David Traub was a adult male with an indisposed heart. Normally not an adventurous man, Saint David was forced to travel all the manner to Kingdom Of Thailand to have his ain grownup root cell to handle his bosom disease.
His lawsuit was featured in the National Geographic docudrama "Supercell," now being shown on the National Geographic channel. "I never imagined I would have got to go all the manner to Kingdom Of Kingdom Of Thailand for root cell treatment and acquire filmed by National Geographic," Saint Saint David exclaimed.
David along with his spouse John Jay made the long journeying to Thailand in September, 2006. "My bosom specialist didn't even believe I would last the airplane ride." Saint Saint David did last the airplane drive and headed to Capital Of Thailand Heart Hospital where his ain grownup root cells were injected directly into his bosom musculus to seek to better his congestive heart failure.
David wishes to associate a recent assignment with his cardiologist, almost one twelvemonth after his root cell treatment. "I was sitting in the waiting room and the physician came running in with his eyes agape." "He said David, your diagnostic test consequences are normal, not normal for you, but normal for anyone. Your bosom have revascularized itself. It have got to be the root cell therapy!" Saint Saint David believes his bosom specialist is now convinced.
While David's bosom jobs are not over, the root cells have improved his status and he is thrilled about the other blood supply to his heart.
As grownup root cell therapy for the bosom is still unavailable in the United States, patients are now traveling abroad to Kingdom Of Thailand and Capital Of Singapore for their treatment. The root cell treatment is noncontroversial as the root cells are removed from the patient and then multiplied to later be implanted back into the coronary arterias or bosom musculus in a simple procedure. Patients like Saint David must go on to go forth the United States to seek treatment as the Food and Drug Administration have not yet approved this process although it is in the trial stage.
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