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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical management of
Parkinson's disease
has been revolutionized by the introduction of levodopa therapy. It has significantly reduced disability and has extended life expectancies of patients with
Parkinson's disease
. However, motor response fluctuations frequently appear in patients after long-term treatment with levodopa. In this study, we investigated the effect of protein-restricted diet on fluctuations in eight patients with
Parkinson's disease
who had been receiving long-term levodopa treatment (mean 12.5 years). Two weeks of protein-restricted daytime diet (7.5 g total at breakfast and lunch) was followed by 12.5 g total at breakfast and lunch. At night, high-protein diet (40-50 g at dinner) was offered to the patients in order to maintain total daily protein intake at Japanese standard level. The medication schedule of levodopa and other antiparkinsonian drugs was not changed within 2 weeks after the study was began. Fluctuations were reduced in 7 of the 8 patients. But in only one patient (case 6), dyskinesia and general condition got worse and stopped this therapy. Body weight, serum protein and
albumin
levels did not change significantly for at least three month after the study was begun in every 6 patients who were examined. Homovanillic acid level of cerebrospinal fluid reduced in every 4 patients who were examined. We concluded that protein-restricted diet during the daytime offers a fascinating technique for the control of motor response fluctuations in patients with
Parkinson's disease
undergoing long-term levodopa treatment. But this therapy must be indicated carefully. Mechanism of this therapy may has something to do with improvement of dopamine metabolism in the brain.
...
PMID:[Influence of protein-restricted diet on motor response fluctuations in Parkinson's disease]. 130 Feb 70
Several recent studies have shown decreased copper and increased zinc concentrations in the substantia nigra and increased copper concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid of
Parkinson's disease
patients. To elucidate whether changes in serum levels of these trace elements may increase the risk of developing
Parkinson's disease
(PD), we assessed serum levels of zinc and copper by flame atomic absorption spectrophotometry, and
albumin
and ceruloplasmin, in 32 (Zn) and 39 PD patients (Cu), respectively, with their spouses as the control group. Serum zinc,
albumin
, copper and ceruloplasmin levels and the zinc/
albumin
and copper/ceruloplasmin ratios, did not differ significantly between the two groups and were not influenced by antiparkinsonian therapy in the PD patients. Serum zinc/
albumin
ratio (r = 0.43), ceruloplasmin (r = -0.36) and copper/ceruloplasmin ratio (r = 0.36) correlated significantly with age, but not with age of onset, duration of the disease, scores of the Unified
Parkinson's Disease
Rating Scale and Hoehn and Yahr staging in PD patients. These values did not correlate with age in the control group. These results suggest that serum levels of zinc and copper do not play any role as risk factors for PD.
...
PMID:Serum levels of zinc and copper in patients with Parkinson's disease. 146 36
Nutritional status was assessed in a group of patients with
Parkinson's disease
. Weight loss since the onset of disease occurred in 52% of the patients and 22% had lost more than 12.8 kg. Although 67% of patients experienced eating difficulties of some kind, dietary intakes of protein and energy were not significantly lower than recommended intakes. Plasma levels of
albumin
(44.2 g/l vs 45.7 g/l), vitamin A (2.61 vs 2.94 mumol/l), vitamin E (22.0 vs 32.0 mumol/l), iron (15.3 vs 18.3 mumol/l) and zinc (14.2 vs 18.7 mumol/l) were significantly lower (P < 0.05) in the patients than in healthy controls. Levels of ferritin, total iron-binding capacity and copper were similar between groups. The potential significance of low levels of vitamin E and zinc are discussed in relation to oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of this disease.
...
PMID:Diet, body size and micronutrient status in Parkinson's disease. 148 17
In order to investigate a putative weight loss in patients with
Parkinson's disease
, an anthropometric and biochemical study was undertaken. We compared body weight and indexes of fat [body mass index (BMI), tricipital skinfold] and lean [midarm muscle area (MMA), calf circumference] mass in men and women suffering from idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
with normal controls. We found that women suffering from
Parkinson's disease
exhibited a significant weight loss (-8.5%) and decreased calf circumference when compared with controls. A decrease (-4.3%) in total body weight was also found in men with
Parkinson's disease
but the difference did not reach the level of significance. Protein biochemical markers of nutritional status (
albumin
, prealbumin, retinol binding protein, transferrin) were normal in
Parkinson's disease
patients. The present study demonstrates the occurrence of weight loss in a large population of patients with
Parkinson's disease
. The putative mechanisms involved in the weight loss are discussed.
