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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diadochokinesia, the ability to perform rapid alternating movements is often impaired in patients with extrapyramidal disease. It is a common sign among patients
with Parkinsonism
or manganism. In the present study we compare patients with
Parkinson's disease
(n = 11), workers formerly exposed to manganese (n = 10) and control subjects (n = 11) performing rapid alternating hand movements for 5 s under four conditions repeated twice (natural cadence and maximal speed with one or two hands). Data recorded using a diadochokinesimeter built in our laboratory and connected to a 486/33 microcomputer were digitized in real time while subjects rotated back and forth hand held foam spheres connected to flexible rods articulated with optical encoders. Significant differences were found between control subjects and patients with
Parkinson's disease
, but not with manganese exposed workers, in most variables examined. However, trajectory length (a combination of movement amplitude and velocity) indicated that manganese exposed workers and patients with
Parkinson's disease
were significantly different from the controls in functional asymmetries between right and left hand. In addition, workers and patients tend to have marked differences between the performance of right and left hands. Improved quantitative measurement of rapid alternating movements may prove to be an important tool in early and differential diagnosis of
Parkinson's disease
and manganese exposure.
...
PMID:Diadochokinesimetry: a study of patients with Parkinson's disease and manganese exposed workers. 785 3
In 58 patients
with Parkinsonism
or dystonia striatal dopamine D2 receptors were investigated using 123I-iodobenzamide (123I-IBZM) single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). The influence of SPECT reconstruction methodology on semiquantification and the clinical value of 123I-IBZM SPECT were evaluated. Delineation of the striatal uptake and striatum/frontal cortex (ST/FC) ratios were improved by the use of compensation procedures for scatter and attenuation as well as the choice of an adequate filter. Satisfactory results were achieved using a Metz prefilter with a comparatively high order number (i.e. high cut-off and low suppression of higher frequencies via roll-off). Regarding clinical diagnoses it was not possible to differentiate between advanced idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
(IP) and Parkinsonism of other aetiology (OP) on the basis of 123I-IBZM SPECT. But patients with IP and favourable response to L-Dopa showed significantly higher ST/FC ratios than those with fluctuating response. In patients with dystonia ST/FC ratios were significantly higher compared to patients with IP or OP.
...
PMID:123I-IBZM SPECT: reconstruction methodology and results in parkinsonism and dystonia. 799 77
Intracranial neoplasms are an uncommon cause of symptomatic Parkinsonism and rest tremor. We found an incidence of 0.3% in a prospective evaluation of 907 patients with supratentorial tumours. Eight patients
with Parkinsonism
and rest tremor secondary to supratentorial tumours sparing the basal ganglia are reported. Neuro-imaging revealed compression and distortion of the basal ganglia by large tumours which were identified histopathologically as meningiomas in four patients and as an epidermoid, a fibrillary astrocytoma, an anaplastic oligodendroglioma and a glioblastoma. Six patients underwent tumour removal by craniotomy, in two the histopathology was obtained by stereotactic biopsy. Four patients were free of Parkinsonian symptoms and signs on long-term follow-up. The possible pathophysiological mechanisms involved are discussed. Since some of these patients closely resemble cases of idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
, and the movement disorder can precede other symptoms and signs or will remain isolated in the further course, the diagnosis of an intracranial neoplasm was generally delayed in these patients. Increased awareness of this rare entity may lead to an earlier diagnosis. Early computed tomography in patients
with Parkinsonism
might help to detect these patients with a potentially curable cause of their condition.
...
PMID:Parkinsonism and rest tremor secondary to supratentorial tumours sparing the basal ganglia. 856 Oct 31
In the late 1980s, a functional and anatomical model of basal ganglia organization was proposed in order to explain the clinical syndrome of
Parkinson's disease
. According to this model, the pathological overactivity observed in the subthalamic nucleus and the output station of the basal ganglia plays a crucial role in the pathophysiology of the motor signs of
Parkinson's disease
. The hyperactivity of subthalamic neurons in Parkinsonism is viewed as a direct consequence of a pathological hypoactivity of the external segment of the pallidum. This article reviews recent data from different experimental approaches that challenge the established model of basal ganglia organization by reinterpreting the functional interaction between the external segment of the pallidum and the subthalamic nucleus in both the normal and pathological state. Indeed, recent neurobiochemical studies have rather unexpectedly shown that the GABAergic and metabolic activities of the external pallidum are not decreased in human and non-human primates
with Parkinsonism
. This absence of any decrease in activity might be explained by the functionally antagonistic influences of the striatal and subthalamic afferences within the external pallidum, as suggested by several anatomical studies. In addition, there are clues from electrophysiological studies to suggest that the hyperactivity found in the subthalamic neurons in Parkinsonism may not depend solely on the level of activity in the external pallidum. In such a framework, the hyperactivity of the subthalamic neurons would have to be explained, at least in part, by other sources of excitation or disinhibition. However, any explanation for the origin of the subthalamic overactivity in Parkinsonism remains speculative.
