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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have studied dopamine D2 receptor binding by [11C]raclopride positron emission tomography in 14 patients with
dopa-responsive dystonia
(
DRD
). Data were compared with 16 levodopa-treated patients with
Parkinson's disease
(PD) and 26 healthy controls. The results revealed an elevated [11C]raclopride binding index in the putamen and caudate nucleus of
DRD
patients compared with controls as well as a significant elevation in the caudate nucleus compared with PD patients. The increase of [11C]raclopride binding may be interpreted either as reduced tracer displacement by endogenous dopamine, or as an alteration of the receptor features due to chronic dopamine deficiency. The difference in [11C]raclopride binding in
DRD
and PD patients in the caudate nucleus suggests that this structure may be of pathophysiological relevance in the presentation of the clinical features of both diseases.
...
PMID:D2 receptor binding in dopa-responsive dystonia. 981 31
1. Catecholamine (dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine) biosynthesis is regulated by tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). TH activity is regulated by the concentration of the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), whose level is regulated by GTP cyclohydrolase I (GCH) activity. Thus, GCH activity indirectly regulates TH activity and catecholamine levels. 2. TH activity in the nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons is most sensitive to the decrease in BH4. 3. Mutations of GCH result in reductions in GCH activity, BH4, TH activity, and dopamine, causing either recessively inherited GCH deficiency or dominantly inherited hereditary progressive dystonia [HPD; Segawa's disease; also called
dopa-responsive dystonia
(
DRD
)]. 4. In juvenile parkinsonism and
Parkinson's disease
, which have dopamine deficiency in the basal ganglia as HPD/
DRD
, the GCH gene may be normal, and the molecular mechanism of the dopamine deficiency in the basal ganglia is different from that in HPD/
DRD
.
...
PMID:Molecular biology of catecholamine-related enzymes in relation to Parkinson's disease. 1007 65
The causative genes of two types of hereditary
dopa-responsive dystonia
(
DRD
) due to dopamine (DA) deficiency in the nigrostriatum DA neurons have been elucidated. Autosomal dominant
DRD
(AD-DRD) was originally described by Segawa as hereditary progressive dystonia with marked diurnal fluctuation (HPD). We cloned the human GTP cyclohydrolase I (GCH1) gene, and mapped the gene to chromosome 14q22.1-q22.2 within the HPD/
DRD
locus, which had been identified by linkage analysis. GCH1 isthe rate-limiting enzyme for the biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), the cofactor for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), which is the first and rate-limiting enzyme of DA synthesis. We proved that the GCH1 gene is the causative gene for HPD/
DRD
based on the identification of mutations of the gene in the patients and decreases in the enzyme activity expressed in mononuclear blood cells to 2-20% of the normal value. About 60 different mutations (missense, nonsense, and frameshift mutations) in the coding region or in the exon-intron junctions of the GCH1 gene have been reported in patients with AD-
DRD
all over the world. Recent findings indicate that the decreased GCH1 activity in AD-
DRD
may be caused by the negative interaction of the mutated subunit with the wild-type one, i.e., a dominant negative effect, and/or by decreases in the levels of GCH1 mRNA and protein caused by inactivation of one allele of the GCH1 gene. Autosomal recessive
DRD
(AR-DRD) with Segawa's syndrome was discovered in Germany. The AR-
DRD
locus was mapped to chromosome 11p15.5 in the chromosomal site of the TH gene. In the AR-
DRD
with Segawa's syndrome, a point mutation in TH (Gln381Lys) resulted in a pronounced decrease in TH activity to about 15% of that of the wild type. Several missense mutations in the TH gene have been found in AR-
DRD
in Europe. The phenotype of AR-
DRD
with the Leu205Pro mutation in the TH gene, which produces a severe decrease in TH activity to 1.5% of that of the wild type, was severe, not dystonia/Segawa's syndrome, but early-onset parkinsonism. However, a marked improvement of all clinical symptoms with a low dose of L-dopa was reported in AR-
DRD
/parkinsonism patients. These findings on
DRD
indicate that the nigrostriatal DA neurons may be most susceptible to the decreases in GCH1 activity, BH4 level, TH activity, and DA level, and that
DRD
is the DA deficiency without neuronal death in contrast to juvenile parkinsonism or
Parkinson's disease
with DA cell death.
...
