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)

This investigation was conducted to clarify the epidemiology of ALS disease in Sardinia. During the years 1965-1974, the average annual incidence was found to be 0.64/100,000 inhabitants. On prevalence day, October 24th, 1974, the prevalence rate was 1.56/100,000 inhabitants. A significant male predominance was found, the average annual incidence rates for men and women being 0.88 and 0.40, respectively. The peak in both sexes was reached between 60 and 69 years. ALS distribution in the study area was uniform but its occurrence was significantly higher among agricultural workers (5.28/100,000). ALS started on average at 56.58 years and its duration was 2.5 years, being significantly longer in patients under 40-years-old. The distribution of the various clinical forms was: 66 per cent conventional forms, 20 percent bulbar and 14 per cent pseudo-polyneuritic. In the bulbar type, a female predominance was found. About 96 percent of cases were sporadic and 4 per cent familial. Familial cases presented no difference from sporadic cases. Trauma was present in 10.5 percent of the cases and gastrointestinal disfunction in 13 per cent. This probably reflects some relationship between trauma and ALS, and between malnutrition and ALS. No combination of ALS, dementia and parkinsonism was observed. Dementia was associated with ALS in four cases and Parkinson's disease in one case, separately. The combination of other disease states with ALS in the present study may be simple coincidence.
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PMID:Studies on epidemiological, clinical, and etiological aspects of ALS disease in Sardinia, Southern Italy. 84 75

At the present time, it seems unlikely that progressive neurodegenerative diseases, such as ALS, Parkinson's disease, and dementia of the Alzheimer type, are triggered by environmental agents with excitotoxic potential. These include excitotoxic agents that behave as glutamate agonists or disrupt energy metabolism: both types elicit permanent but self-limiting neuronal diseases with patterns of neuronal deficit that reflect selective chemical exposure (MPP+ and parkinsonism), differential susceptibility to energy dysmetabolism (NPA and dystonia), or the distribution of glutamate-receptors (domoic acid and memory loss). If environmental agents play an etiologic role in progressive neurodegenerative diseases, they are likely to target a critical, irreplaceable neuronal molecule that is required to maintain long-term neuronal integrity.
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PMID:Are human neurodegenerative disorders linked to environmental chemicals with excitotoxic properties? 132 79

Several neurotransmitter markers were investigated in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) (n = 27), Parkinson's disease (PD) (n = 35) and ALS (n = 26) and from control subjects (n = 34) to compare the possible alterations in the biochemical profiles of these different neurodegenerative diseases. The main proportion of the patients represented an early phase of the illness at the time of the diagnosis. Correlations of the degree of dementia and the stage of the disease with CSF measures were evaluated. The CSF levels of somatostatin like-immunoreactivity (SLI) were significantly reduced in AD patients when compared with those of normals and ALS patients. The CSF concentrations of homovanillic acid (HVA) were significantly decreased for PD patients and the decrease focused on the non-demented patients. A trend of decreasing HVA values towards the most advanced stage of Parkinson's disease assessed by Webster's scale was also displayed. The content of 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol (MHPG) in the CSF was higher for ALS patients than for other groups. The lowest 5-hydroxy-indoleacetic acid (5HIAA) levels were observed in the PD group and the lowest acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activities were found in the PD patients with the most severe disease. Changes in CSF measures were too subtle to be beneficial for diagnostic purposes, but adequate for reflecting the different neurochemical profiles of these three degenerative neurological disorders.
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PMID:Neurochemical markers in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and normal controls. 134 20

