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hi all

oh sure, dr. watts,
just when i finish fixing  up my cancan chart!
it is to laugh with delight!

janet

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Eye Cell Transplants Aid Parkinson's Patients

April 17, 2002 04:49 PM ET - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Eye cells transplanted
into the brains of Parkinson's patients have markedly improved their
symptoms and may provide an alternative to steadily increasing doses of
medication, doctors said Wednesday.

The eye cells produce dopamine, the important chemical lacking in the
brains of people with Parkinson's, whose disease begins with trembling or
stiffness and progresses to a rigidity that leaves them virtually paralyzed.

Dr. Ray Watts, a professor of neurology at Emory University School of
Medicine in Atlanta, said six patients who got the eye cell transplants
showed a regression of their symptoms.

"We've been following these six participants for over a year, and we've
found they've improved, on average, nearly 50 percent in motor function,"
Watts, who presented his findings to a meeting in Denver of the American
Academy of Neurology, said in a statement.

The cells used are found in the retina, the lining of the back of the eye.

"They make dopamine and you can grow them well in culture," Watts said in a
telephone interview. "You can produce hundreds of millions of cells from a
single donor."

Watts said no one knows why the cells produce dopamine, a neurotransmitter
or message-carrying chemical that, in the brain, is associated with movement.

It is the loss of dopamine-producing neurons in the brain that causes
Parkinson's.

MANY DIFFERENT CELL TRANSPLANTS TRIED

Many researchers are trying different kinds of transplants to treat
Parkinson's, which affects more than a million people in the United States
alone. These include cells from pig fetuses, from human fetuses and stem
cells, the body's master cells that can sometimes be induced to form brain
tissue.

Watts's team used retinal cells taken from the bodies of people who donated
their eyes after death. There is little risk of an immune system rejection
because the brain does not have the same level of immune activity as the
rest of the body.

The cells were prepared with a gelatin product called Spheramine, developed
by South San Francisco-based Titan Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

"These cells are making L-dopa and or dopamine and serve, in the brain, as
a more continual production site than just taking medications by mouth
every two hours," Watts said.

L-dopa is one of the standard treatments for Parkinson's and Watts said the
improvement he saw in the patients was comparable to when they take the drug.

Standard tests used to measure a patient's tremors, ability to move and
other symptoms showed they got better after the implants, Watts said.

"At 12 months they averaged a 48 percent improvement, which is
substantial," he said. One patient had a 60 percent improvement. One
patient had had the implants for nearly two years and maintains the benefits.

"Not everybody has the same symptoms, but if they had slowness and
stiffness and trouble walking generally, those were the symptoms that got
better," Watts said.

The problem with drugs given to Parkinson's patients is that the effects
wear off more and more quickly as the disease progresses. Patients have to
take bigger doses.

"Then they start to get complications," Watts said. Sometimes these
complications are as bad as the initial Parkinson's symptoms.

"We need more sustained delivery mechanisms," Watts said. "These cells are
one approach to that for patients with advanced Parkinson's who are not
optimally controlled with their medications."

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

from "pd in the news" under "what's new?" at
a new voice: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/


janet paterson: an akinetic rigid subtype, albeit perky, parky
pd: 55/41/37 cd: 55/44/43 tel: 613 256 8340 email: [log in to unmask]
smail: 375 Country Street, Almonte, Ontario, Canada, K0A 1A0
a new voice: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/

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