Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085632 (apathy)
4,089 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Parkinson's disease is associated with classical Parkinsonian features that respond to dopaminergic therapy. Neuropsychiatric sequelae include dementia, major depression, dysthymia, anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, and sexual disorders. Panic attacks are particularly common. With treatment, visual hallucinations, paranoid delusions, mania, or delirium may evolve. Psychosis is a key factor in nursing home placement, and depression is the most significant predictor of quality of life. Clozapine may be the safest treatment for psychotic features, but more research is needed to establish the efficacy of antidepressant treatments. Dementia with Lewy bodies, the second most common dementia in the elderly, may present in association with systematized delusions, depression, or RBD. Early evidence suggests the utility of rivastigmine, donepezil, low-dose olanzapine, and quetiapine in treating DLB. Parkinson-plus syndromes generally lack a good response to dopaminergic treatment and evidence additional features, including dysautonomia, cerebellar and pontine features, eye signs, and other movement disorders. MSA is associated with dysautonomia and RBD. SND (MSA-P) is associated with frontal cognitive impairments, but dementia, psychosis, and mood disorders have not been strikingly apparent unless additional pathological findings are present. In SDS (MSA-A), impotence is almost ubiquitous; urinary incontinence is frequent; depression is occasional, and sleep apnea should be treated to avoid sudden death during sleep. OPCA neuropsychiatric correlates await further definition. Progressive supranuclear palsy neuropsychiatric features include apathy, subcortical dementia, pathological emotionality, mild depression and anxiety, and lack of appreciable response to donepezil. CBD usually is recognized by early frontal dementia with ideomotor apraxia, often in the right upper extremity, attended later by poorly responsive unilateral Parkinsonism, with additional signs including cortical reflex myoclonus, limb dystonia, alien limb, oculomotor apraxia when asked to look horizontally, depression, personality changes, and, occasionally, Kluver-Bucy syndrome. The neuropsychiatry of FTDP-17 involves apraxia, executive impairment, personality changes, hyperorality, and occasional psychosis. Future research in these Parkinsonian disorders should target the characterization of neuropsychiatric sequelae and their treatment.
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PMID:The neuropsychiatry of Parkinson's disease and related disorders. 1555 Feb 93

The cortical thickness has gained an extensive attention as a pathological alteration of sporadic Parkinson's disease (sPD), the alteration of pathological cortical thickness may distinctly contribute to the consistent clinical manifestations. Therefore, we investigated the cortical thickness correlates of clinical manifestations in the mid-stage sPD from the Han population of Chinese mainland (HPCM). A sample of 67 mid-stage sPD patients and 35 matched controls from HPCM were performed a corticometry of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and the assessment of clinical manifestations including the demographic and disease-related characteristics, and underwent the final analysis of the cortical thickness correlates with the clinical manifestations. In our result, we demonstrated that no significant differences in the demographic characteristics were found among the two groups. The tests of clinical disease-related characteristics demonstrated that the significant differences in the Hoehn and Yahr scale, the UPDRS Part I-IV, the symptom-dominant side (right/left/double), the tremor subscoree off (e), the tremor subscoref on (f), Webster, MMSE, HDS-R, DF, DB, SVFT, SDS, HAMD17, HAMD 24, CDT, CDR, LEDD and PDSI were observed between the mid-stage sPD patients and the controls. The analysis about the cortical thickness correlates with the clinical manifestations revealed that a significant correlation between UPDRS-I and Frontal-Sup-Orb-R and Rectus-R; DB and Frontal-Sup-Orb-R and Frontal-Inf-Orb-R; SDS and Frontal-Sup-Orb-R, Frontal-Mid-Orb-R, Rectus-R and Cingulum-Ant-R respectively in the mid-stage sPD patients from HPCM. Our data showed that the cortical thinning in the right frontal Orb, rectus and cingulum were the pathological base of some clinical manifestations including the cognitive impairment, hallucinations, psychosis, the depressed mood, the anxious mood, apathy, the sleep problems, the nighttime or/and daytime sleepiness, the short term memory stores and the central execution, as well as the sexual desire disorder in the mid-stage sPD patients, suggesting that the dysfunctions of brain regions of some cortical thinning are closely correlated with some clinical manifestations of the mid-stage sPD.
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PMID:The cortical thickness correlates of clinical manifestations in the mid-stage sporadic Parkinson's disease. 2772 Dec 6