To search for targets of therapy that changes the course of Parkinson’s disease
Theoretical substantiation of electrophysiological phenomena underlying Parkinson's disease. Investigation of patients with rapidly and slowly progressive disease. Identification of provoking factors and critical criteria for the effectiveness of therapy.
Рубрика | Медицина |
Вид | статья |
Язык | английский |
Дата добавления | 17.03.2022 |
Размер файла | 23,4 K |
Отправить свою хорошую работу в базу знаний просто. Используйте форму, расположенную ниже
Студенты, аспиранты, молодые ученые, использующие базу знаний в своей учебе и работе, будут вам очень благодарны.
Размещено на http://allbest.ru
Belarusian Medical Academy of Postgraduate Education
To search for targets of therapy that changes the course of Parkinson's disease
V.V. Ponomarev, A.V. Boika, M.M. Sialitski, V.A. Bahamaz
Minsk, Belarus
Abstract
Background. Parkinson's disease (PD) is a multisystem disease that requires a more comprehensive approach to its study and treatment.
The purpose was to give clinical and laboratory characteristics of PD patients, in whom the onset of motor symptoms of the disease is associated with the action of precipitating factors and provide a theoretical justification for the underlying and/or associated electrophysiological phenomena.
Materials and methods. Two hundred and seven patients with PD were examined. Questionnaire analysis and laboratory research were performed.
Results. Among patients with a rapidly progressive type of PD, pain during the survey was registered in 49 (42.2 %) cases, and stress in 73 (62.3 %). In cases of a slowly progressive course, 14 (15.4 %) individuals experienced pain syndromes, and 53 (58.2 %) patients -- stress. Statistically significant differences between patients with rapidly and slowly progressive PD courses were noted in the number of cases of herpetic diseases, inflammatory diseases of the oral cavity.
The results of laboratory tests also showed statistically significant differences between these groups in the blood serum level ofIL1f and cortisol, the level of IL1f in the cerebrospinalfluid, and the albumin coefficient. The patients with a rapidly progressive type of disease presented with a greater number of ^'precipitating factorsfor PD development.
In patients with rapidly progressive PD, the number of precipitating factors and the serum level of antibodies to a -synuclein (r = --0.18), IL10 (r = 0.31), and cortisol (r = 0.18) correlated. Some objective characteristics of non-motor PD symptoms statistically significantly correlated with a level of laboratory biomarkers in blood serum (Montreal Cognitive Assessment value with cortisol level (r = --0.4); Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index value with antibodies to a-synuclein (r = 0.31); Epworth Sleepiness Scale value with IL10 level (r = --0.21)).
Significant acute psychological stresses and pain syndromes may change the pattern of propagation of depolarization waves in the nervous system with the formation of “autowave penumbra”. Possible clinical criteria for the effectiveness of therapy that change the course of PD are presented.
Conclusions. Pain syndromes and acute significant psychological stresses not only contribute to the onset of motor symptoms of PD but also lead to the rapid progression of the disease. The effect of precipitating factors may manifest itself not only in clinical, morphological, and laboratory changes but also in changes in the excitability of nerve cells. The electrophysiological penumbra (“autowave penumbra”) can be considered a possible targetfor the action of a therapy method that modifies the course of PD.
Keywords: Parkinson's disease; precipitating factors; stress; pain syndrome; autowave penumbra; depolarization wave; therapy criteria
Introduction
Several authors suggest Parkinson's disease (PD) as a multi-system disease, the description of which should be approached more comprehensively than the currently accepted classical neurodegenerative approach, focused on symptomatic, replacement therapy of neurotransmitter deficiency [1]. It is believed that the aggregation of a-synuclein has a central role in the occurrence and progression of PD, but other processes are also involved: abnormal protein clearance, mitochondrial dysfunction and neuro in flammation. However, the relationship between these factors remains unclear [2]. At the same time, patients with newly developed PD wonder if it is possible to slow down or even stop the progression of the disease [3]. It is considered dubious that all patients with PD will benefit from the same treatment that changes the course of the disease [3].
