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)

Parkinson's disease (PD) has been proposed to result from the interaction of aging and environment in susceptible individuals. Defective metabolism of debrisoquine, inherited as an autosomal recessive, has been associated with this susceptibility. In 35 PD patients and 19 age-matched controls, no significant differences in debrisoquine metabolism were found, although a trend to impaired metabolism was noted in patients with disease onset less than or equal to 40. Foci of PD patients were associated with rural living and well water drinking, or rural living coupled with market gardening or wood pulp mills. In a questionnaire survey, patients with PD onset less than or equal to age 47 were significantly more likely to have lived in rural areas and to have drunk well water than those with onset greater than or equal to age 54 (p less than or equal to 0.01). Because of population mobility in North America, a case-control study designed to test environmental, occupational, dietary and other proposed risk factors for PD was conducted in China, where the population is more stationary and the environment more stable. No significant differences in incidences of head trauma, smoking or childhood measles were found between patients and controls.
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PMID:Environmental factors in the etiology of Parkinson's disease. 331 47

Fluctuations in motor performances are the major problem in the longterm management of Parkinson's disease. In this study the clinical effects of L-dopa intravenous infusion were evaluated in 18 parkinsonian patients with fluctuations. 14 out of these were given Lisuride intravenous infusion in a following study. Lisuride is a potent dopamine agonist and it is highly soluble in water. The results obtained with L-dopa were very good and we found a close correlation between oral and intravenous dosage. The dosage of L-dopa infusion ranged between 360-1,250 mg for 12 hours. Lisuride proved to be able to give prolonged mobile state in 8 patients out of 14. The other 6 patients showed a different response to the drug. The dosage used ranged between 0.6 and 2.4 mg per day. No severe side-effects were observed during both studies except for nausea and vomiting occurring during Lisuride infusion.
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PMID:Problems in daily motor performances in Parkinson's disease: the continuous dopaminergic stimulation. 346 72

In 1984 we made the first observation of a correlation between early age exposure to rural environment (and drinking well water) and development of idiopathic Parkinson's disease (IPD). These findings were subsequently confirmed elsewhere (Barbeau, 1985;25 Tanner, 1985). Analysis of all early age onset IPD (EPD) cases born and raised in Saskatchewan revealed that 20 of 22 had exclusively rural exposure during the first 15 years of life. This distribution was significantly different from the general population (p = 0.0141). Further study of the EPD group included sampling and metal analysis of childhood sources of drinking water in 18 cases and 36 age and sex-matched controls. Water collected from the two groups was analyzed for 23 metals (including 7 elements implicated in the etiology of IPD). There was no difference in the metal composition of the water between the two groups. Finally, a review of herbicide and pesticide use in Saskatchewan agriculture was undertaken to determine if there was an increased incidence of EPD following utilization of any particular chemical. No increase was found in the incidence of EPD with the introduction of any pesticide or herbicide, including Paraquat, for agricultural use. We conclude that there is a strong correlation between early age rural environmental exposure and development of IPD. We believe well water is a likely vehicle for the causal agent, but neither water metal concentration nor any of the herbicides and pesticides used in Saskatchewan agriculture are related to the cause.
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PMID:Geography, drinking water chemistry, pesticides and herbicides and the etiology of Parkinson's disease. 367 17

The cause of idiopathic Parkinson's Disease (PD) is not known but it is believed to be related to some environmental agent(s). Given a long preclinical interval and onset of symptomatology around age 60 years, it becomes impossible to identify and analyze all prior environmental factors satisfactorily. To circumvent these difficulties we evaluated the childhood environment in those PD patients whose symptoms began at age 40 years or earlier. Twenty-one such cases were born and raised in the province of Saskatchewan. Nineteen of these 21 patients spent the first 15 years of life exclusively in rural Saskatchewan. Detailed population analysis indicates a strong predisposition to early onset idiopathic Parkinson's Disease (EPD) in those raised in rural areas (p = 0.0154). All but one case utilized exclusively well water for the first 15 years of life--a trait significantly different from that expected in the provincial population. It is concluded that rural Saskatchewan environments contribute to EPD and that well water used in childhood should be considered as a potential vehicle for the etiological agent.
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PMID:Early onset Parkinson's disease in Saskatchewan--environmental considerations for etiology. 377 30

We measured the kinetic constants for the unidirectional influx of L-DOPA into red blood cells of patients with Parkinson's disease (seven patients), Huntington's disease (seven patients), and other extrapyramidal diseases (11 patients), and in five controls. Influx consisted of two components with low affinity and high exchange capacity. In individual subjects, the L-DOPA concentration giving half-maximal influx (Km) varied between 0.04 and 2.19 mM, and the maximum velocity (Vmax) of the saturable transport component was between 20 and 578 mumol/l cell water/h, which is compatible with the neutral amino acids of low affinity for the transport system. The range of Kd (the first-order rate constant for the unsaturable component) was between 0.11 and 0.36 hour-1. There was no gross deficit of the L-DOPA uptake process in patients with Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, dystonia, or other extrapyramidal diseases.
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PMID:Normal erythrocyte uptake of L-DOPA in Parkinson's, Huntington's, and related diseases. 622 Dec 1

