Parkinson’s walk set for Saturday in Swampscott

The sixth annual North Shore Walk for Parkinsons Disease will be held on Saturday, Oct. 20. The 3-mile walk starts at the First Church Congregational, 40 Monument Ave. in Swampscott. Registration is $25 and starts at 10 a.m.; the walk begins at 10:30 a.m. Free T-shirts will be provided for the first 100 walkers.

The North Shore Walk for Parkinsons Disease was started by the Wistran family of Swampscott in honor of Dr. Daniel Wistran, who has been battling Parkinsons disease since 1997.

All donations support the Michael J. Fox Foundation, which is dedicated to finding a cure for Parkinsons disease within the decade. Five million people worldwide are living with Parkinsons disease a chronic, degenerative neurological disorder. In the United States, 60,000 new cases will be diagnosed this year alone. There is no known cure for Parkinsons disease.

For more information, call 781-307-5804 or email northshorewalk@gmail.com. Donations may be made online teamfox.org/goto/northshorewalk.

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Parkinson’s walk set for Saturday in Swampscott

NeuroPhage Reports Beneficial Effects of its Drug Candidate in a Pre-clinical Study of Parkinson’s Disease Funded by …

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct.17, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --NeuroPhage Pharmaceuticals, Inc. announced today positive data with NPT001 in an alpha-synuclein pre-clinical model for Parkinson's disease (PD). The study was funded by The Michael J. Fox Foundation (MJFF). NPT001 is a first-in-class drug candidate with potential disease-modifying activity that disrupts and clears a variety of amyloid aggregates in the brain. In addition to reducing beta amyloid and tau aggregates in Alzheimer's disease (AD) preclinical studies, the new study demonstrates that NPT001 disrupts alpha-synuclein fibrils which are thought to play a critical role in PD.

The study was conducted in collaboration with Dr. Eliezer Masliah at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) and demonstrated that a single NPT001 treatment produced significant reductions in neuropathology along with improved motor performance in the PD model. Specifically, NPT001 significantly reduced alpha-synuclein deposits in the brain and restored dopamine-producing cells to normal function. Deficits in dopamine production are responsible for many of the behavioral dysfunctions in PD. In addition, NPT001 was well-tolerated and produced no observable adverse effects.

The data will be presented at the upcoming 2013 ADPD meeting in Florence, Italy. "The effects produced by NPT001 are robust and impressive, and the treatment improved the critical functions that are impaired in the brain of Parkinson patients," said Dr. Franz Hefti, PD expert and Chairman of NeuroPhage's Scientific Advisory Board.

"We are excited by the results of this study showing dose-dependent amelioration of neuropathology and functional improvement in a Parkinson's disease pre-clinical model following treatment with NPT001. These results, taken together with our biochemical and cell data for alpha-synuclein, support the development of NPT001 for PD in addition to the ongoing clinical development for Alzheimer's disease," said Dr. Kimberley S. Gannon, NeuroPhage's Senior Vice President of Preclinical Research & Development.

NeuroPhage's technology platform permits the development of therapeutics that target multiple misfolded proteins involved in neurodegeneration such as beta amyloid and tau (involved in AD), as well as alpha-synuclein (involved in PD). In February 2012, NeuroPhage announced that it had received a grant from MJFF for PD research on NPT001.

About Parkinson's Disease

Parkinson's disease is a chronic, progressive disorder of the central nervous system and results from the loss of cells in an area of the brain called the substantia nigra. These cells produce dopamine, a chemical messenger responsible for transmitting signals within the brain. Loss of dopamine causes critical nerve cells in the brain, or neurons, to fire out of control, leaving patients unable to direct or control their movement in a normal manner. The symptoms of Parkinson's may include tremors, difficulty maintaining balance and gait, rigidity or stiffness of the limbs and trunk, and general slowness of movement (also called bradykinesia). Patients may also eventually have difficulty walking, talking, or completing other simple tasks. Symptoms often appear gradually yet with increasing severity, and the progression of the disease may vary widely from patient to patient. There is no cure for Parkinson's disease. Drugs have been developed that can help patients manage many of the symptoms; however they do not prevent disease progression.

About The Michael J. Fox Foundation

The Michael J. Fox Foundation is dedicated to finding a cure for Parkinson's disease through an aggressively funded research agenda and to ensuring the development of improved therapies for those living with Parkinson's today. The Foundation has funded over $304 million in research to date.

About NeuroPhage

More here:
NeuroPhage Reports Beneficial Effects of its Drug Candidate in a Pre-clinical Study of Parkinson's Disease Funded by ...

NeuroPhage Reports Beneficial Effects of its Drug Candidate in a Pre-clinical Study of Parkinson's Disease Funded by …

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct.17, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --NeuroPhage Pharmaceuticals, Inc. announced today positive data with NPT001 in an alpha-synuclein pre-clinical model for Parkinson's disease (PD). The study was funded by The Michael J. Fox Foundation (MJFF). NPT001 is a first-in-class drug candidate with potential disease-modifying activity that disrupts and clears a variety of amyloid aggregates in the brain. In addition to reducing beta amyloid and tau aggregates in Alzheimer's disease (AD) preclinical studies, the new study demonstrates that NPT001 disrupts alpha-synuclein fibrils which are thought to play a critical role in PD.

