Brivazens
Neurology India
menu-bar5 Open access journal indexed with Index Medicus
  Users online: 876  
 Home | Login 
About Editorial board Articlesmenu-bullet NSI Publicationsmenu-bullet Search Instructions Online Submission Subscribe Videos Etcetera Contact
  Navigate Here 
 »   Next article
 »   Previous article
 »   Table of Contents

 Resource Links
 »   Similar in PUBMED
 »  Search Pubmed for
 »  Search in Google Scholar for
 »Related articles
 »   Citation Manager
 »   Access Statistics
 »   Reader Comments
 »   Email Alert *
 »   Add to My List *
 * Requires registration (Free)
 

 Article Access Statistics
    Viewed21438    
    Printed589    
    Emailed31    
    PDF Downloaded812    
    Comments [Add]    
    Cited by others 6    

Recommend this journal

 

 REVIEW ARTICLE
Year : 2003  |  Volume : 51  |  Issue : 2  |  Page : 176--182

Friedreich’s ataxia – yesterday, today and tomorrow


Department of Neurology, Vivekananda Institute of Medical Science, Calcutta, India

Correspondence Address:
A Chakravarty
59, Beadon Street, Calcutta-700006
India
Login to access the Email id

Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None


PMID: 14570998

Rights and PermissionsRights and Permissions

The present review traces the origin of Friedreich’s Ataxia (FA) from the time of Nikolaus Friedreich in the mid-nineteenth century. The early hesitation on the part of the neurological community in accepting FA as a distinct entity, rather than a variant form of tabes dorsalis and multiple sclerosis, has been highlighted. Research within the last 6-7 years, has firmly established FA as a trinucleotide repeat disorder, the location of the offending gene, and the disease-related gene product, frataxin. Frataxin is now thought to interfere with the mitochondrial oxidative process and enhance iron accumulation. However, whether this iron accumulation is a primary causative event for symptom production is not clear and iron chelators are unlikely to be helpful in therapy. Of great promise is the use of free radical scavengers and antioxidants. One such agent idebenone, a short chain analogue of co-enzyme Q10, may have a future.






[FULL TEXT] [PDF]*


        
Print this article     Email this article

Online since 20th March '04
Published by Wolters Kluwer - Medknow