Pubdate: Tue,  1 Jul 2003
Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)
Copyright: 2003 PG Publishing
Contact:  http://www.post-gazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/341
Author: Anita Srikameswaran

MARIJUANA-BASED DRUG COULD CURB BRAIN DAMAGE

Local researchers have joined an international trial of a marijuana-based 
drug that could limit the damage caused in traumatic brain injuries.

Dr. Jack Wilberger, chairman of neurosurgery at Allegheny General Hospital, 
will be leading the local arm of the study, which began here about 10 days ago.

Dexanabinol, a synthetic drug, is derived from the active agent in 
cannabis, or marijuana. It acts on the so-called secondary injury process, 
which is a chemical cascade that leads to progressive brain cell death 
after the initial trauma. The drug counters inflammation, works as an 
antioxidant and blocks the uncontrolled influx of calcium into the cells, 
which can kill them.

"It's different from all other drugs we've tried in head injury in that all 
of them were limited to one of those three mechanisms of action," Wilberger 
said. "None of them worked."

Dexanabinol could help because it does all those things simultaneously. The 
drug can be given by injection up to four hours after the injury is sustained.

Minimal side effects were seen in earlier European trials, Wilberger said. 
Although the drug is based on a marijuana molecule, it doesn't give 
patients a "high."

For the trial, head injury patients will be randomly assigned to receive 
the drug or a placebo. The researchers will compare mortality rates for the 
two groups, as well as recovery levels.

About 15 to 20 local residents could number among the anticipated 250 
American participants. About 1,500 patients ultimately will be enrolled in 
the trial, which includes both U.S. and European hospitals, Wilberger said.

Studies conducted in Israel found that three months after injury 42 percent 
of patients who took dexanabinol had good neurological recovery compared to 
17 percent of those taking a placebo.

Dexanabinol's properties were discovered in the late 1980s by researchers 
at Israel's Tel Aviv University. The drug is being made by Pharmos 
Corporation, based in Rehovot, Israel.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1.5 
million people sustain a brain injury each year. As a result, about 50,000 
people die and up to 90,000 are left with a longterm or lifelong disability.

After brain injury, "few people come back normal, to the way they were 
before," Wilberger noted. Animal experiments showed that dexanabinol 
markedly improved recovery, but in that setting the drug was given immediately.
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