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)

Serotonergic (5-HT) and dopaminergic activities have been examined in Lewy Body Dementia (LBD) and compared with Parkinson's disease (PD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). In the neocortex the LBD subgroup experiencing hallucinations was distinguished from the other categories by an increase in the 5HIAA:5HT ratio measured in frontal cortex and by the serotonergic (5-HIAA or 5-HIAA:5-HT): cholinergic (choline acetyltransferase) ratio in frontal and temporal cortex. In the neostriatum (caudate nucleus), loss of dopamine and increased HVA:dopamine ratio correlated with the reduction in substantia nigra neurons in LBD but not PD, despite the greater loss of neurones and dopamine and the higher dopamine turnover ratio in PD. LBD patients experiencing severe Parkinsonism as a result of neuroleptic treatment tended to have lower neuron counts, in combination with higher turnover ratios, than the remainder. Qualitative differences between LBD and PD included decreased cortical 5-HT turnover in PD compared with the increase in LBD. There were no significant changes in any parameter in AD, with the exception of a reduction in temporal cortex 5HIAA. The results suggest that although the neurochemical pathology of LBD and PD involves similar systems, the nature of the derangements differs sufficiently between the diseases to account for differences in symptomatology.
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PMID:Monoaminergic activities in Lewy body dementia: relation to hallucinosis and extrapyramidal features. 812 90

In a series of 37 Parkinson's disease (PD) brains, cortical changes were reexamined by means of Bielschowsky silver impregnation and anti-ubiquitin immunocytochemistry. Compared to routine HE staining, anti-ubiquitin immunostaining revealed neocortical Lewy bodies (LBs) in a significantly higher percentage (76% vs. 32%). Neocortical senile plaques (SPs) occurred more frequently in brains with neocortical LBs than in cases without LBs (50% vs. 11%; p < 0.05). Semiquantitative assessment of neocortical LB density correlated with the frequency of occurrence and density of neocortical SPs. Dementia was confined to patients with abundant neocortical LBs, thus fulfilling histological criteria of diffuse Lewy body disease. We conclude that neocortical LBs are a very frequent feature of PD, although abundance of cortical LBs is confined only to a small subgroup with prominent dementia: diffuse Lewy body disease.
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PMID:Neocortical changes in Parkinson's disease, revisited. 820 26

Brain tissue from normal individuals with incidental Lewy bodies and cell loss in pigmented substantia nigra neurons (asymptomatic Parkinson's disease) and age-matched control subjects without nigral Lewy bodies was examined biochemically. There was no difference in dopamine levels or dopamine turnover in the caudate and putamen of individuals with incidental Lewy body disease compared to control subjects. There were no differences in levels of iron, copper, manganese, or zinc in the substantia nigra or other brain regions from the individuals with incidental Lewy body disease compared to those from control subjects. Similarly, ferritin levels in the substantia nigra and other brain areas were unaltered. There was no difference in the activity of succinate cytochrome c reductase (complexes II and III) or cytochrome oxidase (complex IV) between incidental Lewy body subjects and control subjects. Rotenone-sensitive NADH coenzyme Q1 reductase activity (complex I) was reduced to levels intermediate between those in control subjects and those in patients with overt Parkinson's disease, but this change did not reach statistical significance. The levels of reduced glutathione in substantia nigra were reduced by 35% in patients with incidental Lewy body disease compared to control subjects. Reduced glutathione levels in other brain regions were unaffected and there were no changes in oxidized glutathione levels in any brain region. Altered iron metabolism is not detectable in the early stages of nigral dopamine cell degeneration. There may be some impairment of mitochondrial complex I activity in the substantia nigra in Parkinson's disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Indices of oxidative stress and mitochondrial function in individuals with incidental Lewy body disease. 828 90

