Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0233565 (bradykinesia)
2,352 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Biochemical markers for the major neurotransmitter systems were measured in the brains of 5 patients who had died with neuropathologically confirmed progressive supranuclear palsy. A marked nigrostriatal dopamine deficiency, observed in 4 of the 5 patients, was sufficient to explain the parkinsonian features (especially bradykinesia) observed in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy. Dopamine concentrations, however, were normal in the nucleus accumbens, hypothalamus, and temporal cortex. Brain noradrenalin, serotonin, gamma-aminobutyric acid, and aspartic acid levels were generally normal. Normal brain choline acetyltransferase activity (the marker enzyme for cholinergic neurons) in the 2 patients with severe dementia suggests that, at least in some patients, the cognitive impairment in this disorder is likely to be related to noncholinergic neurotransmitter system changes. The glutamic acid concentration was elevated in many brain areas in 3 of the 5 patients studied.
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PMID:Progressive supranuclear palsy: relationship between extrapyramidal disturbances, dementia, and brain neurotransmitter markers. 241 69

We report a family of Japanese origin that has five individuals from two generations affected by an illness characterized by dementia, a stooped posture and an antiflexion gait with an onset in the fourth or fifth decade of life. Two siblings had a clinical phenotype characterized by dementia and Parkinsonism with stooped posture, rigidity and bradykinesia. Neuropathological alterations in both patients included numerous 'cotton wool' plaques (CWPs), senile plaques, severe amyloid angiopathy, neurofibrillary tangles, neuronal rarefaction and gliosis. CWPs were present throughout the cerebral cortex as well as in the caudate nucleus, putamen, claustrum, thalamus, substantia innominata and colliculi. These plaques contained a small quantity of argyrophilic and tau-immunopositive neurites as well as glial fibrillary acidic protein-immunopositive elements. They were mildly fluorescent with thioflavin S and immunopositive using monoclonal antibodies recognizing amyloid beta (A beta) ending at residue 42. The main constituents of CWPs were neuropil elements and extracellular amyloid fibrils. These neuropil elements were small dendrites including spines, axon terminals containing synaptic vesicles and astrocytic processes. Dendrites occasionally contained bundles of paired helical filaments. Dendrites and axons often had an irregular outline and appeared as degenerating osmiophilic processes containing electron-dense mitochondria. Genetic analysis of the proband's affected sibling revealed a novel nucleotide substitution (G to A) in exon 8 of the Presenilin 1 ( PSEN1) gene. This nucleotide change results in a glycine to aspartic acid substitution at residue 217 of the PSEN1 protein. This study provides further evidence of clinical and pathological heterogeneity in dementing illnesses associated with PSEN1 mutations.
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PMID:A novel mutation (G217D) in the Presenilin 1 gene ( PSEN1) in a Japanese family: presenile dementia and parkinsonism are associated with cotton wool plaques in the cortex and striatum. 1211 59