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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a case of
Lewy body disease
incidentally found at autopsy, numerous dense core vesicles 80--200 nm in diameter, were seen in the neuronal perikarya of the locus caeruleus. They were particularly numerous in the vicinity of the Lewy bodies. The change seems to occur at the early stage of Lewy body production and may represent an additional morphologic clue to abnormal catecholamine metabolism in
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:Dense core vesicles around the Lewy body in incidental Parkinson's disease: an electron microscopic study. 19 75
The prevalence of pale bodies and Lewy bodies was studied in the substantia nigra of 12 patients with typical
Parkinson's disease
(PD), in 5 patients with diffuse
Lewy body disease
(DLBD), and in a group of neurologically normal controls. Anti-ubiquitin antibodies labelled pale bodies and Lewy bodies in typical PD and DLBD, and there was a strong positive correlation between numbers of ubiquitin-immunoreactive pale bodies and Lewy bodies. BF10, a monoclonal antibody against a phosphate-dependent epitope of neurofilament 155-kDa polypeptide subunit, immunolabelled 57% of Lewy bodies and 15% of pale bodies in typical PD. Some pale bodies and Lewy bodies were seen in the substantia nigra of 2 of 5 neurologically normal, aged controls, probably representing "incidental PD". We conclude that there is a close relationship between pale bodies and typical Lewy bodies in the substantia nigra in clinical varieties of PD, and that these inclusions share antigenic determinants. If pale bodies and Lewy bodies reflect separate aspects of the cellular pathology in PD, their formation probably occurs in parallel. Alternatively, these observations may suggest that pale bodies represent a stage in the formation of Lewy bodies.
...
PMID:Relationships between Lewy bodies and pale bodies in Parkinson's disease. 132 Mar 23
Lewy body dementia
is common. It presents either with cognitive impairment and neuropsychiatric disturbance followed by parkinsonism or as dementia complicating established
Parkinson's disease
. It is unusual both in its pathological features and in its clinical manifestations. Although both overlap to some extent with those of Alzheimer's disease,
Lewy body dementia
is at least potentially recognizable during life. Some of its manifestations can be ameliorated by established methods, and it has pathological and neurochemical features which offer some hope for the development of useful palliative therapy. Major progress towards effective treatment is, however, likely to depend upon an improved understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying its aetiology.
...
PMID:Lewy body dementia. 134 7
Lewy bodies are cytoskeletal inclusions associated with neuronal injury and death in idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
and other neurodegenerative disorders. The chemical composition of the 8-10-nm fibrils of the Lewy body is unknown, although they are related to both normal cytoskeletal elements and paired helical filaments of Alzheimer neurofibrillary tangles. From the Lewy body-rich cerebral cortex of patients with diffuse
Lewy body disease
we have isolated intact Lewy bodies using a high salt buffer/nonionic detergent gradient centrifugation procedure and extracted the constitutive fibrils with urea and sodium dodecyl sulfate. Urea/detergent-resistant Lewy body fibrils were solubilized with formic acid and found to contain a single protein band of 68 kDa, which was not found in identically prepared normal brain homogenates. The Lewy body derived-polypeptide was recognized on immunoblots by a polyclonal antibody that reacted with both the 68-kDa neurofilament subunit and the microtubule-associated protein tau. The 68-kDa Lewy body protein was not labeled by the monoclonal antibody tau-1 despite prior in vitro enzymatic dephosphorylation. We conclude that the detergent-insoluble component of the cortical Lewy body fibril shares epitopes with neurofilament and tau and may be a posttranslationally modified derivative of either neurofilament or tau with substantially altered biochemical and immunologic properties.
...
PMID:Detergent-insoluble cortical Lewy body fibrils share epitopes with neurofilament and tau. 137 81
This report details the emergence of a progressive parkinsonian syndrome, dementia and behavioural disturbance in a 33 year-old woman which can be dated to the delivery of her first child. The findings of this case indicate that cortical
Lewy body disease
should be considered in any patient with temporoparietal dementia and idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
irrespective of the age of onset.
...
PMID:Diffuse Lewy body disease and progressive dementia in a young woman. 141 40
Dementia in Parkinson's disease is thought to be attributable not only to subcortical lesions but also to cortical alterations, especially frontal lobe dysfunction. To evaluate cortical function, the regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was estimated of 13 demented and 13 non-demented age matched patients with
Parkinson's disease
compared with that of 10 age matched controls using I-123 iodoamphetamine single photon emission tomography (IMP-SPECT). The rCBF of the nondemented Parkinson's patients showed no significant differences from that of the control subjects. In the demented patients, the bilateral frontal and parietal and left temporal regional blood flow was significantly less than in the controls. Four demented patients showed isolated frontal hypoperfusion, 8 showed fronto-parietal hypoperfusion, and 1 showed isolated parietal hypoperfusion. Frontal hypoperfusion was therefore present in 12 of the 13 demented patients, and this finding agrees with the frontal lobe dysfunction hypothesis. Parietal rCBF had a significant positive correlation with cortical functions such as calculation and language ability in the MMSE scores. The parietal and temporal reduction in rCBF probably reflects the presence of Alzheimer pathology, cortical
Lewy body disease
, or both.
