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Drug Firm to Pay Huge Damages to Parkinsons Disease Sufferer

A French Parkinson's sufferer who turned into a gambler and thief, with compulsive homosexual urges thanks to the drugs he took, is all set to receive a huge compensation.

A huge compensation awaits a  47-year-old French man with Parkinson’s disease who turned into a gambler and thief, with compulsive homosexual urges. It is the drugs that did the damage, he says.

Last month  Didier Jambart, 47, from Nantes, western France, and father of two,  had won a groundbreaking ruling giving him compensation rights. He is demanding €400,000 in damages after a tribunal backed his case.

The pharmaceutical group – which cannot be named – will pay 80 per cent of the sum owed to Jambart, and the neurologist the rest.

As the payment details are being worked out, Jambart said, “I could not have told this story even several months ago without breaking down….I know of other dreadful examples here in France, including someone imprisoned as a result of their compulsive gambling, and of women who ended up prostituting themselves in mobile homes because of their sexual obsessions.”

He ran up gambling debts of €130,000 while stealing from his family, friends and neighbours to fund his obsession. He even sold toys belonging to his two young sons.

Dopamine agonists, which mimic the mood chemical dopamine, are used in several branded drugs commonly prescribed for Parkinson's.

Dopamine, a neurotransmitter found in the brain, regulates movement, balance and walking.

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When used alone in early Parkinson's disease, dopamine agonists may reduce symptoms of the disease, especially those that affect motor function, such as stiffness and slowness.

But within a year of starting his medication, Jambart felt the first signs of what he calls 'a state of Jekyll and Hyde.' During the highs he began placing horse racing bets on the internet.

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In December 2004, he made the first of three suicide attempts. The next year he began trawling gay internet sites for sexual partners whom he invited home.

'As soon as we saw him we knew immediately it was dopamine agonists,' said Philippe Damier, head of the neurology department at the Nantes CHU hospital. Jambart was given different medication and his disorders disappeared.

He said: 'Without that, I would have killed myself or have ended up in prison.'

The case is being closely studied by lawyers representing Parkinson's sufferers in Britain, the US and Canada.

Like Jambart, those sufferers too claim that they were provided with minimal information about the disturbing side effects, estimated to affect up to 15 per cent of those taking the drugs.

Bids for compensation in Britain were launched last month by two Parkinson's sufferers who claimed to have become gambling addicts after being prescribed Mirapexin.

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