Synopses & Reviews
In May 1995, neurologist Curt Freed began one of the most dramatic experiments in the history of medicine: the attempt to treat sufferers of Parkinson's disease by grafting human stem cells into their brains.
Of the forty patients who volunteered for Freed's new treatment, half underwent authentic surgery. The other half, who had received placebo surgery, felt their last hope dissolve into bitter frustration. But the hardest road lay ahead for those who had been given the highly experimental procedure. Healing the Brain captures the emotional events that unfolded in the months afterward as Freed, his researchers, and their courageous, desperate patients awaited the outcome and witnessed a moral debate unfolding across the nation over embryonic stem-cell medicine. Would the brain regenerate itself or reject the new cells? This pioneering team was willing to take perilous risks to find out.
Healing the Brain is a moving, fascinating narrative about discovery and disillusionment, conflict and compassion, suffering and -- for some -- amazing success.
Review
"A 'must read' for anyone . . . curious about the stem-cell controversy, or who just enjoys a real-life science thriller."
--Dean Hamer, Ph.D., author of Living with Our Genes
Synopsis
A riveting story from the front lines of today's most controversial science--the new frontier of embryonic stem cell research
About the Author
Curt Freed, M.D., is the director of the neuroscience and neurotransplant programs at the University of Colorado and the director of the National Parkinson Foundation Center of Excellence. He lives in Denver, Colorado.
Simon LeVay, Ph.D., a neuroscientist who has taught at Harvard Medical School and the Salk Institute for Biological Sciences, is the author of The Sexual Brain and Queer Science. He lives in West Hollywood, California.