medical school in 2005 when he could
not heal a post-surgery foot wound in Sam, a 200-pound Irish wolfhound.
As many other large dogs
with footpad injuries do, Sam kept putting weight on the wound, caused when a
toe had to be amputated. The orthotics team took a cast of Sam’s foot and made
a foam-lined plastic boot with Velcro straps. Dr. Hardie later worked with the
team to develop specialized braces for tendon injuries.
Often, partnerships
embrace multiple institutions and, within institutions, fields as diverse as
biomechanics and textiles.
Dr. Jonathan M. Levine,
a veterinary neurologist at the Texas A&M University College of Veterinary
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, joined forces with the medical school at the
University of California, San Francisco, to test a promising new drug that
blocks a particular enzyme that inflicts secondary damage, like the aftershock
to an earthquake, on injured spinal nerves.
Working with dachshunds
and other dwarf canine breeds, which often suffer from spinal cord injuries
because of their propensity to develop herniated discs, he recently won a grant
from the Department of Defense, which is interested in the application of his
research to battlefield injuries.
At the same time, one of
Dr. Levine’s colleagues, Dr. Jay Griffin, has collaborated with specialists at
the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston to develop a new
technique, called diffusion tensor imaging, whose sensitivity allows them to
see precisely how spinal cord cells die.
The big bet is that
veterinary science and human medical science can combine to achieve
efficiencies that translate across species. In some instances, this has already
happened.
Dr. Hollis G. Potter,
head of magnetic resonance imaging at the Hospital for Special Surgery in
Manhattan, has been working with Dr. Lisa A. Fortier of Cornell University’s
college of veterinary medicine to analyze meniscus injuries using sheep.
Quantitative M.R.I.
techniques like ultrashort echo-time imaging makes it possible to see how knee
tissue heals, and how much stress it can stand after surgical repair, information
that has immediate application for the human knee. “In just a couple of years,
we’ve taken this process from sheep to humans,” Dr. Potter said.
The reverse route is
even quicker. “Traditionally there has been a 10-to-20-year lag between animal
and human medicine,” said Dr. Chick Weisse of the Animal Medical Center in
Manhattan, who for the last two years has been treating hard-to-reach canine
tumors with a frozen-nitrogen technique he learned at Sloan-Kettering.
“That gap has narrowed,”
he said. “Now you see renal transplants, hip replacements — things they said
would never be done on animals. Things are happening so fast right now that
it’s almost simultaneous.”
Adapted from: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/11/science/vets-and-physicians-find-parallels-in-medical-research.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1
Please join Helpful Buckeye again next week as we get back to our regular selection of topics on dogs and cats.
~~The goal of this blog is to
provide general information and advice to help you be a better pet owner and to
have a more rewarding relationship with your pet. This blog does not intend to
replace the professional one-on-one care your pet receives from a practicing
veterinarian. When in doubt about your pet's health, always visit a
veterinarian.~~
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