Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Stem cells in heart form scar after heart attack

Source: Baylor College of Medicine
Date: March 22, 2011

Summary:

HOUSTON -- A fibroblast is not always just a fibroblast – particularly in the heart. In a heart attack, fibroblasts – special repair cells that form a scar after injury – come from a population of stem cells that reside within the heart, said researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and the Methodist Hospital in a report that appears in the journal Cardiovascular Research. By contrast, earlier work showed that the fibroblasts responsible for fibrosis – excess fibrous connective tissue – found in cardiomyopathy or heart failure came from a special kind of white blood cell called a monocyte, which originates in the bone marrow. The finding has implications for the treatment of heart failure, said Dr. Mark Entman, chief of the division of cardiovascular sciences in the department of medicine at BCM and the paper's corresponding author.