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)
Autonomic failure
with Lewy bodies (AF-LB) was first described by Fichefet et al. in 1965, and more than ten cases have been reported to date. AF-LB and
Parkinson's disease
(PD) share the neuropathological findings characterized by widely distributed Lewy bodies in the central nervous system including the substantia nigra and locus coeruleus. However, clinical manifestations of AF-LB are far different from PD in which autonomic dysfunction, if present, is not a predominant feature. In the present study, clinical features were comparatively analysed in AF-LB and PD to investigate the nosological relation between PD and AF-LB. The subjects were 94 patients with PD and 11 reported cases of AF-LB in the literature. A test of 70 degrees passive head-up tilt was performed upon the patients with PD in our laboratory. Based on the results in tilting test, the patients with PD were divided into two groups; PD-I (69 cases) with an orthostatic fall of systolic blood pressure less than 30 mmHg, and PD-II (25 cases) with a fall of 30 mmHg or more. Autonomic dysfunctions were more extent in PD-II than in PD-I, because the incidences of anhidrosis, impotence, neurogenic bladder and constipation were higher in PD-II. All of the cases of AF-LB were contained in the previous literatures with reasonably full clinical descriptions. Mean age at onset of the disease was 62.1 +/- 8.7 (mean +/- SD) years old in PD-I, 64.5 +/- 7.5 years old in PD-II and 63.9 +/- 9.0 years old in AF-LB, and no significant differences were found among the three groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Nosological correlation between autonomic failure with Lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease--comparative assessment of clinical features in both diseases]. 208 26
Central autonomic dysfunctions can be due to primary (degenerative) or secondary disorders.
Autonomic failure
(AF) may be a major manifestation of multiple system atrophy (MSA) and idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
(IPD). In both MSA and IPD, AF is almost invariably associated with neuronal loss in the intermediolateral cell columns. Dysautonomia in MSA is early, severe, and progressive, including marked orthostatic hypotension and urinary incontinence and is complicated by respiratory disturbances, such as laryngeal stridor and sleep apnea. MSA/AF can be differentiated from primary (or pure) autonomic failure (PAF) without central nervous system involvement. PAF is mainly a disorder of the postganglionic neurons. In contrast to PAF, MSA/AF has preserved basal sympathetic activity, decreased cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neurotransmitter markers, impaired vasopressin response to hypotension, and impaired adrenocorticotrophic hormone/beta endorphin response to hypoglycemia. AF in IPD is generally less severe than in MSA. Poor response to L-Dopa, abnormal urethral sphincter electromyography, and CSF markers may distinguish MSA from IPD. Secondary autonomic disorders may result from traumatic, vascular, inflammatory, demyelinating, or neoplastic lesions involving corticolimbic, hypothalamic, brainstem, or spinal autonomic network. These disorders can cause AF or autonomic hyperactivity, such as arrhythmia, hypertension, and hyperthermia. However, many disorders may only produce subclinical abnormalities.
...
PMID:Central autonomic disorders. 845 95
Autonomic failure
produces distinct pathophysiological abnormalities that differ according to the site and nature of the lesion(s). Although the anatomic organization and processes mediating chemical neurotransmission in the autonomic nervous system facilitate clinical investigation, limited access to the central compartment hampers evaluation of central neurotransmitter metabolism and neuropeptide function. As illustrated in the discussions of noradrenergic and cholinergic function, several indirect strategies have been used to assess the biochemical and neuropharmacologic consequences of autonomic dysfunction. The methods validated in patients with autonomic failure can be applied to investigate autonomic function in other clinical disorders including
Parkinson's disease
. The results of such studies may help to guide therapy and develop improved strategies for managing those patients with autonomic insufficiency.
...
