Advanced search×

When does Parkinson disease start?

Audio, Transactions of the IRE Professio... 67(7):798-801 (2010) PMID 20625084

There is convincing evidence that the Parkinson disease neurodegenerative process begins many years before the onset of motor manifestations. Initial estimates based on nigral neuropathological findings or striatal dopamine imaging suggested a 5- to 6-year preclinical period. However, more recent evidence of Lewy body pathology in other neuronal populations preceding nigral involvement suggests that the preclinical phase may be much longer. Epidemiologic studies of nonmotor manifestations, such as constipation, anxiety disorders, rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD), and anemia, suggest that the preclinical period extends at least 20 years before the motor manifestations. Olfactory impairment and depression may also precede the onset of motor manifestations; however, the lag time may be shorter. Recognition of a nonmotor preclinical phase spanning 20 or more years should guide the search for predictive biomarkers and the identification of risk or protective factors for Parkinson disease.

DOI: 10.1001/archneurol.2010.135
Version: za2963e q8za6 q8zb2 q8zcf q8zde q8zed q8zf8 q8zg9

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Relationship between sensorimotor gating deficits and dopaminergic neuroanatomy in Nurr1-deficient mice.

    Exp Neurol 232(1):22-32 (2011) PMID 21820432

    We hypothesized that the emergence of prepulse inhibition deficits in adult Nurr1-deficient mice may be linked to dopaminergic neuroanatomical changes. To test this hypothesis, we followed a within-subject approach in which sensorimotor gating performance was correlated with post-mortem expression o...
  2. Habituation and prepulse inhibition of acoustic startle in rodents.

    J Vis Exp (2011) PMID 21912367

    We here describe a method for assessing short-term habituation, long-term habituation and prepulse inhibition of acoustic startle responses in rodents. Habituation describes the decrease of the startle response magnitude upon repeated presentation of the same stimulus. Habituation within a testing s...
  3. Sept4, a Component of Presynaptic Scaffold and Lewy Bodies, Is Required for the Suppression of @a-Synuclein Neurotoxicity

    Neuron 53(4):15 (2007) PMID 17296554

    We show the physiological association of Sept4 with alpha-synuclein, the dopamine transporter, and other presynaptic proteins in dopaminergic neurons; mice lacking Sept4 exhibit diminished dopaminergic neurotransmission due to scarcity of these presynaptic proteins. These data demonstrate an importa...