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Many thanks, Christine, for the good news.  I took the liberty of
editing the format.

Phil T.
Hoboken NJ
age 60/dx 1990

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In a stunning international first, an Auckland research team has
discovered two drugs it believes could halt the progression of some
of mankind's cruellest illnesses -- including Alzheimer's disease,
Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis.  Professor Peter
Gluckman's Auckland Medical School team has spent 10 years developing
brain rescue therapy and has patented two drugs that have sparked
international excitement.

The drugs protect brain cells from damage or death through disease
and injury. One, a hormone given by injection, is expected to begin
multinational clinical trials on multiple sclerosis patients within
12 months -- and New Zealanders will be among the first in the world
to take part.

The second is a small molecule which because of its size can be
easily administered, is cheap to make and has few apparent side-
effects.  It is this drug that holds new hope for victims of
progressive neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's
and Huntington's, as well as acute conditions such as strokes.

Clinical trials are expected to begin in 2000 and if they go well,
the drugs could be on the market by 2001.

"We are on the verge of something unique," said Professor Gluckman.
"A small molecule which can be given quite straightforwardly --
perhaps in pill form -- doesn't have obvious side-effects and which
is very potent in stopping brain cells dying is exactly what everyone
has been looking for for a long time.  "In a range of diseases, of
which Alzheimer's is a classic example, we believe we can stop the
progression of disease by stopping brain cells dying. The data we
have is sufficient to merit large-scale investment. It is certainly
the best thing on the horizon internationally."

Professor Gluckman said the power of the drug to prevent damage was
discovered by sheer luck.  "We thought it was a junk byproduct of a
chemical reaction in the brain. Everyone assumed it had no biological
role. But we discovered it had a greater effect than other molecules
we were testing."

Professor Ross Clark, a research team director, says the drug has
prevented brain cells dying in animals in which Parkinson's and
Huntington's type brain injuries have been induced.  Both are
progressive disorders which cause physical disability, and in the
case of the inherited disease Huntington's, dementia. Animal studies
on Alzheimer's, which afflicts 38,000 New Zealanders, begin shortly.
About 8000 people here have Parkinson's and 3000 MS.

Negotiations are under way with international biotechnology merchant
bankers to raise $10 million to fund MS trials for the growth factor,
a hormone known as IGF1.  Although Professor Gluckman believes the
future hope for MS sufferers may lie in a combination of drugs, "it
looks to us as if we can slow the rate of progression of the disease
and maybe stop it altogether".  The drug is also thought to have the
potential to treat babies who have suffered oxygen deprivation at
birth.

The university has set up NeuronZ -- effectively the country's first
major New Zealand- owned, research-based pharmaceutical company -- to
trial the drugs and ready them for the world market.  Professor
Gluckman estimates the discovery could rocket the company's worth to
"hundreds of millions of dollars" in the next three to five years.
It is the first time a New Zealand-based company will clinically
trial drugs developed in this country. "It shows things in little
old New Zealand are of international importance and can be
commercialised for New Zealand."

The research started when Professor Gluckman began to investigate
what the brain did to limit damage after injury. He discovered it
cooled itself and also made protective hormones known as growth
factors -- but that the process took several days.  "We asked: `What
if we do it a bit better than the brain could do itself?' "Given
that many of these diseases can now be diagnosed at a very early
stage, the future holds a lot of hope."