Print

Print


 A group of drugs used to treat epilepsy may also treat Alzheimer's and 
Parkinson's disease. 

New research shows treatment with T-type calcium channel blockers, used to 
treat epilepsy, protected nerve cells from the brains of mice that can be 
damaged by neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's 
disease. 

Researchers say there aren't any effective medications that protect brain cells 
from age-related damage and degeneration. If these findings hold up under 
further study in humans, they could lead to a new class of more effective 
treatments for age-related neurological diseases. 

Calcium-signaling pathways play an important role in the survival of nerve 
cells (neurons) in the brain. As people age, this process can become disrupted 
and can lead to cognitive and functional decline. 

Researchers say that opens up the possibility of using chemicals like calcium 
channel blockers that are involved in the calcium-signaling process to protect 
the nerve cells from death. 

The study, published in Molecular Neurodegeneration, looked at the effects of 
treatment with calcium channel blockers on the brain cells of mice. 

Researchers found neurons showed an increase in viability after treatment with 
the calcium channel blockers over both the long term and short term. 

"Our data provides implications for the use of this family of anti-epileptic 
drugs in developing new treatments for neuronal injury, and for the need of 
further studies of the use of such drugs in age-related neurodegenerative 
disorders," says researcher Jianxin Bao, PhD, of Washington University in St. 
Louis, in a news release.

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn