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Dear List Friends,

The information that I  have on file on estrogen  relates to  those of the
female persuasion !  For a female  PWP, estrogen  replacement therapy
"could" be beneficial .... Please read the news article below  from earlier
this year ( I believe it came from Reuters Health ???).

Don't think that us guys would want to try it..... Rob

Estrogen and Parkinson Disease

Estrogen Deprivation Leads To Death Of Dopamine Cells In The Brain
Estrogen deprivation leads to the death of dopamine cells in the brain, a
finding by Yale researchers that could have implications for post-menopausal
women. The cells can be regenerated if estrogen is administered within 10
days, but by 30 days, the cells appear to be permanently lost, said D.
Eugene Redmond, Jr., professor of psychiatry and neurosurgery at Yale School
of Medicine and director of the Neural Transplantation and Regeneration
Program. Redmond is co-investigator and spokesperson about the study
published in the December issue of The Journal of Neuroscience.
The principal investigator was Csaba Leranth, M.D., professor of obstetrics
and gynecology and neurobiology.
"Without estrogen, more than 30 percent of all the dopamine neurons
disappeared in a major area of the brain that produces the neurotransmitter,
dopamine, " Redmond said. "This finding is consistent with a lot of
observations for which there has been, until now, no explanation. The
results of the study shed light on why men, who have less estrogen in their
bodies and more androgen to antagonize it, are more likely to develop
Parkinson's Disease than pre-menopausal women, and why post menopausal women
are more likely then to develop the disease."
The discovery was made after the researchers removed the ovaries of female
monkeys, thereby depleting their bodies of estrogen and other gonadal
hormones. Within 10 days, key neurons in the brain that protect against
Parkinson's Disease disappeared. Redmond said monkeys were used in the study
because, unlike usual laboratory animals, they have real menstrual cycles
and many other close similarities to humans.
The researchers were interested in sexual differences in dopamine neurons in
the substantia nigra area of the midbrain, whose destruction is associated
with Parkinson's Disease and dementia. The researchers first sought to
determine whether circulating estrogen might have long term effects by
altering the number of dopamine neurons. The density of dopamine neurons was
calculated in the substantia nigra of intact male and female primates; in
female primates whose ovaries had been removed; and in female primates whose
ovaries had been removed but were receiving estrogen replacement therapy.
"After both 10 and 30 days of estrogen deprivation, apparently 30 percent of
the total number of substantia nigra dopamine cells are lost," Redmond said.
"Furthermore, the density calculations showed that brief estrogen
replacement restores the density of the total number of neurons in that area
of the brain 10 days after the ovaries have been removed, but not 30 days
later."
"These observations show the essential role of estrogen in maintaining the
integrity of the nigral dopamine system involved in muscle control and
higher brain functions. It suggests a new prevention or treatment strategy
for patients at risk of Parkinson's disease and certain forms of
memory-impairing disorders,"he said.
"This also provides another rationale for estrogen replacement therapy for
postmenopausal women. Thirty percent is a very significant number of cells
in this system. Maintenance, restoration, or loss of that many cells could
make the difference between severe parkinsonism and having no symptoms at
all." But Redmond cautioned that women should not use the results to make a
decision about estrogen replacement therapy until further studies look at
the effects on dopamine cells of much longer periods of estrogen
deprivation.
Redmond said the researchers also want to see if much larger doses of
estrogen or other hormones administered at 30 days and beyond of estrogen
deprivation would resuscitate the cells. All of this must be in the context
of possible side effects of hormone replacement that women should take into
account in consultation with their doctors.
Other investigators were Robert Roth, professor of psychiatry and
pharmacology; John Elsworth, senior research scientist, psychiatry;
Frederick Naftolin, M.D., professor of obstetrics and gynecology and of
molecular, cellular and developmental biology, and Tamas Horvath, associate
professor of obstetrics and gynecology and neurobiology.
The study was carried out at the St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation in
the West Indies.

----- Original Message -----
From: ali platin <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2001 4:30 PM
Subject: new treatment


> hi, i heard about an oestrogene treatment on tv and they say that
oestrogene helps recover the nerves. they had an interview with a patient
and he said, before the treatment, he was totally unable to write for his
hands were very shaky. after the treatment, he says, now i can write pretty
much the same as i used to.
> has anyone of you heard about this new tretment? is it applied somewhere,
and what is the success percentage?
>
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> In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn

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