Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neuronal thread protein (NTP) is a recently characterized molecule that is over-expressed in brains with Alzheimer's disease (AD) lesions. The present study encompasses a detailed analysis of NTP expression in AD compared with other neurodegenerative diseases and aged controls. Using a specific monoclonal antibody, NTP immunoreactivity was evaluated in 309 paraffin-embedded sections from 8 different regions of the frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes of 73 brains with AD, AD + Down's syndrome (DN), AD +
Parkinson's disease
(PD), PD dementia (PDD), aged controls, and disease controls with Huntington's disease,
multi-infarct dementia
, or schizophrenia. In 250 adjacent blocks of snap-frozen unfixed tissue the concentration of NTP (ng/mg of protein) was measured using a 3-site forward sandwich monoclonal antibody based immunoradiometric assay (M-IRMA). Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated that brains with AD, AD + PD, and AD + DN contained significantly higher densities of NTP immunoreactive neurons and more frequent immunostaining of neuropil and white matter fibers compared with PDD and aged controls (both P < 0.001) which had few or no AD lesions. In addition, the overall mean concentrations of NTP in AD, AD + PD, and AD + DN were significantly higher than in PDD and aged controls (P < 0.005). Greater degrees of NTP immunoreactivity and higher concentrations of the protein in cerebral tissue were significantly correlated with AD diagnosis and abundant neurofibrillary tangles (P < 0.005). The findings suggest that NTP over-expression may serve as a marker for the type of neuronal degeneration that occurs in AD.
...
PMID:Neuronal thread protein over-expression in brains with Alzheimer's disease lesions. 148 53
We investigated event-related potentials (P300) in three types of demented patients. Fourteen patients with senile dementia of Alzheimer's type (SDAT), 15 with
multiinfarct dementia
(MID), 8 with
Parkinson's disease
with dementia and 29 normal controls participated in this study. We measured the latencies of N100 and P300 at Pz after odd-ball paradigm stimulation. N100 peaks were within the normal range in all patients. However, P300 peaks were significantly delayed in all demented patients. There were no statistical differences in the mean latencies of P300 in each demented group. P300 latencies were found to be negatively correlated with Hasegawa's dementia scale. These results suggest that regardless of its cause dementia has similar influences on the P300 latency and P300 may be a useful means to assess the degree of dementia.
...
PMID:Event-related potentials in senile dementia of Alzheimer's type, multiinfarct dementia and Parkinson's disease. 180 Aug 14
Muscarinic cholinergic receptors were analysed in lymphocyte membranes from 35 patients with early (n = 20) and late onset (n = 15) Alzheimer's disease (AD), 86 patients with other neurological disorders and 60 normal controls by the specific binding of 3H-N-methyl-scopolamine (3H-NMS). The number of binding sites of 3H-NMS (Bmax) was significantly decreased both in early and late onset AD groups as compared with age-matched controls, by 54% and 40%, respectively, whereas the apparent binding affinity (Kd) was the same in all disease and control groups. In addition, the average Bmax in early AD was significantly lower than in late AD. The density of the binding of 3H-NMS was also significantly lower in a subgroup of old subjects with Down's syndrome (DS), whereas no changes were found in younger individuals with DS or in patients with
Parkinson's disease
, whether they were demented or not,
multi-infarct dementia
, myasthenia gravis or epilepsy. In the AD group, the difference in binding sites was unrelated either to the severity of dementia or disease duration. Treatment of the patients with cholinergic agents did not alter the binding values in any of the examined group. We conclude that the alteration of lymphocyte muscarinic receptors is highly associated with AD, but whether this reflects the central cholinergic deficit in these patients is uncertain.
...
