
Stem Cell Therapy Helps Heal Heart Ailing Woman
By Sue Mason
Tammy Henderson can ride a bike. It might not sound like a big deal, but for a woman
who was a hair's breath away from being placed on a heart transplant list two years
ago, it's huge … really huge.
To Henderson and her family, it's a sure sign that the adult stem cell therapy she had
in Thailand in April 2008 is slowly repairing her severely damaged heart.
“My doctor fully believes this is working,” said Henderson. “My echo showed at least a
5 percent improvement in ejection fraction — how well the heart pumps — and my heart
shrunk by 3 mm, which is terrific. Usually, the heart enlarges as it gets worse.”
“My oxygen level went up three points. I have been feeling really great, and I'm back
to bike riding and walking,” she added.
For the Garden City resident, the road to recovery started in 2007 when she and her
family started fund raising the estimated $40,000-$50,000 needed for the stem cell
therapy. She decided to try the treatment at the suggestion of her cardiologist and
flew to Thailand last year where she received immature stem cells created from her own
cells. The stem cells were injected by catheterization into her body close to her
heart.
“It's been eight years since I had my massive heart attack and double bypass,” she
said. “They told me that without a transplant, I wouldn't live six months and here I
am. I've improved. Up to a year ago I think I was using up my reserves, I wonder what
they would say now.”
A bad heart isn't all Henderson has had to deal with over the years. In 1990, she was
diagnosed with stage II Hodgkin's lymphoma. She underwent radiation and chemotherapy
and was cancer-free for 11 years, when she suffered a massive heart attack July 23,
2001. Five days later, she had another attack, so doctors operated to install a heart
pump. That evening, she had a mini-stroke. The next day, she had emergency bypass
surgery.
In January 2002, she was told by the Henry Ford Transplant Center to start the tests
and process for a heart transplant. She went through the process and was within a week
of being added to the list when doctors determined she had improved her heart's
pumping power by taking a CoQ10 supplement.
Kelly Moyer said her sister, who grew up in Westland and graduated from John Glenn
High School, is amazing and the improvements “are exactly what we hoped for.”
“In April, her family and I walked the Kensington Park path — 8.5 miles — that
includes many hills, I was very impressed with her strength,” Moyer said. “A couple of
years ago I would have never thought that kind of experience would be possible. Her
heart is getting smaller and pumping better, clear medical signs of improvement. I
couldn't be more pleased.”
While her heart has shown signs of healing, Henderson said she has been cured of
chronic sinusitis. She use to spend $25 month for Zyrtec, but stop taking it in April
2008.
“I have not had a sinus infection since then,” she said. “I think the stem cells took
care of it. That's a major extra plus.”
Henderson still gets a call from Thailand every few months to see how she is doing and
keeps in contact with other patients on Facebook and MySpace on the Internet. People
also contact her to “see what my opinion” is about stem cell therapy.
And she still receives donations. Recently, a couple sent her a check for $200 and
postage stamps. The message was simply, “Do something nice with your family.”
Henderson set the envelope aside, but said she now knows what she will do with the
money — take a vacation to the Wisconsin Dells and maybe a trip to Frankenmuth.
“I haven't been on a real vacation with my family for years,” she said. “In the past I
didn't want to be to far from Henry Ford Hospital. You never know, especially with
your heart. I was afraid to go to far away.”
Moyer hopes that some day the stem cell therapy will be available in the United
States. Her sister said there's a possibility it could be done at Henry Ford within a
year.
“I pray that this treatment will be available in the U.S. as soon as possible,” Moyer
said. “For someone sick to have to travel around the world for treatment is just
absurd, especially living in the U.S. We live in the best country in the world, it
doesn't seem right.”
