ADVANCEDBROWSE SUBJECTS
alive Academy
Alive Forum
Event Calendar
Health Retailer Search
Alive Awards
Alive Web Exclusives
Alive Australia


APEX Awards 2008

Find a store
Subscribe to our Free Newsletter!

Enlarge Font Printer Version Email It to a Friend
Glutathione: New Hope for Parkinson's Disease?
by author Garrett Swetlikoff, ND

A new therapy for Parkinson’s disease is making inroads in some clinics and alternative healing centres. Pioneered by Florida neurologist Dr. David Perlmutter, the new treatment involves administering high doses of the potent antioxidant glutathione, intravenously.

In Parkinson’s disease, the area of the brain that produces the neurotransmitter dopamine - the substantia nigra - gradually degenerates. Researchers have speculated that one cause of the disorder’s devastating symptoms - slow and decreased movement, resting tremor, shuffling gait, muscular rigidity, and postural instability - might be damage from destructive oxygen molecules known as free radicals, chemicals formed by normal biological processes and exposure to environmental toxins. To oppose such oxidative injury, some Parkinson’s specialists think antioxidants may be an effective therapy.

In Dr. Perlmutter’s research, glutathione levels were measured primarily in the substantia nigra in Parkinson’s patients and in control groups. Glutathione levels were reduced approximately 40 percent in the patients with Parkinson’s compared with normal patients. Furthermore, the degree of reduction in glutathione seems to parallel the severity of the disease. In a separate study, glutathione levels were compared between early and advanced cases. Serum glutathione levels were significantly lower in cases of advanced Parkinson’s. Patients were given glutathione intravenously twice daily for one month. All of the patients in the study group improved significantly after the therapy, noting a 42-per-cent decline in disability. All patients showed marked quickening of gait and noticeably improved balance. Mood and coordination also got better.

Glutathione is not a Health Canada-approved pharmaceutical but instead is classified as a dietary supplement. Drug companies, which do the bulk of clinical trials on new medications, are consequently unable to patent glutathione (and thus anticipate profits to support the initial research), explaining why there have been so few trials on its use for Parkinson’s so far.

For most patients, Dr. Perlmutter recommends 1400 mg glutathione mixed with saline and given intravenously (over the course of 10 to 20 minutes) three times a week. At his clinic, the herb Milk thistle (Silybum marianum), believed to increase glutathione retention, is added to the regimen, along with the amino acid N-acetyl cysteine, another nutritional therapy that actually enhances the body’s own production of glutathione.

So far, IV administration has been the only effective way to give sufficient dosages of glutathione. The problem with an oral dosage is that the delicate glutathione molecule is damaged during digestion and it may be difficult to get an adequate amount into the bloodstream.

The most enthusiastic testimonials are not considered reliable scientific evidence, so most Parkinson’s experts are withholding judgment on glutathione therapy until more convincing evidence is clearly proved. Nevertheless, it is available in Canada at natural health stores.

Garrett Swetlikoff, ND, is a naturopathic physician who lives and practises in Kelowna, BC. He focuses on progressive and interventional natural medicine. He can be reached at 250-868-2205 or gswetlikoff@shaw.ca. Visit: natural-medicine.ca.

Source: alive #257, March 2004

Back to top

See Related Content
Glutathione
An antioxidant that may have been essential to earliestlife forms, glutathione can help rid the body of toxins.
Parkinson's Disease-Treat the Fire, Not the Smoke
It has been estimated that in the United States and Canada more than 1.2 million people suffer from Parkinson's disease. That translates to about one to two cases per 1,000 individuals in the general population.
Your Detox-Product Shopping List
From the car fumes we breathe to the pesticide residues on our foods, toxic contaminants are, sadly, a daily reality. Your local health food store is your best source of the wide range of natural foods, herbs, and supplements needed to support natural detoxification.
Coenzyme Q10
Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) is an energetic little nutrient considered crucial for cellular energy production. Concentrated in microscopic cellular organs called mitochondria, it is one of a select number of nutrients that has been the subject of intense study over the last 20 years.

Back to top