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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We examined seven right-handed,
asymmetrical
(right side affected)
Parkinson's disease
patients and seven age-matched controls in a manual finger sequencing test using left and right hands in vision, no vision, and motor imagery conditions. All patients displayed motor asymmetry, favoring the left hand. They also displayed motor imagery asymmetry, mentally simulating movement more slowly with their right affected hand than with their left hand. Additionally, impairment in mental hand rotation correlated significantly with the imagery asymmetry. These data support two related hypotheses: (a) Motor sequence imagery and execution share common neural structures. (b) The frontostriatal system is among these shared structures.
...
PMID:Motor imagery of a lateralized sequential task is asymmetrically slowed in hemi-Parkinson's patients. 767 64
Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) is a rare syndrome characterised by an
asymmetrical
rigidity with localised cortical signs, particularly apraxia. Using positron emission tomography, abnormal patterns of cortical metabolism have recently been shown. We have studied patterns of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) using single photon emission tomography, with the tracer 99Technetium hexamethylpropylenamine (HMPAO), in subjects with CBD. In subjects with CBD, compared with 12 age-matched normal controls, in the clinically more affected hemisphere a characteristic pattern was found with significant reductions in HMPAO uptake in the posterior frontal cortex (by 11.5%), and in the superior, inferior, anterior, and posterior parietal cortex (by 12.2, 12.9, 12.9, and 9.7, respectively). Reduced uptake was also found in the caudate (9.3%), putamen (9.7%), and thalamus (8.6%). In contrast, HMPAO uptake in the temporal and occipital cortex was normal. In comparison with 12
Parkinson's disease
(PD) controls, significant reduced uptake was seen in the thalamus (9.0%), posterior frontal (8.9%), and inferior (9.9%), and anterior parietal (9.5%) cortex. A similar pattern of impaired uptake was seen in the clinically less/unaffected cerebral hemisphere in patients with CBD compared with normal controls, with a significant reduction in HMPAO uptake in the thalamus (6.8%), superior parietal (9.6%) and anterior parietal (7.6%), and posterior parietal (7.3%) cortex. This implies that the disease process is bilateral even in those cases with clinically unilateral disease. This widely available technique may be useful in the early diagnosis of CBD and in differentiation from other extrapyramidal disorders.
...
PMID:Patterns of regional cerebral blood flow in corticobasal degeneration studied using HMPAO SPECT; comparison with Parkinson's disease and normal controls. 875 6
Reaction time (RT) and movement time (MT) are reported to be delayed in
Parkinson's disease
(PD), but their clinical utility and relationship with clinical findings is still uncertain. We investigated RT and MT in 22 PD patients at baseline conditions and following acute oral trials of levodopa and biperiden, an anticholinergic drug. At baseline conditions, RT and MT of PD patients were abnormally delayed compared with those of 16 normal control subjects. Both RT and MT were longer in more severely affected patients compared with the mild PD patients; in the mild PD patients with
asymmetrical
signs both responses were longer on the more affected side. Bradykinesia was the clinical symptom that best correlated with the objective measurements, with a stronger correlation for MT than for RT. The oral administration of levodopa significantly improved both the responses, whereas biperiden was ineffective. The magnitude of RT and MT improvement after levodopa differed; MT improvement was related to PD severity, whereas RT improvement was not. These results suggest that MT, rather than RT, is an objective, simple, and reliable tool to evaluate bradykinesia and its levodopa-induced modifications in PD.
...
PMID:Usefulness of movement time in the assessment of Parkinson's disease. 779 3
'Arteriosclerotic' parkinsonism is still a subject of debate. The aim of this study was to investigate whether parkinsonism associated with basal ganglia lacunes possesses peculiar clinical features and a clinical course which enables its distinction from idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
(IPD). 106 consecutive ambulatory patients with the clinical diagnosis of parkinsonism were referred for CT examination. Patients in whom isolated basal ganglia lacunes were found were interviewed and examined, and their clinical characteristics were compared to those of patients suffering from IPD without lacunes (controls). In 20 patients, isolated basal ganglia lacunes were detected; all had risk factors for stroke (significantly more than controls) and 7 of them had had clinically diagnosed strokes. The extrapyramidal disability evolved slowly in all. The clinical picture was indistinguishable from IPD in individual patients. However, tremor was significantly less frequent in this group. Lower body parkinsonism was not observed. Extra-pyramidal signs were frequently
asymmetrical
(55%), with no consistent relationship to the side of the lacune. Asymmetrical pyramidal signs were present in 30% of those with unilateral lacunes, always on the appropriate side. Only 1 patient was an L-dopa nonresponder. Patients with parkinsonism associated with basal ganglia lacunes showed tremor less frequently than other IPD patients; otherwise, clinical features and course of the disease were indistinguishable from IPD. In these cases, parkinsonism and basal ganglia lacunes might have occurred independently of each other and tremor might have been prevented by ischemic events.
