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Teeth May Hold Key To Treatment Of Parkinson's
NEWSWISE
www.tulsaworld.com
5/30/2004

Cells derived from the inside of a tooth might someday prove an effective way to treat the brains of people suffering
from Parkinson's disease.

A study in the May 1 issue of the European Journal of Neuroscience shows dental pulp cells provide great support for
nerve cells lost in Parkinson's disease and could be transplanted directly into the affected parts of the brain. The
study's lead author is Christopher Nosrat, an assistant professor of biological and materials sciences at the
University of Michigan School of Dentistry.

This is not the first test of stem cells as a therapy for Parkinson's disease-type illnesses, known as
neurodegenerative diseases, but Nosrat noted that it is the first to use post-natal stem cells grown from more readily
available tooth pulp in the nervous system.

Using dental pulp has other advantages besides its availability, Nosrat said. The cells produce a host of beneficial
"neurotrophic" factors, which promote nerve cell survival.

Parkinson's disease is characterized by symptoms including tremors of the hands, arms or legs, rigidity of the body and
difficulty balancing while standing or walking. Parkinson's affects nerve cells in the part of the brain called the
basal ganglia, which is responsible for control of voluntary movement. An estimated 1 million Americans suffer from
Parkinson's disease, for which there is no cure.

Nosrat's study involved evaluating the potential of injecting tooth cells into brain cells as a possible cell-based
therapy for Parkinson's. He was testing whether the tooth cells could provide neurotrophic factors to support dying
nerve cells and replace dead cells.

Nosrat also has studied dental pulp stem cells as a treatment for spinal cord injuries and said applying that knowledge
to treatment of neurodegenerative disease was the next logical step.

He used the same general approach for this Parkinson's study: researchers extract a tooth and draw cells from the
center of the tooth, then culture them in a Petri dish to increase the number of the cells. The cell mixture then
contains neuronal precursor cells and cells that produce beneficial neurotrophic factors.

Nosrat emphasized that there is much work to be done before human patients might find relief from Parkinson's symptoms
as a result of this therapy. It is still many years from being tested in people as a possible treatment or cure for
neurological disorders.

Previous studies have used other sources for stem cells, and in animal and human studies, most of those cells die when
grafted into the brain. Nosrat believes cells drawn from dental pulp are more robust because they also produce the
neurotrophic factors, which promote nerve cell survival. Nosrat hopes that by refining the delivery method---by
focusing the treatment much more specifically on affected parts of the brain and the co-delivery of neurotrophic
factors---he can eventually achieve success.

SOURCE: Tulsa World, OK
http://tinyurl.com/2n45h

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