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by Linda LIM
Advances in stem cell research could be the light at the end of the tunnel for Parkinson's disease sufferers.
arkinson's disease affects 5 million people worldwide
over the age of 50. Unlike Alzheimer's disease, whose
pathology is more widespread, Parkinson's disease is
sufficiently localised to be receptive to cell-transplantation therapy,
which involves substituting new for dead or dying dopamine-producing
neurons in the affected region of the brain.
The first tissue-implantation procedure was reported in 1989.
A group at Lund University, Sweden, implanted foetal ventral
mesencephalic (midbrain) tissue into the striatum (a part of the
brain that controls movement, balance, and walking) of a
Parkinson's disease patient. The researchers included Olle Lindvall,
professor of neurology and one of Europe's most respected experts
in stem-cell research today, and Patrik Brundin, professor of
neuroscience, who collaborated with Singapore doctors in the
mid-1990s in the country's first tissue-implantation procedure.
To date, only about 150 patients worldwide have undergone
tissue implantation. Brundin mentioned that the limitations
preventing widespread practice of the procedure is the low survival
rate (less than 10%) of neurons in the graft, resulting in a need in
each patient for multiple donors of aborted foetal tissue.
Furthermore, difficulties in predicting which patients will
experience dramatic improvement have to do not only with the
graft but also with the particular stage of the disease and the
underlying disease condition of different patients.
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