PMID:An analysis of lymphocyte 3H-N-methyl-scopolamine binding in neurological patients. Evidence of altered binding in Alzheimer's disease. 188 77
Most clinically demented elderly patients are found at autopsy to have Alzheimer's disease,
multi-infarct dementia
,
Parkinson's disease
, Pick's disease, or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. We studied 5 patients clinically characterized by late onset dementia whose brains showed no pathological evidence of Alzheimer's disease, or any other specific neuropathological diagnosis. We found argyrophilic grains, coiled bodies, abundant Alz-50-positive and thioflavine S-negative neurofibrillary tangles, and neuropil threads in the hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, locus ceruleus, substantia nigra, subthalamic nucleus, and inferior olives. Ultrastructurally, the grains, threads, and tangles were composed of straight tubulofilamentous structures, 25 nm in diameter, similar to those found in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy but different from the paired helical filaments of patients with Alzheimer's disease. These findings suggest that the late onset dementia with argyrophilic grains syndrome is also characterized by the presence of tangles and threads with the topographical distribution of progressive supranuclear palsy.
...
PMID:Late onset dementia with argyrophilic grains and subcortical tangles or atypical progressive supranuclear palsy? 172 42
Positron-emission tomography (PET), a noninvasive analytical method, made possible the detection of regional alterations in the central nervous system, thus demonstrating "in vivo" the presence of biochemical alterations and the organization of cerebral function in the pathological states. The study of glucose cerebral metabolism velocity, performed recently with the aid of PET, reveals that in the patients with thymic disorders the values recorded for the bipolar syndromes differ from those recorded the for unipolar ones. At the same time, the direct measurement of the activity of the neuroanatomic structures involved in schizophrenia and their response to neuroleptics was possible. This technique and the F-fluoro-desixiglucose method were also applied to the patients with Alzheimer's disease,
multi-infarct dementia
, Huntington's disease. Wilson's disease and
Parkinson's disease
. Suggestive alterations of glucose metabolism velocity were noticed and the neuroanatomic structures involved in the pathological manifestations could be specified.
...
PMID:[The use of positron-emission tomography in psychiatry]. 198 25
In the absence of pathognomonic clinical features, the clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) remains one of exclusion of other dementias. We investigated the clinical diagnoses among 394 neuropathologically confirmed AD cases in a dementia brain bank. Most patients were correctly diagnosed as AD (348 or 88%). Among the misdiagnosed patients, AD was mistaken for a primary depressive disorder in 14,
multi-infarct dementia
in 13,
Parkinson's disease
in nine, and alcoholic dementia in four. The number of misdiagnosed AD patients did not differ between physician specialties but was greater among AD patients with agitation, depression, paranoia, or delusions. This retrospective study suggests that the diagnostic sensitivity for AD is high among a cross-section of practicing physicians and that an important factor in mistaking AD for another illness is unfamiliarity with the potential psychiatric symptoms of AD.
...
PMID:Neuropathologically confirmed Alzheimer's disease: clinical diagnoses in 394 cases. 205 48
Fifty brains from patients prospectively studied in a geriatric hospital (Charles Richet Study) were examined pathologically. The patients were senile (mean age: 85) and demented and had been clinically diagnosed as senile dementia of Alzheimer type (SDAT), vascular or
multi-infarct dementia
(VD), mixed dementia (MD). The whole brain was studied after formalin fixation and coronal sections. The senile changes were quantified in 6 neocortical areas, hippocampus and amygdala and subcortical structures after staining by thioflavine--S and Bodian's method. The other vascular and degenerative lesions were semiquantitatively studied. Three groups of patients were identified after microscopic examination: 1. SDAT (n = 27), 2. VD (n = 6), 3. MD (n = 15), 2 patients had no significant pathological correlate for dementia. Comparison of thioflavine S and Bodian's method in 30 cases showed the former to be more sensitive for the identification of senile plaques. In SDAT, 13/27 brains lacked neurofibrillary tangles in the neocortex. Amyloid angiopathy was observed in 78% of the brains but lacked in 5/6 cases affected by pure VD. Significant lesions of the substantia nigra were observed in 13 cases with typical features of
Parkinson's disease
in 2 cases. The locus coeruleus was affected mainly in SDAT cases (20/27) and in some cases of VD or MD (6/21). The raphe nuclei showed neuronal loss in 18% of the cases, mostly SDAT. In this series of cases, neocortical neurofibrillary tangles could be lacking in SDAT. Amyloid angiopathy was almost always present in SDAT and MD. Subcortical structures involved in cholinergic, noradrenergic and serotoninergic innervation of the cortex were more severely impaired in SDAT and MD than in VD. Mixed dementia was frequent in these very old demented patients. Clinical and pathological criteria are needed to identify this group of patients.
