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Friday, June 20, 2014
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Fetal-cell Revival for Parkinson’s
Wednesday June 11, 2014
Moratorium on controversial therapy lifted as stem cells emerge as alternative source of treatment.
Allison Abbott -
A neurosurgery team will next month transplant cells from aborted human fetuses into the brain of a person with Parkinson’s disease. The operation breaks a decade-long international moratorium on the controversial therapy that was imposed after many patients failed to benefit and no one could work out why.
But the trial comes just as other sources of replacement cells derived from human stem cells are rapidly approaching the clinic. And this time, scientists want to make sure that things go better. So the teams involved in all the planned trials have formed a working group to standardize their research and clinical protocols in the hope that their results will be more easily interpretable.
People with Parkinson’s disease suffer from a degeneration of neurons that produce the neurotransmitter dopamine, which is crucial for normal movement. This often leaves patients with severe mobility problems. Standard treatment includes the drug l-dopa, which replaces dopamine in the brain but can cause side effects. The cellular therapies aim to replace the missing neurons with dopamine-producing (dopaminergic) cells from fetal brains or with those derived from human stem cells.
The moratorium on replacement-therapy trials was introduced in 2003 because the early fetal-cell studies had produced varying results that were impossible to interpret.
“We want to avoid a repeat of this situation,” says neurologist Roger Barker at the University of Cambridge, UK, who helped to organize the working group’s inaugural meeting in London last month. The group, known as the Parkinson’s Disease Global Force, includes scientists from the European, US and Japanese teams about to embark on the trials. At the meeting, they pledged to share their knowledge and experiences.
The first human transplantation of fetal brain cells took place in 1987 at Lund University in Sweden, where the technique was pioneered. Surgical teams took immature fetal cells destined to become dopaminergic neurons from the midbrain of aborted fetuses and transplanted them into the striatum of patients’ brains, the area of greatest dopamine loss in Parkinson’s disease.
More than 100 patients worldwide received the therapy as part of clinical trials before the moratorium. “But centres used different procedures and protocols — it was impossible to work out why some patients did very well and others didn’t benefit at all,” says Barker.
In 2006, Barker, together with neuroscientist Anders Björklund at Lund University, set up a network to bring together the original seven teams that had performed the transplants, to assess all protocol details and patient data retrospectively.
The teams worked out that the procedure tended to be most effective in patients who were relatively young and whose disease was at an early stage. In addition, post-mortem analysis of patients’ brains showed that those who benefited most had at least 100,000 dopamine-producing cells of fetal origin integrated into their brains. Cells from at least three fetuses are needed to achieve these numbers, the neuroscientists concluded.
The retrospective analysis encouraged the European scientists, including Barker and Björklund, to launch a new trial, which is funded by the European Union, involving fetal dopaminergic-neuron transplants. Known as TRANSEURO, it will monitor disease progression in 150 patients in the United Kingdom, Sweden, France and Germany. The first patient is due for transplantation next month at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge. In line with the retrospective findings, the average age of trial participants at recruitment was 55, and their average disease duration just 4 years. None had displayed dyskinesias — uncontrolled muscle movements that can be a side effect of l-dopa treatment.
But stem-cell biology has advanced significantly since 2003, and dopaminergic neurons can now be derived from human embryonic stem cells and also from induced pluripotent stem cells — mature cells that have been rewound to an uncommitted stem-cell-like state and that can be coaxed to become a cell type of choice. These potential sources are more desirable than those derived from fetuses, because fetal cells are hard to come by and their biology varies.
Research is under way to ensure that the stem cells develop into the exact type of dopaminergic cell needed to treat Parkinson’s and that they become correctly integrated into recipients’ brains. But progress has been so fast that clinical trials are already on the horizon. A Japanese trial, using induced pluripotent stem cells, is planned to start in Kyoto within two years; and two trials using human embryonic stem cells are also planned, one to begin within three years in New York and the other in Europe within four to five years.
The Parkinson’s Disease Global Force hopes that its joint planning will make comparing outcomes easier. Members will share their protocols for deriving and grafting cells, as well as their clinical criteria for patient selection and follow-up.
They see the TRANSEURO trial as a pathfinder. “We don’t know yet which source of cell will turn out to be the best, but right now the fetal cell is the gold standard we need to match,” says neurologist Claire Henchcliffe from the Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York, who is coordinating the working group’s guidelines on patient assessment and trial design.