The study was conducted in collaboration with Dr. Eliezer Masliah at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) and demonstrated that a single NPT001 treatment produced significant reductions in neuropathology along with improved motor performance in the PD model. Specifically, NPT001 significantly reduced alpha-synuclein deposits in the brain and restored dopamine-producing cells to normal function. Deficits in dopamine production are responsible for many of the behavioral dysfunctions in PD. In addition, NPT001 was well-tolerated and produced no observable adverse effects.

The data will be presented at the upcoming 2013 ADPD meeting in Florence, Italy. "The effects produced by NPT001 are robust and impressive, and the treatment improved the critical functions that are impaired in the brain of Parkinson patients," said Dr. Franz Hefti, PD expert and Chairman of NeuroPhage's Scientific Advisory Board.

"We are excited by the results of this study showing dose-dependent amelioration of neuropathology and functional improvement in a Parkinson's disease pre-clinical model following treatment with NPT001. These results, taken together with our biochemical and cell data for alpha-synuclein, support the development of NPT001 for PD in addition to the ongoing clinical development for Alzheimer's disease," said Dr. Kimberley S. Gannon, NeuroPhage's Senior Vice President of Preclinical Research & Development.

NeuroPhage's technology platform permits the development of therapeutics that target multiple misfolded proteins involved in neurodegeneration such as beta amyloid and tau (involved in AD), as well as alpha-synuclein (involved in PD). In February 2012, NeuroPhage announced that it had received a grant from MJFF for PD research on NPT001.

About Parkinson's Disease

Parkinson's disease is a chronic, progressive disorder of the central nervous system and results from the loss of cells in an area of the brain called the substantia nigra. These cells produce dopamine, a chemical messenger responsible for transmitting signals within the brain. Loss of dopamine causes critical nerve cells in the brain, or neurons, to fire out of control, leaving patients unable to direct or control their movement in a normal manner. The symptoms of Parkinson's may include tremors, difficulty maintaining balance and gait, rigidity or stiffness of the limbs and trunk, and general slowness of movement (also called bradykinesia). Patients may also eventually have difficulty walking, talking, or completing other simple tasks. Symptoms often appear gradually yet with increasing severity, and the progression of the disease may vary widely from patient to patient. There is no cure for Parkinson's disease. Drugs have been developed that can help patients manage many of the symptoms; however they do not prevent disease progression.

About The Michael J. Fox Foundation

The Michael J. Fox Foundation is dedicated to finding a cure for Parkinson's disease through an aggressively funded research agenda and to ensuring the development of improved therapies for those living with Parkinson's today. The Foundation has funded over $304 million in research to date.

About NeuroPhage

More here:
NeuroPhage Reports Beneficial Effects of its Drug Candidate in a Pre-clinical Study of Parkinson's Disease Funded by ...

Parkinson’s cells

The nuclei of brain stem cells in some Parkinson's patients become misshapen with age. The discovery opens up new ways to target the disease.

Nubby nucleus: Brain cells from a deceased Parkinsons patient have deformed nuclei (bottom) compared with normal brain cells from an individual of a similar age. Merce Marti and Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte

Stem cells in the brains of some Parkinson's patients are increasingly damaged as they age, an effect that eventually diminishes their ability to replicate and differentiate into mature cell types. Researchers studied neural stem cells created from patients' own skin cells to identify the defects. The findings offer a new focus for therapeutics that target the cellular change.

The report, published today in Nature, takes advantage of the ability to model diseases in cell culture by turning patient's own cells first into so-called induced pluripotent stem cells and then into disease-relevant cell typesin this case, neural stem cells. The basis of these techniques was recognized with a Nobel Prize in medicine last week.

The authors studied cells taken from patients with a heritable form of Parkinson's that stems from mutations in a gene. After growing several generation of neural stem cells derived from patients with that mutation, they saw the cell nuclei start to develop abnormal shapes. Those abnormalities compromise the survival of the neural stem cells, says study coauthor Ignacio Sancho-Martinez of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California.

Today's study "brings to light a new avenue for trying to figure out the mechanism of Parkinson's," says Scott Noggle of the New York Stem Cell Foundation. It also provides a new set of therapeutic targets: "Drugs that target or modify the activity [of the gene] could be applicable to Parkinson's patients. This gives you a handle on what to start designing drug screens around."

The strange nuclei were also seen in patients who did not have a known genetic basis for Parkinson's disease. The authors suggest this indicates that dysfunctional neural stem cells could contribute to Parkinson's. While that conclusion is "highly speculative," says Ole Isacson, a neuroscientist at Harvard Medical School, the study demonstrates the "wealth of data and information that we now can gain from iPS cells."

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Parkinson's cells

Parkinson's cells

The nuclei of brain stem cells in some Parkinson's patients become misshapen with age. The discovery opens up new ways to target the disease.

Nubby nucleus: Brain cells from a deceased Parkinsons patient have deformed nuclei (bottom) compared with normal brain cells from an individual of a similar age. Merce Marti and Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte

Stem cells in the brains of some Parkinson's patients are increasingly damaged as they age, an effect that eventually diminishes their ability to replicate and differentiate into mature cell types. Researchers studied neural stem cells created from patients' own skin cells to identify the defects. The findings offer a new focus for therapeutics that target the cellular change.

