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Ecstasy as a brain booster for Parkinson's?
 
 27 October 2006 
 NewScientist.com news service 

 
It could be a rave result for people with Parkinson's. It seems that ecstasy 
boosts the number of dopamine-producing cells in the brain - the type that 
decline in those with the disease. Or so rat studies suggest.
Previous human studies have suggested that ecstasy is bad for the brain 
because it damages serotonin signalling neurons, which play a role in memory. 
When Jack Lipton of the University of Cincinnati and his colleagues gave 
pregnant rats the drug they found no signs of damage in newborn pups.
Instead, they saw a threefold rise in the number of dopamine producing cells. 
These cells were also more highly branched and developed than normal, 
suggesting they functioned better.
Similarly, when cultured embryonic dopamine cells were exposed to ecstasy, 
roughly three times as many cells survived. The effect didn't vary much with 
increasing concentration, although particularly high doses did kill the brain 
cells.
Lipton believes that ecstasy prevents the programmed cell death that normally 
occurs when neurons are stressed, as happens in certain degenerative diseases 
including Parkinson's, and in cell cultures.
Lipton suggests that some promising new ecstasy-like drugs might one day be 
used to boost dopamine-producing cells in people with Parkinson's - without 
damaging other neurons in the brain. The work was presented at a meeting of 
the Society for Neuroscience in Atlanta, Georgia, last week.
From issue 2575 of New Scientist magazine, 27 October 2006, page 17

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