The stem-cell approaches have a long way to go before they can rival the promise of fetal cells, says Lund University stem-cell biologist Malin Parmar, a member of the European clinical-trial team. That is because the cells from fetal brains are already on the way to becoming mature dopaminergic cells. “The human body knows very well how to develop each cell type from the embryo,” she says. “We haven’t learnt all of these secrets yet, but we have learnt some major ones.”
Nature 510, 195–196 (12 June 2014)
Abbott, Allison (11 June 2014). Nature.com. Fetal-cell Revival for Parkinson’s. http://www.nature.com/news/fetal-cell-revival-for-parkinson-s-1.15387
Largest-ever Trial in Parkinson's Disease Shows that for Long-term Treatment Levodopa is Better than Newer Drugs
Tuesday June 10, 2014
Medical Xpress - For long-term treatment of newly diagnosed Parkinson's disease (PD), the old drug levodopa provides better mobility and a higher quality of life than the two main alternatives, dopamine agonists (DA) and monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors (MAOBI), according to the largest-ever trial of PD treatment (PD MED), published in The Lancet.
PD is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder (after Alzheimer's) in the UK, with 8000 new cases each year and over 100 000 people living with the disease. The most widely used treatment is the drug levodopa, although after prolonged use patients can develop involuntary muscle spasms (dyskinesias) and motor fluctuations (movement problems). There is less risk of developing these complications with DAs or with MAOBIs than with levodopa, but other side effects including nausea, hallucinations, oedema, and sleep disturbance are increased with these newer drugs.
"Previous studies included too few patients, had short follow-up, and focused on the clinicians' assessments of motor symptoms rather than asking patients how the drugs affected their overall quality of life. So, for many years there has been uncertainty about the risks and benefits of starting treatment with these different classes of PD drugs"*, explains study leader Professor Richard Gray from the University of Oxford in the UK.
The PD MED trial randomly assigned 1620 people with early PD to levodopa-sparing therapy (DA or MAOBI) or levodopa. With up to 7 years of follow-up, self-reported scores on scales measuring mobility and quality of life showed small but persistent benefits of starting treatment with levodopa rather than the other drugs. Patients in the levodopa group also reported significantly better scores on the activities of daily living, stigma, cognition, communication, and bodily discomfort scales than those taking levodopa-sparing therapy despite more involuntary muscle spasms.
According to Professor Gray, "Although the differences in favour of levodopa are small, when you consider the short- and long-term benefits, side-effects, quality of life for patients, and costs, the old drug levodopa is still the best initial treatment strategy for most patients."
He adds, "In current clinical practice, most patients younger than 70 years are treated initially with a DA to avoid levodopa-related motor complications. However, we found levodopa better than the more expensive DAs at all ages."*
Professor Carl Clarke, the clinical coordinator of the study from the University of Birmingham, UK, added, "The PD MED trial is the largest drug trial ever performed in Parkinson's disease. It is likely to change clinical practice worldwide, with the majority of patients from now on starting therapy with levodopa."
Writing in a linked Comment, Professor Anthony Lang and Dr Connie Marras from Toronto Western Hospital, Ontario, Canada say, "PD MED provides reassuring data showing that in most patients with Parkinson's disease, who have an older age of onset, how treatment is initiated generally does not matter because outcomes are very similar…Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the results of this study will help to persuade physicians and reassure patients that the fears that have served as the groundwork in establishing levodopa phobia—that often results in patients experiencing unnecessary and easily managed disability and reduction in quality of life in the early years of their disease—are unfounded".
(10 June 2014). Medical Xpress. Largest-ever Trial in Parkinson's Disease Shows that for Long-term Treatment Levodopa is Better than Newer Drugs. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-06-largest-ever-trial-parkinson-disease-long-term.html
Parkinson's Disease Early Stages Detected With 'Simple' MRI; Up To 85% Accurate
Wednesday June 11, 2014
Samantha Olson
Medical Daily - Detecting a life-threatening disease could give researchers the power of earlier diagnosis, treatment approaches, and innovative therapies — a power that could one day possibly lead to cure a disease like Parkinson’s. Researchers from Oxford University published their findings in the journal of Neurology, which reveal a promising new diagnostic approach for the early stages of Parkinson’s disease.