The report, published today in Nature, takes advantage of the ability to model diseases in cell culture by turning patient's own cells first into so-called induced pluripotent stem cells and then into disease-relevant cell typesin this case, neural stem cells. The basis of these techniques was recognized with a Nobel Prize in medicine last week.

The authors studied cells taken from patients with a heritable form of Parkinson's that stems from mutations in a gene. After growing several generation of neural stem cells derived from patients with that mutation, they saw the cell nuclei start to develop abnormal shapes. Those abnormalities compromise the survival of the neural stem cells, says study coauthor Ignacio Sancho-Martinez of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California.

Today's study "brings to light a new avenue for trying to figure out the mechanism of Parkinson's," says Scott Noggle of the New York Stem Cell Foundation. It also provides a new set of therapeutic targets: "Drugs that target or modify the activity [of the gene] could be applicable to Parkinson's patients. This gives you a handle on what to start designing drug screens around."

The strange nuclei were also seen in patients who did not have a known genetic basis for Parkinson's disease. The authors suggest this indicates that dysfunctional neural stem cells could contribute to Parkinson's. While that conclusion is "highly speculative," says Ole Isacson, a neuroscientist at Harvard Medical School, the study demonstrates the "wealth of data and information that we now can gain from iPS cells."

See original here:
Parkinson's cells

Research and Markets: Multiple Sclerosis – Thought Leader Panel – Pharmacoeconomics – What Benefits Make a Multiple …

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/6xfx9g/multiple) has announced the addition of the "Multiple Sclerosis Thought Leader Panel #15 Pharmacoeconomics" report to their offering.

Multiple Sclerosis Thought Leader Panel #15 2012-02, commissioned by BOLT International / MedPredict, was designed to address a question asked by a number of our clients: What benefits make a multiple sclerosis therapeutic worth the price? Asked another way, should MS therapies be priced more like an acute life-saving drug, whose survival benefit is measured in weeks or months? Or should they be priced more like therapies prescribed to deliver both symptomatic benefit and disease modifying properties for other immunologic conditions (psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease)? These agents top out in the $30,000 - $35,000/yr range. Are the QALY figures that Noyes cites reflective of overpriced drugs, ineffective therapies, or a combination of these two factors? Or do they reflect an over-hyped academic perspective that fails to capture the full spectrum of benefit that the drugs deliver over the entire course of the disease?

Applying the Goldilocks principle, our Panel concluded the following: Gilenya (fingolimod) may be as effective as Tysabri in terms of reducing disease activity measured by MRI, but at $52,000/yr, it's overpriced. The CRAB(E)s (interferon, Copaxone), are priced lower ($30,000 - $40,000, but are less effective even on this dimension. Tysabri (natalizumab), priced in the low $40,000/yr range, arguably has the best efficacy, and with the new diagnostic, can be timed for safe use. Tysabri is effective when measured by reduction in gadolinium enhancing lesions, and EDSS. In addition it is remarkably effective at returning patients to essentially normal function - meaning that they feel like they no longer have MS (also described as improves existing symptoms). The drug attenuates fatigue, early cognitive complaints, executive function problems and depression symptoms.

Key Topics Covered:

Executive Summary

- Backround

- Conclusions

Discussion

- Introduction

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Research and Markets: Multiple Sclerosis - Thought Leader Panel - Pharmacoeconomics - What Benefits Make a Multiple ...

Multiple Sclerosis Yielding Secrets But Questions Remain

Editor's Choice Main Category: Multiple Sclerosis Also Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience Article Date: 11 Oct 2012 - 11:00 PDT

Current ratings for: Multiple Sclerosis Yielding Secrets But Questions Remain

3.78 (9 votes)

4.75 (4 votes)

This week more than 7000 leading MS physicians and researchers are in Lyon, France, attending the annual scientific conference of The European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS).

In the official Conference press briefing, leading MS clinicians described some of the unanswered questions currently perplexing the MS community.

"One concern is the growing proportion of women, compared with men who develop MS. Since the 1950s this proportion has grown from a ratio of 2:1 (women to men) to 3:1. "We don't know why," said Professor Christian Confavreux, Hopital Neurologique, Lyon, France and Chair of ECTRIMS 2012.

When asked about the apparent increase in MS currently occurring in the Middle East, the panel said that this was a mystery, but there were clues.

"MS seems to be a disease of 'modern life' ", said Professor Confavreux. As less developed societies modernise, many factors change, such as basic hygiene, vaccinations, smoking, and diet.

"We don't know what it is, but something about this new way of life is leading to an increase in MS." He pointed to the French West Indies where a major study had yielded intriguing findings.

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Multiple Sclerosis Yielding Secrets But Questions Remain

EMD Serono Launches One Million Euro Research Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation

ROCKLAND, Mass., Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --EMD Serono, Inc., a subsidiary of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, announced today during the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) congress in Lyon, France, that the company has initiated a new global research award to improve understanding of multiple sclerosis for the ultimate benefit of patients.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20101126/SF07905LOGO-a)

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20101126/SF07905LOGO-b)

The Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation will award up to one million euros annually to fund innovative research into multiple sclerosis (MS) by academic researchers.Researchers can submit their project proposals via the program's website, http://www.grantformultiplesclerosisinnovation.org, and awardees will be announced at next year's ECTRIMS congress in Copenhagen.

