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    I found the following report on Yahoo Health News
yesterday. It may not seem at first to have much
relevance to PD, but be sure to read the last paragraph.

Linda Herman

  Yahoo! News                                             Health
Headlines
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Wednesday, April 24, 1998
Nerve Growth Factor Heals Corneal Ulcers

NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Eyedrops containing nerve growth factor
have restored the vision of patients suffering from corneal
neurotrophic ulcers, which usually lead to a loss of sight,
researchers report.

"All ocular symptoms disappeared once the corneal ulcer was
completely healed," say Italian investigators led by Dr.
Alessandro Lambiase of the University of Rome Tor Vergata, and
the National Research Council, both in Rome. The study appears
Thursday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Corneal neurotrophic ulcer is a relatively rare but devastating
ophthalmologic condition involving a gradual degradation of the
corneal nerves. More than half of all cases occur as a result of
infection with the herpes simplex virus, while other cases seem
to be triggered by the improper use of contact lenses,
complications from eye surgery, injury, or illnesses such as
diabetes or multiple sclerosis. Corneal neurotrophic ulcers
usually lead to a gradual loss of vision in the affected eye.
Until now, experts have found no effective treatment for the
disease.

Lambiase and his colleagues focused their research on a recently
discovered compound called nerve growth factor, which seems to
stimulate healing and regrowth in nerve pathways.

They administered eyedrops containing nerve growth factor into
the affected eyes of 12 individuals suffering from corneal
neurotrophic ulcers. Patients received the eyedrops every 2 hours
during waking hours over the course of a few weeks.

The result? "All patients had complete resolution of the corneal
ulcer after 10 days to 6 weeks of treatment with nerve growth
factor, at which time the dosage was reduced for 2 weeks and then
discontinued," according to the study authors. They say "the
healing process began 2 days after initial treatment in three
patients and within 2 weeks in the other patients."

Dissimilarities between illness types or patient age seemed to
have little impact on healing rates, and there were no adverse
treatment side effects. Vision progressively improved with time,
and any corneal scarring gradually disappeared.

In an accompanying editorial, Drs. Ronald Smith and Alfredo Sadun
of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, point out
that the Italian results may represent the mere tip of the
iceberg when it comes to the potential therapeutic uses of nerve
growth factor. They write: "Much as the cornea has been regarded
as the window to the eye, the brain, and even the soul, so it may
now prove to be a window to the trophic (healing) effects
of nerve growth factor." SOURCE: The New England Journal of
Medicine (1998;338:1174-1180, 1222-1223)
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