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Parkinson's treated with marijuana-like chemicals


  Ian Sample
Thursday February 8, 2007
The Guardian

  http://www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,2008213,00.html

A treatment for Parkinson's disease has been dramatically improved by boosting
the levels of natural marijuana-like chemicals in the brain.
Researchers combined a drug used to treat patients with another that prevents
the breakdown of substances called cannabinoids in the brain and noticed an
almost complete recovery in mice that developed a Parkinson's-like disease.
The scientists focused on a region of the brain called the striatum, which has
been linked to a range of brain disorders including Parkinson's. They
uncovered two distinct brain circuits they believe play a key role in
Parkinson's disease. The first brain circuit activates normal movement, while
the second works to restrain unwanted movements.
 In Parkinson's disease, nerves that produce a brain chemical called dopamine
die off, and with low levels of dopamine, the second brain circuit becomes
overactive, making it difficult for people to move properly.
In tests, mice treated with quinpirole, a dopamine-mimicking drug, showed a
small improvement, but when injected with a chemical that slows down the
degradation of cannabinoids in the brain, the mice were able to move freely
within 15 minutes.
"The dopamine drug alone did a little bit but it wasn't great, and the drug
that targeted the enzyme that degrades endocannabinoids basically did nothing
alone," said Anatol Kreitzer at Stanford University school of medicine whose
study appears in Nature today. "But when we gave the two together, the
animals really improved dramatically."
"It's a long, long way to go before this will be tested in humans, but none
the less, we have identified a new way of potentially manipulating the
circuits that are malfunctioning in this disease," added co-author Robert
Malenka.
Parkinson's disease affects one in 500 people and there are around 120,000
cases in Britain. The latest study sought to boost only those regions of the
brain where cannabinoids are found naturally. "That is a really important
difference, and it's why we think our manipulation of the chemicals is really
different from smoking marijuana," said Professor Malenka.

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