"We are committed to driving innovative research to further contribute to our understanding of the disease and ultimately lead to new medical breakthroughs in multiple sclerosis," said Annalisa Jenkins, Head of Global Drug Development and Medical for Merck Serono, a division of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany. "While tremendous progress has been made over the years, we must continue to search for answers to important scientific questions in the field."

Potential research topics which could be funded through the Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation include MS pathogenesis, predictive markers for treatment response and potential new treatments.

This grant complements other existing programs like EMD Serono's collaboration with the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the FastFoward* collaborative fund.

The funds from the Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation will be awarded by EMD Serono for projects based in the United States and Canada, and by Merck Serono to those based in the rest of the world.

For more information about the program, and to submit a scientific research project proposal, please visit http://www.grantformultiplesclerosisinnovation.org.

*For more details related to FastForward, please visit: http://www.nationalmssociety.org/fast-forward/index.aspx

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EMD Serono Launches One Million Euro Research Grant for Multiple Sclerosis Innovation

Multiple sclerosis: Using the eye as a ‘window into the brain’

ScienceDaily (Oct. 17, 2012) An inexpensive, five-minute eye scan can accurately assess the amount of brain damage in people with the debilitating autoimmune disorder multiple sclerosis (MS), and offer clues about how quickly the disease is progressing, according to results of two Johns Hopkins studies.

"The eye is the window into the brain and by measuring how healthy the eye is, we can determine how healthy the rest of the brain is," says Peter A. Calabresi, M.D., a professor of neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and leader of the studies described in recent issues of The Lancet Neurology and the Archives of Neurology. "Eye scans are not that expensive, are really safe, and are widely used in ophthalmology, and now that we have evidence of their predictive value in MS, we think they are ready for prime time. We should be using this new quantitative tool to learn more about disease progression, including nerve damage and brain atrophy."

Calabresi and his colleagues used optical coherence tomography (OCT) to scan nerves deep in the back of the eye, applying special software they co-developed that is capable of assessing previously immeasurable layers of the light-sensitive retinal tissue. The scan uses no harmful radiation and is one-tenth the cost of an MRI. The software will soon be widely available commercially.

In the Lancet paper, Calabresi and his team reported measuring thickness or swelling of the inner nuclear layer of the retina in 164 patients with MS and 60 healthy controls, following changes in these tissues over four years. At the same time, they also used brain MRI to measure inflammation spots directly, and performed clinical tests to determine disability levels.

The more inflammation and swelling the researchers found in the retinas of the MS patients, the more inflammation showed up in their brain MRIs. The correlation, they said, affirmed the value of the retinal scans as a stand-alone surrogate for brain damage. Having such information so easily available could allow physicians to accurately tell how far the disease has progressed, and to better advise patients about how they should proceed with their care.

The researchers also found microcystic macular edema in the central part of the retinas of 10 of the MS patients, tiny pockets of fluid typically found in older, usually diabetic people. While Calabresi cautions that eye scans do not as yet have primary diagnostic value for MS, he says finding a cyst like this on the eye of a young, healthy person might be reason to have her evaluated for the disorder.

In the United States, there are roughly 400,000 people living with MS. The disorder typically strikes between the ages of 20 and 50 and affects two-to-three times as many women as men.

In the paper published in the Archives of Neurology, Calabresi and colleagues looked at eye and brain scans of 84 MS patients and 24 healthy controls. This time, they focused on two other deep retinal layers, the ganglion cell layer + inner plexiform layer (GCL+IPL), and the peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRFNL). Greater cell wasting in those areas was strongly correlated with more atrophy in the gray matter of the brain, signifying more nerve damage from MS. Gray matter consists of the part of the brain where nerve cells live, and plays a role similar to a computer's hard drive, in contrast to white matter that is more like the wiring that sends information out from the brain to the spinal cord and the rest of the body's nerves.

Calabresi, director of the Johns Hopkins Multiple Sclerosis Center, says this finding is particularly important because neurodegeneration is so difficult to accurately gauge. In a young person with MS, the brain may be atrophying but may cause no symptoms because the brain is able to compensate for what is being lost. Ultimately, though, the loss of brain cells becomes apparent and is irreversible. Calabresi says that if he saw the kind of thickness on an eye scan indicating severe atrophy, he would consider a patient's prognosis less encouraging than someone with a healthy retina, and this information may guide physicians to treat more aggressively. For example, he says he would likely redouble efforts to enter a patient into a clinical trial for an experimental medication before too much permanent damage takes place.

Calabresi says his findings could also shift how researchers approach MS, long believed to be caused by an immune system that wrongly attacks the fatty protein called myelin that insulates nerves and helps them send electrical signals that control movement, speech and other functions. The usefulness of the scans raises the possibility that there could be something else going on, as there is no myelin deep in the retina of the eye. If the immune system is going after something else along with myelin, it could help researchers find new medications to target the incapacitating symptoms of MS, such as blurred vision, numbness and weakness.

