The debilitating symptoms of Parkinson's disease in mice were found to be reduced by a drug meant to treat high blood pressure, reports a study.
The debilitating symptoms of Parkinson's disease in mice were found to be reduced by a drug meant to treat high blood pressure, reports a study. Because the drug, isradipine, has already been approved for human use, it could soon be available for Parkinson's patients, the lead researcher told AFP.
A preliminary, or "phase II", clinical trial "examining the safety and tolerability of isradipine in early stage Parkinson's disease patients is under way," James Surmeier said by email.
"A phase III trial" -- the final clinical hurdle -- "to determine whether it can slow the progression of the disease should follow."
Had the compound not been cleared previously for treatment of hypertension, the testing and approval process would take far longer, he said.
A movement disorder characterized by tremors and sluggishness, Parkinson's is the second most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer's. More than one million people are afflicted in the United States alone.
There is no known cure for either genetic or non-genetic forms of the disease, which typically strikes later in life.
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It has long been known that the disease is brought on by the accelerated degeneration and death of dopamine-releasing cells in the substantia nigra region of the brain.
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In experiments with mice, the researchers showed for the first time that this process of oxidative stress is accelerated when calcium ions enters the neurons through tiny pores in the membrane called ion channels.
They also showed that isradipine blocks the calcium, diminishing the degeneration giving rise to the signature symptoms of Parkinson's.
"The stress on the vulnerable dopamine-secreting cells can be reversed," Surmeier said.
"Our results point to a way a currently used drug can be re-purposed to potentially prevent or slow the disease's progression."
Boxer Muhammad Ali, actor Michael J. Fox and the late pope John Paul II are among well-known sufferers of the disease.
Source-AFP