...
PMID:SPECT findings in Parkinson's disease associated with dementia. 143 61
Subsumed under the rubric of
Lewy body disease
are idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
(PD), pure diffuse
Lewy body disease
(DLBD), and, most commonly, combined brainstem and neocortical Lewy bodies with Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology in a relatively early developmental stage. Clinical correlates are dementia with psychiatric and subcortical features plus mild extrapyramidal signs (EPS).
...
PMID:Lewy body disease. 146 83
We examine the evidence for free radical involvement and oxidative stress in the pathological process underlying
Parkinson's disease
, from postmortem brain tissue. The concept of free radical involvement is supported by enhanced basal lipid peroxidation in substantia nigra in patients with
Parkinson's disease
, demonstrated by increased levels of malondialdehyde and lipid hydroperoxides. The activity of many of the protective mechanisms against oxidative stress does not seem to be significantly altered in the nigra in
Parkinson's disease
. Thus, activities of catalase and glutathione peroxidase are more or less unchanged, as are concentrations of vitamin C and vitamin E. The activity of mitochondrial superoxide dismutase and the levels of the antioxidant ion zinc are, however, increased, which may reflect oxidative stress in substantia nigra. Levels of reduced glutathione are decreased in nigra in
Parkinson's disease
; this decrease does not occur in other brain areas or in other neurodegenerative illnesses affecting this brain region (i.e., multiple system atrophy, progressive supranuclear palsy). Altered glutathione metabolism may prevent inactivation of hydrogen peroxide and enhance formation of toxic hydroxyl radicals. In brain material from patients with incidental
Lewy body disease
(presymptomatic
Parkinson's disease
), there is no evidence for alterations in iron metabolism and no significant change in mitochondrial complex I function. The levels of reduced glutathione in substantia nigra, however, are reduced to the same extent as in advanced
Parkinson's disease
. These data suggest that changes in glutathione function are an early component of the pathological process of
Parkinson's disease
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Oxidative stress as a cause of nigral cell death in Parkinson's disease and incidental Lewy body disease. The Royal Kings and Queens Parkinson's Disease Research Group. 151 Mar 85
Lewy bodies are intraneuronal inclusions initially found in the pigmented brainstem nuclei of patients with
Parkinson's disease
. Their aspect varies according to their neuronal or cerebral situation. They have been a long time the hallmark of
Parkinson's disease
, but in recent years it has emerged that a small group of rare disorders or rare variants of common degenerative diseases are also sometimes associated with Lewy bodies in the nervous system. Pathological studies have also individualized a new disorder characterized by the presence of numerous Lewy bodies throughout the cerebral cortex and the brainstem:
Lewy body disease
. The clinical syndrome associates dementia, parkinsonian features, dysautonomia and motor neuron disease. The dementia is cortical in type and psychiatric symptoms such as agitation, hallucinations or delusions are frequent. The pathological features are nerve cell loss, diffuse Lewy bodies, and sometimes senile plaques. The origin of this disorder remains unclear, but it could be a primitive abnormality of neuronal cytoskeleton.
...
PMID:[From Parkinson's disease to Lewy body disease]. 153 93
A progressive parkinsonian disorder predicts pathology in the substantia nigra and possibly elsewhere in the basal ganglia.
Parkinson's disease
is a manifestation of
Lewy body disease
, which is characterized by the association between Lewy bodies and cell degeneration in specific neuronal populations. Striatonigral degeneration is part of multiple system atrophy and is characterized by striatal and nigral degeneration without neuronal inclusion bodies, but glial inclusions have been described. Steele-Richardson-Olszewski disease is characterized by the globose neurofibrillary tangle and predominant brain stem pathology. Corticobasal degeneration shows similar midbrain pathology and a round, filamentous inclusion in the substantia nigra, not unlike the globose tangle, but there is also focal frontoparietal cortical atrophy. The combination of the distribution of degeneration and nerve cell morphology identify apparently distinct disorders, but most of the neuronal inclusions are not disease specific.
...
PMID:Neuropathology of Parkinson's disease and related syndromes. 158 79
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