Three cases of Lewy body disease were investigated in order to compare the morphological and immunohistochemical characteristics of the neuronal inclusions in the cerebral cortex (CC) and brain-stem (BS). Ultrastructurally, the CC contained intermediate-sized filaments with variable amounts of granular material and other organelles, whereas the BS consisted of an electron-dense core and an outer area with radially oriented filaments. The cerebral cortex was immuno-reactive with antibodies against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and tau protein, and differed from BS. In addition, although the CC were antigenically similar to BS in their neurofilament (70, 160 and 200 kDa) and ubiquitin contents, the localization of neurofilament immunoreactivity differed between them, being confined positively to the core of CC, but to the periphery of the BS. Although Lewy bodies (LB) in idiopathic Parkinson's disease are morphologically similar to BS, they have been reported to differ in their immunoreactivity with antibodies against tau. It has been reported that CC differ from LB with regard to immunoreactivity with antibodies against TH and tropomyosin. It is inferred that these inclusions (CC, BS and LB) differ in morphogenesis.
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PMID:Immunohistochemistry of neuronal inclusions in the cerebral cortex and brain-stem in Lewy body disease. 829 42

Presymptomatic detection of Parkinson's disease is necessary if neuroprotective therapies are to be utilized in its treatment. Various methods (PET, electrophysiology, enzyme assays, olfactory function) may be applicable but none has been rigorously evaluated. Other possible approaches are now considered. Plasma HVA levels (pHVA) in the presence of debrisoquine may reflect cerebral dopamine function. However, there are no detectable differences in pHVA between newly diagnosed and untreated parkinsonian patients and control subjects. Compensatory increases in dopamine turnover may mask a decrease in pHVA in the early stages of the disease. So, at present this technique could not be used as a diagnostic tool. Post-mortem studies of brain in Parkinson's disease may provide clues to biochemical markers indicative of nigral pathology. Mitochondrial complex I activity is reduced in substantia nigra in Parkinson's disease and it was reported also to be markedly reduced in blood platelets. However, subsequent studies suggest that the difference in platelet complex I activity is too small to be diagnostic of Parkinson's disease. There are also selective reductions in brain glutathione levels in Parkinson's disease restricted to substantia nigra, which do not occur in other neurodegenerative disorders and are not due to drug treatment. Importantly, in incidental Lewy body disease (preclinical Parkinson's disease) nigral glutathione levels are reduced to the same degree as in advanced Parkinson's disease. So, some peripheral index of altered glutathione function may be valuable in the early detection of the disease process.
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PMID:Presymptomatic detection of Parkinson's disease. 829 98

The mechanisms underlying dopamine cell death in substantia nigra in Parkinson's disease remain unknown. Current concepts of this process suggest the involvement of free radical species and oxidative stress. Indeed, in postmortem tissues from patients dying with Parkinson's disease there is evidence for inhibition of complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, altered iron metabolism and decreased levels of reduced glutathione. However, alterations in iron levels in substantia nigra are not specific to Parkinson's disease but also occur in other basal ganglia degenerative diseases. So, alterations in iron may be a response to, rather than a cause of nigral cell death. This is further suggested by a failure to find any alterations in iron metabolism in cases of incidental Lewy body disease (presymptomatic Parkinson's disease). Similarly, in these tissues no significant alteration in complex I activity is apparent. However, there is a reduction in the levels of reduced glutathione in substantia nigra in incidental Lewy body disease of the same magnitude as occurs in advanced Parkinson's disease. This would suggest that alterations in glutathione function are an early marker of pathology in Parkinson's disease and may be a clue to the primary cause of nigral cell death.
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PMID:Altered mitochondrial function, iron metabolism and glutathione levels in Parkinson's disease. 833 54