PMID:Biochemical and pharmacologic assessment of autonomic function. 861 53
Pure autonomic failure
(PAF; also known as idiopathic orthostatic hypotension or
Bradbury-Eggleston syndrome
) is an uncommon sporadic disorder, characterized by autonomic failure without other neurological deficits and histopathologically by cell loss in intermediolateral columns and sympathetic ganglia. Few postmortem studies of patients with PAF have been reported in the literature, and none have demonstrated Lewy bodies in distal axons, although this has been described as a feature in
Parkinson's disease
with autonomic failure. We report a patient with PAF who had orthostatic hypotension and urinary symptoms for 15 years prior to death at the age of 63 years. Postmortem findings included typical and atypical Lewy bodies in the substantia nigra, locus ceruleus, substantia innominata, and sympathetic ganglia, as well as in autonomic axons in the epicardial fat, autonomic nerve fascicles in periadrenal adipose tissue, and autonomic nerves in the muscularis of the urinary bladder. Sites of autonomic nerve involvement correlated with clinical symptomatology, and thus were a valuable observation in the complete autopsy. Systemic autopsy results should be reviewed carefully in patients with PAF, as Lewy bodies in this disease may be seen in distal axons at a great length from their primary cell bodies.
...
PMID:The distribution of Lewy bodies in pure autonomic failure: autopsy findings and review of the literature. 925 96
Pure autonomic failure
(
PAF
) is an uncommon disorder, characterized by autonomic failure without other neurological deficits. We report here an autopsy case of pure autonomic failure with pathological features of
Parkinson's disease
. At age 79, the patient developed slowly progressive severe orthostatic hypotension, followed by decreased sweating and constipation. On admission, his blood pressure dropped after standing (from 133/97 to 71/22 mmHg) without tachycardia. Neurological examination revealed neither parkinsonism, nor cerebellar symptoms. Supine plasma norepinephrine levels were low and intravenous norepinephrine administration showed denervation hypersensitivity. He was diagnosed as having
PAF
and treated by amezinium, midodrine, L-threodops, and fludrocortisone with elastic stockings but without any effects. He died of pneumonia about 2 years after the onset of the disease. Postmortem study revealed Lewy bodies in the nucleus basalis of Meynert, substantia nigra. Edinger-Westphal nucleus, locus ceruleus, and dorsal vagal nucleus. Neuronal loss was found in above-mentioned sites, except for Edinger-Westphal nucleus and intermediolateral nucleus. This is a rare and important report on a patient with
PAF
who satisfied the strict clinical criteria on
PAF
reported in 1996, and showed neuropathological findings, consistent with
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of pure autonomic failure with pathological features of Parkinson's disease]. 1143 66
Involvement of the autonomic nervous system in
Parkinson's disease
(PD) demonstrates the multiple system character of this disease exceeding the extrapyramidal system. Forty to sixty percent of patients with PD suffer from symptoms of autonomic failure impairing their quality of life.
Autonomic failure
in PD is caused by damage to the postganglionic part of the autonomic nervous system. Scintigraphy with radiolabeled metaiodobenzylguanidin (MIBG) provides evidence of autonomic involvement at an early stage of the disease and enables an early differential diagnosis of PD versus other neurodegenerative disorders. Sensitivity to identify PD versus multiple system atrophy is 89.7%, specificity in 94.6%. Orthostatic hypotension is a frequently overlooked symptom in PD. Diagnosis and cause of orthostatic hypotension can be identified with clinical methods. There are effective physical and pharmacological treatments to improve symptoms.
...
PMID:[Autonomic disorders in idiopathic Parkinson syndrome: diagnostic relevance and therapeutic possibilities]. 1193 46
Autonomic dysfunction in patients with
Parkinson's disease
(PD) has been recognized since the original description by James Parkinson in 1817.
