Parkinson’s Disease Could Start in This Body Part, Massive Study Finds

Hint: Parkinsonโ€™s doesn't begin in the muscles or the brain,

Hands of an old woman with a caneevrymmnt/Shutterstock

Scientists have understood for a while that symptoms of Parkinsonโ€™s diseaseย develop when dopamine-producing brain cells start to die. Dopamine is a chemical messenger that helps regulate movement, and as its levels decrease, Parkinsonโ€™s emerges. What researchers havenโ€™t understood is why those cells begin to break down in the first placeโ€”but a huge new study is shedding some light.

Researchers combed through the records of more than 1.6 million patients, some of which went back 52 years. You might think of Parkinsonโ€™s as affecting the muscles, but researchers suspect that the gut shows the earliest signs. In this massive study, scientists put their focus on the appendix, which is attached to the large intestine. Theย results in the journal Science Translational Medicine suggest that the organ plays a big role in development of the disease. Learn aboutย 21 health secrets your gut is trying to tell you.

People whose appendix had been removed early in life had a 19 percent lower risk of developing Parkinsonโ€™s, according to the findings. In rural areas, where Parkinsonโ€™s is more common, the effect was even stronger: People with appendectomies were 25 percent less likely to get a diagnosis.

Appendix removal canโ€™t fully prevent or stop the disease, but those who did develop Parkinsonโ€™s after losing their appendix pushed back diagnosis by more than three years. Removing the appendix after symptoms appeared didnโ€™t seem to offer any protection, though. Whatโ€™s more, the researchers found marks of Lewy bodies, which are abnormal clumps of a protein called alpha-synuclein, in appendixes. Lewy bodies in the brain are a hallmark of Parkinsonโ€™s, but interestingly, even healthy people had the proteins in their appendixes. Check out moreย unsolved mysteries about the human body.

โ€œParkinson’s is relatively rareโ€”less than 1 percent of the populationโ€”so there has to be some other mechanism or confluence of events that allows the appendix to affect Parkinson’s risk,โ€ senior study author Viviane Labrie, PhD, said in a news release. โ€œThat’s what we plan to look at next: Which factor or factors tip the scale in favor of Parkinson’s?โ€ Whether or not your appendix is intact, watch out for these early symptoms of Parkinson’s disease that are easy to miss.

Source: EurekAlert!

Marissa Laliberte
Marissa Laliberte-Simonian is a London-based associate editor with the global promotions team at WebMDโ€™s Medscape.com and was previously a staff writer for Reader's Digest. Her work has also appeared in Business Insider, Parents magazine, CreakyJoints, and the Baltimore Sun. You can find her on Instagram @marissasimonian.