...
PMID:Parkinson's disease and weight loss: a study with anthropometric and nutritional assessment. 149 61
The motor deficits associated with
Parkinson's disease
may be ameliorated by intrastriatal placement of dopamine-secreting cells in a polymer capsule. Water soluble polyelectrolytes were utilized for membrane encapsulation of dopamine-secreting PC12 cells. Membrane permeability studies revealed exclusion of radiolabeled 69,000 Da
albumin
, whereas 30,000 Da carbonic anhydrase was able to cross the membrane. No cytolytic activity was observed following incubation of the encapsulated PC12 cells with PC12 cell-directed antiserum and fresh complement. In vitro, dopamine release and the surface area of intact cells per microcapsule, reached a plateau at 4 weeks that was maintained for at least 12 weeks. Viable PC12 cells were observed in microcapsules implanted for 4 and 8 weeks in nonlesioned guinea pig striata. The behavioral effect of intrastriatal dopamine release from microencapsulated PC12 cells was evaluated in the 6-hydroxydopamine unilaterally lesioned rat model. From 1 to 4 weeks postimplantation a significant reduction in rotation behavior under apomorphine challenge was observed with PC12 cell-loaded microcapsules as compared to empty microcapsules. Tyrosine hydroxylase immunopositive PC12 cells were observed 4 weeks postimplantation in all animals exhibiting a reduction in turning behavior. Implantation of polymer-encapsulated cells may provide a means for long-term delivery of neurotransmitters and growth factors to the nervous system.
...
PMID:Behavioral recovery following intrastriatal implantation of microencapsulated PC12 cells. 191 23
The cerebrospinal fluid of eight patients with
Parkinson's disease
who underwent adrenal medullary autotransplantation was analyzed using SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A protein, subsequently identified as prealbumin, was noted to change in concentration over the intraoperative to 18-month postoperative time course. The qualitative changes observed on visual inspection were confirmed and quantified using laser densitometry. The concentration of prealbumin increased by an average of 90% when the intraoperative and 12-month samples were compared. This increase persisted at 18 months. The ratio of prealbumin to
albumin
also increased from intraoperative to 12 months by an average of 56%. This suggests that the increases in PA are the result of choroid plexus activation rather than a nonspecific breakdown of the blood-brain barrier. Given the association of prealbumin with other nervous system diseases, as well as its known ability to bind multiple substances, these findings may have important implications. Alterations in prealbumin may be responsible for the improvement seen in some patients who receive adrenal medullary autotransplants. Alternatively, prealbumin may be implicated in the pathophysiology of
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:Alterations in prealbumin concentration after adrenal autotransplantation for Parkinson's disease. 211 May 29
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum or plasma concentrations of
albumin
, IgG and carbidopa were measured before and after adrenal-brain transplantation in patients with
Parkinson's disease
to indirectly assess blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity. Previous studies in animals have suggested that the BBB is compromised by cerebral transplantation. CSF and plasma levodopa was also measured to permit comparison with the carbidopa values, recognizing that levodopa readily crosses the BBB via facilitated transport. Our patients underwent adrenal-brain transplantation in accordance with the method of Madrazo et al. (I. Madrazo, R. Drucker-Colin, V. Diaz, J. Martinez-Mata, C. Torres, and J. J. Becerril, 1987, N. Engl. J. Med. 316: 831-834) in which adrenal medullary pieces are implanted in the head of the caudate nucleus, in contact with the cerebrospinal fluid. All patients were maintained on oral carbidopa/levodopa therapy after surgery. CSF
albumin
/serum albumin and CSF IgG/serum IgG ratios were initially elevated above the preoperative baseline 6 weeks after the surgery; however, these values returned to the preoperative baseline by 6 months following the operation in six of seven patients. This suggested that the BBB was sufficiently intact to exclude these larger protein molecules from the CSF of these six patients. On the other hand, exogenously administered carbidopa, which normally is largely excluded from the cerebrospinal fluid by the BBB, was modestly increased in the CSF in four of the five patients in which it was measured. This suggests that the transplant BBB might be partially patent to small molecules for at least 6 months after the surgery. Whether increased passage of carbidopa into CSF and perhaps the transplant is of clinical significance has yet to be determined. Median CSF levodopa did not increase after surgery, probably because a limited defect in the BBB would be likely to be overshadowed by the effects of facilitated transport. CT scans performed following intravenous iothalamate meglumine contrast failed to reveal enhancement (dye leakage) near the transplantation site; however, artifact from the metal surgical clips used in the Madrazo procedure prevented good visualization of the area.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid indices of blood-brain barrier permeability following adrenal-brain transplantation in patients with Parkinson's disease. 275 15
