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Animal Study Cuts Parkinson's Symptoms
 By Staff
 May 17, 2007
  
  Spanish scientists report success in treating Parkinson's disease symptoms 
in monkeys by implanting dopamine generators into the animals' brain cells.
Researchers at the Navarra University Hospital in Pamplona, Spain, led by Dr 
Marķa Rosario Luquin Piudo, used a procedure that involved implanting cell 
fragments extracted from the carotid body in the striate area of the brain.
  After the implantation of the cellular aggregates of the carotid body into 
the striate area of the brain, improvement in movement in monkeys with 
Parkinson's was demonstrated to last for at least a year.
The research team concludes the mechanism by which the implants manage to 
ameliorate Parkinson's symptoms appears to be related to the capacity of the 
cells to release substances that induce an increase of the dopaminergic cells 
that usually exist in the normal brain, but in lower quantities.
The research is detailed in the British journal Brain.

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