“At the moment we have no way to predict who is at risk of Parkinson's disease in the vast majority of cases,” said Dr. Clare Mackay, the study’s co-author and professor of the Department of Psychiatry at Oxford University. Oxford researchers are turning the tables on that bleak risk evaluation now that they have developed an expediently simple technique to diagnose early Parkinson’s stages with a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine with 85 percent accuracy. A normal MRI scan cannot detect the early signs, which is why researchers used restating state functional MRI (fMRI) to look at how strong the brain connections were in the basal ganglia, where important dopamine nerves are located.
“We are excited that this MRI technique might prove to be a good marker for the earliest signs of Parkinson's. The results are very promising,” Mackay said. Parkinson’s disease is a neurodegenerative brain disorder that progresses very slowly in most people. In America alone, as many as one million people are currently living with Parkinson’s disease, with an additional 60,000 diagnosed each year. According to the National Parkinson’s Foundation, there is no one exact way to diagnose the disease, but there are a variety of symptoms that can indicate a diagnosis.
“We think that our MRI test will be relevant for diagnosis of Parkinson's,” said Dr. Michele Hu, the study’s co-author and professor of the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences at Oxford University and the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust.
Parkinson’s disease symptoms include hand tremors, slow movement, and stiff, inflexible muscles. The disease is caused by the continual loss of a particular set of dopamine nerve cells in the brain, which start much earlier than symptoms begin to show. Dopamine helps humans to make smooth, coordinated muscle movements, and when these cells are impaired, neurodegeneration takes place.
“We tested it in people with early-stage Parkinson's. But because it is so sensitive in these patients, we hope it will be able to predict who is at risk of disease before anysymptoms have developed. However, this is something that we still have to show in further research,” Hu said.
As of yet, there is no cure for Parkinson’s disease, but there are treatments that are able to at least reduce certain symptoms and maintain quality of life as best as possible.
“This new research takes us one step closer to diagnosing Parkinson's at a much earlier stage — one of the biggest challenges facing research into the condition. By using a new, simple scanning technique the team at Oxford University have been able to study levels of activity in the brain which may suggest that Parkinson's is present,” said Claire Bale, the research communications manager at Parkinson’s UK.
Source: Hu M, Bale C, Mackay C, et al. Neurology. 2014.
Olson, Samantha. (11 June 2014). Medical Daily. Parkinson's Disease Early Stages Detected With 'Simple' MRI; Up To 85% Accurate. http://www.medicaldaily.com/parkinsons-disease-early-stages-detected-simple-mri-85-accurate-287658
Fahr's Syndrome is a rare inherited neurological disorder
Fahr's Syndrome is a rare inherited neurological disorder that can present with a wide
spectrum of symptoms, including those of Parkinson's Disease. It is characterised by
abnormal deposits of calcium in areas of the brain that control movement, including the basal
ganglia and the cerebral cortex. For more information go to Fahr's Syndrome :
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/fahrs/fahrs.htm
Symptoms of Fahr's Syndrome that are similar to those of
Parkinson's Disease may include deterioration of motor function,
dementia, dysarthria (poorly articulated speech), tremors, muscle
rigidity, a mask-like facial appearance, shuffling gait, and a
"pill-rolling" motion of the fingers. These symptoms generally
occur later in the development of the disease. More common
symptoms of Fahr's Syndrome include dystonia (disordered
muscle tone) and chorea (involuntary, rapid, jerky movements).
The age of onset of Fahr's Syndrome is typically in the 40s or
50s, which is similar to Parkinson's Disease, although it can also
occur at any time in childhood or adolescence.
Due to the possible similarity of symptoms to those of Parkinson's Disease, Fahr's Syndrome
should be considered as an important differential diagnosis in cases of Parkinsonism.
http://www.viartis.net/parkinsons.disease/news/140609.pdf
spectrum of symptoms, including those of Parkinson's Disease. It is characterised by
abnormal deposits of calcium in areas of the brain that control movement, including the basal
ganglia and the cerebral cortex. For more information go to Fahr's Syndrome :
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/fahrs/fahrs.htm
Symptoms of Fahr's Syndrome that are similar to those of
Parkinson's Disease may include deterioration of motor function,
dementia, dysarthria (poorly articulated speech), tremors, muscle
rigidity, a mask-like facial appearance, shuffling gait, and a
"pill-rolling" motion of the fingers. These symptoms generally
occur later in the development of the disease. More common
symptoms of Fahr's Syndrome include dystonia (disordered
muscle tone) and chorea (involuntary, rapid, jerky movements).
