How
CHF Patients can Take Advantage of Translational Research?
In nature every action spawns a separate and equal reaction. In the field
of medicine, the reaction may not always be equal to the action. The performance
of a particular treatment in the lab on test animals may not be the same
as would be seen in a human subject; this is where the field of translational
research comes in.
Translational research takes research from the laboratory to the patient's
bedside. This can be done in several forms. In its earliest stages a treatment
will undergo controlled clinical trials with a voluntary group of test
subjects. If these small, controlled tests meet the acceptable range of
success the treatment is then taken to research hospitals such as St.
Jude's or Children's Hospital of Boston. Here patients are given the opportunity
to experience new methods of control and treatment of a disease with the
understanding that it is still considered highly experimental; however,
for many these treatments represent a chance for a cure that previously
as out of reach for them as the moon.
Congestive heart failure is, at the moment, an incurable event, occurring
when for whatever reason the cells of the heart muscle are destroyed and
the heart can no longer adequately pump blood throughout the body. Once
the cells in the heart tissue are non-functional the body is unable to
replace them, making it impossible for the heart to regain full heart
function on its own. The current mortality rate is high, and over fifty
percent of patients with congestive heart failure will die within five
years of being diagnosed. There are many treatment options currently being
considered for congestive heart failure, however, and a number of new
technologies being tested daily. For example, Montefiore Medical Center
in New York City is currently doing clinical trials on a drug known as
Lovosimendan, a calcium sensitizer that does not trigger cardiac arrhythmia,
and research into the possibility of using stem cells to regrow cardiac
tissue is ongoing.
For a patient to take advantage of these options they should discuss the
possibility of being a subject for clinical testing with their physician
to see if they would be a good candidate, then allow the physician to
make a recommendation on a course of action from there. It may be suggested
that the patient contact a research facility, or the physician may suggest
their name for a clinical trial they know is occurring soon. If the patient
lives in an area with a research hospital nearby, chances are there will
be an opportunity for them to benefit from the hospital's policy on translational
research.
It should be understood that translational research is precisely what
it sounds like; research. Scientists and doctors are often still learning
about the treatment and its effect on the human body, and there is always
a possibility that it will be unsuccessful or carry with it many hazardous
side effects. These courses of treatments are unknowns to physician and
researcher alike. For patients who have run out of options, however, even
the possibility of a negative effect cannot stifle what the opportunity
to be part of a translational research project provides: hope.
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