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Research tied to Parkinson's ... The discovery could ultimately benefit those with the disease.
JUDY MONCHUK, CP
2004-01-30 05:22:14

CALGARY -- University of Calgary neuroscientists have discovered how the brain tells the body to move, research that
could give new hope to people with Parkinson's disease. The researchers say they have greater understanding of how the
brain processes sensory "cues" that prepare the body for action, which may some day lead to new or different treatment
for the degenera- tive nerve disorder.

"The next step is to develop new drugs or therapeutic stimulation, and to modulate these cueing cells to trigger motor
response," says Dr. Bin Hu of the university's faculty of medicine.

Hu, scientific director of the Movement Disorder and Therapeutic Brain Stimulation Program, has spent the past decade
studying the thalamus, a part of the brain where signals for hearing, vision, touch and movement converge.

Neurons in the thalamus decide what part of the brain gets signals and when, exerting tremendous influence on how
people think, memorize and react to the outside world.

The research team found that cue cells take in sensory information and cognitive signals from the cortex. When those
signals collide, they create a burst that alerts the body for action.

The team believes the cue cells are controlled by a chemical messenger called acetylcholine, which can synchronize the
collision of signals.

The discovery may explain why Parkinson's patients have considerable difficulty controlling their movements, yet are
able to move smoothly when stimulated by strobe lights or music, says Hu.

The information was published Jan. 6 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.

There are no immediate plans to test Hu's theory on human Parkinson's patients.

"The more important thing at this stage is that we have to have a thorough understanding of this cueing system, then we
can revisit the current Parkinson's disease model," Hu said.

About 100,000 Canadians have Parkinson's, a slowly progressive neurodegenerative disease. It's believed that the
telltale shaking of sufferers occurs when the brain doesn't have enough dopamine, a naturally occurring chemical that
allows nerve cells to transmit messages to muscles.

SOURCE:  The London Free Press
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/LondonFreePress/News/2004/01/30/329510.html

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