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Man's Own Brain Cells Help Treat Parkinson's-Study
April 08, 2002 04:33 PM ET
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A transplant of his own brain cells
have treated a man's Parkinson's disease, clearing up the trembling
and rigid muscles that mark the disease, researchers reported
on Monday.

The researchers believe they isolated and nurtured adult stem cells
from the patient's brain, cells that they re-injected to restore normal
function.

"We definitely need to do more studies," said Dr. Michel Levesque
of the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, who led the
study. "This is the first case that shows a promising technique may
work. It is an experimental procedure and has to be investigated
further before it becomes accepted procedure."

More than two years after the experimental treatment, the man has
no symptoms of Parkinson's, an incurable and fatal brain disease
that starts with tremors and ends up incapacitating its victims.

Parkinson's is caused when brain cells that produce dopamine
die off. Dopamine is a key neurotransmitter or message-carrying
chemical that is involved in movement.

Many different groups of researchers are experimenting to see
if these brain cells can be regenerated using stem cells, the
so-called master cells that give rise to the various different
tissues in the body.

Some stem cells come from very early embryos, some from
aborted or miscarried fetuses and some can be found in a
person's own tissues, but they are elusive.

The study is sure to be used in the debate over the use of
embryonic stem cells. Some groups say adult stem cells can be
as useful as those taken from embryos. Many scientists
disagree and say both adult and embryonic stem cells
should be studied.

CELLS REMOVED FROM PATIENT'S BRAIN
Levesque said the patient, a nuclear engineer and jet pilot,
developed Parkinson's in his 40s. He had tremors and stiffness
in his muscles and the drugs used to treat the disease had,
as they always do, stopped working.

His team drilled into the patient's skull and removed a piece
of his brain. "We took a tiny piece of cortex measuring
probably less than the size of a pea," Levesque said in
a telephone interview. "What we extracted were neural
stem cells or progenitor cells."

It is hard to tell whether a cell is a stem cell, but they grew
the cells in special media, a kind of nurturing soup.

They checked to make sure at least some of the cells were
producing dopamine, and then injected them back into the
patient's brain, researchers told a meeting in Chicago
of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons.

PET scans of the man's brain, which show brain function,
showed that dopamine was being produced and used.
"At three months there was a 58 percent increase,"
Levesque said.

But now the man's dopamine production, as measured
by PET scans, is back to where it was when he was first
treated, which puzzles Levesque, as the symptoms of
Parkinson's have not returned.

He said it is possible that it takes a while for the symptoms
to show after dopamine production dies down. Or perhaps
PET scans do not show everything that is going on.

Other cells may also be involved in the processes that
underlie Parkinson's, Levesque said.

It is also possible that the animals used to study Parkinson's
do not accurately mimic the human disease, so that humans
may react differently to treatment, he said.

Although the Phase I safety study was done using only
the single patient, Levesque said the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration had given his team the go-ahead to start
a Phase II trial, which will include more patients and test
for safety and whether the treatment works.

Levesque and colleagues formed a company to develop
the technique, called Neurogeneration. It has been bought
out by California-based CelMed Bioscience, a subsidiary
of Canada-based Theratechnologies .

SOURCE: Reuters
http://reuters.com/news_article.jhtml;jsessionid=IYTFYS4BKWI5WCRBAEZSFEYKEEATIIWD?type=sciencenews&StoryID=787568

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