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								Our movements are partly ordered by a 
								biochemical substance, the dopamine, secreted by 
								specialized cells located in a center located in 
								the base of the brain (a black substance, also 
								called locus niger).When these cells are destroyed, they do not 
								secrete dopamine anymore; the:
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								musculature solidifies and is prone to shakings. 
Syndromes of Parkinson’s 
Cells secreting of dopamine can be destroyed in 
								various ways.
								
								
								
								
								
								
								Certain cases have a genetic cause, several 
								active genes having been identified in families 
								of those with Parkinson’s.
								
								
								
								
								
								
								Other cases are caused by the exposure to the 
								pesticides. 
The 
								Frozen Drug Addicts 
								(1) 
								
								When 
								William Langston, a neurologist at Santa Clara 
								Valley Medical Centers
								in the Northern of California, was stunned 
								to see when he sees arriving at his consultation 
								a motionless young man, as frozen, mute, and his 
								open, large eyes without eyelids' unblinking. 
One 
								also understands the stupefaction of the other 
								doctors who did never saw such a case before.
								
								
								
								
								
								By 
								examining the friend of the young man, Langston 
								and his fellow neurologist, Phil Ballard, noted 
								that she was in the same frozen state
								as him.
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								They 
								suspected a connection between the two cases. 
								
								By 
								chance, Phil Ballard went to a meeting arranged 
								by one of his neurologist friends, James Tetrud, 
								who told him he’d to have seen two similar cases 
								in his consultation. 
The 
								four-frozen people were heroin addicts.
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								Langston went on television to alert the 
								community of the existence of a bad heroin sold 
								in the street.
								
					
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								Following this emission, a spectator announced 
								two other cases.
								
					
								
								
								
								Six were frozen. 
Langston got remaining samples of the powders 
								that the victims had injected.
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								Analyses of the powder sold as heroin showed in 
								fact that it was a toxic synthetic product,
								
					
								
					
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								the MPTP. 
								
								
								The MPTP(MPTP:
								
								
								1-methyle, 
								4 - 
					
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								phenyl, 
								1-, 2-, 3-, 6-tétrahydro 
					
								
								
								
								
								pyridine),
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								 is 
								a 
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								neurotoxin 
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								that 
								causes the permanent symptoms of the 
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								Parkinson’s disease 
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								by 
								destroying certain 
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								neurons 
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								in the 
								black 
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								substance 
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								of the
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								brain. 
								It is used to study the disease in monkeys. 
The story of the frozen drug addicts was told 
								with passion by William Langston and Jon 
								Palfreman, a medical writer, in a book called
								
								
								
								
								
								The Case of the Frozen Addicts:
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								How 
								the Solution of an Extraordinary Medical Mystery 
								Has Spawned a Revolution in the Understanding 
								and Treatment of Parkinson’s Disease 
								(1). 
								
								The neurotoxicity of the MPTP had already been 
								suspected in 1976, when Barry Kidston, a 
								twenty-three-year-old student of chemistry in
								
					Maryland, 
								had injected himself with a drug that he had 
								synthesized in an incorrect way. He had been 
								contaminated by the MPTP, and, after three days, 
								he had developed the symptoms of the Parkinson’s 
								disease. 
								
								The Parkinson’s syndrome of Kidston had been 
								treated successfully with Levo-dopa, 
								but he died eighteen months later from a cocaine 
								overdose. At the time of autopsy, they 
								discovered the destruction of the dopamine 
								receptors of the black substance. 
The Parkinson’s Disease 
								
								It is a 
degenerative chronic neurological disease 
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								(progressive loss of the neurons) affecting the
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								central nervous system. 
								It is caused 
								
								
								
								by an 
								
								
								insufficiency of production of dopamine in the 
								brain. 
								
