Parkinson's Disease Tulip


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Old 06-02-2007, 11:02 PM #1
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Default The Parkinson's Mystery...Despite Associations, Disease's Origins Remain Unknown

The Parkinson's Mystery
Despite Associations, Disease's Origins Remain Unknown


By JOSEPH BROWNSTEIN
ABC News Medical Unit
May 30, 2007
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?i...C-RSSFeeds0312

Even as a large European study reinforces links between Parkinson's disease and genetics, head injury, pesticide exposure and other potential causes, the disease's specific origins remain a mystery.

Researchers at Aberdeen University in Scotland worked with those in Italy, Sweden, Romania and Malta to look at the life histories of 959 patients suffering from Parkinson's and 1,989 patients who were not to try and tease out the possible causes for the disease.

They found that having close family members with Parkinson's increased an individual's risk for the disease by five times, being knocked unconscious more than once increased the risk two and a half times and having high pesticide exposure in work or hobbies made someone 33 percent more likely to contract Parkinson's.

The study was published this week in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

"It's a solid study, [but] it has the limitations of many studies of this type," said Harvey Checkoway, an epidemiologist at the University of Washington who was not involved with the research.

Parkinson's is the second most common degenerative brain disease, following Alzheimer's, afflicting around 1 million Americans, including 1 percent of all Americans above the age of 60.

The World's Most Famous Parkinson's Patient


Parkinson's supposed link to head injury is most commonly associated with three-time heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, who was diagnosed in 1983, nearly two years after his retirement from the sport.

But many experts dispute the connection.

"I'm a little lost to understand why they believe that is related to his head injuries," said Thomas Hammeke, co-chief of the neuropsychology division at the Medical College of Wisconsin.

He said that the rate of Parkinson's disease for boxers has not been shown to be any higher than for other professions. He added that football players, despite often suffering multiple concussions, have not been shown to suffer widely from the disease.

Hammeke also points out that Ali, who won 56 of his 61 professional bouts, would be less likely than most boxers to suffer from his fighting days.

"Muhammad Ali probably had less in the way of head injury than many or most," he said. "It's not clear to me how the link was made in his case."

Hammeke said the strong association in this study could just as easily be explained by Parkinson's patients' balance problems leading to head injuries -- an assessment Checkoway and Dr. Finlay D/ick, the study's lead author, agreed with.

"We can't conclude that it's causal," said D/ick. "However, we have shown that the more you're knocked out, the greater your risk."

The Pesticide Link

One limitation of the study, D/ick said, is that despite the associations between pesticides and Parkinson's they were unable to figure out which specific pesticides may have been responsible.

At the same time, the study took a step further from previous ones by looking at potential pesticide exposure through both work and hobbies, said the authors.

While the lifetime exposures were only projected based on those activities, Checkoway said that method may have aided the study by avoiding recall bias.

Parkinson's patients, he said, tend to have a strong knowledge of the medical literature on the illness, and may have given different answers to questions if they related obviously and directly to pesticides.

Checkoway added that conclusions based on recalls of head injuries can suffer from a similar problem, as Parkinson's patients would be more likely to remember things, like head injuries, that they feel could have caused their illness.

Smoking Saves?

Another finding of the study, reinforcing previous research, was that tobacco use appeared to have a protective effect for Parkinson's. Study participants who had used tobacco at some point were only half as likely to have contracted Parkinson's.

While researchers looked at a number of other potential causes for Parkinson's, such as exposure to certain metals and solvents and alcohol consumption, they found little association between them.

D/ick is hesitant to make sweeping generalizations based on his study. While he said people should try and avoid head injury from contact sports like boxing and workers should follow manufacturer's instructions on pesticides, he referred to that as "generally good advice."

Checkoway remains skeptical of tying anything to Parkinson's, saying there is nothing on the level of the connection between cigarettes and asbestos with lung cancer.

"The contribution of environmental factors [to Parkinson's] does not appear to be very large," he said.
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Last edited by Stitcher; 06-03-2007 at 02:21 AM. Reason: Had to add "/" to the end of Dr. Finley D's name..."D/ick". The NT system censored the word.
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Old 06-03-2007, 12:13 AM #2
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Default Thanks Carolyn

Excellent article!
Kind of a condensed version of factors I believe are true.
Thanks for posting it.
Cheers,
Lee
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Old 06-03-2007, 07:51 AM #3
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Default A possible explanation...

...for the facts that although PD does not appear to be hereditary but does become more likely in families lies in the bacterial endotoxin element that I mention from time to time.

1) Exposure to the toxin (LPS) in the womb or early life sets the stage for later PD. That has been shown in a mouse at least.

2) LPS from dead bacteria is the primary component of house dust. So members of a given family would likely have similar exposures.

3) This would lead to the situation that was found. Growing up in the same house or same family with similar housekeeping habits would increase the chance of PD. Twins separated at birth should exhibit a different pattern but only if allowance is made for prenatal conditions.
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