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Brain & Nervous System

Multiple Sclerosis Therapy: A Controversial Therapy For Multiple Sclerosis (MS)


Date: 19/12/03
 
Brad successfully kicked a long-time cigarette smoking habit in June of 1990.

Brad successfully kicked a long-time cigarette smoking habit in June of 1990. As with most everyone who quits smoking, he was looking forward to improved health in return for his hard won victory. Instead, just five weeks later, he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

Right from the beginning, Brad had a hunch that the sudden appearance of the multiple sclerosis (MS) symptoms was somehow connected to his break with cigarettes. But when he opened the subject with his doctor and other healthcare professionals, his hunch was always dismissed as illogical. I mean, how could there be ANY downside with kicking the habit, right?

Then in 1998, Brad picked up a copy of the Wall Street Journal and read an article about R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company scientists who were studying the effects of nicotine on central nervous system (CNS) diseases such as Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, and multiple sclerosis (MS).

Seems they wouldn't have thought Brad's hunch was so illogical.

Central nervous mysteries
When Brad read the US Wall Street Journal article in '98, he didn't need to consult any doctors or researchers. He began using an over-the-counter nicotine patch immediately. The patch helped improve the mobility in his hands and upper body, but after a couple of years became less effective and he stopped using it. He now feels strongly that if he had started using the patch when he was first diagnosed, he would have been able to have more control over the symptoms. But he doubts that the infusion of nicotine could have helped to significantly change the course of the disease.

Nicotine therapy. Those are two words I never expected to see side by side. But there are a number of research projects currently underway that, if successful, could one day bring nicotine into the mainstream as a therapy to help control various CNS disease symptoms.

I've noticed, however, that Mmultiple sclerosis (MS)S is mentioned in discussions of nicotine therapy infrequently. References to Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, Tourette's syndrome, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, and depression are the most common health issues likely to be successfully treated with nicotine.

Brad believes that the complexity of multiple sclerosis (MS) may be the reason it's often left off that list. With Parkinson's disease, for instance, researchers have a clearer idea about the mechanism of the disease - where it originates in the brain, and how it responds to treatments. Comparatively, multiple sclerosis (MS) is an enigma - far more difficult to understand and treat.

Into the maze
So at this point, what is known about nicotine and its effect on disorders of the central nervous system?

Start with acetylcholine, a biochemical neurotransmitter that creates nerve impulses in neurons. For the nervous system and muscles to function properly, acetylcholine has to find special receptors in the neurons. One of those receptors is called a nicotinic receptor, and it responds to both acetylcholine and nicotine.

When nicotine is introduced into the system, the number of nicotinic receptors increases. Alzheimer's patients, for instance, are believed to suffer from a loss of nicotrinic receptors. This impairs nerve impulses, resulting in memory lapses and problems with other brain functions.

More than two decades ago, research at Georgetown University in the US, showed that nicotine can also protect neurons against damage and death. The problem is that nicotine affects a wide variety of neurotransmitter systems. So while it may be doing good things in some areas, it also increases blood pressure and heart rate.

This is one reason why quite a bit of nicotine research is focused on the development of nicotine formulas designed to be selective in their effects on the different varieties of nicotinic receptors.

Which is much easier said than done. It's as if researchers were electricians, sorting through tens of thousands of individual circuits, looking for the one that performs a very specific task, and then trying to enhance that single circuit without affecting any of the others.

But as daunting as that research might be, it continues in earnest, because if a synthetic nicotine that targets a single type of receptor can be developed, it can also be patented. That's why a number of major pharmaceutical companies are currently devoting huge resources toward the development of a nicotine drug.

Something tells me this will not be the last e-Alert on this topic.

No smoking
If Brad had not successfully quit smoking on that June day in 1990, he would still have developed multiple sclerosis. He might have delayed the onset, but eventually it would have overcome the effect of the nicotine. Which brings us to two important points emphasised by the handful of researchers who have been studying nicotine for more than 20 years:
1) Nicotine may help treat CNS diseases, but it cannot cure them; and
2) This research should not in any way be taken as an endorsement of tobacco smoking. Without question, the negative effects of smoking far outweigh any positive effects that nicotine might have.