...
PMID:Basal ganglia lacunes and parkinsonism. 801 63
The objective of this paper is to evaluate the accuracy of conventional diagnostic criteria for
Parkinson's disease
and give an overview of alternative causes to parkinsonian syndromes. We also propose a new approach to the clinical diagnosis of
Parkinson's disease
, which may improve the diagnostic accuracy. The available information on autopsy findings in patients clinically diagnosed as
Parkinson's disease
shows that 20 to 30% of these patients do not have the typical neuropathological features with Lewy bodies and cell loss in the substantia nigra. The use of selected additional clinical criteria improves the diagnostic accuracy, however, at the cost of rejecting a rather large group of patients with idiopathic disease verified by autopsy. Based on this fact and a review of the literature on parkinsonian syndromes that may be confused with idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
, we propose criteria for diagnostic subgroups of the disease classified at different levels of confidence. The suggested diagnostic subgroups are clinical definite, probable and possible
Parkinson's disease
with a decreasing level of specificity and an increasing level of sensitivity in the different patient categories. The clinical features given special importance in this classification includes presence of resting tremor,
asymmetrical
disease, response to dopamine agonism and presence of atypical clinical features like dementia and clinical autonomic failure at onset and pyramidal or cerebellar signs at examination. In addition, a history indicating possible etiology for another parkinsonian syndrome will exclude the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Clinical diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. Proposal of diagnostic subgroups classified at different levels of confidence. 804 40
Regional cerebral blood flow was assessed in 19 patients with early idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
(PD) and 12 control subjects of similar age by single-photon emission tomography using technetium-99m hexamethylpropylene amine oxime (HMPAO). Of the patients with PD, seven were mildly demented and 15 presented with hemiparkinsonism. Mean HMPAO cortical or basal ganglia/cerebellum activity ratios were calculated. Mean cortical and regional uptake ratios in non-demented PD patients were not significantly different from values in the controls. In contrast, besides generalized cortical hypoperfusion, demented PD patients had significantly lower HMPAO uptake in the frontal and basal ganglia regions than non-demented patients. These observations support the hypothesis of impaired neuronal activity in both cortical and subcortical regions of the brain in demented PD patients. In hemiparkinsonian patients, the only
asymmetrical
finding was a relative hypoperfusion in the contralateral parietal region. This may be due to deafferentation of the thalamoparietal pathways. The lack of
asymmetrical
uptake in basal ganglia in our PD patients may be explained by their staging at the time of the investigation (stage I and II, Hoehn and Yahr scale).
...
PMID:Technetium-99m hexamethylpropylene amine oxime single photon emission tomography of the brain in early Parkinson's disease: correlation with dementia and lateralization. 849 Dec 27
Five patients with
Parkinson's disease
, unilaterally transplanted with foetal mesencephalic cells into putamen (n=1) or putamen and caudate (n=4), were followed throughout a period of 15-36 months after surgery, according to the recommendations of the core assessment programme for intracerebral transplantations (CAPIT). All these patients exhibited an increase in the fluorodopa uptake in the grafted putamen, which was most significant in the first and last patient of the series. Long-term bilateral improvement of skilled hand movements was observed, starting between the third and sixth month after grafting, and confirmed by the statistical analysis of CAPIT timed tests. A mild to moderate effect on the amount of 'off' time and 'on-off' fluctuations was observed, whereas, apart from one case, no other clear effect on gait, walking and speech was found. One patient included in the study, already suffering slight cognitive impairment, clearly exhibited progression of a dementia process after surgery. Daily living activities were clearly improved in only one of the other four patients. At the end of the study period, all patients needed L-dopa therapy at a similar or higher dose than before grafting, but, in most of them, other dopaminergic drugs were reduced or stopped. All patients exhibited bilateral dyskinesias before grafting that were greatly decreased in intensity a few months after surgery. Delayed
asymmetrical
dyskinesias, occurring on the side displaying the better motor improvement, i.e. contralateral to the graft, were observed in three patients. These results suggest that neural transplants may influence two central mechanisms involved in motor function and the onset of dyskinesias. These effects are likely to occur through complex interactions with the post-synaptic dopaminergic receptors. The occurrence of dyskinesias might simply reflect increased presynaptic storage and release of dopamine. Alternatively, it might, in part, represent some other long-term deleterious effect of the graft. Since PET-scan data indicate that the reinnervation obtained is sub-optimal, it will be of interest to obtain a larger and denser reinnervation of the host striatum and to try, thereafter, to reduce the dose of L-dopa.