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Multiple sclerosis: Using the eye as a 'window into the brain'

Multiple sclerosis: Using the eye as a 'window into the brain'

ScienceDaily (Oct. 17, 2012) An inexpensive, five-minute eye scan can accurately assess the amount of brain damage in people with the debilitating autoimmune disorder multiple sclerosis (MS), and offer clues about how quickly the disease is progressing, according to results of two Johns Hopkins studies.

"The eye is the window into the brain and by measuring how healthy the eye is, we can determine how healthy the rest of the brain is," says Peter A. Calabresi, M.D., a professor of neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and leader of the studies described in recent issues of The Lancet Neurology and the Archives of Neurology. "Eye scans are not that expensive, are really safe, and are widely used in ophthalmology, and now that we have evidence of their predictive value in MS, we think they are ready for prime time. We should be using this new quantitative tool to learn more about disease progression, including nerve damage and brain atrophy."

Calabresi and his colleagues used optical coherence tomography (OCT) to scan nerves deep in the back of the eye, applying special software they co-developed that is capable of assessing previously immeasurable layers of the light-sensitive retinal tissue. The scan uses no harmful radiation and is one-tenth the cost of an MRI. The software will soon be widely available commercially.

In the Lancet paper, Calabresi and his team reported measuring thickness or swelling of the inner nuclear layer of the retina in 164 patients with MS and 60 healthy controls, following changes in these tissues over four years. At the same time, they also used brain MRI to measure inflammation spots directly, and performed clinical tests to determine disability levels.

The more inflammation and swelling the researchers found in the retinas of the MS patients, the more inflammation showed up in their brain MRIs. The correlation, they said, affirmed the value of the retinal scans as a stand-alone surrogate for brain damage. Having such information so easily available could allow physicians to accurately tell how far the disease has progressed, and to better advise patients about how they should proceed with their care.

The researchers also found microcystic macular edema in the central part of the retinas of 10 of the MS patients, tiny pockets of fluid typically found in older, usually diabetic people. While Calabresi cautions that eye scans do not as yet have primary diagnostic value for MS, he says finding a cyst like this on the eye of a young, healthy person might be reason to have her evaluated for the disorder.

In the United States, there are roughly 400,000 people living with MS. The disorder typically strikes between the ages of 20 and 50 and affects two-to-three times as many women as men.

In the paper published in the Archives of Neurology, Calabresi and colleagues looked at eye and brain scans of 84 MS patients and 24 healthy controls. This time, they focused on two other deep retinal layers, the ganglion cell layer + inner plexiform layer (GCL+IPL), and the peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRFNL). Greater cell wasting in those areas was strongly correlated with more atrophy in the gray matter of the brain, signifying more nerve damage from MS. Gray matter consists of the part of the brain where nerve cells live, and plays a role similar to a computer's hard drive, in contrast to white matter that is more like the wiring that sends information out from the brain to the spinal cord and the rest of the body's nerves.

Calabresi, director of the Johns Hopkins Multiple Sclerosis Center, says this finding is particularly important because neurodegeneration is so difficult to accurately gauge. In a young person with MS, the brain may be atrophying but may cause no symptoms because the brain is able to compensate for what is being lost. Ultimately, though, the loss of brain cells becomes apparent and is irreversible. Calabresi says that if he saw the kind of thickness on an eye scan indicating severe atrophy, he would consider a patient's prognosis less encouraging than someone with a healthy retina, and this information may guide physicians to treat more aggressively. For example, he says he would likely redouble efforts to enter a patient into a clinical trial for an experimental medication before too much permanent damage takes place.

Calabresi says his findings could also shift how researchers approach MS, long believed to be caused by an immune system that wrongly attacks the fatty protein called myelin that insulates nerves and helps them send electrical signals that control movement, speech and other functions. The usefulness of the scans raises the possibility that there could be something else going on, as there is no myelin deep in the retina of the eye. If the immune system is going after something else along with myelin, it could help researchers find new medications to target the incapacitating symptoms of MS, such as blurred vision, numbness and weakness.

View original post here:
Multiple sclerosis: Using the eye as a 'window into the brain'

Research and Markets: Multiple Sclerosis – Pipeline Review, H2 2012

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/q5j88n/multiple) has announced the addition of Global Markets Direct's new report "Multiple Sclerosis - Pipeline Review, H2 2012" to their offering.

Global Markets Direct's, 'Multiple Sclerosis - Pipeline Review, Global Markets Direct's, 'Multiple Sclerosis - Pipeline Review, H2 2012', provides an overview of the indication's therapeutic pipeline. This report provides information on the therapeutic development for Multiple Sclerosis, complete with latest updates, and special features on late-stage and discontinued projects. It also reviews key players involved in the therapeutic development for Multiple Sclerosis. Multiple Sclerosis - Pipeline Review, Half Year is built using data and information sourced from Global Markets Direct's proprietary databases, Company/University websites, SEC filings, investor presentations and featured press releases from company/university sites and industry-specific third party sources, put together by Global Markets Direct's team.

Scope

- A snapshot of the global therapeutic scenario for Multiple Sclerosis.

- A review of the Multiple Sclerosis products under development by companies and universities/research institutes based on information derived from company and industry-specific sources.

- Coverage of products based on various stages of development ranging from discovery till registration stages.

- A feature on pipeline projects on the basis of monotherapy and combined therapeutics.

- Coverage of the Multiple Sclerosis pipeline on the basis of route of administration and molecule type.

