If ever there was a glowing advertisement for stem cell therapy it has to be Saturday's Moonee Valley winner Viz Vitae. The David Hayes-trained galloper bowed a tendon in 2006, but after undergoing stem cell treatment the gelding came out to score a 20-length win at the Valley last weekend.
Viz Vitae had already won the Benalla Cup last spring and a hurdle at Sandown last month. Part-owner and Lindsay Park veterinarian Dr Campbell Baker is thrilled that the stem cell therapy is working on horses who would previously have had their racing careers ended.
"This horse suggests to us at Lindsay Park that no matter how severe the tendon injury, stem cells promise a complete regeneration of the damaged tissue," Dr Baker said after the Moonee Valley Hurdle win. "Whilst it is too soon to comment on the long-term outcomes of Vet Biotechnology's therapy, early results to date in terms of returning injured horses to the racetrack have been nothing short of stunning."
Hayes, who this season won his seventh Melbourne premiership and guided Viz Vitae’s successful return, also produced stem cell recipient Gorky Park to win the Andrew Ramsden Stakes over 3200m in the autumn.
Gorky Park subsequently spelled and is now back
in work at Lindsay Park in preparation for the 2008 Melbourne
Cup. To cap off a great weekend for Vet Biotechnology,
Lanson, which has had autologous stem cell tendon implants
in both forelegs, won The Metric Mile in Darwin.
Vet Biotechnology general manager David Bridgland said the successful
performances of stem cell recipients such as Viz Vitae, Gorky Park, Valedictum,
The Black Rod, Lanson and Kenviel, were timely reminders of the growing evidence
that stem cell therapy is fast becoming the orthopaedic treatment of the 21st
century.
Bridgland pointed out the timeliness of the latest focus on the therapy which comes as the foaling season is about to begin. One of the best sources of stem cells is from the umbilical cord of a new-born foal.
"The stem cells derived from the umbilical cord are cryo-stored for the life of the horse in readiness for the treatment of injury and illnes," Bridgland said. "Collecting the cord is like an insurance policy and will be a reassuring bonus for breeders who race their own produce and yearling buyers alike."
- Mike Hedge










