A new study has shown that gene therapy can reduce symptoms in patients with Parkinson's, media reports said Thursday.
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The treated group showed a 23.1 percent improvement on a scale of Parkinson's symptoms six months after treatment, compared to a 12.7 percent improvement for patients who received sham surgery, according to the published research.
"Gene therapy is no longer just a theory," said Michael Kaplitt, a neurosurgeon at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and Weill Cornell Medical Center, and one of the study authors. "We are getting much closer to a reality where this treatment can be offered to patients."
In patients with Parkinson's disease, their brains get overactive after losing the normal supply of a chemical called GABA. The new treatment, gene therapy, works by inserting billions of copies of a gene into patients' brains that helps them produce more GABA.
Kaplitt said the results might spur similar treatments for other brain disorders like Alzheimer's, epilepsy and depression. (Agencies)
VietNamNet/Xinhuanet
