Authors
Olle Lindvall, Patrik Brundin, Håkan Widner, Stig Rehncrona, Björn Gustavii, Richard Frackowiak, Klaus L Leenders, Guy Sawle, John C Rothwell, C David Marsden, Marsden Björklund
Publication date
1990/2/2
Journal
Science
Volume
247
Issue
4942
Pages
574-577
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Neural transplantation can restore striatal dopaminergic neurotransmission in animal models of Parkinson's disease. It has now been shown that mesencephalic dopamine neurons, obtained from human fetuses of 8 to 9 weeks gestational age, can survive in the human brain and produce marked and sustained symptomatic relief in a patient severely affected with idiopathic Parkinson's disease. The grafts, which were implanted unilaterally into the putamen by stereotactic surgery, restored dopamine synthesis and storage in the grafted area, as assessed by positron emission tomography with 6-L-[18F]fluorodopa. This neurochemical change was accompanied by a therapeutically significant reduction in the patient's severe rigidity and bradykinesia and a marked diminuation of the fluctuations in the patient's condition during optimum medication (the "on-off" phenomenon). The clinical improvement was most marked …
Total citations
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