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FYI

*Drug reverses Parkinson's brain damage *

*Ian Sample, science correspondent
Saturday July 2, 2005
The Guardian <http://www.guardian.co.uk>*

An experimental drug for Parkinson's disease has been shown to trigger
new nerve growth in the brain, the first time any treatment has reversed
the brain damage caused by the condition.

Neuroscientists at Frenchay hospital in Bristol made the discovery when
they examined the brain of a patient who took part in a trial of the
drug GDNF four years ago. All five patients on the trial showed dramatic
improvements.

Seth Love, a consultant neuropathologist at the hospital, examined the
brain of a 62- year-old patient who had been on the trial but recently
died of a heart attack. He found that nerve fibres in a region of the
brain called the putamen had regrown. The loss of these fibres, and the
chemical dopamine they produce, leads to Parkinson's disease.

Tests showed that the drug improved patients' control of their movements
by between 50% and 80%. Also, they have experienced no deterioration
since treatment stopped six months ago.

"This is the first time that any treatment at all has been shown to
reverse the disease process. All the other drugs have just treated the
symptoms," said Professor Love, whose study is published in the journal
Nature Medicine.

But the finding does not mean a new treatment for Parkinson's disease is
on the horizon. Amgen, the US company that owns GDNF, withdrew the drug
last year amid concerns over its safety and efficacy.

Helen Garner of the Parkinson's Disease Society said the trial was
encouraging. "This only based on one person though, and there are
120,000 people with Parkinson's disease in Britain."

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