Tuberculosis drug may cure
Parkinson's-like illness
Newswise — Researchers have
discovered that a drug used to treat tuberculosis apparently cures
patients of a Parkinson's-like illness suffered by thousands of
mineworkers, welders and others exposed to high levels of the metal
manganese.
Manganese is used to produce steel
alloys and as a coating on welding rods, among other industrial
applications. It replaced lead decades ago as a component in
unleaded gasoline, increasing the risks of manganese intoxication
for the general public, said one of the researchers, Wei Zheng, a
professor and University Faculty Scholar in Purdue's School of
Health Sciences.
When manganese builds up in toxic
levels in the body, people suffer from "occupational manganese
parkinsonism," which causes symptoms similar to Parkinson's disease.
Victims experience hand tremors, poor coordination, unsteady gait
and a masklike inability to show facial expressions, Zheng said.
Manganese contained in the coating
of welding rods is released in fumes. Welders involved in
manufacturing vehicles, tanks and ships are especially prone to
manganese intoxication because they work in close quarters,
increasing their exposure to the metal, Zheng said.
"There are about 430,000 welders
in the United States alone, and even more in China, so manganese
intoxication likely affects many people, including workers involved
in manganese mining and steel production," he said. "In Beijing, we
found a high percentage of welders have these symptoms."
While the condition's symptoms are
similar to those of Parkinson's disease, the standard treatments for
Parkinson's disease, including the drug levodopa, are not effective
for manganese intoxication. A chemical compound called EDTA has been
used to help patients eliminate manganese in the urine. The drug's
effectiveness, however, is limited because it is water-soluble,
preventing it from readily passing through membranes in the
"blood-brain barrier," layers of cells surrounding blood vessels
that block substances from traveling from the blood into brain
tissue.
Ten researchers from institutions
around the world - including Purdue - conducted a 17-year medical
follow-up study on a manganese-poisoned worker and about 80 other
patients. The researchers learned that an aspirinlike drug called
sodium para-aminosalicylic acid, or PAS, dramatically reduces
symptoms on a long-term basis.
"The amazing thing is that this
drug reverses Parkinson-type symptoms of manganese intoxication,"
Zheng said. "We see remarkable improvement after treatment with this
drug even 17 years later."
PAS has been used for decades to
treat tuberculosis and apparently can cross the blood-brain barrier
because it is fat-soluble, or lipophilic. That's because the drug
contains a structure known as a benzene ring, which enables it to
penetrate the membranes.
Findings will appear in the June
issue of the Journal of Occupational Environmental Medicine.
The paper was written by Yue-Ming Jiang, Xue-An Mo, Feng-Qi Du, Xue
Fu and Xia-Yan Zhu, from Guangxi Medical University in China;
Hong-Yu Gao and Feng-Ling Liao, from Wuzhou Center for Disease
Prevention and Control in China; Jin-Lan Xie from the Wuzhou
Worker's Hospital in China; Enrico Pira from the University of Turin
in Italy; and Zheng.
The research has focused on China
because that country is a major manganese ore producer and provides
one-third of the world's supply of steel alloys.
The paper includes data from
research involving a female Chinese mineworker who suffered
debilitating symptoms, including lack of coordination, trouble
walking and writing, and a masklike appearance caused by tense
facial muscles. The woman's symptoms nearly disappeared after
treatment with PAS in 1987, and she remained free of symptoms when
re-examined during a follow-up study in 2004.
The researchers suggest several
possible mechanisms that enable the drug to reverse symptoms of the
illness. One is that the drug may contain "chelating arms" that grab
manganese.
"However, we are not just looking
at this drug as a chelating compound, but also as an
anti-inflammatory, like aspirin," Zheng said. "Historically, we have
believed that neurodegeneration is permanent and cannot be reversed,
but PAS appears to shed light on a reversal mechanism.
"It may possibly repair neurons.
If this is true, this would be a major finding, but further research
will be needed to study this possibility. We think the bigger
picture is that the drug might also be used as a treatment for
Parkinson's disease, but much more work is needed to confirm this
theory."
Zheng's research has been funded
by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, the U.S.
Department of Defense and the Purdue Research Foundation.