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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Comparison of the properties of blood platelets and serotonergic synaptosomes suggests that the human platelet can serve as an appropriate model for the transport, metabolism, and release of serotonin (5-HT) by CNS serotonergic neurons. The study of blood 5-HT levels and platelet 5-HT pharmacodynamics in patients with a variety of psychiatric and neurologic disorders has generated interesting leads into possible abnormalities of CNS 5-HT neurons in these patients. This article reviews the experimental evidence, which uses the human platelet model to investigate neurotransmitter-related abnormalities in Down syndrome,
mental retardation
, infantile autism, hyperactivity syndromes (minimal brain dysfunction), schizophrenia, affective disorders, Duchenne muscular dystrophy,
Parkinson disease
, Huntington chorea, and migraine headaches.
...
PMID:The human platelet. A diagnostic and research tool for the study of biogenic amines in psychiatric and neurologic disorders. 14 Jun 32
Down's Syndrome (DS), the most frequent of congenital birth defects, results from the trisomy of the chromosome numbered 21 in all cells of affected patients. This disease is characterized by developmental anomalies,
mental retardation
and features of rapid aging, particularly in the brain where the occurrence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is observed in all trisomy 21 patients over the age of 35. Elucidation of the biological mechanisms leading to brain aging in DS might provide new insight into the understanding of brain aging and AD in normal people. Copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) is one of the genes encoded by chromosome 21. As a consequence of gene dosage excess, CuZnSOD activity and protein are increased by 50% in all DS tissues. The level of CuZnSOD protein and mRNA is particularly high in hippocampal pyramidal neurons susceptible to degenerative processes in AD and in dopaminergic melanized-neurons vulnerable in
Parkinson's disease
. Increased CuZnSOD activity in these age-related neurodegenerative disorders might result in H2O2 overproduction and subsequently promote peroxidative damages within cells. Increase of seleno-dependent glutathione peroxidase (Se-GPx) in DS cells supports this concept. In order to test this hypothesis, cell and animal models of CuZnSOD overexpression have been designed. In cells transfected with the human CuZnSOD gene, and increased Se-GPx activity is observed, a situation which mimics DS. In mice transgenic for the human CuZnSOD, the expression pattern of the transgene in the brain is similar to that in humans, and we can observe an increased peroxidation in this tissue. These data, like others in the literature, support the hypothesis that excess CuZnSOD induces an imbalance in the regulation of oxygen-derived free radical production which might result in peroxidative brain damage and possibly contribute to accelerated aging and age-related neuropathology.
...
PMID:Cellular clones and transgenic mice overexpressing copper-zinc superoxide dismutase: models for the study of free radical metabolism and aging. 145 Jun 8
Between 1986 and 1988 a door-to-door survey was conducted on a stable rural population of 60,820 in central Ethiopia. Trained lay health workers made a complete census and identified cases with symptoms and signs of neurological disorders, using specially designed questionnaires which, in a previous pilot study, were found to have a sensitivity of 91% and specificity of 85%. Neurological disorders in the rural population were epilepsy, postpoliomyelitis paralysis,
mental retardation
, peripheral neuropathy (mainly due to leprosy), and deaf-mutism with prevalence rates (cases/100,000 population) of 520, 240, 170, 150 and 130, respectively. The prevalence rates of the other less common neurological disorders were 62 for hemiparesis (15 of which were for cerebrovascular accidents), 20 for cerebral palsy, 16 for optic atrophy, 12 for perceptive deafness, 10 for tropical spastic paraparesis, 7 for
Parkinson's disease
and 5 for motor neuron disease, ataxia and chorea/athetosis. Among related non-neurological conditions, blindness, locomotor disability and deafness were predominant. The significance and role of such a neuroepidemiological study in laying the strategies for the prevention of neurological disorders and rehabilitation of patients are discussed in the context of a developing country.
...
PMID:Community-based study of neurological disorders in rural central Ethiopia. 208 51
Family histories of male patients with histologically confirmed malignant gliomas were compared to family histories of controls (wives). Included were 77 case families with 892 relatives and 77 control families with 719 relatives. Cases had significantly more siblings than controls (P = 0.02), although cases were not preferentially the oldest or the youngest sibs. Odds ratios of two or more were found for
mental retardation
,
Parkinson's disease
, and meningitis for the relatives of cases versus controls, but none were statistically significant. The excesses of
Parkinson's disease
and meningitis were explained by the family of one particularly interesting case containing three relatives with meningitis and two relatives with
Parkinson's disease
. Noteworthy age-adjusted odds ratios for cancer among relatives of cases compared to relatives of controls were 1.6 (95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.0-2.3) for cancer of any site, 2.4 (95% CI = 0.8-6.1) for breast cancer, and 4.0 (95% CI = 0.6-10.7) for lung cancer. Only the odds ratio for cancer of any site was statistically significant. Overall, 6 of 77 (8%) of cases came from families that included two or more relatives with breast or lung cancer in addition to the proband with malignant glioma. These three cancer sites may form familial clusters worthy of further evaluation in future studies by pedigree and genetic linkage analyses.
...
PMID:Familial factors associated with malignant gliomas. 222 74
The objective of this study is to investigate the type, importance, and incidence of hereditary diseases in patients at the National Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery in Mexico City. A review of 6,258 files indicated that hereditary diseases represent an important problem for the Institute. Of the diseases with the highest incidences, hereditary factors have an important role in seven (epilepsy, depression, facial palsy, schizophrenia,
mental retardation
, migraine, and
Parkinson's disease
). Diseases of known monogenic etiology represent 1.5% of all the cases.
...