- Key discontinued pipeline projects.

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Research and Markets: Multiple Sclerosis - Pipeline Review, H2 2012

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Movement Disorders

NEW YORK, Oct. 11, 2012 Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders -- Focus on Movement Disorders http://www.reportlinker.com/p01009663/Global-Markets-for-Treatments-of-Dementia-and-Movement-Disorders----Focus-on-Movement-Disorders.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pathology

INTRODUCTION

STUDY OBJECTIVES

BCC's goal in conducting this study is to provide an overview of the current and future characteristics of the global markets for treatments for syndromes of dementia and movement disorders. The key objective is to present a comprehensive analysis and the future direction of the market as it shapes drug and therapy development.

This report explores present and future strategies within the neurodegenerative disorder market, which includes treatments and therapies for progressive dementia, progressive dementia with other neurological abnormalities and movement disorders. Market gains, setbacks and needs are discussed in this report. Comparisons, usage and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of technologies, including small molecules and monoclonal antibodies, are also presented in this report.

A detailed analysis of the structure of the syndromes of dementia and movement disorder industry has been conducted. Revenues are broken down by neurodegenerative disease and primary clinical/pathological feature. Sales figures are estimated for the five-year period from 2012 through 2017.

Applications for syndromes of dementia and movement disorder treatments, or therapeutic technologies, are also discussed separately in the report, with an emphasis on small molecule and monoclonal antibodies technology. The report also covers significant patents and their allotment in each category.

REASONS FOR DOING THIS STUDY

Extensive research in the field of syndromes of dementia and movement disorders and company collaborations with research institutes have highlighted the importance of understanding the nature of these disorders. New technological developments are providing disease-modifying therapies for the late stages of the disorders. Collaborations between research institutes and pharmaceutical companies are on the rise as state-of-the-art technology is being explored to develop more efficient products and therapies. R&D spending, along with increasing competition, patent expiries and new technologies are taking the market in a new direction. Global market revenues increased from 2009 to 2011 and are expected to continue to show growth over the forecast period as new advances, launches and collaborations continue to influence the market. This study looks at most of the systems affected by these factors. Acquisition strategies and collaborations by companies are also covered in this report. This study also discusses the strength and weaknesses of each type of technology in light of the new technologies, growing competition and changing customer needs.

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Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders -- Focus on Movement Disorders

Global Markets for Treatments for Syndromes of Dementia and Movement Disorders

NEW YORK, Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

http://www.reportlinker.com/p01009666/Global-Markets-for-Treatments-for-Syndromes-of-Dementia-and-Movement-Disorders.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pathology

INTRODUCTION

This report explores present and future strategies within the neurodegenerative disorder market, which includes treatments and therapies for progressive dementia, progressive dementia with other neurological abnormalities and movement disorders. Market gains, setbacks and needs are discussed in this report. Comparisons, usage and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of technologies, including small molecules and monoclonal antibodies, are also presented in this report.

A detailed analysis of the structure of the syndromes of dementia and movement disorder industry has been conducted. Revenues are broken down by neurodegenerative disease and primary clinical/pathological feature. Sales figures are estimated for the five-year period from 2012 through 2017.

Applications for syndromes of dementia and movement disorder treatments, or therapeutic technologies, are also discussed separately in the report, with an emphasis on small molecule and monoclonal antibodies technology. The report also covers significant patents and their allotment in each category.

R&D spending, along with increasing competition, patent expiries and new technologies are taking the market in a new direction. Global market revenues increased from 2009 to 2011 and are expected to continue to show growth over the forecast period as new advances, launches and collaborations continue to influence the market. This study looks at most of the systems affected by these factors.

Acquisition strategies and collaborations by companies are also covered in this report. This study also discusses the strength and weaknesses of each type of technology in light of the new technologies, growing competition and changing customer needs.

Some of her other reports with BCC include Reagents for Chromatography; SpectroscopyAn Enduring Market; Advanced Drug Delivery SystemsTechnologies and Global Markets; Orthopedic Drugs, Implants and DevicesMedical Imaging Reagents and Analysis Equipment; Pharmaceutical Regulatory IndustryThe Dynamic Media, Sera and Reagent Market in Biotechnology; Contract Pharmaceutical Manufacturing, Research and PackagingGlobal Markets; Chiral TechnologyGlobal Markets; Autacoids and Related DrugsTechnologies and Global Markets; ContraceptivesTechnologies and Global Markets; Liver Disease TreatmentsThe Global Market; Hormone Replacement Therapies and Other Hormone TherapiesGlobal Markets; Cardiovascular MedicineDiagnostics, Drugs and Devices; and Cancer Therapies ? Technologies and Global Markets.

The lead consultant on this project is Ms. Ruma Chakravarty, who holds a master's degree in biophysics. She has tremendous experience in market research, quality, process improvement and lean and six sigma concepts.

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Global Markets for Treatments for Syndromes of Dementia and Movement Disorders

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Progressive Dementia with Other …

NEW YORK, Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders -- Focus on Progressive Dementia with Other Neurological Abnormalities

http://www.reportlinker.com/p01009664/Global-Markets-for-Treatments-of-Dementia-and-Movement-Disorders----Focus-on-Progressive-Dementia-with-Other-Neurological-Abnormalities.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pathology

INTRODUCTION

STUDY OBJECTIVES

BCC's goal in conducting this study is to provide an overview of the current and future characteristics of the global markets for treatments for syndromes of dementia and movement disorders. The key objective is to present a comprehensive analysis and the future direction of the market as it shapes drug and therapy development.

