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Is there any treatment?
Physicians prescribe a number of medications to help control emotional and movement problems associated with HD. Most drugs
used to treat the symptoms of HD have side effects such as fatigue, restlessness, or hyperexcitability. It is extremely important
for people with HD to maintain physical fitness as much as possible, as individuals who exercise and keep active tend to do
better than those who do not.
What is the prognosis?
At this time, there is no way to stop or reverse the course of HD. Now that the HD gene has been located, investigators are
continuing to study the HD gene with an eye toward understanding how it cause disease in the human body.
What research is being done?
Scientific investigations using electronic and other technologies enable scientists to see what the defective gene does to
various structures in the brain and how it affects the body's chemistry and metabolism. Laboratory animals are being bred
in the hope of duplicating the clinical features of HD so that researchers can learn more about the symptoms and progression
of HD. Investigators are implanting fetal tissue in rodents and nonhuman primates with the hope of understanding, restoring,
or replacing functions typically lost by neuronal degeneration in individuals with HD. Related areas of investigation include
excitotoxicity (overstimulation of cells by natural chemicals found in the brain), defective energy metabolism (a defect in
the mitochondria), oxidative stress (normal metabolic activity in the brain that produces toxic compounds called free radicals),
tropic factors (natural chemical substances found in the human body that may protect against cell death).