...
PMID:Long-term outcome of unilaterally transplanted parkinsonian patients. I. Clinical approach. 862 93
In separate experiments, we studied the temporal accuracy and precision of self-paced, repetitive finger-tapping in two groups of 12 patients with
Parkinson's disease
and a group of 12 controls matched to the patients with respect to age and general cognitive state. One group (I) of patients was studied initially following 12-15 h abstinence from normal levodopa medication ('off') and again, subsequently, approximately 1 h after ingestion of a single normal dose ('on'). A second group (II) of patients, each of whom had bilaterally
asymmetrical
neurological signs, was tested using 'worse' and 'better' hands separately. Within each session, subjects were tested repeatedly on a tapping task during which they were required to produce a regular series of self-timed inter-tap intervals, the target duration (550 ms) of which had been established previously during an initial period of tapping in synchrony with the beats of a regular metronome. We employed Wing and Kristofferson's (1973) model of control of motor timing to partition the total variance (TV) about the mean inter-response interval (IRI) produced during the self-paced phase of each run into separate components ['clock' variance (CV) and 'motor-delay' variance (MDV)] attributable to hypothetical 'clock' and 'motor-implementation' processes. Although the mean self-paced IRI of parkinsonian patients was generally shorter than that of controls, only during the 'on' medication condition (Group I) was it significantly so. By comparison with control values, and those observed during the 'on' medication condition, values of TV, CV and MDV in Group I were all significantly higher when subjects were 'off' medication. During the 'on' medication condition, only CV was significantly higher than the control value. In Group II, values of TV, CV and MDV associated with use of the 'worse' hand were all significantly higher than both control values and those associated with use of the 'better' hand. Values of these variables when subjects used the 'better' hand did not, however, differ significantly from control values. The theoretical import of these results is discussed in the light of several important procedural, statistical and computational issues and we conclude that TV, CV, and MDV may all vary significantly as a function of the efficacy of dopaminergic transmission in the basal ganglia.
...
PMID:The accuracy and precision of timing of self-paced, repetitive movements in subjects with Parkinson's disease. 862 94
Humans with
Parkinson's disease
(PD) often have problems in righting themselves, in that they have difficulty in recruiting their axial musculature to rotate the body to prone. Since this "axial apraxia' is not ameliorated by L-DOPA therapy, it has been concluded that dopamine (DA) does not play a role in recruiting axial rotation of the body [14]. This hypothesis was tested by comparing the righting of rats with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesions of the substantia nigra (SN) with that of intact rats. Body-on-body righting, where
asymmetrical
tactile stimulation of the body initiates hindquarter righting, was used to specifically test tactile righting independently of righting triggered or influenced by other sensory systems. In this behavioral test, rats are placed on their sides, their forequarters are held down and their hindquarters released. The DA-depleted rats took longer to begin righting, to complete righting, and used more limb action to right themselves than did control rats. These findings suggest that for this tactile based form of righting, DA-depletion produces axial apraxia. However, frame-by-frame analysis of righting sequences of DA-depleted rats showed that pelvis-led axial rotation could occur, but the spatio-temporal relationship between body and limb movements was disorganized. Therefore, following DA-depletion axial apraxia-like deficits appear to arise from sensorimotor disruption. This raises the issue of whether the axial apraxia in PD patients arises from damage to systems beyond the nigrostriatal DA system, or from interference with sensorimotor integration that is not ameliorated by replacement therapy.
...
PMID:Spatio-temporal impairments in limb and body movements during righting in an hemiparkinsonian rat analogue: relevance to axial apraxia in humans. 889 8
Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) is an adult-onset, progressive parkinsonian syndrome with strikingly
asymmetrical
features, and signs and symptoms referable to both cerebral cortex and basal ganglia. Although once considered rare, it is now recognized with increasing frequency during life. Eight patients with clinically diagnosed CBD and 8 age- and sex-matched patients with
Parkinson's disease
underwent high-field-strength magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain. MRIs were graded by a blinded neuroradiologist using a semiquantitative (0-3) scale. MRI of patients with CBD revealed significantly greater T2-weighted signal hypointensity in the putamena and globi pallidi, and ventricular enlargement. When specifically sought,
asymmetrical
cortical atrophy was identified in 5 of 8 CBD patients. Increased T2-weighted lenticular signal hypointensity, ventricular enlargement, and
asymmetrical
cortical atrophy are supportive MRI findings of CBD.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of corticobasal degeneration. 890 73
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