This report explores present and future strategies within the neurodegenerative disorder market, which includes treatments and therapies for progressive dementia, progressive dementia with other neurological abnormalities and movement disorders. Market gains, setbacks and needs are discussed in this report. Comparisons, usage and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of technologies, including small molecules and monoclonal antibodies, are also presented in this report.

A detailed analysis of the structure of the syndromes of dementia and movement disorder industry has been conducted. Revenues are broken down by neurodegenerative disease and primary clinical/pathological feature. Sales figures are estimated for the five-year period from 2012 through 2017.

Applications for syndromes of dementia and movement disorder treatments, or therapeutic technologies, are also discussed separately in the report, with an emphasis on small molecule and monoclonal antibodies technology. The report also covers significant patents and their allotment in each category.

REASONS FOR DOING THIS STUDY

See the original post here:
Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders -- Focus on Progressive Dementia with Other ...

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders — Focus on Progressive Dementia

NEW YORK, Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders -- Focus on Progressive Dementia

http://www.reportlinker.com/p01009665/Global-Markets-for-Treatments-of-Dementia-and-Movement-Disorders----Focus-on-Progressive-Dementia.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pathology

INTRODUCTION

STUDY OBJECTIVES

BCC's goal in conducting this study is to provide an overview of the current and future characteristics of the global markets for treatments for syndromes of dementia and movement disorders. The key objective is to present a comprehensive analysis and the future direction of the market as it shapes drug and therapy development.

This report explores present and future strategies within the neurodegenerative disorder market, which includes treatments and therapies for progressive dementia, progressive dementia with other neurological abnormalities and movement disorders. Market gains, setbacks and needs are discussed in this report. Comparisons, usage and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of technologies, including small molecules and monoclonal antibodies, are also presented in this report.

A detailed analysis of the structure of the syndromes of dementia and movement disorder industry has been conducted. Revenues are broken down by neurodegenerative disease and primary clinical/pathological feature. Sales figures are estimated for the five-year period from 2012 through 2017.

Applications for syndromes of dementia and movement disorder treatments, or therapeutic technologies, are also discussed separately in the report, with an emphasis on small molecule and monoclonal antibodies technology. The report also covers significant patents and their allotment in each category.

REASONS FOR DOING THIS STUDY

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Global Markets for Treatments of Dementia and Movement Disorders -- Focus on Progressive Dementia

Dementia care plan consultation

17 October 2012 Last updated at 03:26 ET

Plans to halve the number of hospital beds for people with dementia in the Harrogate area are to go out to public consultation.

The 32 inpatient beds for dementia patients are equally divided between Harrogate Hospital and Alexander House in Knaresborough.

The Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust plan to close all 16 beds in Knaresborough.

The trust said the plan was based on the changing needs of patients.

Under the proposals, the 16 beds at Alexander House would be closed but the unit would still offer respite care.

The trust said bed occupancy in Knaresborough had fallen and the environment at Harrogate hospital was more appropriate to treat patients with complex needs.

Savings generated by bed closure would enable the trust to "protect and invest" in community services as more people with dementia were being treated outside hospital, it said.

The Alzheimer's Society said the trust should ensure services were sufficient to meet the needs of people at all stages of dementia.

A public consultation on the plans will run until January 2013.

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Dementia care plan consultation

Art gallery tours a treat for dementia patients

Tags: dementia, national gallery of australia, toowoomba regional art gallery

DEMENTIA care specialist Marjorie Crawford hopes residents from her memory support unit will soon be able to enjoy a National Gallery of Australia project in Toowoomba.

She will travel to Canberra with Toowoomba Regional Art Gallery education program co-ordinator Sue Lostroh tomorrow for a seminar on the National Gallery of Australia's Outreach Program.

The program encourages local galleries to facilitate guided tours for people living with dementia.

Mrs Crawford, who is the clinical nurse consultant overseeing Blue Care's Toowoomba memory support unit, said a trial visit to the Toowoomba Regional Art Gallery by patients in June was successful.

"It was just amazing to see the conversation it invoked," Mrs Crawford said.

"That's the thing about dementia; it is all about the here and now.

"It is that whole gallery experience that makes it so special."

She said she hoped the specialised tours could become a regular occurrence.

"Hopefully, this seminar is another opportunity to talk about the program and how we can deliver it."

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Art gallery tours a treat for dementia patients

Sensors Embedded in Everyday Life Might Spot Dementia Early

Diagnosing dementia early is both important and difficult. Carnegie Mellon University neuroscientist Anind Dey thinks hes found a better way.

By embedding motion-detecting sensors in domestic objects, such as coffee machines and pill boxes, Dey can make informational representations of people performing everyday tasks. Doctors can then look at that data for subtle changes suggesting mental decline.

Right now, the state of medicine being what it is, you have an occupational therapist come to your parents or grandparents house once every six months, said Dey, who presented his dwellSense platform Oct. 16 at the Wired Health Conference in New York City. For a diagnosis in which a few months can make a difference, thats not frequently enough.