								When the cells that secrete the dopamine die or 
								are damaged, one sees the appearance of motor 
								disorders of progressive evolution.
								The Parkinson’s 
								disease usually begins at forty-five (ages for 
								the beginning of andropause disease) or after.
								It is the second 
								most frequent neuro-degenerative disease, after 
								the 
Alzheimer’s disease.
								The Parkinson’s 
								disease is distinguished from the 
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								Parkinson’s syndromes, 
								
					
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								which are generally of various origins (genetic, 
								exposure to the pesticides), are more severe, 
								and which respond little to treatments. 
Symptoms of the Parkinson’s Disease: 
Motor symptoms:
								
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								shakings, muscular rigidity, slowness of 
								movements, losing 
								balance. 
								
								
								
								
								
								Non-motor symptoms:
								
								
								
								
								constipation, disturbed sleep, emergencies to 
								urinate, frigidity, impotence, dizzy spells, 
								tiredness, depression, memory disorders. 
Treatment of the Parkinson’s Disease 
There doesn’t yet exist yet any curative 
								treatment for the Parkinson’s disease. 
Substitution of the 
								Dopamine: 
The Parkinson’s disease is due to an 
								insufficiency of production of dopamine. The 
								drugs making it possible to treat it mitigate 
								this insufficiency either by giving dopamine 
								(L-dopa), or by providing an agonist of the 
								dopamine (molecule miming the action of the 
								dopamine). These various classes of drugs 
								constitute today, for a great majority of 
								Parkinson’s sufferers, the 
								central element of the treatment. 
								The L-dopa is the most powerful drug for the 
								improvement of motor disorders. 
Inhibiters of the Mono Amine Oxidase 
								
								
								
								
								The inhibiters of the mono amine oxidase (IMAO) 
								are molecules that block the enzyme degrading 
								the dopamine.
								
								
								
								
								
								
								They 
								can be used only at the beginning of the 
								disease, or to prolong the effects of the 
								L-dopa.
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								Unfortunately, the association of the IMAO with 
								certain drugs is risked, in particular 
								antidepressants often prescribed, like the 
								fluoxetine (Prozac). 
An old publication going back to 1974 attracts 
								our attention here.
								
								
								
								
								
								It is a clinical study evaluating the action of 
								testosterone on the activity of the monoamine 
								oxidase in seven depressed men. 
									
										| 
										
										
										  
										
										
										Average activity of MAO (monoamine 
										oxidase) in plasma |  
										| 
										
										
										
										Before treatment | 
										
										
										
										7223 ± 3740 |  
										| 
										
										
										
										After treatment | 
										
										
										
										1997 ± 1250 (p<0,01) |  
										| 
										
										
										400 mg. of testosterone cipionate every 
										twenty-one days |  
According
								
					
								
								to Klaiber and collaborators. 
								
								
								
								  
The conclusion of this study is that :
								
					
								
								
								
								Testosterone, in sufficient quantity, naturally 
								lowers the quantity of MAO (Mono Amine Oxidase), 
								thus preventing the degradation of the 
								production of dopamine (2). 
								
								
								From where the interest to study of the 
								
daily 
								androgens'
								
								
								
								
								
								production in men suffering from a Parkinson’s 
								disease, with the aim 
								
								losing balance.in 
								order to
								save 
								their dopamine production.
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								By the same token, taking occasion the take of 
								androgens will decrease the tendency toward
								nervous 
								breakdowns (and will limit the taking “ of 
								antidepressants”.
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								The destruction of cerebral cells producing 
								dopamine causes the symptoms of the Parkinson’s 
								disease.
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								That was shown with precision by the study of 
								the frozen drug addicts, whose cases are 
								extremely rare. 
What is the cause of dopamine cells’ destruction 
								in those with Parkinson’s one whose symptoms
								
								
								
								
								
								usually 
								
								begin 
								
								between forty-five and seventy years old?
								
					
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								The health of those with Parkinson’s depends on 
								an aging disease that strikes the whole of the 
								organism after forty years and sometimes even 
								before:
								
					
								
								
								
								
								the andropause disease (chapter 1). 
Diseases 
								of aging develop in a permanent vascular 
								disorder caused by 
								arteriosclerosis, atheroma, and arterial 
								hypertension
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								The very small arteries that 
								constitute the end of the arterial network are 
								particularly vulnerable.
								
					
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								They 
								are the first to be blocked by a lack of
								androgens hormones.
								
