2013-PATS-logos---joint 

In This Issue
Pet Care Trade Association appoints Nigel Baker as new Chief Executive
So who is Nigel Baker? Read about him in his first interview since the appointment
Newcomers take PATS Sandown exhibitor numbers over the 100 mark
New pet model agency launched
Pet shop owner 'forced out of business'
AQUA 2013 is filling up fast
£2m pet hospital for cash-strapped owners
Pet boutique opens in Leek, Staffs
Christmas foster homes sought for homeless pets
Nose cell transplant enables paralysed dogs to walk
City trader quits rat race to set up pet website
Fun stories
Men finish second behind pets in new survey
 

A quarter of women would dump a man if their pet didn’t like him, a study has found...
Read more»
Brits to spend £595m on Xmas presents for dogs
 

Generous Brits will shell out £595 million on gifts for their pampered pets this Christmas...

Read more»
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Nose cell transplant enables paralysed dogs to walk

Scientists have reversed paralysis in dogs after injecting them with cells grown from the lining of their nose.

The pets had all suffered spinal injuries which prevented them from using their back legs.

The Cambridge University team is cautiously optimistic the technique could eventually have a role in the treatment of human patients.

The study is the first to test the transplant in 'real-life' injuries rather than laboratory animals.

Professor Robin Franklin, a regeneration biologist and report co-author, said: "Our findings are extremely exciting because they show for the first time that transplanting these types of cell into a severely damaged spinal cord can bring about significant improvement.

"We're confident that the technique might be able to restore at least a small amount of movement in human patients with spinal cord injuries but that's a long way from saying they might be able to regain all lost function."

Prof Franklin said the procedure might be used alongside drug treatments to promote nerve fibre regeneration and bioengineering to substitute damaged neural networks.

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