So far, dwellSense has been tested with 14 elderly people in the Pittsburgh area. In addition to coffee-making and pill-taking, Deys group also tracked telephone-dialing. The information wasnt used for medical purposes, but to see if they tracked with traditional cognitive test results. Dey said they did.

They correlated very well with occupational therapist results, Dey said. It could catch problems more objectively, more quickly, than requiring an occupational therapist visit.

The next stage of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation-funded project is collaboration with doctors who can give feedback on how best to present the data. We want to get them engaged in trying to figure out how to abstract this information to a higher level and improve the conversation with their patients, Dey said.

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Sensors Embedded in Everyday Life Might Spot Dementia Early

Dementia Sufferers Will Top 2 Billion by 2050

As the baby boomer generation sails into their senior years, rates of dementia are soaring to never-before-experienced heights. With the disease expected to spread exponentially within the next generation, some experts believe were headed towards the worst medical disaster in human history.

That probably got your attention, and it should. Heres whats happening : dementia is unfortunately already considered commonplace among the elderly, with those afflicted totaling just about 36 million. However, according to the newest statistics recently released by the World Health Organization (WHO), that number is expected to hit 2 billion by the year 2050.

At that point,Alternet reportsdementia will cost the U.S. alone over $1 trillion in medical care.Not to put too fine a point on it, Dr. Barry Greenberg, director of the Toronto Dementia Research Alliance, reported to MITs Technology Review, "The scope of the looming medical care disaster is beyond comparison with anything that has been faced during the entire history of humanity.

The syndrome, dementia, is caused by several diseases, but its most common cause is Alzheimers.

For those whove never witnessed a loved one experience the debilitating slide into a mental no-mans land, it may be difficult to grasp the severity of the illness, which encompasses physical as well as mental impairments. But the statistics should help illuminate the diseases danger. The Alzheimers Association reports that Alzheimer's is currently the sixth leading cause of death in the U.S., and it's the only disease on the top ten list that cannot be cured, prevented, or even slowed."

Alternet reports that tens of billions of dollars have been spent to find and develop a single drug that could stop or at least slow the disease, and still, after decades, we have nothing to show for our efforts. The WHO is hoping that by releasing these latest statistics, more attention will be paid to problem and more funding provided.

In the meantime, what's showing promise is that since 2005, its been widely suspected that of the causes of dementia,Alzheimers may in fact actually be a type of diabetes. And if that turns out to be true, then like diabetes, Alzheimers may be controlled through diet.

Of course, widely suspected and proven are two different places on the spectrum of health care, but so far evidence suggests that there is hope in that direction. And when youre facing a medical issue of this magnitude, whether you're a sufferer or a caregiver, hope is no small gift.

If you are currently taking care of a loved with dementia, you can read TakeParts coverage of caregiving, or visit the National Alliance for Caregiving, to learn about resources that may help.

Have you had a loved one afflicted by dementia? Tell us about your experience in the Comments.

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Dementia Sufferers Will Top 2 Billion by 2050

Dementia Care Facility Recognized as First Tennessee Distinguished Provider

MILWAUKEE, WI--(Marketwire - Oct 16, 2012) - Dementia Care Specialists (DCS) has recognized Provision Living at Hermitage, Nashville, TN as the first facility in Tennessee to achieve the status of Distinguished Provider -- the highest credential in dementia care.

DCS is a specialized offering of the Crisis Prevention Institute (CPI), the worldwide leader in crisis prevention and intervention training. Launched in 2011, the Distinguished Provider program signifies a commitment to the DCS training philosophy and abilities-based approach, which helps improve function, safety, and quality of life for individuals with Alzheimer's/dementia.

"When people look for a long-term care facility, they want to select a place that they trust will offer the best and most attentive care for themselves or their loved ones. That trust is exactly what the Distinguished Provider status communicates. It is a seal of approval from industry leaders," said Kim Warchol, OTR/L, Dementia Care Specialists president and founder.

A Distinguished Provider demonstrates a commitment to high-quality, person-centered dementia care. This includes compliance with training standards and the implementation of CPI's Dementia Capable Care training and principles. For individuals at all stages of Alzheimer's/dementia, these principles promote the highest possible level of function, maximize health and safety, and help maintain dignity and quality of life.

With more than 5.4 million Americans living with Alzheimer's/dementia, and many more projected over the coming years, the level of care provided by Provision Living at Hermitage can serve as an example and help elevate the standard of dementia care in the US.

In addition to recognizing facilities, DCS also recognizes therapists and care partners who demonstrate the passion, heart, and skill to deliver Dementia Capable Care. DCS welcomes both facilities and individual practitioners to apply for the Distinguished Provider program. The application and additional information are available at crisisprevention.com/dcs.

CPI is an international training organization committed to best practices and safe behavior management methods that focus on prevention. Through a variety of specialized offerings and innovative resources, CPI educates and empowers professionals to create safe and respectful work environments and enrich the lives of the individuals they serve.

For more information about CPI and DCS, visit crisisprevention.com.

For more information about Provision Living at Godfrey, visit http://www.provisionliving.com/provision-living-at-Hermitage/

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Dementia Care Facility Recognized as First Tennessee Distinguished Provider