...
PMID:Re-evaluation of the functional anatomy of the basal ganglia in normal and Parkinsonian states. 901 19
A 74 year old retired building inspector with a 15 year history of
Parkinson's disease
(PD) presented with severe resting tremor in the right hand, generalized bradykinesia, difficulties with the initiation of gait with freezing, mental depression and generalized cognitive impairment despite being fully medicated. Testing of constructional abilities employing various drawing tasks demonstrated drawing impairment compatible with severe left hemispheric dysfunction. After receiving two successive transcranial applications, each of 20 minutes duration, with AC pulsed electromagnetic fields (EMFs) of 7.5 picotesla flux density and frequencies of 5Hz and 7Hz respectively, his tremor remitted and there was dramatic improvement in his drawing performance. Additional striking improvements in his drawing performance occurred over the following two days after he continued to receive daily treatments with EMFs. The patient's drawings were subjected to a Reliability Test in which 10 raters reported 100% correct assessment of pre- and post drawings with all possible comparisons (mean 2 = 5.0; p < .05). This case demonstrates in PD rapid reversal of drawing impairment related to left hemispheric dysfunction by brief transcranial applications of AC pulsed picotesla flux density EMFs and suggests that cognitive deficits associated
with Parkinsonism
, which usually are progressive and unaffected by dopamine replacement therapy, may be partly reversed by administration of these EMFs. Treatment with picotesla EMFs reflects a "cutting edge" approach to the management of cognitive impairment in Parkinsonism.
...
PMID:Reversal of cognitive impairment in an elderly parkinsonian patient by transcranial application of picotesla electromagnetic fields. 939 15
Ventilatory responses to isocapnic, progressive hypoxic rebreathing (HVR), in supine and sitting positions, lung ventilation and gas exchange while breathing air and during 5 min of breathing 11% O2 in N2 were studied in 12 healthy young (20-28 years), 5 old (57-73 years) male subjects, and in 7 male patients with
Parkinson's disease
(PD) aged 55-67 years. The piecewise linear approximation technique was used for evaluation of the ventilatory response curves, which allowed a separate analysis of slopes during minor and severe hypoxia. It has been shown that body position affected HVR. In the range of PETO2 from 60 to 35 mm Hg, the ventilatory response in the sitting position was higher than supine: in young persons by 43%, in healthy old persons by 76%, and in the PD patients by 211%. No significant differences in HVR to minor hypoxia (PETO2 from 100 to 60 mm Hg) were found in the 3 groups. During severe hypoxia (PETO2 from 60 to 35 mm Hg) the slope of minute ventilation versus O2 was 4.6 (supine) and 2.6 (sitting) times greater in healthy old men than PD patients' slopes. PD patients compared to old controls had 32% lower alveolar ventilation, 10% lower PETO2 and 15% elevation of PETCO2 while breathing air; similar differences were found while the patients were breathing 11% O2. The reduced alveolar ventilation under severe hypoxia in patients with PD could not be attributed to mechanical restriction of lung function. We suggest that the discrepancy in HVR under minor and severe hypoxia results from dysfunction in chemoreception associated
with Parkinsonism
.
...
PMID:Hypoxic ventilatory responses and gas exchange in patients with Parkinson's disease. 952 65
Mental dysfunction including cognitive, behavioural changes, mood disorders, and psychosis are increasingly recognized in patients with
Parkinson's disease
(PD) and related disorders. Their morphological correlates are complex due to multiple system degeneration. CNS changes contributing to cognitive changes in PD include 1. Dysfunction of subcorticocortical networks with neuron losses in a) the dopaminergic nigrostriatal loop, causing striato-(pre)frontal deafferentation and mesocortico-limbic system (medial substantia nigra, ventral tegmentum); b) noradrenergic (locus coeruleus), and serotonergic systems (dorsal raphe nuclei), c) cholinergic forebrain system (nucleus basalis of Meynert, etc), and d) specific nuclei of amygdala and limbic system (thalamic nuclei, hippocampus); 2. Limbic and/or cortical Lewy body and Alzheimer type pathologies with loss of neurons and synapses, 3. Combination of subcortical, cortical, and other pathologies. In general, degeneration of subcortical and striato-frontal networks causes cognitive, executive, behavioural, and mood disorders but less severe dementia than cortical changes which, when present in sufficient numbers, are important factors for overt dementia. In PD, cortical tau pathology with similar or differential patterns than in Alzheimer disease (AD) shows significant linear correlation with cognitive decline. In dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), the second most frequent cause of dementia in the elderly, cortical Lewy bodies (LB) may or may not be associated with amyloid plaques and neuritic AD lesions. They predominantly affect the limbic system with less frequent isocortical Braak stages, whereas the cholinergic forebrain system is more severely affected than in AD. Both neuritic degeneration in limbic system in PD and DLB and the density of cortical synapse markers correlate with neuritic AD pathology and less with cortical LB counts. Apolipoprotein E epsilon4 allele frequency may represent a common genetic background for both AD and LB pathologies but there are different proportions of plaques between DLB (less Abeta1-40) and AD (more frequent Abeta1-40). Familial parkinsonism with dementia, linked to chromosome 17 (frontotemporal dementia
with Parkinsonism
(FTDP-17), and other tauopathies pathologically resembling PD plus AD, are often related to mutations of the tau gene, whereas familial PD with alpha-synuclein and Parkin mutations usually show no cognitive impairment. Mood disorders, in particular depression, and psychotic complications in both PD and DLB are related to complex involvement of noradrenergic and serotonergic systems, not confirmed in AD with depression, and both the prefrontal and limbic dopaminergic systems. The specific contributions of cortical and subcortical pathologies to mental dysfunction in PD and related disorders, their relationship to AD, and their genetic and aetiological backgrounds await further elucidation.
