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Public release date: 26-Nov-2001
Contact: Cheryl Alementi
[log in to unmask]
651-695-2737
American Academy of Neurology
Electrical brain stimulation reduces Parkinson’s symptoms

ST. PAUL, MN – Electrical brain stimulation can reduce the problems
Parkinson's patients develop after long-term use of the drug levodopa,
the main treatment for Parkinson's, according to a study published in the
November 27 issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the American
Academy of Neurology.

After years of use, levodopa becomes less effective, causing
fluctuations in Parkinson's motor symptoms such as tremor and poor
balance, called the "on/off" phenomenon.

Electrical brain stimulation increased the "on" motor function when
medication was working by 29 percent, and improved the "off" motor
function by 38 percent in the study. The process, also called deep brain
stimulation, uses a surgical implant similar to a cardiac pacemaker to
block brain signals that cause tremors and other signs of the disease.

The study examined 12 people who had stimulating electrodes implanted
one to three years prior. They were monitored hourly for two days while
taking their normal medications. One day the stimulators were turned on;
one day they were turned off.

Six of the patients received stimulation in the globus pallidus interna
nuclei of the brain; six were stimulated in the subthalamic nuclei.
The patients were also able to complete a walking test 13 percent faster
when the stimulator was on. And patients improved by 23 percent on a
finger-tapping test, which measures bradykinesia, or the slowness in
initiating movement that affects Parkinson's patients.

Other studies citing improvements from deep brain stimulation on
levodopa-induced symptoms have been based on reports from patients,
not on objective tests, according to study author and neurologist John
Nutt, MD, of Oregon Health & Science University in Portland.

The study was also designed to help researchers determine how deep
brain stimulation changes the body's response to levodopa. To that end,
patients were studied for another two days, during which they received
their levodopa doses intravenously rather than orally -- once while the
stimulators were on and once while they were off.

"The hypothesis has been that the improvement occurs because the
body's response to levodopa is prolonged by the stimulation," Nutt
said. "But we saw no evidence of this. Instead, we found that
improvement is determined more by the decrease in the amount of
disability patients experience when they are in their 'off' state when the
drug is not working."

Nutt said this finding may give researchers a new strategy for
developing therapies to reduce the motor fluctuations in advanced
Parkinson's patients.

"Most new therapies have focused on extending the response of each
dose of levodopa," he said. "These findings suggest that we should
focus on improving the 'off' disability level."

###

The study was supported in part by the National Parkinson
Foundation, Willamette-Columbia Parkinsonian Society, National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and Oregon Health
Sciences University General Clinical Research Center.

The American Academy of Neurology, an association of more than
17,500 neurologists and neuroscience professionals, is dedicated to
improving patient care through education and research.

For more information about the American Academy of Neurology,
visit its web site at http://www.aan.com
For more information contact:
Kathy Stone, 651-695-2763; [log in to unmask]

For a copy of the study, contact Cheryl Alementi,
651-695-2737;
[log in to unmask]

SOURCE: EurekAlert
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2001-11/aaon-ebs111901.php

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