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This is a bit of good news:

Deep Brain Stimulation Halts Cell Loss, Parkinson's Researchers Find

ScienceDaily (Sep. 3, 2008) - Deep brain stimulation, a surgical technique 
often viewed as a last resort for people with Parkinson's disease, halts the 
progression of dopamine-cell loss in animal models, according to preliminary 
research by scientists at the Neuroscience Institute at the University of 
Cincinnati (UC) and University Hospital.

The scientists also discovered clues to why the technique works. The act of 
stimulating neurons with electrodes boosted the amount of an important 
protein in animals' brains. The protein, a trophic factor known as BDNF 
(brain-derived neurotrophic factor), is a nurturing, growth-promoting 
chemical.

Parkinson's disease is a degenerative neurological disorder involving the 
death of dopamine-producing brain cells, or neurons.

"Demonstrating that deep brain stimulation halts the progression of 
dopamine-cell loss was basically a confirmation and extension of previous 
findings," says Caryl Sortwell, PhD, associate professor of neurology at UC 
and the study's lead investigator. "But finding the mechanism is a novel 
discovery that is even more critical. We now know not only that it works, we 
also are beginning to understand how it is working."
Sortwell recently announced her team's results at a professional conference 
held by the Cleveland Clinic and the National Institute of Neurological 
Disorders and Stroke.

The research holds important implications for patients with Parkinson's 
disease and could alter the current recommended timetable for surgical 
intervention.

In a typical treatment scenario, a patient has lost about 50 percent of his 
or her dopamine-producing neurons when symptoms first appear and a diagnosis 
is made. The typical patient then waits an average of 14 additional years 
before undergoing deep brain stimulation surgery. During that 14-year span, 
medications can offer symptomatic relief, but cell loss continues unabated. 
There is at present no cure for the disease.

Sortwell's research was a response to an observation by physicians, 
including co-investigator George Mandybur, M.D., associate professor of 
neurosurgery, who have long been able to neutralize, in certain patients, 
some of the most debilitating symptoms of Parkinson's disease, including 
tremor, stiffness, and slowness, by stimulating an area deep within the 
brain.

"The surgery for Parkinson's disease has been available for over 10 years, 
and in that time we have noticed that in some patients the disease does not 
seem to progress as rapidly after surgery as it did before the surgery," 
says Mandybur, a neurosurgeon with the Mayfield Clinic. As a result, he and 
others theorized that DBS not only alleviated symptoms, but also provided 
neuroprotection.

The UC study, Mandybur says, "helps us to understand why this is going on 
and what may be happening in the brain. It also gives some evidence to 
support performing the surgery earlier to slow the overall progression of 
Parkinson's disease."

Sortwell's study, which is continuing, is supported by a $120,000 grant from 
the Sunflower Revolution fundraiser, a partnership of the University 
Hospital Foundation and the Davis Phinney Foundation. The 2008 Sunflower 
Revolution, scheduled for Sept. 5-7, includes a gala, a free educational 
symposium for patients, families and caregivers, and bike rides of 20, 40, 
and 100 kilometers. (See http://www.sunflowerrev.org.)

During the DBS study, researchers implanted high-frequency stimulating 
electrodes in the subthalamic nucleus, an area of the brain associated with 
movement, in rats and then induced dopamine neuron loss. When the rats had 
experienced a 50 percent loss of dopamine neurons, the researchers initiated 
brain stimulation in half of the group. Measurements of surviving, 
functioning dopamine neurons in rats implanted with active stimulators were 
then compared to a control group implanted with inactive stimulators. While 
the control group's loss of dopamine neurons increased to 75 percent after 
two weeks, the rats implanted with active stimulators experienced no further 
loss of cells during that time.

Subsequent tissue analysis revealed that in rats implanted with active 
stimulators the trophic factor BDNF had tripled in the striatum, a part of 
the brain that houses dopamine terminals and "receives" the dopamine 
neurotransmitters that are produced in the substantia nigra.

The study has brought together investigators from four academic disciplines: 
Sortwell, and Timothy Collier, PhD., and doctoral student Anne 
Spieles-Engemann, from UC's department of neurology; Michael Behbehani, PhD, 
from the department of physiology; Jack Lipton, PhD, from the department of 
psychiatry; and Mandybur, from the department of neurosurgery. Michael 
Behbehani, PhD, professor of molecular and cellular physiology and 
anesthesia, established the method for implanting the electrodes in the rat's 
tiny subthalamic nucleus.

The initial study platform was funded by UC's Millennium Fund and 
subsequently by the Neuroscience Institute.

Adapted from materials provided by University of Cincinnati.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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