PMID:Molecular genetics of dopa-responsive dystonia. 1066 62
Mutations of the parkin gene on chromosome 6 cause autosomal recessive, early onset parkinsonism. This is the most frequent form of monogenic parkinsonism so far identified. The associated phenotypical spectrum encompasses early onset, levodopa-responsive parkinsonism (average onset in the early 30s in Europe), and it overlaps with
dopa-responsive dystonia
in cases with the earliest onset, and with clinically typical
Parkinson's disease
in cases with later onset. Despite clinical features, Lewy bodies are not found at autopsy in brains of patients with parkin mutations. The parkin protein possesses ubiquitin ligase activity, which is abolished by the pathogenic mutations.
...
PMID:The parkin gene and its phenotype. Italian PD Genetics Study Group, French PD Genetics Study Group and the European Consortium on Genetic Susceptibility in Parkinson's Disease. 1148 97
The primary objective of the study was to determine the effect of levodopa (LD) on human substantia nigra. The study included patients seen at the Movement Disorder Clinic, Saskatoon over a 32 year period. The evidence provided is based on epidemiological observations of 934 consecutive Parkinson syndrome (PS) patients assessed during 22 years and detailed studies of six patients including two autopsies. Life expectancy increased significantly with LD therapy. The prolonged survival was evident when the patients were treated during early stage of the illness. One parkinsonian patient with substantia nigra (SN) pathology who was extensively studied for 30 years, revealed significant slowing of the disease progression while on LD. Three essential tremor patients who received 24 kg (26 years), 22 kg (21.5 years), and 8.5 kg (12.5 years) LD respectively, had no evidence of PS and one autopsy revealed normal SN. Two
dopa-responsive dystonia
patients who received LD 3 kg (11 years) and 17 kg (29 years) each had no evidence of PS and one autopsy revealed normal number of SN neurons. These observations indicate that LD is not toxic to human SN and are consistent with salutary effect of the drug on the SN in
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:Levodopa prolongs life expectancy and is non-toxic to substantia nigra. 1148 74
Mutations in the parkin gene, PARK2, are a common cause of parkinsonism in familial as well as isolated cases with an age of onset <40 years and should be considered in the diagnostic work up of young-onset parkinsonism. We report a detailed clinical evaluation of a personal series of 24 patients with mutations in the parkin gene. The clinical presentation of most cases was broadly comparable to that of previous descriptions of autosomal recessive early-onset or juvenile parkinsonism and young-onset
Parkinson's disease
and also had similarities with phenotypes of
dopa-responsive dystonia
. However, our only case with consanguineous parents had an age of onset of 54 years. We report three new phenotypes at presentation: cervical dystonia; autonomic dysfunction and peripheral neuropathy; and pure exercise-induced dystonia. We emphasize a number of clinical features that can be seen in parkin disease: focal dystonia; early instability; freezing; festination or retropulsion; concurrent autonomic failure; dramatic response to anticholinergics; early or atypical L-dopa-induced dyskinesias; exquisite sensitivity to small doses of L-dopa; and recurrent psychosis, even taking L-dopa alone. We also report behavioural disorder prior to the onset of parkinsonism. Some relatives carrying a single parkin mutation without extrapyramidal symptoms or signs also had psychiatric symptoms that might be related to their carrier status.
...
PMID:Parkin disease: a phenotypic study of a large case series. 1276 48
Functional imaging of the dopamine transporter (DAT) defines integrity of the dopaminergic system and has its main clinical application in patients with mild, incomplete, or uncertain parkinsonism. Imaging with specific single positron emission computerised tomography ligands for DAT (FP-CIT, beta-CIT, IPT, TRODAT) provides a marker for presynaptic neuronal degeneration. Striatal uptake correlates with disease severity, in particular bradykinesia and rigidity, and monitoring of progression assists in clinical trials of potential neuroprotective drugs. DAT imaging is abnormal in idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
, multiple system atrophy and progressive supranuclear palsy and does not distinguish between these disorders. Dopamine loss is seen even in the earliest clinical presentations of true parkinsonism; a normal scan suggests an alternative diagnosis such as essential tremor, vascular parkinsonism (unless there is focal basal ganglia infarction), drug-induced parkinsonism, or psychogenic parkinsonism. Congruence between working clinical diagnosis and DAT imaging increases over time in favour of baseline DAT imaging results. Additional applications are characterising dementia with parkinsonian features (abnormal results in dementia with Lewy bodies, normal in Alzheimer's disease); and differentiating juvenile-onset
Parkinson's disease
(abnormal DAT) from
dopa-responsive dystonia
(normal DAT).
