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http://dailynews.yahoo.com/headlines/health/story.html?s=z/reuters/980608/health/stories/nic13_1.html

Monday June 8, 1998
Nicotine patch promising for Parkinson's

TORONTO, Jun 08 (Reuters) -- A nicotine patch may improve symptoms in
patients with Parkinson's disease, a preliminary study suggests. While
it is too early to tell patients to wear such a patch, nine people
with early to moderate Parkinson's disease showed improvement in both
motor function and cognition -- a catchall term that includes learning
and memory -- after being given nicotine by intravenous injection and
then wearing a nicotine patch for 2 weeks.

"These improvements appeared to be sustained for up to 1 month after the
drug had been discontinued," reported Dr. Paul Newhouse of the
University of Vermont last week at the 151st annual meeting of the
American Psychiatric Association.

Parkinson's disease is characterized by progressive degeneration of the
dopamine producing-cells in the brain, resulting in tremor, difficulty
walking, and eventually paralysis.

"Preliminary analysis shows improvements after acute nicotine
administration in several areas of cognitive performance," Newhouse
noted. These included improvement in reaction time and central
processing speed. After chronic use of nicotine, the researchers also
saw improvements in tests of motor function -- the ability to move.

Some studies have shown that smokers are significantly less likely to
develop Parkinson's disease than nonsmokers. It's also been shown that
cells in laboratory culture dishes release dopamine in the presence of
that nicotine, Newhouse said.

"Whether nicotine can do this on a chronic basis is questionable," he
said, "but these results are intriguing and we think that nicotinic
stimulation may hold promise for improving both cognitive and motor
aspects of Parkinson's disease."
--
Judith Richards, London, Ontario, Canada
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