The age of onset of Fahr's Syndrome is typically in the 40s or
50s, which is similar to Parkinson's Disease, although it can also
occur at any time in childhood or adolescence.
Due to the possible similarity of symptoms to those of Parkinson's Disease, Fahr's Syndrome
should be considered as an important differential diagnosis in cases of Parkinsonism.
http://www.viartis.net/parkinsons.disease/news/140609.pdf
Monday, June 16, 2014
The Medication Question
As you may know, medications are the backbone of the Parkinson's treatment plan. But because the disease affects everyone differently, and each person's response to therapy will vary, there is no hard-and-fast rule about when you should begin taking medication and what to take first. Some doctors prescribe medication upon diagnosis. Others believe that drugs, especially levodopa, should be delayed as long as possible to avoid earlier onset of medication-related side effects.
Your involvement from the very start is important because you want to be sure your doctor is addressing your individual needs. When your doctor writes a new prescription, or makes a change to an existing one, take the opportunity to ask for an explanation. If her response goes something like, "I always start my Parkinson's patients on X dosage of Y, a dopamine agonist," you might want to consider switching to a movement disorders specialist, a neurologist who has had special training in Parkinson's disease and other movement disorders.
Taking a closer look at your options
Since the drug levodopa (L-dopa for short) was synthesized in the 1960s, levodopa in combination with carbidopa (brand name Sinemet), has been the gold standard for treating the symptoms of Parkinson's. However, after several years of taking this medication some people experience dyskinesias, or involuntary writhing movements. This is sometimes referred to as levodopa-induced dyskinesias or "LIDS." The fear of these side effects has led many clinicians and patients to avoid levodopa-carbidopa for as long as possible.
But some experts do not believe this "levodopa phobia" is warranted (risk factors for LIDS include younger age at onset, duration of treatment and a higher levodopa dose). In short, they say that levodopa can be considered as a potential first-line therapy in all age groups---although caution should be exercised in younger patients. In most cases, the dosage will start low then increase slowly, often in combination with other medications, to adjust to a person's changing condition.
Other first-line medications that can be used to control Parkinson's symptoms include drugs known as dopamine agonists and monamine oxidase inhibitors. Dopamine agonists provide relief by mimicking the action of dopamine within the brain, and monamine oxidase inhibitors help maintain motor control by slowing the breakdown of dopamine within the brain. These drugs can help younger patients buy some time before starting levodopa-carbidopa.
For an in-depth explanation of all medications used to treat both motor and non motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease medications, download a copy of NPF's Parkinson's Disease Medications Manual.
Timing is everything
When it comes to Parkinson's medications, timing is critical. That is why it is so important to take all prescription drugs exactly as directed. Levodopa-carbidopa, in particular, must be taken in precise, consistent dosages throughout the day in order to control symptoms. The goal is to maintain a steady supply of the medicine in your bloodstream. When medication is not taken on time, "freezing" and other sudden and debilitating motor symptoms can occur.
Keeping a drug diary
You will need to report back to your doctor about how your body is responding to the medication you are taking. A good way to do this is by keeping a drug diary. This can be done simply, with a notebook and a pencil. Take this diary with you to every doctor visit. Here is what to record:
Warning signs. Write down any new experience, from a headache to mild diarrhea to hives to anaphylactic shock. Ask your care partner to jot down any side effects he or she notices.
Changes to your meds. Whenever your doctor adds or withdraws a medication or changes a dose, enter that information into your diary.
A list of medicines. Keep an updated list of everything you are taking, including supplements, along with specific dosages.
Avoiding negative interactions
Be aware that some medicines can have a negative effect on your condition. That is why it is important to familiarize yourself with all the medications that people with Parkinson's should avoid. Having this information on hand can help prevent dangerous interactions and other problems.
As you can see the answer to the medication question can be long and and tricky. Work with your physician to make sure you are taking the medications that are right for you.
Too much protein may kill brain cells as Parkinson’s progresses
For release: Thursday, April 10, 2014
Parkinson’s killer lurks
within
NIH-funded scientists show that the deadly Parkinson’s gene LRRK2within
can kill nerve cells (green) by
tagging the s15 ribosomal protein (purple), a cog in a cell’s
protein-making machinery.
Courtesy of Dawson lab, JHU
Morris K. Udall Center of
Excellence for Parkinson’s Disease.
Scientists may have discovered how the most common genetic cause of Parkinson’s disease destroys brain cells and devastates many patients worldwide. The study was partially funded by the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS); the results may help scientists develop new therapies.