...
PMID:Role of dopamine transporter imaging in routine clinical practice. 1546
We investigated the integrity of striatal dopaminergic system in seven patients with
dopa-responsive dystonia
(
DRD
). Dopamine transporter function ([(11)C]CFT) and D1 ([(11)C]NNC 756) and D2 receptors ([(11)C]raclopride) were studied in same patients using positron emission tomography. Compared to age-adjusted control values the dopamine D2 receptor availability was increased in
DRD
. The mean age-adjusted [(11)C]raclopride uptake was 116% of the control mean in the putamen (p = 0.004) and 114% in the caudate nucleus (p = 0.007). The mean [(11)C]NNC 756 uptake was not different between
DRD
patients and controls, the age-adjusted uptake in
DRD
being 93% of mean control value in the putamen (p = 0.20) and 95% in the caudate nucleus (p = 0.40). The dopamine transporter binding was not altered. The [(11)C]CFT uptake in
DRD
was 96% of the control value in the putamen (p = 0.64), and 95% in the caudate nucleus (p = 0.44). In conclusion, striatal dopamine D2 receptors availability is increased in
DRD
whereas dopamine D1 receptors and dopamine transporter ligand binding is unchanged. The pattern of changes in striatal dopaminergic system in
DRD
is different from that reported in juvenile
Parkinson's disease
. The increased D2 receptor availability may be due to reduced competition by endogenous dopamine or a compensatory response to dopamine deficiency, or both.
...
PMID:Striatal dopaminergic system in dopa-responsive dystonia: a multi-tracer PET study shows increased D2 receptors. 1471 16
Levodopa-treated
Parkinson's disease
is often complicated by the occurrence of motor fluctuations, which can be predictable ('wearing-off') or unpredictable ('on-off'). In contrast, untreated
dopa-responsive dystonia
(
DRD
) is usually characterized by predictable diurnal fluctuation. The pathogenesis of motor fluctuations in treated
Parkinson's disease
and diurnal fluctuation in untreated
DRD
is poorly understood. We have developed a mathematical model indicating that all these fluctuations in motor function can be explained by presynaptic mechanisms. The model is predicated upon the release of dopamine being subject to probabilistic variations in the quantity of dopamine released by exocytosis of vesicles. Specifically, we propose that the concentration of intravesicular dopamine undergoes dynamic changes according to a log-normal distribution that is associated with different probabilities of release failure. Changes in two parameters, (i) the proportion of vesicles that undergo exocytosis per unit of time and (ii) the proportion of dopamine subject to re-uptake from the synapse, allowed us to model different curves of levodopa response, for the same degree of nigrostriatal damage in
Parkinson's disease
. The model predicts the following periods of levodopa clinical benefit: 4 h for stable responders, 3 h for wearing-off fluctuators, and 1.5 h for on-off fluctuators. The model also predicts that diurnal fluctuation in untreated
DRD
should occur some 8 h after getting up in the morning. All these results fit well with clinical observations. Additionally, we calculated the probability of obtaining a second ON period after a single dose of levodopa in
Parkinson's disease
(the 'yo-yoing' phenomenon). The model shows that the yo-yoing phenomenon depends on how fast the curve crosses the threshold that separates ON and OFF states, which explains why this phenomenon is virtually exclusive to patients with on-off fluctuations. The model supports the idea that presynaptic mechanisms play a key role in both short-duration and long-duration responses encountered in
Parkinson's disease
. Dyskinesias may also be explained by the same mechanisms.
...
PMID:Presynaptic mechanisms of motor fluctuations in Parkinson's disease: a probabilistic model. 1496 May
Juvenile parkinsonism (JP) describes patients in whom the clinical features of parkinsonism manifest before 21 years of age. Many reported cases that had a good response to levodopa have proved to have autosomal recessive juvenile parkinsonism (AR-JP) due to mutations in the parkin gene. With the exception of parkin mutations and
dopa-responsive dystonia
, most causes are associated with the presence of additional neurological signs, resulting from additional lesions outside of the basal ganglia. Lewy body pathology has only been reported in one case, suggesting that a juvenile form of idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
may be extremely rare.
...
PMID:Diagnostic considerations in juvenile parkinsonism. 1497 67
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