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Stem cell hope for Parkinson's

Saturday, 17 February, 2001, 02:47 GMT  - Scientists are closer to finding
a cure for Parkinson's disease using special "master cells" taken from
embryos.

Dr Ole Isacson, of Harvard Medical School, and Dr Ronald McKay, of the US
National Institutes of Health, said on Friday they had both used the cells
successfully to treat mice and rats which mimicked symptoms of the human
condition.

But the researchers, who revealed details of their work at the annual
meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, may
find that political and ethical obstacles will delay the treatment getting
into clinical trials.

Public funding for research that uses cells taken from embryos is
restricted in the US, as it is in many countries. Although the new Bush
administration has promised to review the ethical issues involved, it has
yet to come forward with a policy position.

Until it does, the scientists say it could be difficult to develop further
some of the emerging cell technologies.

Adequate supplies

Isacson and McKay used slightly different techniques but achieved broadly
similar results. Both used embryonic stem cells, the master cells that can
transform into virtually any tissue type in the body, and which can be
grown in vast numbers.

The scientists used the cells so that they would produce dopamine when
implanted into the brains of rats and mice. Dopamine is the key brain
chemical missing in Parkinson's patients, and which gives rise to the
classic symptoms of tremor and rigidity.

Drug treatment for Parkinson's has only short-lived beneficial effects, and
researchers have had difficulty obtaining sufficient supplies of
dopamine-producing cells from foetal tissue for use in brain transplants.

"What stem cell research provides is finally to get an adequate source of
cells that one can produce in tubes that the neurosurgeons can implant," Dr
Isacson said. "This would be a revolution."

'Medical moonshot'

But if scientists are to take the research further, they will need support
from politicians. Ethical concerns about the use of embryos mean public
researchers can only use stem cells if they are sourced from private labs.

Jeffrey Martin, a Parkinson's sufferer and campaigner, told the AAAS
meeting that he was hopeful the new US Government would be a supporter of
biomedical technology and extend the scope of funding.

"If the public is made aware of the opportunities here then the president
will in fact do what he said in his campaign in Florida in September and
launch what he called a medical moonshot to cure a number of age-old
diseases with new resources and new resolve."

Dr McKay said it was possible the new Parkinson's treatments would be
developed in a country where the regulatory framework covering stem cell
research was most benign.

"Recently the British Government has moved forward in this area," he said.
"There has also been very positive moves from the French and Dutch
Governments in the use of stem cells as a clinical treatment."

By Jonathan Amos in San Francisco
http://news6.thdo.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/in%5Fdepth/sci%5Ftech/2001/san%5Ffran
cisco/newsid%5F1175000/1175105.stm

janet paterson, an akinetic rigid subtype parkie
53 now / 44 dx cd / 43 onset cd / 41 dx pd / 37 onset pd
TEL: 613 256 8340 SMAIL: PO Box 171 Almonte Ontario K0A 1A0 Canada
EMAIL: [log in to unmask] URL: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/