Parkinson’s Drug Shows Promise as Multiple Sclerosis Treatment

Posted: Published on October 10th, 2013

This post was added by Dr Simmons

Parkinson's drug benztropine led to the repair of MS-damaged nerve fibers in mice (Luke Lairson, The Scripps Research Institute)

A drug for Parkinson's disease has been found to be an effective treatment for multiple sclerosis (MS) in mice.

Benztropine has been found to be highly effective in treating a standard model of MS in mice, both as a stand-alone treatment and in combination with existing MS drugs.

Unlike standard MS drugs, which supress the immune system, the newly identified set of compounds boost progenitor cells that can then repair nerve fibres damaged by the disease.

MS is an autoimmune disease of the brain and spinal cord that currently affects over two million people worldwide. Its cause is unknown but a lack of vitamin D and certain infections are known to increase risk.

Symptoms include limb weakness, numbness, fatigue, vision problems, slurred speech, memory problems and depression. The average life expectancy of someone living with MS is around 10 years less than the average population.

Immune cells infiltrate the spinal cord and brain causing inflammation and the loss of an insulating coating called myelin on nerve fibres. As these nerve fibres lose their coating, they lose the ability to transmit signals efficiently and degenerate.

Scientists from the Scripps Research Institute identified the compounds while trying to restore progenitor cells damaged by MS. These cells, called oligodendrocytes, normally repairmyelin sheaths of nerve fibres but they decline sharply in MS sufferers and do not mature to offer their protective benefits.

Compliment existing treatments

They screened 100,000 diverse compounds to find any that could induce these cells to mature. Several compounds were found to be effective but only benztropine had already been approved by the Food and Drugs Administration.

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Parkinson’s Drug Shows Promise as Multiple Sclerosis Treatment

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