Karen Davila resorts to stem-cell therapy for son’s autism

DAVILA and her firstborn David at age 10

You can point a mother to the ends of the earth and it won’t weaken her resolve to find that cure for her ailing child.

 

Broadcast journalist Karen Davila’s firstborn, David, was 3½ years old when he was diagnosed with Pervasive Developmental Disorder, Not Otherwise Specified (PDD/NOS) in the Autism Spectrum, a severe form of autism. The development pediatrician said there was no cure for David’s condition.

 

“David didn’t have the classic signs of autism, but clearly he wasn’t developing like other children his age,” says Davila. “At the age of 3, he wasn’t speaking spontaneously, although he could read. He had tantrums, couldn’t express his needs, whether he was hungry or sad, and didn’t reach out to other children his age.”

 

Like most kids in the autism spectrum, the boy had attention difficulties. “He was spaced out most of the time, and was rigid. It was so heartbreaking to see my eldest this way,” she adds.

 

Davila refused to accept that there was no answer to her son’s condition. “I researched endlessly and devoted myself to making sure my son got the best possible treatment,” she says. She quickly put her son on a casein- and gluten-free diet and biomedical treatment, under the care of Defeat Autism Now (DAN)-licensed doctors.

 

Davila explains that kids like David lack an enzyme in the body to digest casein, a protein found in cow’s milk, and gluten, a protein found in wheat, oats, barley and rye. “When they take [casein and gluten], it feels like opium in the body, so kids feel ‘high,’ they’re so hyper, get wild and are spaced out.”

 

David, now 11, has also undergone anti-fungal treatments, and has been taking supplements and B12 injections to help his attention issues. He has also benefited from the help of occupational and speech therapists. Now in Grade 5, David is in his grade level in Multiple Intelligence School, in a smaller class ratio, according to his mother.

 

Early last year, Davila was offered an opportunity to try the fresh cell therapy being offered by a clinic in Germany   called Villa Medica. The stem cells are harvested from lamb fetus and injected into the patient. By then, the journalist-mom had read up on the supposed benefits of stem cell on children with special needs.

 

In March, mother and son flew to Frankfurt, to Villa Medica’s clinic in Edenkoben.

 

“I didn’t consult with David’s doctors,” Davila admits. “But I have an aggressive-progressive approach to David’s condition. I’m willing to try anything that could help my son.”

 

Explaining the process to David was easy enough. He was used to blood extractions, and he takes some 20 food supplements on a daily basis. Her husband, says Davila, was entirely onboard.

 

“Doctors will frown upon this (lamb stem cell) since it is not accepted in the medical field, but I did try it for David’s sake.”

 

Around June last year, Dr. Z Teo and his wife, dermatologist Aivee Aguilar-Teo, introduced autologous fat stem-cell therapy or fat stem-cell therapy in their clinic, The Skin Laser and Aesthetic Center, in Taguig. Dr. Teo has been performing fat stem cell repair therapy or FSCR in his clinic in Singapore for a few years.

 

Human stem cell

 

Unlike the sheep stem cell, FSCR harvests fat from the patient’s tummy or thigh; a machine then isolates the stem cells from the fat. The fresh stem cell is then injected back into the patient’s body to stimulate the production of new, healthy cells. In patients who are too old or too sick, or have autism like David, fat stem cells are taken from a close blood kin.

 

“Immediately, I asked Aivee to help me,” says Davila, a friend of the Teos. In November, fat stem cell taken from Davila’s tummy was injected into her son.

 

David’s procedure is deemed safe, “but blood screening, infectious screening, and compatibility testing and complete physical checkup must be performed prior to the procedure,” says Dr. Aguilar-Teo. Compatibility testing is vital to determine which of the parents is a better-match donor, she adds.

 

The Teos’ Taguig clinic has performed 50-60 FSCRs since last year, only a handful of which share the same case as David’s.

 

“This is a new procedure, and not a lot of parents are as brave as Karen,” Dr. Aguilar-Teo says. “A lot of people are ‘conservative’ when it comes to treatments they’re not yet familiar with.”

 

As for its effect on David, “after just a week or two, the results were dramatic,” Davila says. “We noticed that David was quicker in question-and-answer response. He was visibly more aware, more in the moment, and he was bantering more at home and in school.

 

“Earlier that year, I brought David to Germany for fresh cell therapy. The effects were quite different. I believe that stem cell coming from the human body is clearly more powerful and potent.”

 

The surgeons in the Teos’ clinic also injected back some of Davila’s fat stem cells into her body. Apart from its purported benefits for people with neurodegenerative and cardiovascular disorders, and diseases like diabetes and asthma, FSCR is largely touted for its anti-aging and aesthetic benefits.

 

Prominent personalities who have admitted undergoing stem-cell therapy include former Presidents Joseph Estrada and Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, and Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile.

 

“People say that I’m glowing,” Davila says of her own procedure. “I do feel stronger, but clearly you’d have to wait for the results long-term.”

 

Speaking to her son’s autism specialists, Davila says they have “no strong opposition against autologous fat stem-cell therapy.”

 

She is quick to point out, however, that stem-cell therapy, especially for children with her son’s condition, “isn’t the magic pill.” David, his mom stresses, wouldn’t have improved through the years if not for his biomedicines and special diet.

 

“I believe credible, proper, and autologous stem cells will make a difference in certain conditions,” Davila says. “I’ve met patients myself, but safety along with proper traditional doctor-guided medication for any illness is important.”

 

(Next week: Business tycoon and Namfrel founder Jose “Joecon” Concepcion Jr.’s way)

 

 

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