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Hi All,
I believe PD sufferers may have a higher (than the norm for their age
bracket) incidence of osteoporosis, so I thought I would pass this on.

Cheers ......... murray

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 1 JANUARY 2001
Contact: Jerry Barach
[log in to unmask]
972-2-588-2904
Hebrew University of Jerusalem

New generation of bone building drugs for men
Hope for male osteoporosis patients

Jerusalem, January 1, 2001 - Osteoporosis is an affliction commonly
identified with women, however there are millions of men in the world
who also suffer from it. Estimates are that the number of men with this
disease is one-fourth that of women.

 Despite this, there has been no solution thus far to this epidemic
 among men.

However, researchers in the Bone Laboratory in the Institute of Dental
Sciences at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Faculty of Dental
Medicine are developing new therapeutic and preventive approaches to
treat men suffering from osteoporosis. The Hebrew University
researchers, headed by Professor Itai Bab, are developing preparations
that stimulate bone building based on naturally occurring hormones that
regulate bone formation. Professor Bab's research team in Jerusalem and
the Division of Bone and Mineral Metabolism at the Harvard Medical
School in Boston, headed by Professors Michael Chorev and Michael
Rosenblatt, have jointly reported that th e Osteogenic Growth Peptide
(OGP, discovered a decade ago in the Hebrew University Bone
Laboratory)
and the Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) stimulate bone building in
osteoporotic mice. Drugs under development based on these
preparations can prevent bone loss and restore the porous skeleton.

Osteoporosis is a disease that weakens bones resulting from a decrease
in bone density.

This, in turn, results in multiple fractures, which in many cases lead
to severe disability and complications that may even cause death. The
decrease in bone density results from internal destruction of the bone
tissue. In every person this tissue is being continuously remodeled and
rebuilt throughout life to cope with changing mechanical loads. This
process consists of two stages: resorption (destruction) of bone tissue
and its replacement by newly formed bone. Specialized cells carry out
both the destruction and building of bone. This remodeling takes place
in multiple minute foci and migrates from site to site. At any given
time about a tenth of the total bone tissue in the body participates in
the remodeling. Until menopause in women and at an o lder age in men
(10-15 years later), the remodeling process is balanced; that is, the
total amount of bone that is built is equal to the amount of bone lost,
thus maintaining the bone density. Thereafter, the remodeling is
unbalanced -- the amount of bone destroyed is greater than that built,
and the density drops.

The reasons for the imbalance are different in men and women.
Menopause in women triggers a steep rise in the number of
bone destroying cells and in their activity. In men, there is a slow and
longer decrease in the number and activity of bone building cells, which
is especially pronounced in prostate cancer patients treated with sex
hormone inhibitors. These differences suggest different treatment
approaches. Indeed, women are currently benefited from a new
generation of drugs that inhibit the activity of the bone destroying cells
and prevent the decrease in bone density. On the other hand, drugs that
stimulate bone formation in osteoporotic men are so far unavailable.
Medicines based on the research by the Hebrew University scientists are
now under development by pharmaceutical companies in the U.S. and
Europe to combat osteoporosis in men and also as complementary drugs
to antiresorptive agents in women. However, several years are still
required for the efficiency of these newly developed drugs to be
demonstrated in clinical trials in humans.

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For further information: Jerry Barach, Dept. of Media Relations, 972-2-
5882904 or 972-2-5864772 (home).

http://www.eurekalert.com/releases/huj-ngo010200.html