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Light 'could detect Parkinson's' 
 A light as bright as a million-watt bulb could help identify early signs of 
Parkinson's disease, British researchers have said.  
 The Keele University team told a conference that a "super-microscope" could 
spot changes in brain cells before the disease destroyed them. 
 Keele's Dr Joanna Collingwood said that the technique was "pioneering". 
 She told the American Association for the Advancement of Science patients 
could be treated sooner as a result. 
 'Early diagnosis'  
 Dr Collingwood said the team had been using a synchrotron - or Diamond Light 
Source (DLS) - at Harwell, Oxfordshire. 
 The device is a large doughnut-shaped particle accelerator, the size of five 
football pitches, which fires particles at just below the speed of light, 
focusing them into a beam less than a single cell in diameter. 
 It allows researchers to to observe iron levels in individual brain cells, 
which are affected by Parkinson's. 
 Dr Collingwood told the AAAS conference in Chicago: "We have been able to 
investigate human tissue with such precision that metal ions, particularly 
iron levels, in and around individual cells can be mapped. 
 "The technique is pioneering in that it does not change the distribution or 
form of the metals in the tissue being studied." 
 She said she hoped that the team's work could help doctors detect early signs 
of Parkinson's using MRI. 
 "Early diagnosis is key because we know that by the time a typical individual 
presents with the symptoms of the disease, chemical changes have already 
caused significant cell death of vulnerable motor neurones," she added. 

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