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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Substance P
(SP), Met-enkephalin (Met-enk) and cholecystokinin-8-S (CCK-8-S) were measured by a combined HPLC/RIA method in the caudate nucleus and anterior putamen from controls and from
Parkinson's disease
(PD) patients. SP levels were reduced in caudate in PD, but unchanged in putamen. No differences in Met-enk content were found in parkinsonians compared to controls. However, a significant correlation between DA and Met-enk levels in caudate nucleus from PD was observed. The concentration of CCK-8-S was unaltered in caudate nucleus or putamen in PD. The decrease in caudate nucleus SP levels might be related to the decrease in nigral SP levels in PD, while the reduction in Met-enk levels appears to be a feature of a subgroup of parkinsonian patients.
...
PMID:Striatal neuropeptide levels in Parkinson's disease patients. 128 32
Substance P
-like immunoreactivity (SPLI) was determined in cerebrovascular fluid of patients with extrapyramidal motor diseases. Patients with
Parkinson's disease
(PD) showed a SPLI concentration decreased by 30% compared with patients without extrapyramidal disease. No differences were apparent for patients with dystonia. Fluid obtained from the foramen Monro showed higher SPLI concentrations than fluid from a lateral ventricle, indicating that hypothalamic sources are important for ventricular substance P. Lateral ventricular SPLI was particularly low in parkinsonian patients which raises the possibility of a decreased SPergic activity in basal ganglia occurring in PD.
...
PMID:Ventricular fluid neuropeptides in Parkinson's disease. II. Levels of substance P-like immunoreactivity. 170 13
Substance P
immunoreactive (SP+) neurons were analysed quantitatively in serial sections of the mesopontine tegmentum in 6 patients with idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
and 5 age-matched normal controls. In the tegmentum of the
Parkinson's disease
brains many SP+ neurons contained swollen, twisted neuronal processes as well as Lewy bodies. There were significant reductions in the total number of SP+ neurons in the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (loss 43%), in the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus (loss 28%), in the oral pontine reticular nucleus (loss 41%) and in the median raphe nucleus (loss 76%). It was the large SP+ (greater than 20 microns) neurons that were particularly affected. In our control group we did not document a significant relationship between age at death and number of SP+ neurons in these tegmental nuclei or between age at death and number of pigmented neurons in the locus coeruleus. In contrast, in patients with
Parkinson's disease
, there was a strong inverse relationship between age at death and numbers of SP+ and pigmented neurons. Our findings suggest an interaction between the pathophysiological mechanisms initiated by
Parkinson's disease
and other processes related to ageing. Since tegmental SP+ neurons are affected by the primary pathological processes underlying
Parkinson's disease
as severely as catecholamine-synthesizing neurons are affected, theories of pathogenesis and therapeutic strategies in
Parkinson's disease
will need to take into account the involvement of these SP+ neurons.
...
PMID:Substance P-containing neurons in the mesopontine tegmentum are severely affected in Parkinson's disease. 171 30
The causes of the neurodegenerative disorders of
Parkinson's disease
(PD), Alzheimer's disease (AD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are unknown. It is proposed that all these disorders result primarily from a loss of trophic peptidergic neurotransmitter, possibly
Substance P
(SP). This loss in turn produces the classical neuronal degeneration seen in each of these diseases and occurs due to a combination of natural aging and chronic autoimmune destruction following a viral infection of the CNS, early in life. The loss is therefore slow and by the time of clinical presentation the inflammatory process is disappearing as the antigenic stimulus lessens with its removal. The implications of the theory in terms of future research and therapy are briefly discussed.
...
PMID:Substance P and neurodegenerative disorders. A speculative review. 172 84
Substance P
is found in both the basal ganglia and cerebral cortex in mammalian brain. In the present study postmortem concentrations of substance P-like immunoreactivity (SP-LI) were measured in the globus pallidus, substantia nigra and 22 cortical regions in a group of demented patients with neuropathological features of both
Parkinson's disease
(PD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD), and from neurologically normal controls. There were no significant changes in the globus pallidus but concentrations were significantly reduced by 44% in the substantia nigra compacta in the PD patients. In cerebral cortex small (20-30%) significant reductions of SP-LI were found in the PD patients in 7 of 22 cortical regions examined. These results are similar to changes found in AD alone and provide further evidence that the dementia of PD is frequently related to the coincidence of PD and AD.
...
PMID:Substance P-like immunoreactivity in brains with pathological features of Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases. 247 78
Immunocytochemical studies of the distribution and intensity of
Substance P
and Met-enkephalin staining in the basal ganglia and substantia nigra were carried out in five cases each of brains from patients with Huntington's disease,
Parkinson's disease
, Alzheimer's disease, and normal controls. The usefulness of the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method for human autopsy material was confirmed.