...
PMID:[Neuropathologic study of 50 cases of senile dementia]. 207 18
A dementing syndrome has been identified in a group of psychiatric cases aged 71-90 years, presenting initially with a subacute/acute confusional state, often fluctuating and associated with visual hallucinations and behavioural disturbances. Clinically, these cases did not meet criteria for a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease, and many were assigned to the
multiinfarct dementia
group, although no significant ischaemic lesions were evident at autopsy. Mild extrapyramidal features were apparent in a number of cases but the characteristic clinical triad of
Parkinson's disease
, i.e., tremor, rigidity, and akinesia, was absent. Detailed neuropathological examination revealed Lewy body formation and selective neuronal loss in brain stem and other subcortical nuclei, accompanied by Lewy body formation in neo- and limbic cortex, at densities well below those previously reported in diffuse Lewy body disease. A variable degree of senile degenerative change was present; numerous senile plaques and minimal neurofibrillary tangles in most cases. Neither the clinical nor the neuropathological features of this group are typical of Parkinson's or Alzheimer's disease, but suggest a distinct neurodegenerative disorder, part of the Lewy body disease spectrum, in which mental symptoms predominate over motor disabilities and lead to eventual psychogeriatric hospital admission. In a sequential series of autopsies conducted on clinically assessed demented patients, neuropathological analysis has indicated that such cases may comprise up to 20% of a hospitalized population of demented old people over the age of 70 years, an observation clearly relevant to the diagnosis and management of dementia in the elderly.
...
PMID:Senile dementia of Lewy body type. A clinically and neuropathologically distinct form of Lewy body dementia in the elderly. 215 23
We present a review on recent neuroimaging techniques, like x-ray computed tomography (XCT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET) and single photon emission tomography (SPECT) in dementia and related diseases. Significant new findings have been obtained using techniques reflecting proton density, regional brain perfusion and brain metabolism. In dementia of the Alzheimer type, for example, temporoparietal and sometimes also frontal reductions in cerebral blood flow and metabolism are characteristic. The infarctions found in
multi-infarct dementia
are especially well visualized on T2-weighted MRI images. Pick's disease is characterized by brain atrophy and decrease of radiotracer activity in the frontal lobes. In huntington's chorea the metabolic rate on PET scan in the area of the caudate nuclei may be reduced even before signs and symptoms become apparent. Furthermore, neuroimaging provides us with fairly typical finding in Creutzfeld-Jakob's disease, alcoholic dementia, Wilson's disease, hydrocephalus,
Parkinson's disease
, progressive supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, Fahr's disease, and the olivopontocerebellar ataxias. Neuroimaging techniques, however, have always to be interpreted in conjunction with clinical findings, thus disclosing their full range of information.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic differentiation of dementia diseases by modern imaging procedures]. 227 95
Patients with
Parkinson's disease
(n = 81) are compared with normal controls and three clinical groups, each representing a different level of cerebral impairment (TIA; Stroke; Alzheimer's disease (AD) and
multi-infarct dementia
(MID). Psychometric measures of abstract reasoning, speed of information processing, verbal and visual memory, visuospatial perception and psychomotor functions are taken using a neuropsychological test battery with appropriate age-correction and normalized scaling. Following differentiation between the uncomplicated idiopathic
Parkinson's syndrome
and Parkinson plus (signs of cerebral polypathy and/or a degenerative process exceeding the nigro-striatal system) the neuropsychological profile reveals intellectual impairments approaching the dementia level (AD/MID) only in the Parkinson plus subgroup. With the exception of the severe motor deficiencies, the overall performance of patients with an uncomplicated
Parkinson's syndrome
is largely on the level of age-matched controls. Slight deficits exist only in the speed of information processing (action under time restriction) and in visuoconstructive performance.
...
PMID:[Comparative psychological test studies of the intellectual ability of Parkinson patients]. 232 Jan 95
1
2
3
4
Next >>