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Comments

mel Posted 23/08/2008

I have had ms for thirty years, I quit smoking thirty years ago but I remembered that smoking lelped me walk. So I substituted choline abd lechithin and lived and worked using massive amounts of choline. Doctors saw that my reflexes improved with choline. But I knew I was living on borrowed time as the effect gradually diminished. What a kick- the habit,, but at least not yet the bucket,

h Posted 22/07/2009

h

Allan Carr Posted 24/01/2010

I'd rather stay on cigarettes before I venture into getting a therapy that might damage me further. Face it we all die at some stage - some from smoking and others from bomb attacks and wars waged by America...

gphx Posted 03/04/2010

Brad's experience is similar to my own. While nicotine is not politically correct new answers aren't usually found under the rocks everyone looks under, they're found under the rocks no one has looked under. Nicotine is deserving of much more research including with regard to masking ms symptoms. I have been self medicating my own symptoms with it for years. They like to say smoking worsens ms but do pain killers worsen back pain? Correspondence does not equal causation. I believe those people with the worst ms smoke because they experience some degree of relief.

Kristin NM Posted 14/06/2010

Another option for nicotine relief is the electronic cigarette. For smokers with MS, it could help ease the transition from smoking, while immediately removing the greatest danger - the smoke. For MS patients with balance dysfunction, the carbon monoxide and other toxins in smoke only exacerbate symptoms.

Nicotine has received a bad image due to its addictive properties and the link to smoking. Remove the smoke and you remove up to 99% of the health risks, reducing the negative health effects to be comparable to that of caffeine.

Electronic cigarettes use a solution of propylene glycol (generally regarded as safe for humans by the FDA and EPA), nicotine and food flavoring. Testing has found no unsafe levels of toxic chemicals or carcinogens to date.

There are also other tobacco alkaloids which may be beneficial to smoking MS patients, which nicotine cannot provide on its own in patches or gums - most commonly cognative impairments and mild depression. Smokeless tobacco may help.

If a former smoker still feels the urge to smoke, try a smokeless tobacco, such as snus or dissolving strips or sticks. Smokeless tobacco has also been shown in research studies to be 98-99% safer than smoking (the horror stories anti-tobacco groups like to share about oral cancer from smokeless alternatives are actually extremely rare and still much less risk than with smoking.)

Reduced-harm (smokeless) tobacco products and electronic cigarettes provide higher, more effective doses of nicotine. And electronic cigarettes even allow the user to pick the nicotine level that works for them and provide that comforting familiarity and ritual many former smokers need/want.

My husband, a former smoker, passed away from complications associated with MS in 2006. I wish I knew then what I know now.

I strongly urge smokers with MS look into smokeless tobacco alternatives and electronic cigarettes!

CWH Posted 19/06/2010

Last year my husband nearly died. I was standing outside the hospital around "some icky smokers". But I bummed a cigarette hoping it would help my nerves. Not only did it do that, but it eased the symptoms of my current relapse of MS. I kept up the habit, 6-10 a day. I had no allergies in the fall and spring as usual, and it makes my pain medicine more effective. Thinking it was just the nicotine, I tried the patches. No use. There must be other compounds in tobacco that help. One possibility, my physician says, is the cigarette ingredients and activates my immune system to higher level.

ME sufferer Posted 17/01/2012

I've been severely disabled for about 3 years due to an undiagnosed condition - it has both immunological and neurological hallmarks, but I can't get a VA doctor to investigate it adequately, and the VA is all I have. I recently started smoking due to reading I'd done online. I figured that since I was only operating at <10% of my healthy capacity, there wasn't much more ground to lose. I'd now consider myself to be operating at about 80% capacity, which given the 3 years of near-total disability and inactivity, is nothing short of miraculous. I'd love to have a less harmful way of administering the relevant drugs, but A. e-cigarette juice is nicotine-only, and that doesn't provide anywhere near the same effects, and B. due to various allergies, the only way I can administer whatever it is that "fixes" me is unfortunately by just smoking the tobacco. I know that it may shorten my lifespan, but even as little as 5 years of being able to LIVE again measured against an unknown span of living in a bed, unable to even THINK clearly... it's just not even a contest.



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