Parkinsons' Helped By Marijuana-Lke Chemicals In Brain
Main Category: Parkinson's DiseaseAlso Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience
Article Date: 11 Feb 2007 - 11:00 PDT
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Marijuana-like chemicals in the brain may point to a treatment for the debilitating condition of Parkinson's disease. In a study published in Nature, researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine report that endocannabinoids, naturally occurring chemicals found in the brain that are similar to the active compounds in marijuana and hashish, helped trigger a dramatic improvement in mice with a condition similar to Parkinson's.
"This study points to a potentially new kind of therapy for Parkinson's disease," said senior author Robert Malenka, MD, PhD, the Nancy Friend Pritzker Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. "Of course, it is a long, long way to go before this will be tested in humans, but nonetheless, we have identified a new way of potentially manipulating the circuits that are malfunctioning in this disease."
Malenka and postdoctoral scholar Anatol Kreitzer, PhD, the study's lead author, combined a drug already used to treat Parkinson's disease with an experimental compound that can boost the level of endocannabinoids in the brain. When they used the combination in mice with a condition like Parkinson's, the mice went from being frozen in place to moving around freely in 15 minutes. "They were basically normal," Kreitzer said.
But Kreitzer and Malenka cautioned that their findings don't mean smoking marijuana could be therapeutic for Parkinson's disease.
"It turns out the receptors for cannabinoids are all over the brain, but they are not always activated by the naturally occurring endocannabinoids," said Malenka. The treatment used on the mice involves enhancing the activity of the chemicals where they occur naturally in the brain. "That is a really important difference, and it is why we think our manipulation of the chemicals is really different from smoking marijuana."
The researchers began their study by focusing on a region of the brain known as the striatum. They were interested in that region because it has been implicated in a range of brain disorders, including Parkinson's, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and addiction.
The activity of neurons in the striatum relies on the chemical dopamine. A shortage of dopamine in the striatum can lead to Parkinson's disease, in which a person loses the ability to execute smooth motions, progressing to muscle rigidity, tremors and sometimes complete loss of movement. The condition affects 1.5 million Americans, according to the National Parkinson Foundation.
"It turns out that the striatum is much more complicated than imagined," said Malenka. The striatum consists of several different cell types that are virtually indistinguishable under the microscope. To uncover the individual contributions of the cell types, Malenka and Kreitzer used genetically modified mice in which the various cell types were labeled with a fluorescent protein that glows vivid green under a microscope. Having an unequivocal way to identify the cells allowed them to tease apart the functions of the different cell types.
Malenka's lab has long studied how the communication between different neurons is modified by experience and disease. In their examination of two types of mouse striatum cells, Kreitzer and Malenka found that a particular form of adaptation occurs in one cell type but not in the other.
Malenka said this discovery was exciting because no one had determined whether there were functional differences between the various cell types. Their study indicated that the two types of cells formed complementary circuits in the brain.
One of the circuits is thought to be involved in activating motion, while the other is thought to be involved in restraining unwanted movement. "These two circuits are critically involved in a push-pull to select the appropriate movement to perform and to inhibit the other," said Kreitzer.
Dopamine appears to modulate these two circuits in opposite ways. When dopamine is depleted, it is thought that the pathway responsible for inhibiting movement becomes overly activated - leading to the difficulty of initiating motion, the hallmark of Parkinson's disease.
Current treatment for Parkinson's includes drugs that stimulate or mimic dopamine. It turns out that the neurons Kreitzer identified as inhibiting motion had a type of dopamine receptor on them that the other cells didn't. The researchers tested a drug called quinpirole, which mimics dopamine, in mice with a condition similar to human Parkinson's disease, resulting in a small improvement in the mice.
"That was sort of expected," said Malenka. "The cool new finding came when we thought to use drugs that boost the activity of endocannabinoids." Based on prior knowledge of endocannabinoids and dopamine, they speculated that the two chemicals were working in concert to keep the inhibitory pathway in check.
When they added a drug that slows the enzymatic breakdown of endocannabinoids in the brain - URB597, being developed by Kadmus Pharmaceuticals in Irvine, Calif. - the results were striking.
"The dopamine drug alone did a little bit but it wasn't great, and the drug that targeted the enzyme that degrades endocannabinoids basically did nothing alone," Kreitzer said. "But when we gave the two together, the animals really improved dramatically."
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This work was supported by a Ruth L. Kirchenstein Fellowship, the National Institutes of Health and the National Parkinson Foundation. Neither researcher has financial ties to Kadmus Pharmaceuticals.
Stanford University Medical Center integrates research, medical education and patient care at its three institutions - Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford. For more information, please visit the Web site of the medical center's Office of Communication & Public Affairs at http://mednews.stanford.edu/.
Contact: Mitzi Baker
Stanford University Medical Center
Visit our parkinson's disease section for the latest news on this subject.
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11 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/62616.php>
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (3)
Marijuana And Parkinsons
posted by Jim Kane on 25 Mar 2009 at 4:44 amThe researchers say they don't think smoking marijuana is effective and would like us to believe that only after they have manipulated it (and taken the joy out of it) is it effective. As someone who is legally licensed to possess and smoke marijuana for my Parkinon's I can say with absolute certainty that smoking it provides sweet relief and helps me feel relatively normal.
Help with thc
posted by matthew on 31 Aug 2010 at 8:16 pmI've not been diagnosed with Parkinson's but I constantly shake uncontrollably. More so than Parkinson's diagnosed ppl. And have had prescription pills do nothing to help the shaking. Makes it where I cant write text unless I rewrite it otherwise I can't. I'd say it helps. Otherwise I have to constantly delete and erase everything. Why I can't type. The fingers don't hit the right keys. Luckily for smart phones like the droid. Thc helps. Thank god for thc
CBI Symptoms
posted by William on 12 Jan 2012 at 5:35 am2006 head-on collision. Sit.MRI no skull injury. Diagnosed CBI. No symptoms noticed, focus on other body injuries. 2008 first episode: intense energy wave descending slowly through body to feet, maybe 1-15 sec.
duration. Fear, unobservable shakiness, nervousness, stupor, frozen expression. Weakness and continued shakiness after, disorientation. Over time began to realize chunks of current memory erased. Became aware sometime that I had lost near all life memories. Left with some recognition, i.e. recognized photo of brother, but no recall of experiences together. Episodes slowly increased in frequency until December 2011 I had 11! Accident bankrupted me, no resources to seek medical exam. One so far 2012. Memory retention can be lost in seconds, or days. No recognizable pattern. Now residing in 3rd world country to survive. Male,age 69. Excellent health in all other respects.
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