Summary: Two studies from the University at Buffalo shed new light on the very dearly development of Parkinson's disease. Using advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technologies, the researchers could identify regions linked to Parkinson's disease (PD) based on images showing the status of both white and gray matter.
Summary: Researchers at Rush University Medical Center reported that neurons grafted into the brain of a patient with Parkinson’s disease fourteen years ago have developed Lewy body pathology, a condition that precedes Parkinson's disease. The finding suggest that Parkinson’s disease is an ongoing process that can affect cells grafted into the brain in the same way the disease affects host dopamine neurons in the brain.
Summary: Researchers have identified a gene that, when switched off, causes folded proteins to accumulate within brain cells. Such accumulations, or "protein misfolding," is linked to age-related neurological conditions such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.
Summary: Data from a pioneering genome-wide association study (GWAS), which focused on Parkinson's disease, is now available to researchers through the the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Funded in part by The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research, the data was generated by the first genome-wide association study applied to Parkinson's disease and was previously available only to a few researchers.
Summary: Scientists have pinpointed the location in brain cells that determine whether a person develops Parkinson's disease. The defect in questions is a single missing phosphate in a protein called alpha-synuclein found in brain cells. Using gene therapy, scientists have been able to simulate and replace the missing phosphate in the brain cells of rats, successfully blocking Parkinson-like pathology.
Summary: Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania have developed a smell test involving 40 common odors. People with Parkinson's disease can typically identify 20 or fewer of the smells.
Summary: A new study found that trichloroethylene (TCE) is a risk factor for Parkinsonism, a group of nervous disorders with symptoms similar to Parkinson's disease. TCE is an industrial chemical that leaches into drinking water, surface water, and soil.
Summary: A new website, Riskometer.org, from the American Council on Science and Health ranks the leading risk factors for death in the United States.
Summary: Natural genetic differences might help predict the most effective antipsychotic drug for a particular patient with Parkinson's disease.
Summary: Immediate blood relatives of people who have Parkinson's disease have an increased risk for developing depression and anxiety disorders, and not just because of the emotional toll of support a family member with a chronic disease.