Dendritic spheroid bodies (SBs) and Lewy bodies (LBs) were identified in comparable numbers in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SBC) of nine parkinsonian cases and one case of striatonigral degeneration but were not found in cases of Huntington's disease or neurologically normal controls. The immunohistochemical profile of the SBs in dystrophic dendrites of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons was remarkably similar to that of the LBs found within dendrites or free of the SNC neuropil. Both types of inclusions stained positively with antibodies to tyrosine hydroxylase, ubiquitin and microtubule-associated protein-2 (MAP2), and negatively for Tau-2, although they had different ultrastructural appearances. A few intracellular LBs were stained by antibodies to neurofilament proteins (NFs) 68, 160, and 200 kD, but dendritic SBs and extracellular LBs were not so stained. These data indicate that dendritic SBs and extracellular LBs may have a common molecular pathogenetic origin in Parkinson's disease. On the other hand, the SBs seen in the pars reticulata (SNR) and in the distal nigrostriatal axons even in control cases were generally stained by antibodies to NFs and ubiquitin but not to MAP2. This latter staining pattern in similar to that shown by SBs in the anterior horn in ALS and in the cerebellum of neurologically normal brains and is believed typical of axonal as opposed to dendritic SBs.
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PMID:Two types of spheroid bodies in the nigral neurons in Parkinson's disease. 191 62

Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) to transcranial stimulation (TCS) and somatosensory evoked potentials to median nerve stimulation (MN-SEPs) were examined in 74 patients affected by multiple sclerosis (MS = 49 cases), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS = 9 cases), cervical cord lesions (7 cases), Parkinson's disease (PD = 5 cases), Huntington's chorea (HC = 2 cases), Wilson's disease (WD = 1 case), subacute combined degeneration (SCD = 1 case). MN-SEPs were altered in 38% of arms in MS with a higher incidence in clinically affected than in clinically 'silent' arms (= 77.8% vs. 27.5%). MEP alterations were found in 54% of examined arms, mostly because of a prolongation of the motor CCT. This index was invariably altered in the affected arms, whilst it was involved in 40% of the 'silent' ones. Twelve out of 18 arms displayed abnormal MEPs in ALS. These were mainly due to an absent response, even if moderate motor CCT prolongation and 'giant' MEPs were also encountered. MN-SEPs were altered in 3/18 arms. By recording MEPs from proximal and distal upper limb muscles, cues on the level of abnormal propagation were obtained in patients suffering from 'focal' lesions of the spinal cord. Combining SEP records enhanced the diagnostic yield in this field. Both MEPs and SEPs were normal in patients with PD and HC, whilst abnormally prolonged CCTs were found in the case with WD. MEP and SEP recording revealed central propagation abnormalities coupled to a severe clinical picture of the peripheral nerve involvement (as in the case of SCD).
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PMID:Neurophysiological evaluation of the central nervous impulse propagation in patients with sensorimotor disturbances. 245 26

We argue against the dominant status assigned to conventional microscopy in the categorization of disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and ALS. As an example we criticize the emphasis that has been placed on correlating the presence of Lewy bodies with the diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. In essence, we submit that Parkinson's disease can exist without Lewy bodies, and Lewy bodies can exist without Parkinson's disease. Nevertheless, we consider that the newer techniques available to histology have led to an important concept that constitutes a shared feature for Alzheimer's disease. Parkinson's disease and ALS; they are all characterized by the deposition of cytoskeletal debris in tissue, so they may perhaps be collectively termed the "Cytoskeletal Disorders".
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PMID:The relationship between Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and motor neuron disease. 255 32

In cases of Parkinson's disease, a high incidence of dementia and simultaneous pathologic changes of Alzheimer's type have been reported. X-ray CT and MRI have such good spatial resolution that they can be expected to be useful for evaluation of brain atrophy. Positron emission tomography (PET) used with 18F-2-deoxy-2-fluoro-D-glucose is considered to reflect regional function. By these techniques, brain atrophy and local cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (LCMR-glc) in patients with Parkinsonism with dementia was studied, and also compared with age-matched normal controls and senile dementia of Alzheimer type. In seven cases of Parkinson's disease with dementia, LCMRs-glc were statistically decreased in all regions in comparison with ten normal controls. LCMRs-glc in six Parkinson's disease without dementia were higher than those of demented Parkinson's disease, but significantly lower than normal controls in all regions except basal ganglia. Some aged normal controls presented cortical atrophy and a significant difference could not be seen in evaluation by MRI among these three groups. There was also no correlation between LCMR-glc and cortical atrophy. There was no significant difference of LCMR-glc between six Guamnian cases of Parkinsonism-Dementia complex (PD complex) without ALS and four cases of PD complex with ALS, and these values were significantly lower than five Guamanian and ten Caucasian normal controls. In PD complex with and without ALS, remarkable cortical atrophy and ventricular dilatation were recorded in comparison with normal controls, and correlation between decrement of LCMR-glc and cortical atrophy was indicated in frontal, parietal and temporal lobe. In Parkinson's disease with dementia and PD complex in Guam, LCMRs-glc in all regions of brain were generally lower than normal controls. These findings were different from Alzheimer's disease in which LCMR-glc have been reported to be low especially in cerebral cortex. On the other hand, cortical atrophy and ventricular dilatation evaluated by MRI and CT was apparent in PD complex, but these changes were not remarkable in Parkinson's disease. Cortical atrophy did not always correlate with the decrease of LCMR-glc and changes of LCMR-glc could reflect clinical signs such as Parkinsonism and dementia. Both PET as a functional imaging method and MRI, CT as an anatomical imaging method are useful to access the study of these diseases.
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PMID:[Comparison study of positron emission tomography, X-ray CT and MRI in parkinsonism with dementia]. 279 56