					
								
								
								
								
								Their 
								obstruction deprives the cells of oxygen, 
								causing their destruction.
								
					
								
								
								
								
								Contributions of essential molecules like 
								androgens, necessary to the survival of these 
								cells, are also compromised. 
The 
								cells that produce the dopamine, localized in 
								the depth of the brain, are located at the end 
								of the arterial network.
								
					
								
								
					
								
								
								
								
								It 
								would not be astonishing that one of the causes 
								of the destruction of the cells producing 
								dopamine resides in the fact that they are not 
								irrigated anymore normally by blood anymore 
								since the final arterial network, 
								extremely fine, can be blocked.
								
					
								
								
								
								The testosterone could play a producing, 
								determining role on biochemistry, even of the 
								cells producing dopamine or by improving blood 
								circulation on the level of these cells.   
									
										
											| 
											Normal production 
											of 
											androgens | 
											
											
											Insufficient production of androgens |  
											| 
											
   
   
  
   
  ↓ | 
											
   
  ↓ |  
											| 
											Very small, 
											permeable arteries | 
											Very small, 
											blocked arteries |  
											| 
											
   
  ↓ | 
											
   
  ↓ |  
											| 
											Normal 
											dopaminergic cells | 
											Dopaminergic 
											cells 
											
											 
											
											
											destroyed |  
											| 
											
   
  ↓ | 
											
   
  ↓ |  
											| 
											Normal production 
											of 
											
											 dopamine
											
											
											 | 
											
											
											
											 Insufficient 
											production of dopamine |  
											| 
											
   
  ↓ | 
											
   
  ↓ |  
											| 
											Normal movements | 
											
											Shakings |  
								
								
								
								
								
								  
Exceptional Treatment 
								
								
								
								  
								
								
								
								
								
								Surgical treatment(major cerebral stimulation or SCP) or
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								graft reprogrammed stem cells 
								
								
								
								are the focus of the medical research. 
								
								
								Stem 
								Cells 
								
								The 
								National Institute of Neurological Disorders and 
								Stroke
								(NINDS) in the United States supports 
								research on stem cells biology, in the 
								development of the adult brain, and in studies 
								of spinal-cord lesions.Studies are also made on the possibility of 
								producing dopamine by stem cells. 
					Growth Factor FGF20 
								In 
								2013, 
								Nobuyuki Itoh and
								Hiroya 
								Ohta of the Department of Genetic Biochemistry, 
								Kyoto University Graduate School of 
								Pharmaceutical Sciences, in Kyoto, Japan, showed 
								the importance of growth factor FGF20 in the 
								differentiation of the stem cells in cells 
								producing of the dopamine (3). 
								
								The use of the stem cells to treat the 
								neurological diseases in man is very promising.
								
								
								There remains, however, much work to do before 
								being able to apply this therapeutic treatment 
								in private clinics.
								
					To carry out these future treatments quite 
								successfully,
								general aging of organism's structures 
								will always be taken into account 
								Bibliography 
								
								1.  
								
								Langston W., PALFREMAN J. The Case of the 
								Frozen Addicts: How the Solution of an 
								Extraordinary Medical Mystery Spawned a 
								Revolution in the Understanding and Treatment of 
								Parkinson's disease. 
								Pantheon Books, New York, 1995. 
								
								
								2. KLAIBER E.L., BROVERMAN D.M., VOGEL W., 
								KOBAYASHI Y. The use of steroid hormones in 
								depression. In Psychotropic action of hormones. 
								Proceedings of the World Congress of biological 
								psychiatry. Buenos Aires. Argentina, September 
								1974. Spectrum publications INC. 
								
								
								3.  
								
								NOBUYUKI ITOH 
								and 
								HIROYA OHTA. 
								Roles of FGF20 in 
								dopaminergic neurons and Parkinson's disease.
								
								
								
								
								
								
								Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience;  
								
								
								
								
								
								www.frontiersin.org. Volume 61 Article 
								
								
								
								
								
								15: 1-4. 
								
								
								
								
								May 2013 
								
								
								
								
								
								 
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