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reformatted; here tis

From: Anderson <[log in to unmask]> 6:32 PM

Hi all, I sent an e-mail to the Sunday Star Times explaining about this
group and asked if they could e-mail me their news item so I could
forward it to the group - and guess what, it just arrived.  I'm sorry it
is set out in a funny way and I'm not competent enough to try to change
it, so I am simply posting it exactly as I received it.  It makes for
very exciting reading but, being rationalists, I'm sure we would all
appreciate feedback from all you medical contributors as well.
Cheers - Christine Anderson 48/4

Date: Thu, 17 Dec 1998 02:43:07 +1300 From: Feedback
<[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask]

a stunning international first, an Auckland research team has discovered
two drugs it believes could halt the progression of some of man kind'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 some thing unique, said Professor Gluckman.
A small molecule which can be given quite straight forwardly _ 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. ĦIn 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.

Feedback Sunday Star-Times News Media (Auckland) +64 09 302 1300

--
Ron Vetter 1936, '84 PD dz
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http://www.ridgecrest.ca.us/~rfvetter