“This may be a major discovery for Parkinson’s disease patients,” said Ted Dawson, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Johns Hopkins University (JHU) Morris K. Udall Center of Excellence for Parkinson’s Disease, Baltimore, MD. Dr. Dawson and his wife Valina Dawson, Ph.D., director of the JHU Stem Cell and Neurodegeneration Programs at the Institute for Cell Engineering, led the study published in Cell.
The investigators found that mutations in a gene called leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2; pronounced “lark two” or “lurk two”) may increase the rate at which LRRK2 tags ribosomal proteins, which are key components of protein-making machinery inside cells. This could cause the machinery to manufacture too many proteins, leading to cell death.
“For nearly a decade, scientists have been trying to figure out how mutations in LRRK2 cause Parkinson’s disease,” said Margaret Sutherland, Ph.D., a program director at NINDS. “This study represents a clear link between LRRK2 and a pathogenic mechanism linked to Parkinson’s disease.”
Affecting more than half a million people in the United States, Parkinson’s disease is a degenerative disorder that
attacks nerve cells in many parts of the nervous system, most notably in a brain region called the substantial
nigra, which releases dopamine, a chemical messenger important for movement. Initially, Parkinson’s disease
causes uncontrolled movements; including trembling of the hands, arms, or legs. As the disease gradually
worsens,
patients lose ability to walk, talk or complete simple tasks.
attacks nerve cells in many parts of the nervous system, most notably in a brain region called the substantial
nigra, which releases dopamine, a chemical messenger important for movement. Initially, Parkinson’s disease
causes uncontrolled movements; including trembling of the hands, arms, or legs. As the disease gradually
worsens,
patients lose ability to walk, talk or complete simple tasks.
For the majority of cases of Parkinson’s disease, a cause remains unknown. Mutations in the LRRK2 gene are a
leading genetic cause. They have been implicated in as many as 10 percent of inherited forms of the disease
and in aboutt 4 percent of patients who have no family history. One study showed that the most common LRRK2 mutation, called G2019S, may be the cause of 30-40 percent of all Parkinson’s cases in people of North
African Arabic descent.
leading genetic cause. They have been implicated in as many as 10 percent of inherited forms of the disease
and in aboutt 4 percent of patients who have no family history. One study showed that the most common LRRK2 mutation, called G2019S, may be the cause of 30-40 percent of all Parkinson’s cases in people of North
African Arabic descent.
LRRK2 is a kinase enzyme, a type of protein found in cells that tags molecules with chemicals called phosphate
groups. The process of phosphorylation helps regulate basic nerve cell function and health. Previous studies
suggest that disease-causing mutations, like the G2019S mutation, increase the rate at which LRRK2 tags
molecules. Identifying the molecules that LRRK2 tags provides clues as to how nerve cells may die during
Parkinson’s disease.
groups. The process of phosphorylation helps regulate basic nerve cell function and health. Previous studies
suggest that disease-causing mutations, like the G2019S mutation, increase the rate at which LRRK2 tags
molecules. Identifying the molecules that LRRK2 tags provides clues as to how nerve cells may die during
Parkinson’s disease.
In this study, the researchers used LRRK2 as bait to fish out the proteins that it normally tags. Multiple
experiments performed on human kidney cells suggested that LRRK2 tags ribosomal proteins. These proteins
combine with other molecules, called ribonucleic acids, to form ribosomes, which are the cell’s protein-making
factories.
experiments performed on human kidney cells suggested that LRRK2 tags ribosomal proteins. These proteins
combine with other molecules, called ribonucleic acids, to form ribosomes, which are the cell’s protein-making
factories.
Further experiments suggested that disease-causing mutations in LRRK2 increase the rate at which it tags two ribosomal proteins, called s11 and s15. Moreover, brain tissue samples from patients with LRRK2 mutations
had greater levels of phosphorylated s15 than seen in controls.
had greater levels of phosphorylated s15 than seen in controls.
Next, the researchers investigated whether phosphorylation could be linked to cell death, by studying nerve cells
derived from rats or from human embryonic stem cells. Genetically engineering the cells to have a LRRK2 mutant
gene increased the amount of cell death and phosphorylated s15. In contrast, the researchers prevented cell death
when they engineered the cells to also make a mutant s15 protein that could not be tagged by LRRK2.
derived from rats or from human embryonic stem cells. Genetically engineering the cells to have a LRRK2 mutant
gene increased the amount of cell death and phosphorylated s15. In contrast, the researchers prevented cell death
when they engineered the cells to also make a mutant s15 protein that could not be tagged by LRRK2.