We studied six patients with adult-onset dystonia-parkinsonism (DYS-P) with 18F-6-fluoro-dopa (18F-dopa) positron emission tomography and compared their influx constants (Ki values) with those of six patients with classical childhood-onset dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD), 12 age-matched Parkinson's disease (PD) patients without dystonia, and 21 normal controls. The DYS-P group had significantly reduced mean caudate (67% of normal) and putamen (45% of normal) 18F-dopa uptake. These Ki values were similar to mean caudate and putamen Ki values obtained for the PD group. In contrast, the DRD group showed minor reductions in mean caudate (9%) and putamen (18%) 18F-dopa uptake when compared with normals. The mean caudate:putamen Ki ratio was 1.7 in the DYS-P group and 2.1 in the PD group. In the DRD and normal groups, the caudate:putamen ratios were close to unity. The findings of this study are that adult-onset DYS-P targets the nigrostriatal dopaminergic projections in a pattern similar to PD, with the putamen being more affected. This provides support for the hypothesis that DYS-P may be a phenotypic variant of Lewy body disease. DYS-P seems distinct from childhood-onset DRD, in which striatal 18F-dopa uptake is either normal or only mildly reduced.
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PMID:Comparison of striatal 18F-dopa uptake in adult-onset dystonia-parkinsonism, Parkinson's disease, and dopa-responsive dystonia. 835 Oct 12

The clinical details of 100 cases of histologically confirmed Parkinson's disease were examined and correlated with pathologic findings. Age at disease onset (mean, 62.4 years), disease duration (mean, 13.1 years), and age at death (mean, 75.5 years) were similar to those in previous smaller series. Asymmetric, tremulous onset was most common, although 23% of patients had no rest tremor. Motor fluctuations and dyskinesias occurred in 60% of levodopa-treated patients. All patients had clinical parkinsonism; however, 12 had atypical clinical features of Parkinson's disease, including severe early dementia, fluctuating confusional states, no response to levodopa, and early marked autonomic disturbance. Neuropathologic examination found coexistent Alzheimer-type change in 17 cases and striatal abnormality--mainly vascular--in 34 cases. Cortical Lewy bodies were present in all cases, but only four satisfied proposed criteria for diffuse Lewy body disease. Dementia occurred in 44% of cases; 29% had Alzheimer's disease, 10% had numerous cortical Lewy bodies, and 6% had a possible vascular cause; in 55% no definite pathologic cause was found. Nigral cell loss correlated with disease duration and severity. Although the general pattern of disease conformed to traditional descriptions, the findings broaden the present clinical and pathologic spectrum of Parkinson's disease.
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PMID:A clinicopathologic study of 100 cases of Parkinson's disease. 843 Nov 32

Nicotinic cholinergic agonists represent a relatively newly developing area for therapeutic intervention in Alzheimer disease (AD) and related neurodegenerative dementias. Loss of cholinergic receptors has been reported not only in AD but also in Parkinson's disease, Lewy body dementia, and progressive supranuclear palsy. Clinical studies suggest that compounds that act to stimulate nicotinic receptors may improve learning and memory in a variety of models of cognitive impairment in animals. Early clinical studies have suggested positive effects on cognition of nicotine in human beings with and without AD. Finally, nicotinic compounds might show the progression of AD, as suggested by preclinical models of cell death as well as epidemiological evidence of a protective effect of smoking in AD and Parkinson's disease.
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PMID:Nicotinic receptors and neurodegenerative dementing diseases: basic research and clinical implications. 853 21

Although traditionally associated with Parkinson's disease, the eosinophilic intracytoplasmic neuronal inclusion known as the Lewy body has recently been regarded as the primary neuropathologic finding in a variety of conditions affecting the aging brain. The term Lewy Body Disease (LBD) will be used in this review to refer to a spectrum of clinical states varying from those due to incidental or mildly symptomatic histopathologic changes to progressive dementia and psychosis. Many unanswered questions remain about the neurobehavioral and neuropathological implications of Lewy bodies, but it is useful to consider the LBD spectrum in terms of the variable effects on neuropsychiatric function that can be observed clinically.
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PMID:Neuropsychiatric features of Lewy body disease. 854 51


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