| Neural
Transplantation in Parkinson's Disease
V.
Mehta, J. Spears and I. Mendez
Abstract:
Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disorder that
affects about 1% of Canadians between the ages of fifty and
seventy. The medical management for these patients consists
of drug therapy that is initially effective but has limited
long term benefits and does not alter the progressive course
of the disease. The recalcitrance of longstanding Parkinson's
disease to medical management has prompted the use of alternative
surgical therapies. Many neurosurgical procedures have been
utilized in order to improve the disabling symptoms these patients
harbour. Although most of the current procedures involve making
destructive lesions within various basal ganglia nuclei, neural
transplantation attempts to reconstitute the normal nigrostriatal
pathway and restore striatal dopamine. The initial success of
neural transplantation in the rodent and primate parkinsonian
models has led to its clinical application in the treatment
of parkinsonian patients. Currently, well over one hundred patients
throughout the world have been grafted with fetal tissue in
an effort to ameliorate their parkinsonian symptoms. Although
the results of neural transplantation in clinical trials are
promising, a number of issues need to be resolved before this
technology can become a standard treatment option. This review
focuses on the current status of neural transplantation in Parkinson's
disease within the context of other surgical therapies in current
use.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1997; 24: 292-301
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