...
PMID:Morphological substrates of mental dysfunction in Lewy body disease: an update. 1096 31
Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging of dopamine transporters by using the cocaine derivative [123I]-(1R)-2-beta-carbomethoxy-3-beta-(4-iodophenyl)-tropane ([123I]-beta-CIT) has been shown to be useful in patients
with Parkinsonism
. The aim of this study was to compare beta-CIT imaging with single-headed (SHS) and three-headed gamma camera systems (THS). In 17 patients
with Parkinsonism
, SPECT imaging with an SHS and a THS was performed 24 h after injection of 180 MBq of [123I]-beta-CIT. The SPECT studies were evaluated by visual assessment of the caudate nucleus (CN) and the putamen (PT) and the calculation of the striatal/cerebellar (S/C) ratios (with additional comparison to clinical symptoms measured by the Unified
Parkinson's Disease
Rating Scale (UPDRS)). The S/C ratios measured by the SHS and THS showed highly significant correlation (two-tailed P < 0.01) with Spearman correlation coefficients (SCCs) of 0.864 for the right side, 0.676 for the left side, and 0.761 for both sides. By the SHS, a sufficient visual differentiation between the CN and the PT could not be achieved. A significantly better distinction could be achieved by using the THS (Wilcoxon P<0.05). The S/C ratios of the THS only showed a significant (P < 0.05) SCC of -0.514 comparing to the UPDRS. Pathological alterations in the beta-CIT uptake pattern could be identified by using the SHS, but a significantly better differentiation of CN and the PT was possible by using the THS. The significant correlation of the S/C ratios measured by THS only emphasizes the value of THS in beta-CIT imaging.
...
PMID:SPECT imaging with [123I]-beta-CIT in Parkinsonism: comparison of SPECT images obtained by a single-headed and a three-headed gamma camera. 1125
We report a case in which typical clinical features of idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
existed for seven years prior to the development of significant behavioral and cognitive changes and severe dementia. The patient presented with right-sided resting tremor, bradykinesia, and rigidity, which were highly responsive to levodopa. Serial neuropsychological evaluation revealed no evidence of dementia until late in the disease. The patient deteriorated rapidly eight years into the disease, requiring full care. She died 16 years after symptom onset and post-mortem neuropathological analysis revealed Lewy body
Parkinson's disease
and Pick's disease. To our knowledge, this is the first non-familial case with this combination of clinical history and pathologically confirmed disease to be reported in the literature. The absence of a family history of any neurological disease sets this case apart from the recently described genetic cases of frontotemporal dementia
with Parkinsonism
linked to chromosome 17. In addition, the relatively late onset of dementia in frontotemporal dementia is atypical. While there is considerable debate regarding the cause of dementia in idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
, our case illustrates that Pick's disease is one such cause.
...
PMID:Parkinson's disease with late Pick's dementia. 1129 87
Three Mutations were recently reported in the same codon (N296) in exon 10 of the tau gene. Two of these mutations, N296N and N296H, lead to a clinical syndrome similar to autosomal dominant fronto-temporal dementia
with Parkinsonism
linked to chromosome 17. In contrast the third mutation, delN296, gives rise to atypical progressive supranuclear palsy in individuals homozygous for the mutation, but in heterozygous individuals this mutation is incompletely penetrant and associated with a phenotype similar to idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
. Functional assays were employed to determine the effects of these mutations on alternative splicing of exon 10, on microtubule assembly and self-aggregation of recombinant tau protein. We demonstrate that these mutations exhibit a spectrum of potentially pathogenic changes in tau function, and provide insight into the possible cause of the incompletely penetrant phenotype of the delN296 mutation.
...
PMID:Effects on splicing and protein function of three mutations in codon N296 of tau in vitro. 1191 84
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