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Updated Nov 25, 2025 · 17:45
Health News Updated Nov 25, 2025

Parkinson's Breakthrough: How Brain Blood Vessel Changes Drive Disease

Australian researchers have made a groundbreaking discovery about Parkinson's disease. They found that the condition causes progressive changes in the brain's blood vessels, not just protein accumulation. The study revealed region-specific vascular deterioration including non-functional capillaries called string vessels. These findings could lead to entirely new treatment approaches targeting vascular pathology.

Parkinson's disease causes progressive changes in brain's blood vessels: Study

New Delhi, Nov 25

Researchers in Australia have found that Parkinson's disease causes significant and progressive changes in the brain's blood vessels, changing the understanding of the disease.

While Parkinson's disease is characterised by alpha-synuclein protein deposits, the research demonstrated that region-specific changes to blood vessels in the brain underlie disease progression, Xinhua news agency reported.

"Traditionally, Parkinson's researchers have focused on protein accumulation and neuronal loss, but we have shown the impacts on our cerebrovasculature -- the blood vessels in our brain," said Derya Dik, postdoctoral student at Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA).

"Our research identified region-specific changes in the brain's blood vessels, including an increased presence of string vessels, which are non-functional remnants of capillaries," Dik added.

NeuRA researchers, in collaboration with the University of New South Wales and the University of Sydney, also observed changes relating to how blood flows in the brain and how the blood-brain barrier operates.

The findings, published in the journal Brain, may also help open up new treatment avenues.

Researchers believe that targeting these progressive, region-specific changes may be able to slow disease progression and improve outcomes for patients suffering from Parkinson's disease.

In addition to exploring what these findings mean for people with Parkinson's disease, the researchers are considering impacts for other neurodegenerative disorders.

"We are now investigating whether similar cerebrovascular changes are present in post-mortem brain tissue from individuals with Alzheimer's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies tissue," Dik said.

"This study may lead to new treatment options for people with Parkinson's disease, but we also want to better understand the contribution of vascular pathology in these other neurodegenerative disorders and explore whether this can reveal new targets for therapies and treatments for people with those conditions also," the researcher said.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rajesh Q

Interesting how they're looking beyond just protein accumulation. In India, we need more awareness about Parkinson's - many people still think it's just old age tremors. This research could change how we approach treatment completely.

Michael C

As someone working in medical research, I appreciate this shift in focus. The blood-brain barrier connection is particularly fascinating. However, I wonder if the study sample size was adequate - that's often a limitation in such specialized research.

Anjali F

My mother was diagnosed last year. Reading this gives me hope that maybe future generations won't have to suffer as much. The part about "string vessels" being non-functional remnants is heartbreaking but important to understand.

Sarah B

The collaboration between NeuRA, University of New South Wales and University of Sydney shows how international research can benefit everyone. Hope Indian research institutions also get involved in such studies 🤝

Vikram M

This could be a game-changer! If they're extending this research to Alzheimer's and dementia too, it might help millions of families. In India, we need better healthcare infrastructure to implement such advanced treatments when they become available.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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