Title: Nicotine: can it save your brain?
1Nicotine can it save your brain?
- Issue 23 of Cosmos, October 2008
- by Becky McCall
- Is it a scourge on society or a blessing in
disguise? - Public enemy number one may soon be a treatment
for cognitive diseases.
2A growing body of evidence suggests that smoking
helps delay the progression of Parkinson's
disease, and potentially other cognitive diseases
as well. These are statistics that rarely see the
light of day they are hidden from the public by
layers of anti-smoking campaigns and health
warnings.
3For example, a review of epidemiological studies
led by researchers from the University of
Washington, in Seattle, USA, and published in the
journal Behavioural Brain Research in 2000,
showed that non-smokers are twice as likely to
develop Parkinson's disease as smokers.
4- Another review of 44 previous studies,
published in the U.S. journal Annals of Neurology
in 2002, found that smokers have a 60 per cent
lower risk of developing the disease.
5Abnormal proteins found at high levels between
nerve cells in the brains of Alzheimer's
sufferers (known as amyloid-ß and amyloid
plaques) are reduced in both Alzheimer's patients
and in other elderly patients who smoke.
6- Dopamine, a neurotransmitter or chemical
messenger in the brain, is released after
nicotine activates nicotinic receptors in the
midbrain. These receptors in turn activate
regions responsible for movement and motivation,
as well as addiction behaviour. - "In patients with Parkinson's disease, neurones
are lost in these two regions. So stimulation of
any remaining neurones with nicotine could help
prevent further decline," explains Picciotto.
7THE POWER OF NICOTINE in the human nervous system
has been known since the early 20th century.
Nicotine mimics a neurotransmitter called
acetylcholine, and is a chemical signal sent
between nerve cells.