PMID:Importance of hereditary disease at a Neuropsychiatric Institute in Mexico City. 259 29
In a Nigerian town with a stable population of 20,000, a door-to-door survey was conducted, using a questionnaire involving a complete census and a simple neurological evaluation which had previously showed a 95% sensitivity and an 80% specificity for detecting neurological disease. Positive responders were evaluated and categorised, using agreed criteria for diagnoses. Nearly 100% cooperation was obtained. Life prevalence ratio for at least one episode of headache was 51/1000. Crude point prevalence ratio for migrainous headache was 5.3/100, and peak age-specific ratio was in the first decade. Prevalence ratio for epilepsy was 533/100,000 and peak age-specific prevalence ratio occurred in the 5-14 years age groups. The prevalence ratio for peripheral nerve disorders was 268/100,000, and age-specific prevalence ratio for tropical neuropathy increased with age. Prevalence ratio for stroke was rather low at 58/100,000, but was probably due to the people's attitude to the disabled elderly and high mortality of stroke which showed annual mortality rate of 70/100,000 which increased with age to 1519/100,000 per year in the eighth decade. Crude prevalence ratios (cases per 100,000) for others are 112 for neurological complications (including sciatica) of spondylosis, 15 each for poliomyelitis, motor neurone disease, development speech disorders, 10 each for syncope, hereditary neuropathies.
Parkinson's disease
, benign essential tremor, primary cerebellar degeneration, cerebral palsy,
mental retardation
, organic psychosis (probable intracranial tumor) and 5 each for muscular dystrophy, pyomyositis, spina bifida occulta, alcohol dependence and cerebral malaria. The implications of the findings are important for development of community neurological services in the developing countries.
...
PMID:Neurological disorders in Nigerian Africans: a community-based study. 303 73
There is a paucity of trained neurologists in developing countries. We designed a questionnaire to rapidly screen a community of 851 people (Parsis living in a colony in Bombay, India) for possible neurologic diseases. This questionnaire was pretested and found to have a sensitivity of 100 percent for detecting epilepsy, febrile seizures (only in children), completed stroke, peripheral neuropathy, movement disorders, cerebral palsy,
mental retardation
, and severe dementia. The screening questionnaire was administered by trained lay health workers. One hundred and sixty-three people were identified by this questionnaire as possibly having neurologic disease. Neurologists later examined these 163 people and found that 80 of them actually suffered from at least one of the neurologic diseases of interest (positive predictive value = 48 percent). The most common neurologic disorders were peripheral neuropathy (32 cases), essential tremor (13 cases), stroke (12 cases),
Parkinson's disease
(six cases), and epilepsy (four cases).
...
PMID:Pilot survey of the prevalence of neurologic disorders in the Parsi community of Bombay. 333 Jun 62
To investigate the possibility that anti-CNS antibodies may play a pathogenic role in a number of neurological and psychiatric disorders, a population study was undertaken. Serum samples were obtained from a total of 257 adults and were screened against sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic blots of various normal, necropsy-derived adult human brain regions. The incidence of IgG immunoreactive banding in the total sample was 30%. Within the diagnostic groups the incidence of banding was: controls 32%, schizophrenia 28%,
mental retardation
27%, cerebellar ataxia 33%,
Parkinson's disease
22%, myasthenia gravis 45% and epilepsy 31%. The differences are not statistically significant. There was no significant difference in the numbers and locations of bands between the various diagnostic groups and the controls. The overall incidence of immunoreactivity corresponding to the high molecular weight subunit of neurofilaments was only 6%, thus not confirming a previously reported incidence of 95%. The similarity between the diagnostic and the control sera suggests that caution should be exerted in interpreting the pathogenic significance of anti-CNS immunoreactive banding on Western blots.
...
PMID:Anti-CNS antibodies in neurological and psychiatric disorders. 369 10
There is an urgent need for efficient, non-invasive measures of neurotoxic insult in humans. The late positive component (LPC) of the event-related cortical potential may be such a measure. The latency and amplitude of the LPC have been related to both memory and response speed, two aspects of behavior which are indicators of neurological status. The LPC has been found to be altered in cases of known neurophysiological insult, including Alzheimer's disease, cerebrovascular disease,
Parkinson's disease
, surgical and traumatic damage, hyperkinesis, chronic alcoholism,
mental retardation
, and in schizophrenia. Further development of the LPC as a possible indicator of both the cognitive impairment due to neurotoxic substances as well as the site of neurological damage is warranted.
...
PMID:The late positive component of the evoked cortical potential: application to neurotoxicity testing. 390 31
Ten autopsy cases of Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) are reported. Age at onset ranged from 16 to 67 years and the duration of illness 3 to 24 years. The clinical features were aggressive
mental retardation
in 4 cases with early onset, paroxysmal dysequilibrium, ophthalmoplegia, rigidity and akinesia, pseudobulbar palsy and variable degrees of dementia. Neuropathology showed widespread neurofibrillary degeneration associated with system-bound neuronal loss and gliosis in subcortical areas, particularly affecting the subthalamic nucleus, substantia nigra, brainstem tegmentum and dentate nuclei, with no or little involvement of the cerebral cortex. The distribution of the lesions and the ultrastructure of the neurofibrillary tangles made of 15 nm straight filaments (seen in one case) in PSP are different from postencephalitic parkinsonism, Guam Parkinson-dementia complex and brainstem affection in (pre)senile dementia. Post-mortem biochemical analysis of two brains disclosed severe reduction of tyrosine hydroxylase, the key synthetic enzyme of the catecholamine pathway, not only in the nigrostriatal system as seen in
Parkinson's disease
, but in most areas of the brain-stem and limbic system. The implication and possible pathogenic and therapeutic significance of these biochemical findings are discussed. The etiology of PSP and its nosological position within the degenerative extrapyramidal disorders remain unknown.
...
PMID:Progressive supranuclear palsy: clinico-pathological and biochemical studies. 610 28
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