Substance P
and Met-enkephalin fibers were distributed in essentially the same pattern as described in experimental animals and in human brains. In Huntington's disease brains decreased
Substance P
staining was found in the internal globus pallidus and the substantia nigra, in agreement with radioimmunoassay studies by others. Met-enkephalin staining in the external globus pallidus was of normal intensity, although present within a shrunken area. In Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases there was intense immunoreactivity for
Substance P
in the globus pallidus and substantia nigra, and for Met-enkephalin in the globus pallidus, at variance with reported decreases in
Parkinson's disease
by radioimmunoassay, but in essential agreement with other immunocytochemical studies. Immunocytochemical methods complement radioimmunoassays of human brain and may help in mapping neuropeptidergic pathways and in pinpointing abnormalities in these pathways in basal ganglia disorders.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical studies of substance P and Met-enkephalin in the basal ganglia and substantia nigra in Huntington's, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases. 257 85
A motor disorder similar to idiopathic
Parkinson's Disease
develops in rhesus monkeys after several daily repeated doses of N-methyl-4-phenyl, 1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP). The concentrations of peptides derived from proenkephalin A, proenkephalin B, substance P and somatostatin were measured by specific radioimmunoassays in the basal ganglia of MPTP-treated monkeys. In MPTP-treated monkeys, dynorphin B concentration was reduced in the caudate. In the putamen, the concentrations of peptides derived from both proenkephalin A and proenkephalin B were decreased. In the globus pallidus, the concentrations of all opioid peptides tend to be increased, reaching significance only for alpha-neo-endorphin. In the substantia nigra, only Met-enkephalin concentration was reduced, while other peptides derived from either proenkephalin A or proenkephalin B were not changed.
Substance P
and somatostatin were not changed in any brain area examined. Some of the symptoms associated with
Parkinson's Disease
may be related to altered activity of endogenous opiates in basal ganglia.
...
PMID:Primate model of Parkinson's disease: alterations in multiple opioid systems in the basal ganglia. 615 Jul 50
The neurotoxicity induced by incidental prenatal exposure to 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) was studied in three marmosets. The baby marmosets exposed in utero to MPTP looked normal in the first few weeks of life but around 8 to 10 weeks of life they started to behave abnormally and were sacrificed when they were 20 weeks old. A marked reduction in DA levels was found in the baby marmosets prenatally exposed to MPTP as compared to the corresponding age-matched controls and this was highly significant in the caudate nucleus, putamen, and nucleus accumbens. Serotonin content was normal in the caudate and putamen and was only significantly reduced in the nucleus accumbens, hypothalamus, and cingulate cortex. Met-enkephalin levels were reduced in the caudate nucleus, putamen, and globus pallidus.
Substance P
content tended to be lower in all regions examined; however, the decrease was only statistically significant in the substantia nigra. These results indicate that prenatal exposure to MPTP induces a marked and long-lasting alteration in monoaminergic and peptidergic systems of the primate brain. This observation may provide a new insight into the role of toxins in the etiology of
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:Neurotoxicity induced by prenatal exposure to MPTP on the monoaminergic and peptidergic systems of the marmoset brain. 753 17
The specific binding of [3H]neurotensin, [3H]substance P, [3H]D-Ala2-D-Leu5-enkephalin (delta receptors) and [3H]-Tyr-D-Ala-Gly-(NMe)Phe-Gly-ol (mu receptors) were studied in membrane preparations of caudate nucleus, putamen, globus pallidus and substantia nigra from patients with
Parkinson's disease
and from age-matched controls. The density of neurotensin receptors was decreased in globus pallidus (lateral and medial segments) in parkinsonian brain.
Substance P
receptors were reduced in the putamen (anterior and posterior) and in lateral globus pallidus in
Parkinson's disease
. There was a reduction in the density of opioid receptors in posterior putamen and in mu receptors in caudate nucleus and putamen (anterior and posterior). No differences in neuropeptide receptor binding were observed in substantia nigra from parkinsonian brains compared with control subjects. The reductions in neuropeptide receptor density were less marked than the decrease in caudate and putamen content of dopamine and its metabolites. This suggests that neuropeptide receptors are only partially localized to striatal dopamine terminals.
...
PMID:Neurotensin, substance P, delta and mu opioid receptors are decreased in basal ganglia of Parkinson's disease patients. 796 97
The levels of the neuropeptides Met- and Leu-enkephalin (MET-ENK, LEU-ENK), substance P and neurotensin were measured by a combined high performance liquid chromatography/radioimmunoassay (HPLC/RIA) method in postmortem samples of basal ganglia from
Parkinson's disease
patients, incidental Lewy body disease patients (pre-symptomatic
Parkinson's disease
) and matched controls. Dopamine (DA) levels were reduced in the caudate nucleus and putamen in
Parkinson's disease
, but unaltered in incidental Lewy body disease. The levels of MET-ENK were reduced in the caudate nucleus, putamen and substantia nigra in
Parkinson's disease
. Met-enkephalin levels were reduced in the caudate nucleus and in the putamen in incidental Lewy body disease. Leu-enkephalin levels were decreased in the putamen and were undetectable in the substantia nigra in
Parkinson's disease
. Leu-enkephalin levels were unchanged in incidental Lewy body disease, although there was a tendency to a reduction in putamen.
Substance P
levels were reduced in the putamen in
Parkinson's disease
. No significant changes in substance P content were observed in incidental Lewy body disease. Neurotensin levels were increased in the substantia nigra in
Parkinson's disease
. Neurotensin levels in incidental Lewy body disease were not altered significantly, but tended to parallel the changes in
Parkinson's disease
. The changes in basal ganglia peptide levels in incidental Lewy body disease generally followed a trend similar to those seen in
Parkinson's disease
, but were less marked. This suggests that they are an integral part of the pathology of the illness and not secondary to DA neuronal loss or a consequence of prolonged drug therapy.
...
PMID:Alterations in peptide levels in Parkinson's disease and incidental Lewy body disease. 867 94
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