Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (Parkinson's disease)
63,064 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This review describes the recent advances in slow infections of the nervous system emphasizing the pathogenetic aspects of these diseases. A theoretical model for the pathogenesis of subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is proposed, illustrating the factors that may affect host response to the measles virus and allow it to persist and produce the panencephalitis. The isolation of an oncogenic virus from progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) has implications in the consideration of a viral etiology for some brain tumors. The agent responsible for the transmissibility of kuru and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) remains uncharacterized despite recent interest in viroids and abnormalities in replication of cell membranes. The epidemiological data on multiple sclerosis suggests an exposure to an infectious agent at an early age of life modified by the host response. No specific agent has been consistently associated with multiple sclerosis. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinson's disease, Mollaret's meningitis and Behcet's disease are other examples where a virus is suspect but unproven. The ability of viruses to persist in the host for months to years has linked many chronic neurologic diseases to an infectious agent, enlarging the spectrum of disease caused by viruses.
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PMID:Slow infections of the central nervous system. 32 29

Virological studies were performed on brain material from 9 patients with idiopathic Parkinson disease and 3 matched controls. Electron microscopy and indirect immunofluorescent study were carried out directly on autopsy material from substantia nigra, caudate nucleus, and hypothalamus and on primary tissue culture explants of these brain areas grown alone or in cocultivation with virus-susceptible indicator cell lines. All studies were negative for the presence of viral particles, viral inclusions, or cellular changes suggestive of virus infection. All materials were negative for antigens of herpes simplex type 1, influenza A/NWS, and measles (Edmonston strain) viruses. Within the limits of these tehcniques, there is no evidence at this time that viruses are an important etiological agent in idiopathic Parkinson disease.
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PMID:Search for viral particles and virus-specific products in idiopathic Parkinson disease brain material. 53 25

Serologic investigations were carried on samples of sera and cerebrospinal fluid from patients aged between 6 and 67 years with degenerative and demyelinating disease with the aim of determining the pathogenetic role of viruses in these disorders. Increased titers of complement fixation antibodies against the measles virus were detected in patients with subacute sclerosing panencephalitis and multiple sclerosis, whereas high titers of complement fixation antibodies against Herpes Simplex Virus Type I were found in Parkinsonian cases. Demonstration of high titers of heterophil antibodies in patients with Parkinson's disease seemed to be a significant contribution to this matter. Although HSV type I and heterophil antibodies were high in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, small number of samples hampered satisfactory interpretation.
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PMID:[The role of viral antibodies in the pathogenesis of degenerative and demyelinating diseases]. 256 May 26

Parkinson's disease (PD) has been proposed to result from the interaction of aging and environment in susceptible individuals. Defective metabolism of debrisoquine, inherited as an autosomal recessive, has been associated with this susceptibility. In 35 PD patients and 19 age-matched controls, no significant differences in debrisoquine metabolism were found, although a trend to impaired metabolism was noted in patients with disease onset less than or equal to 40. Foci of PD patients were associated with rural living and well water drinking, or rural living coupled with market gardening or wood pulp mills. In a questionnaire survey, patients with PD onset less than or equal to age 47 were significantly more likely to have lived in rural areas and to have drunk well water than those with onset greater than or equal to age 54 (p less than or equal to 0.01). Because of population mobility in North America, a case-control study designed to test environmental, occupational, dietary and other proposed risk factors for PD was conducted in China, where the population is more stationary and the environment more stable. No significant differences in incidences of head trauma, smoking or childhood measles were found between patients and controls.
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PMID:Environmental factors in the etiology of Parkinson's disease. 331 47

A case-control analysis of Parkinson's disease and infections in childhood was conducted in a cohort of 50,002 men who attended Harvard College (Cambridge, MA) or the University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, PA) between 1916 and 1950 and who were followed in adulthood for morbidity and mortality data. Cases of Parkinson's disease were identified from responses to mailed questionnaires and death certificates through 1978. Four controls from the same population were selected for each case. A reduced risk of Parkinson's disease was associated with most childhood viral infections. The negative association was statistically significant for a history of measles prior to college entrance (exposure odds ratio = 0.53; 95% confidence limits: 0.31, 0.93). The reduced risk of Parkinson's disease among subjects with a positive history of measles in childhood may reflect an adverse effect of measles in adulthood or of subclinical or atypical measles. Furthermore, a negative history of measles, especially if associated with a lack of other common diseases, could be a marker for negative influenza history before 1918 and thus a higher risk of infection during the 1918 influenza epidemic, because of the lack of partial influenza immunity. These data may also suggest a truly protective effect of measles, compatible with some complex interaction between measles virus and the virus of the 1918 influenza epidemic.
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PMID:Measles infection and Parkinson's disease. 406 37

Serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CFS) immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies to herpes simplex (HSV) and measles viruses were assayed with a radioimmunoassay in 56 patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease and in a similar number of age- and sex-matched controls with other neurological diseases. As a group, the patients with Parkinson's disease had a significantly increased serum antibody level against HSV, but measles virus antibody levels were similar in both groups. Both in the Parkinson's group and in the control group, the levels of the total IgG in CSF were within normal limits and the CSF antibodies to HSV and measles virus paralleled the serum antibody titers relative to the total IgG serum-to-CSF ratios. This indicates no increased intrathecal antibody production in either group. In 48 patients with Parkinson's disease who were HLA-typed, no association of viral antibody levels with particular HLS antigens were noted. The findings suggest that HSV is not present within the central nervous system of the patients with Parkinson's disease. The increase HSV antibody level seen in Parkinson's disease patients may reflect a more general disturbance of the patients' immune functions.
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PMID:Virus antibodies in Parkinson's disease. Herpes simplex and measles virus antibodies in serum and CSF and their relation to HLA types. 628 83

We studied the relative etiologic importance upon the development of Parkinson's disease (PD) of occupational exposure to herbicides and other compounds, ionizing radiation exposure, family history of PD and essential tremor, smoking, and history of various viral and other medical conditions. We identified patients (n = 130) with neurologist-confirmed idiopathic PD through contacts with Calgary general hospitals, long-term care facilities, neurologists, the Movement Disorder Clinic, and the Parkinson's Society of Southern Alberta, and selected two matched (by sex and age +/- 2.5 years) community controls for each case by random digit dialing. We obtained lifetime work, chemical, radiation, medical, and smoking exposure histories and family histories of PD and essential tremor by personal interviews, and analyzed the data using conditional logistic regression for matched sets. After controlling for potential confounding and interaction between the exposure variables, using multivariate statistical methods, having a family history of PD was the strongest predictor of PD risk, followed by head trauma and then occupational herbicide use. Cases and controls did not differ in their previous exposures to smoking or ionizing radiation; family history of essential tremor; work-related contact with aluminum, carbon monoxide, cyanide, manganese, mercury, or mineral oils; or history of arteriosclerosis, chicken pox, encephalitis, hypertension, hypotension, measles, mumps, rubella, or Spanish flu. These results support the hypothesis of a multifactorial etiology for PD, probably involving genetic, environmental, trauma, and possibly other factors.
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PMID:Parkinson's disease: a test of the multifactorial etiologic hypothesis. 817 May 64

Using a case-control method, we studied the role of environmental risk factors and viral infection in the development of Parkinson's disease (PD) in China. Ninety-three PD patients and 186 controls were investigated with a questionnaire and from most of them, blood was taken to test the antibody levels of four virus (measles, rubella, HSV-1, CMV) IgG. The study result showed that positive family history, living near rubber plants, drinking river-water were associated with an increased risk of developing PD. In contrast, living in small cities, drinking well-water, drinking hard-liquor frequently, were associated with a decreased risk for PD. PD cases and controls did not differ with respect to other factors investigated including smoking and viral infection. These findings suggest that some environmental factors may be related to the development of PD, but further standardized studies will be required to confirm our results.
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PMID:A case-control study on the environmental risk factors of Parkinson's disease in Tianjin, China. 827 80

We report the brain magnetic resonance (MR) imaging abnormalities observed at the basal ganglia system of 5 patients (2 female and 3 male), who fulfilled the criteria of parkinsonism. The onset of parkinsonian syndrome ranged from 5 to 52 years old. All patients underwent MR exams with a 1.5T MR equipment. High field T2-weighted sequences disclosed hypersignal bilateral and symmetrically located exclusively at substantia nigra (3 cases), exclusively at globus pallidus (1case) and simultaneously at substantia nigra, globus pallidus and nigro-strital interconnections (1case). For three patients, the diagnose of secondary parkinsonism was supported by clinical data: the first had the onset of the symptoms after the exposure to an herbicide (glyphosate); the second after vaccination against measles; the third after coma due to encephalitis. For the other two patients, the onset of PS was progressive, resembling a typical idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) but the findings at the MR dimissed this initial diagnose. In this study, the contribution of neuroimaging was crucial to recognize secondary parkinsonism though the ethiological agents could not be determined in these patients.
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PMID:[Neuroimaging abnormalities in parkinsonism: study of five cases]. 1289 71

At many centers, subthalamic nucleus (STN) deep brain stimulation (DBS) is not considered for patients with secondary forms of parkinsonism, due to higher expected rates of treatment failure. We present the case of a woman with secondary parkinsonism that developed following a Measles, Mumps, and Rubella (MMR) vaccination, who experienced sustained improvement in motor function following STN DBS. Despite the diagnosis of a secondary parkinsonism, this patient responded well to dopaminergic therapy, a good predictor of DBS outcome in patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease. This case suggests that DBS may be considered in the setting of secondary parkinsonism if such patients have levodopa-responsive symptoms.
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PMID:Motor improvement with bilateral subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation in a patient with levodopa-responsive secondary parkinsonism. 2190 43


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