In middle of Kii peninsula, one of the biggest mercury mine in Japan had been present until about 10 years ago. The mercury contents in water and fish are reported to be higher in this district. So we investigated the mercury in hair of patients and normal controls. In this study the subjects are 23 cases of ALS including 15 cases in Nara and Mie and 8 cases in other prefectures except in Kii peninsula, 14 cases with ataxia, 11 cases with other degenerative diseases like Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease, 25 cases of cerebrovascular disease as compared to 26 normal controls. The hair are taken from 3 areas on head of patients and normal controls. They are washed in 2% sodium lauryl sulfate and stirred in distilled water several times, and they are soaked in acetone and dried in filter paper. They are inserted in fire and vaporized mercury are measured (Zeeman Effect Mercury Analyzer) in ppm. The hair mercury concentration is 2.81 ppm in ALS in total, 3.62 ppm in ALS in Nara and Mie and 1.39 ppm in outside of Kii Peninsula, 2.34 ppm in ataxia, 1.83 ppm in other degenerative diseases, 1.66 ppm in cerebrovascular disease and 1.44 ppm in normal controls. Statistically it is significant (p less than 0.05) between that in ALS in Nara and Mie and that in normal controls. 6 cases (40%) with ALS in Nara and Mie have the value above the mean +2 standard deviation of controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Mercury in hair of patients with ALS]. 280 5

We have studied the frequency of human retrovirus antibody (HTLV-I, II, III) in the serum and CSF of patients with MS, matched controls, and patients with optic neuritis, idiopathic and postencephalitic Parkinson's disease, neuropathies, polymyositis, ALS, and postpoliomyelitis. Except for the postpoliomyelitis samples, all samples were collected prior to 1980. Contrary to a previous published report, no significant levels of antibody to HTLV-I, II, or III were found in the MS patients or controls. No retrovirus antibody was detected in patients with the other neurologic diseases.
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PMID:Serologic studies of MS patients, controls, and patients with other neurologic diseases: antibodies to HTLV-I, II, III. 282 54

The physiological functions of the medullary arcuate nucleus are supposed to be involved in autonomic cardioventilatory regulation, but neuropathological studies on neurodegenerative diseases have rarely reported about the arcuate nucleus. We quantitatively examined the neuronal density of the arcuate nucleus in patients with multiple system atrophy (MSA, n = 3), Parkinson's disease (PD, n = 3), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, n = 2), and control subjects (n = 6), and statistically compared the findings in each group. Although the neuronal densities in PD and ALS patients were not different from that in the controls, MSA patients showed a marked depletion of neurons in the arcuate nucleus. The neuronal density (/mm2, mean +/- SEM) in the arcuate nucleus was 9.27 +/- 10.4 in MSA, and was significantly decreased (P < 0.05; Wilcoxon test), compared with that in control subjects (87.1 +/- 12.2). These results suggest that the lesioned arcuate nucleus is related to the pathogenesis of dysatonomia in MSA.
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PMID:Decrease of neurons in the medullary arcuate nucleus of multiple system atrophy: quantitative comparison with Parkinson's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 933 16


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