Studies have shown that the classic motor symptoms of PD in patients begin to manifest after the 50% loss of all dopaminergic neurons and 75--80% of striatum dopamine [4, 5]. Therefore, the study of non-neurodegenerative mechanisms of PD development (including factors leading to accelerated excessive degeneration of neurons in the substantia nigra) is an important task for the development of approaches to therapy that changes its course. Our studies have shown that the impact of significant psychological stress, pain syndromes contributes to the manifestation of motor symptoms of PD [6], which is probably due to the last straw effect: an increase in previously asymptomatic dopamine deficiency in the striatonigral system, followed by a violation of the synaptic transmission of a nerve impulse (action potential).
Experimental studies show that exposure to acute and chronic stress modulates the threshold for the occurrence of cortical spreading depression in mice [7]. At the same time, the pathophysiology underlying the symptoms of pain has not yet been clearly defined, but it is already well known that chronic pain conditions are associated with a decrease in the internal supraspinal function of pain modulation, which often manifest itself in a decrease in motor excitability of the cortex [8--10]. Also, in addition to the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the compact part of the substantia nigra [11] and the loss of neurons in the ventral tegmental area [12], PD is associated with increased excitability of the cerebral cortex, mainly arising from a decrease in inhibition, which can be partially reduced by dopaminergic therapy [13, 14]. It is known that an imbalance of excitation/inhibition can lead to pathological changes in the excitability of the cerebral cortex and the development of neurological diseases [15, 16].
The purpose was to give clinical and laboratory characteristics of PD patients, in whom the onset of motor symptoms of the disease is associated with the action of precipitating factors (acute psychological stress, pain syndromes) and provide a theoretical justification for the underlying and/or associated electrophysiological phenomena.
Materials and methods
The study was approved by the independent ethics committees of the State Educational Institution “Belorussian Medical Academy of Postgraduate Education” and healthcare institution “5th City Clinical Hospital”. The basic group (BG) included 207 patients with PD (men and women ratio was 1 : 1.13; mean age 65 [58, 70] years). In BG, 116 (56 %) patients had a rapidly progressive course of the disease with a change in PD stages up to 5 years after the onset of PD motor symptoms. In 91 (44 %) patients, a slow rate was noted with a change in the stages of the disease after 5 or more years. The anamnestic data on the precipitating factors for the development of motor symptoms of PD were collected using an independently developed questionnaire [6]. The control group (CG) consisted of 34 patients (men and women ratio was 1 : 1.3; mean age 62 [57, 66] years). The differences in age and sex between BG and CG were not statistically significant (p > 0.05), which indicates the clinical homogeneity of the formed groups by the age-sex principle.
Physical and neurological examination of patients of BG and CG was supplemented by obtaining objective information using the following scales: Montreal Cognitive
Assessment (MOCA), Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, Non-Motor Symptoms Questionnaire, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), and Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS). The levels of cytokines (IL10 and IL1p), antibodies to a-synuclein, and cortisol were determined in blood serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) using appropriate enzyme- linked immunosorbent assay kits.
When processing the data obtained, nonparametric methods of biomedical statistics were used. The results are presented in the form of median, 25th and 75th percentiles (Me, Q25-Q75). Kruskal-Wallis test (H test) was used to assess the differences between three or more samples at the same time in terms of the level of the required trait. The Mann-Whitney test (U test) was used to compare the two groups. The relationship of quantitative and/or ordinal features was assessed using the Spearman's rank correlation with the determination of the rank correlation coefficient (R). The strength of the correlation was assessed depending on the value of the coefficient R: |R| < 0.25 -- weak correlation; 0.25 < |R| < 0.75 -- moderate correlation; |R| > 0.75 -- strong correlation.
