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Is there any treatment?
There is currently no effective cure or treatment for Friedreich's ataxia. However, many of the symptoms and accompanying
complications can be treated to help patients maintain optimal functioning as long as possible. Diabetes and heart problems
can be treated with medications. Orthopedic problems such as foot deformities and scoliosis can be treated with braces or
surgery. Physical therapy may prolong use of the arms and legs.
What is the prognosis?
Generally, within 15 to 20 years after the appearance of the first symptoms, the person is confined to a wheelchair, and in
later stages of the disease, individuals become completely incapacitated. Most people with Friedreich's ataxia die in early
adulthood if there is significant heart disease, the most common cause of death. Some people with less severe symptoms live
much longer.
What research is being done?
Studies have revealed that frataxin, a protein that should normally be present in the nervous system, the heart, and the pancreas,
is severely reduced in patients with Friedreich's ataxia. Studies have shown that patients have abnormally high levels of
iron in their heart tissue. It is believed that the nervous system, heart, and pancreas may be particularly susceptible to
damage from free radicals (produced when the excess iron reacts with oxygen) because once certain cells in these tissues are
destroyed by free radicals they cannot be replaced. Nerve and muscle cells also have metabolic needs that may make them particularly
vulnerable to free radical damage. The discovery of the genetic mutation that causes Friedreich's ataxia has added new impetus
to research efforts on this disease.