Autonomic failure
can be the clinical presentation of other diseases like pure autonomic failure (PAF) and multiple system atrophy (MSA). Both the central and peripheral autonomic nervous systems can be affected in PD. Rajput and Rozdilsky described cell loss and Lewy bodies within the sympathetic ganglia and antibodies to sympathetic neurons have been detected in PD patients. Lewy bodies can be seen in autonomic regulatory regions, including the hypothalamus, sympathetic (intermediolateral nucleus of the thoracic cord and sympathetic ganglia), and parasympathetic system (dorsal, vagal, and sacral parasympathetic nuclei). Lewy bodies were also found in the adrenal medulla and in the neural plexi innervating the gut, heart and pelvis. Symptoms of dysautonomia are variable, and include cardiovascular symptoms, gastrointestinal, urogenital, sudomotor and thermoregulatory dysfunction, pupillary abnormalities and sleep and respiratory disorders. They may represent a useful tool in the differential diagnosis of "atypical" or "complicated" parkinsonisms.
...
PMID:Autonomic dysfunction in Parkinson's disease. 1575 24
Autonomic failure
with orthostatic and postprandial hypotension, bowel and bladder disturbances, and sexual dysfunction are frequent, disabling features in patients with the three most prevalent neurodegenerative movement disorders:
Parkinson's disease
(PD), dementia with Lewy bodies and multiple system atrophy (MSA), and the related neurodegenerative Lewy-body disorder characterized by isolated severe autonomic failure (pure autonomic failure, PAF). All of these disorders have in common the presence of alpha-synuclein in the cytoplasmic precipitates found in neurons in Lewy body disorders or glia in MSA.
Autonomic failure
with disabling orthostatic hypotension is the clinical hallmark of PAF. It may also be the initial presentation of MSA, making diagnosis difficult. Within a few years, however, MSA patients develop movement disorders, which are differentiated from PD by the paucity of unilateral resting tremor, the lack of response to levodopa, and their rapidly progressive nature, resulting in disability and death in 7 to 8 years. Moderately effective treatment is available for autonomic symptoms, but management of movement disorders remains unsuccessful. Discoveries relevant to physiology and common pathological conditions were initially made in patients with autonomic failure. Meals induce profound hypotension in these patients. Conversely, commonly used nasal decongestants can produce substantial pressor effects. Even 500 mL of water can increase blood pressure by a previously unrecognized sympathetic reflex. Residual sympathetic tone is able to induce sustained supine hypertension in MSA, because it is resolved after ganglionic blockade. These phenomena were not previously recognized because of the buffering capacity of the baroreflex, but were unmasked in autonomic failure patients.
...
PMID:Autonomic failure in neurodegenerative disorders. 1508 56
Autonomic dysfunction is common in Lewy body disorders (
Parkinson's disease
, Dementia with Lewy Bodies,
Pure Autonomic Failure
, and REM sleep disorder). The loss of post-ganglionic myocardial sympathetic nerve fibers is a prominent feature of autonomic dysfunction in such disorders. (123)I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scintigraphy that visualizes catecholaminergic terminals in vivo is a biomarker used to detect cardiac sympathetic degeneration. Abnormal MIBG uptake has been consistently reported in Lewy body disorders. Some studies agree in the notion that increasing bradykinesia is related with an incremental cardiac sympathetic denervation, whereas tremor is not closely linked to cardiac denervation. "Atypical" parkinsonian syndromes, including Multiple System Atrophy, Progressive Supranuclear Palsy, and others, show modest reductions of cardial MIBG uptake. MIBG scintigraphy is moderately sensitive and specific in differentiating
Parkinson's disease
from such syndromes. Conversely, its sensitivity and specificity might be better in cognitively impaired patients, helping differential diagnosis between Dementia with Lewy Bodies, and Alzheimer disease. Confounding factors (comorbidities, comedications) should be carefully controlled before analyzing MIBG scintigraphy.
...
PMID:123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine scintigraphy in Parkinson's disease and related disorders. 1987 2
Autonomic failure
is a common finding in patients with
Parkinson disease
(PD). Here we describe a patient with PD in whom autonomic symptoms began 3 years before motor deficits.
...
PMID:Neurogenic orthostatic hypotension as the initial feature of Parkinson disease. 2256 19
1
2
Next >>