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) proteins, as resolved by two-dimensional electrophoresis and made visible by silver staining, have been examined in patients with various neurological diseases and normal volunteers. The patterns for 15 of 20 patients with
Parkinson's disease
showed a protein (Mr 25 000) with charge similar to
albumin
, which was not seen in the patterns for any of 91 normal volunteers. Patterns for 21 of 22 multiple sclerosis patients showed novel immunoglobulin light chain proteins, also not present in the CSF of any normal volunteers. Quantitative analysis by computer-assisted densitometry in
Parkinson's disease
and multiple sclerosis showed that 20 of 68 and 33 of 85 proteins, respectively, were significantly altered as compared with proteins in the normal population. This ability to characterize both
Parkinson's disease
and multiple sclerosis molecularly provides a broad baseline for improved clinical diagnosis and may serve as an aid in exploring the underlying pathophysiology. These studies illustrate the potential of applying this methodology in the study of neurological diseases.
...
PMID:Two-dimensional electrophoresis and "ultrasensitive" silver staining of cerebrospinal fluid proteins in neurological diseases. 620 29
Arginine vasopressin (AVP) was determined in plasma and lumbar CSF from 46 patients with
Parkinson's disease
, dementia, cerebrovascular disease, multiple sclerosis and other, mostly peripheral neurological disorders. The mean plasma concentration of AVP was 1.62 microU/ml, the CSF concentration 1.14 microU/ml and the gradient CSF/plasma 0.72. There was a good correlation between the plasma and the CSF values in most patients. No sex difference could be found. A slight decrease of the CSF values could be found with increasing age. Significantly higher CSF-AVP values were found in patients with cerebrovascular disease, whereas lower CSF values were found in patients with dementia and
Parkinson's disease
. However there were decreased CSF/plasma gradients in patients with dementia and
Parkinson's disease
to about 0.30 compared to 0.98 in patients with peripheral neurological disorders. Patients with multiple sclerosis had an increased IgG index indicating an intrathecal IgG production but there was no obvious correlation between this and the AVP concentrations in plasma and CSF, nor with the total CSF protein content, nor with the
albumin
and IgG concentrations in plasma and CSF.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid arginine vasopressin in degenerative disorders and other neurological diseases. 684 95
Comparative studies of the differences in elderly patients with and without cardiovascular disorders were made in regard to complications occurring during and after operation. The subjects included 38 patients (6 men and 32 women) aged 70 to 99 years (mean: 84 years) at Nagoya City Kouseiin Geriatric Hospital who had orthopedic surgery under general anesthesia, between March 1990 and October 1992. Diseases identified in these subjects were sequelae of cerebrovascular disease (38 subjects), heart disease (22 subjects), hypertension (9 subjects), senile dementia (6 subjects),
Parkinson's disease
(5 subjects), malignant disease (3 subjects) and diabetes mellitus (2 subjects). They were initially divided into 2 groups according to ultrasonic cardiography: a normal group comprising 20 patients without cardiovascular abnormalities, and a disorder group comprising 18 patients with reduction of left ventricule function, left ventricular hypertrophy and/or valvular disease (more than moderate). All subjects were examined with regard to age, weight, the nutrition index proposed by Onodera, activity of daily living (ADL), cardiac output, left ventricular ejection fraction, serum level of BUN and
albumin
etc. Moreover, the disorder group subjects were divided into 2 groups according to the presence or absence of heart failure occurring after surgery. In addition to the above-mentioned, we also studied the duration of surgery and anesthesia, and water balance during and after surgery. Results showed that the ADL and nutrition index in the disorder group were lower compared to the normal group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Comparative studies on complications occurring during and after surgery in elderly patients with and without cardiovascular disorders]. 829 52
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