Print

Print


Hi All,
I've spent a lot of time around welding, cut m'teeth in the Blacksmith
Shop, worked briefly as a welder in a plant built in the '20s.....

Why am I not surprised?  ...........  murray

*******************
Researchers Suspect Link Between Welding and Parkinson's Disease
Jan. 22, 2001 | 5:22 p.m.
ATTENTION: Medical editors
ST. LOUIS, Jan. 22 (AScribe News) -- Scientists have identified the first
clue that welding might trigger the early onset of Parkinson's disease
(PD). A research team led by neurologist Brad A. Racette, M.D., found
that 15 professional welders developed typical clinical and neurological
signs of the disease an average of 15 years earlier than the general
population. The study is featured in the January issue of the journal
Neurology with an accompanying editorial.
``This research doesn't prove that welding causes PD,'' explains Racette,
an assistant professor of neurology at Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis. ``But it's suspicious that the majority of these
patients had a much younger age of onset. Our theory is that we have
identified a group of people who probably would have developed the
disease eventually, but something in the welding environment caused
them to develop symptoms earlier.''
PD is a progressive movement disorder that affects more than 1 million
Americans. It is characterized by slowness of movement and tremors
that affect one side more than the other. Although genetics can account
for some cases, 80 percent of PD patients lack a family history of the
disease.
Scientists therefore have hypothesized that environmental factors are
largely responsible. However, no such factors have been identified. One
clue, though, is that manganese miners are susceptible to a condition
called manganism because they inhale large amounts of the mineral
manganese. The disease is classified as a Parkinson syndrome because
it bears a resemblance to PD. But both the symptoms and brain
pathology are significantly different.
Welding fumes also contain high levels of manganese. But when a
young welder walked into Racette's office and said he was suffering
from manganism, Racette knew something was fishy.
``Manganism is a very different disease. To me, this patient clearly
looked as if he had PD,'' Racette says.
He soon discovered a lore that welding may lead to PD; material data
safety sheets even list the disease as a possible hazard. But there is little
scientific evidence to back up the idea.
Racette and colleagues therefore set out to determine whether welding is
in fact an environmental contributor to PD. They identified 15
professional welders among patients in the school's Movement
Disorders Center. Then they compared the welders' medical history and
clinical symptoms with those of control PD patients.
They found no clinical differences between the welders and typical PD
patients. The two groups had the same severity and frequency of
symptoms and responded similarly to levodopa, a drug used to treat PD.
The only statistically significant difference was average age of onset: 45
for the welders or 15 years younger than for the control group. Racette
and colleagues also imaged the brains of two of the welding patients
and 13 control patients. People with PD typically have lower levels of a
neurotransmitter called dopamine in certain regions of their brain. Using
a technique called fluorodopa positron emission tomography (FDOPA
PET), the researchers determined how much dopamine the brain could
take up. With that information, they assessed the extent of Parkinson-
like deterioration. The FDOPA PET scans revealed no significant
difference between the welding and control groups. Therefore, the
welders appeared to have typical PD.
``These results are really exciting because we may soon be able to
identify the first environmental cause of PD,'' says Racette. ``Our first
goal is to show that welding truly does cause this disease. Then we can
figure out which aspect of welding is responsible.''
This information, Racette argues, will help determine whether welders
should take precautionary measures and also will help researchers begin
to unlock the underlying cause of this debilitating disorder.
In the editorial that accompanies the paper, Canadian neurologist Ali H.
Rajput, M.B.B.S., F.R.C.P.C., likens the search for environmental causes
of PD to looking for a needle in a haystack. ``By narrowing the focus to
one environmental group, Racette et al. have chosen a smaller stack and,
therefore, have a greater chance of finding whether there is a needle or
not,'' he says.
Racette BA, McGee-Minnich L, Moerlein SM, Mink JW, Videen TO,
Perlmutter JS. Welding-related parkinsonism: Clinical features, treatment,
and pathophysiology. Neurology, 56, 8-13, Jan. 9, 2001.
Funding from the National Institutes of Health, the American
Parkinson's Disease Association, the Charles A. Dana Foundation and
the McDonnell Center for the Study of Higher Brain Function supported
this study.
The full-time and volunteer faculty of Washington University School of
Medicine are the physicians and surgeons of Barnes-Jewish and St.
Louis Children's hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading
medical research, teaching and patient care institutions in the nation.
Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC Health System.
-30-
Media Contact: Gila Reckess, Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis, 314-286-0109; reckessg(at)msnotes.wustl.edu
AScribe - The Public Interest Newswire / 510-645-4600 $$
AP-NY-01-22-01 1810ES

http://www.postnet.com/postnet/News/wires.nsf/StateRegion/7546AA26
4A1437F3862569DC007F5102?OpenDocument

**************
[log in to unmask]