“These results suggest that s15 ribosome protein may play a critical role in the development of Parkinson’s
disease,” said Dr. Dawson.
disease,” said Dr. Dawson.
How might phosphorylation of s15 kill nerve cells? To investigate this, Dr. Dawson and his colleagues performed experiments on fruit flies.
Previous studies on flies showed that genetically engineering dopamine-releasing nerve cells to overproduce
the LRRK2 mutant protein induced nerve cell damage and movement disorders. Dr. Dawson’s team found that
the brains of these flies had increased levels of phosphorylated s15 and that engineering the flies so that s15
could not be tagged by LRRK2 prevented cell damage and restored normal movement.
the LRRK2 mutant protein induced nerve cell damage and movement disorders. Dr. Dawson’s team found that
the brains of these flies had increased levels of phosphorylated s15 and that engineering the flies so that s15
could not be tagged by LRRK2 prevented cell damage and restored normal movement.
Interestingly, the brains of the LRRK2 mutant flies also had abnormally high levels of all proteins, suggesting that increased s15 tagging caused ribosomes to make too much protein. Treating the flies with low doses of
anisomycin, a drug that blocks protein production, prevented nerve cell damage and restored the flies’ movement
t even though levels of s15 phosphorylation remained high.
anisomycin, a drug that blocks protein production, prevented nerve cell damage and restored the flies’ movement
t even though levels of s15 phosphorylation remained high.
“Our results support the idea that changes in the way cells make proteins might be a common cause of Parkinson’s disease and possibly other neurodegenerative disorders,” said Dr. Dawson.
Dr. Dawson and his colleagues think that blocking the phosphorylation of s15 ribosomal proteins could lead to
future therapies as might other strategies which decrease bulk protein synthesis or increase the cells’ ability to
cope with increased protein metabolism. They also think that a means to measure s15 phosphorylation could also
act as a biomarker of LRRK2 activity in treatment trials of LRRK2 inhibitors.
future therapies as might other strategies which decrease bulk protein synthesis or increase the cells’ ability to
cope with increased protein metabolism. They also think that a means to measure s15 phosphorylation could also
act as a biomarker of LRRK2 activity in treatment trials of LRRK2 inhibitors.
This work was supported by grants from the NINDS (NS038377, NS072187), the JPB Foundation, the Maryland
Stem Cell Research Fund (2007-MSCRFI-0420-00, 2009-MSCRFII-0125-00, 2013-MSCRFII-0105-00), and
the New York Stem Cell Foundation.
Stem Cell Research Fund (2007-MSCRFI-0420-00, 2009-MSCRFII-0125-00, 2013-MSCRFII-0105-00), and
the New York Stem Cell Foundation.
References:
Martin et al. “Ribosomal protein s15 phosphorylation mediates LRRK2 neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s
disease,” Cell, April 10, 2014. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2014.01.064
disease,” Cell, April 10, 2014. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2014.01.064
For more information about Parkinson’s disease, please visit:
###
NINDS (http://www.ninds.nih.gov) is the nation’s leading funder of research on the brain and nervous system. The mission of NINDS is to seek fundamental knowledge about the brain and nervous system and to use that knowledge to reduce the burden of neurological disease.
About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27
Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the
primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about
NIH and its programs, visithttp://www.nih.gov.
Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the
primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about
NIH and its programs, visithttp://www.nih.gov.
Last Modified June 10, 2014
STUDY: GMO FREE USA: ROUND-UP Causes Toxic Damage To Rat Brains
GMO Free USA with Rick Tallman and 3 others
STUDY: Roundup Herbicide Causes Toxic Damage
to Rat Brains. The summarization of their results, looking at the effects of
both acute and chronic exposure, werereported as follows: "Taken together,
these results demonstrated that Roundup might lead to excessive extracellular
glutamate levels and consequently to glutamate excitotoxicity and oxidative
stress in rat hippocampus." The hippocampus processes memories, emotional
responses and more. This leads us to ask... what health problems might be
caused by Roundup induced toxicity to the human brain as a result of the
Roundup laden GMOs in our food?