We describe a new, water-soluble formulation of levodopa plus benserazide (Madopar LIQ) for the treatment of Parkinson's disease. Two dosage strengths are available: 100 mg levodopa plus 25 mg benserazide and 50 mg levodopa plus 12.5 mg benserazide. Pharmacokinetic data show that levodopa absorption is more rapid than with standard Madopar, resulting in a shorter time to peak plasma concentration. Other pharmacokinetic values are comparable to those obtained with the standard formulation. We discuss the clinical advantages of this new water-soluble formulation, particularly when the patient requires rapid onset of action for morning or circadian akinesia. The indications of this formulation in patients with dysphagia and in other clinical situations, e.g. during the postoperative period and for levodopa dosage adjustment in ambulatory care, are discussed.
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PMID:[Benefits of a new galenic form of levodopa and benserazide in the treatment of patients with Parkinson disease]. 748 41

Intravenous administration of 15O-labeled water and 6-[18F]-L-fluorodopa were used to assess abnormal striatal activity in monkeys after long-term recovery of unilateral lesions of the dopaminergic nigro-striatal system induced by the neurotoxin MPTP. PET data were examined in relation to behavioral and biological parameters. Cerebral blood flow and 6-[18F]-L-DOPA uptake were found to be significantly reduced in the lesioned striatum, compared to the unaffected side and to normal controls. There was no correlation between cerebral blood flow and any of the behavioral parameters. The uptake rate constant of 18F-DOPA from blood to striatum and the ratios of striatum to occipital areas were highly correlated to the concentrations of homovanillic acid in the cerebrospinal fluid of the same animals but not to the rotational behavior. This MPTP-induced model of striatal dopamine deficiency in primates presents similarities with idiopathic Parkinson's disease and may be used to evaluate the effects of dopaminergic lesions and transplants on brain function.
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PMID:6-[18F]fluoro-L-dopa and cerebral blood flow in unilaterally MPTP-treated monkeys. 750 98

Deprenyl is a selective monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B) inhibitor and has been used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease. However, it is not known whether deprenyl effects are symptomatic or pharmacological. Aging mice were partially lesioned with MPTP. Control and MPTP-treated mice were given deprenyl in drinking water for 14 days. Brain tissue (including the striatum, olfactory tubercle and cerebral cortex) was assayed for MAO-B and neurotransmitter levels. The results show that deprenyl treatment, given alone or after MPTP, reduced MAO-B activity in all the three regions. No change was seen in dopamine (DA), 3,4-dihydroxyphenyl acetic acid (DOPAC), and homovanillic acid (HVA) content in any of the three areas. Cortical norepinephrine (NE) levels were also unaltered. However, striatal serotonin (5-HT) levels were decreased while its metabolite, 5-HIAA levels were significantly increased in the olfactory tubercle in animals receiving deprenyl alone. These data suggest that deprenyl treatment reduces MAO-B activity in regions in addition to the striatum without affecting norepinephrine, dopamine (DA) and its metabolites.
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PMID:Effects of deprenyl on monoamine oxidase and neurotransmitters in the brains of MPTP-treated aging mice. 754 44

Using the ELITE system, a kinematic analysis was performed of the upper limb drinking action of nine Parkinson's disease patients and nine control subjects. The aim was to use a natural task to investigate the reported Parkinson's disease dysfunction in the performance of simultaneous and sequential movements. Subjects were required to reach 28 cm, grasp a half-filled glass and then take a sip of water. Dysfunction for simultaneous movements was supported by the finding that, in both absolute and relative terms, Parkinson's disease subjects often began to open the hand later than control subjects. Dysfunction for sequential movements was supported by the finding that Parkinson's disease subjects often showed a pause between the first ('reach-grasp') and second ('take-to-lips') parts of the drinking action. Despite these delays and pauses, the proportional organization of the action was similar for both groups. This suggested that Parkinson's disease subjects were able to compensate for the problem in activating the different components of the drinking action. The results are discussed in relation to the influence of the abnormal basal ganglia input to cortical motor regions.
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PMID:The drinking action of Parkinson's disease subjects. 765 91

This study examined the effects on Parkinson's disease risk estimates of exposure misclassification in proxy-derived data on agricultural work, pesticide use, rural living, well water drinking, head trauma, smoking, and family history of Parkinson's disease or essential tremor. The data were collected in 1989 as part of a population-based case-control study of Parkinson's disease in Calgary, Canada. Nondemented cases (n = 130) were selected from a case register of Calgary residents with neurologist-confirmed Parkinson's disease. For each case, two matched (sex and age +/- 2.5 years) community controls were selected by random digit dialing. Forty cases and 77 controls were randomly selected as index respondents. The cases, controls, and one proxy respondent (spouse or offspring) for each index respondent were interviewed using a structured questionnaire. The data were analyzed using conditional logistic regression. Incorporation of proxy-derived data for 30% of the cases or controls, or both, resulted in considerable misclassification of exposure for some variables and, in most cases, attenuation of the odds ratio. The results indicate that pooling dichotomously classified data derived in part from self- and proxy respondents may result in biased estimates of Parkinson's disease risk associated with agricultural, family history, and head trauma factors.
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PMID:Effects of agricultural work and other proxy-derived case-control data on Parkinson's disease risk estimates. 770 17


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