Please watch video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Njd0RugGjAg
Please watch video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Njd0RugGjAg
Parkinson’s Personality
Parkinson’s Personality: Disease More Likely to Strike Cautious People
By Rachael Rettner, MyHealthNewsDaily Staff Writer | LiveScience.com – Tue, May 1, 2012
Some personality traits appear to be linked with the risk of developing Parkinson’s disease, a new study suggests.
The results show patients with Parkinson’s disease are more likely to be cautious and avoid taking risks compared with people who don’t have Parkinson’s.
Moreover, the tendency to avoid taking risks appears to be a stable personality trait across a patient’s lifetime — as far back as 30 years before symptoms began, those with Parkinson’s disease said they did not often engage in risky or exhilarating activities, such as riding roller coasters or speeding, the study found.
The findings add to a growing body of research suggesting Parkinson’s is more likely to afflict people with rigid, cautious personalities.
It’s possible that what we consider to be aspects of someone’s personality may in fact be very early manifestations of Parkinson’s, said study researcher Kelly Sullivan, of the University of South Florida’s department of neurology. However, much more research is needed to confirm this hypothesis, Sullivan said.
It’s also way too soon to say that having a “look before you leap” personality puts you at risk for Parkinson’s.
“I’m not a big risk-taker, but at the same time, I haven’t resigned myself that I’m going to have Parkinson’s,” Sullivan said.
Parkinson’s personality
Since the early 1900s, there have been reports that Parkinson’s patients tend to be industrious, punctual, cautious and risk-averse. Most studies that have found a link between Parkinson’s and a risk- avoidant personality have been based on assessments of patients’ personalities prior to the disease, using questions such as “did you take risks when you were younger?” However, remembering what you were like many years ago may be difficult, and what someone considers a “risk” is subjective, Sullivan said.
In the new study, Sullivan and colleagues asked 89 patients with Parkinson’s and 99 healthy people whether they engaged in specific activities— such as riding roller coasters, speeding and wearing a seatbelt— before the age of 35.
They also asked questions to gauge participants’ current personalities.
The results showed that participants with Parkinson’s had higher levels of neuroticism — a personality trait associated with experiencing more negative emotions such as anxiety — and higher levels of harm-avoidance compared with healthy participants. In general, participants’ willingness to take risks tended to be stable over time, and Parkinson’s patients tended to report they took fewer risks.
Another study by Sullivan and colleagues found women with Parkinson’s disease were 60 percent more likely to say they had a routine lifestyle as a young adult (such as getting up and going to bed at the same time every day) compared with people without Parkinson’s.
Too little dopamine
A brain chemical called dopamine is needed to control muscle movement, and in Parkinson’s disease patients, the brain cells that produce dopamine start to die. This cellular death leads to the tremors and difficulty with walking, movement and coordination, which are hallmarks of Parkinson’s.
Levels of dopamine may also affect personality. Dopamine is responsible for signaling
feelings of reward and pleasure. “When you take a risk or jump out of an airplane, that’s
what gives you that reward feeling,” Sullivan said.
feelings of reward and pleasure. “When you take a risk or jump out of an airplane, that’s
what gives you that reward feeling,” Sullivan said.
“If you have lower levels of dopamine, it’s less likely that you would really get that neurochemical reward and say ‘That was awesome! Let’s keep doing that,’” Sullivan said.
While the symptoms of Parkinson’s don’t show up until about 70 percent of dopamine-producing cells have deteriorated, Sullivan said, it’s possible the loss of
dopamine-producing cells goes on for a long period before someone is diagnosed,
Sullivan said.
While the symptoms of Parkinson’s don’t show up until about 70 percent of dopamine-producing cells have deteriorated, Sullivan said, it’s possible the loss of
dopamine-producing cells goes on for a long period before someone is diagnosed,
Sullivan said.
More research is needed to know exactly how long this process of brain cell loss goes on,
and whether the risk-avoidant behaviors exhibited early in life by Parkinson’s patients
are actually manifestations of the disease, Sullivan said.
and whether the risk-avoidant behaviors exhibited early in life by Parkinson’s patients
are actually manifestations of the disease, Sullivan said.
Sullivan’s studies were presented last week at the American Academy of Neurology
meeting in New Orleans.
meeting in New Orleans.
Pass it on: Parkinson’s diseases patients tend to have more cautious personalities.
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Topping the function of a protein called LRRK2
Stopping the function of a protein called LRRK2 may help treat all people with Parkinson’s disease, even those without a LRRK2 genetic mutation.