Results and discussion
The results of the anamnestic data analysis demonstrated that 126 (60.9 %) patients with PD in the period from 1 day to 4 years before the development of motor symptoms of the disease experienced severe acute psychological stressful situations. Twenty-two (17.5 %) patients reported several different separate stresses. In 80 (63.5 %) patients, the effect of stress took place against the background of other factors: herpes viral infections, pain syndrome, inflammatory diseases of the ENT (ear, throat, nose) organs. Forty-six (36.5 %) patients noted only psychological stress in their history before the development of PD motor symptoms. Eighty-one (39.1 %) patients did not notice the action of acute stressful situations before the development of PD motor symptoms. Sixty-three (30.4 %) patients reported cases of pain syndromes in the past, before the development of PD motor symptoms. During the survey, 49 (42.2 %) individuals with a rapidly progressive type of PD experienced pain, and 73 (62.3 %) patients -- stress. In cases of a slowly progressive course, 14 (15.4 %) patients presented with pain syndromes, and 53 (58.2 %) -- stress. The difference between the cases of the onset of motor symptoms of rapidly and slowly progressive forms of PD against the background of the previous pain syndrome was statistically significant (p < 0.05) but did not follow the stress (p > 0.05).
Statistically significant differences between patients with rapidly and slowly progressive PD courses were also noted in the number of cases of herpetic diseases (50 (43.1 %) cases with a rapidly progressive course and 15 (16.53 %) with a slowly progressive course), inflammatory diseases of the oral cavity (12 (10.3 %) cases with a rapidly progressive course and 2 (2.3 %) with a slowly progressive course). The results of laboratory tests also showed statistically significant (p < 0.05) differences between these groups in the serum level of IL1p and cortisol, the level of IL1p in the CSF, and the albumin coefficient (laboratory marker of blood-brain barrier permeability). The study of the levels of albumin coefficient, IL1p, and cortisol may be informative for determining the likelihood of a rapidly progressive form of PD in a patient.
Analysis of the data obtained showed a greater number of precipitating factors for the development of PD in patients with a rapidly progressive type of disease. So, the precipitating factors in the anamnesis were absent in 21 (18.1 %) cases; 1 factor was revealed in 30 (25.9 %) cases, 2 factors -- in 28 (24.1 %) cases, 3 factors -- in 26 (22.4 %) cases, 4 factors -- in 11 (9.5 %) cases. In patients with a slowly progressive course, the precipitating factors in the anamnesis were absent in 25 (27.5 %) cases; 1 factor was determined in 37 (40.7 %) cases, 2 factors -- in 22 (24.2 %) cases, 3 factors -- in 6 (6.6 %) cases, 4 factors -- in 1 (1.1 %) case. The differences between the groups were statistically significant (p < 0.05). In patients with rapidly progressive PD, a correlation was found between the number of precipitating factors and the serum level of antibodies to a-synuclein (r = --0.18), IL10 (r = 0.31), and cortisol (r = 0.18).
Some objective characteristics of non-motor PD symptoms statistically significantly correlated with a level of laboratory parameters: MOCA value with cortisol level (r = --0.4) in blood serum; PSQI value with antibodies to a-synuclein (r = 0.31) in blood serum; ESS value with serum IL10 level (r = --0.21). In the group of rapidly progressive course of PD, only the difference in serum IL10 level among patients with no history of precipitating factors and 4 factors was statistically significant (Z adjusted --2.91; p = 0.004).
The data obtained suggest that pain syndromes and acute psychological stresses can contribute not only to the onset of motor symptoms of PD but also to the rapid progression of the disease. Precipitating factors can be considered predictors of the rapid progression of PD. Several studies confirm the multifaceted effect of these factors on the body. Thus, in a series of animal experiments, Rocio M. de Pablos et al. have shown that chronic stress increases the activation of microglia and the death of dopaminergic neurons after the previous induction of the inflammatory process in the ventral part of the midbrain [17]. Smith A.D. et al. [18] demonstrated that stress causes excessive neuronal death in some areas of the brain and increases the extracellular availability of dopamine, glucocorticosteroids, and glutamate in the striatum. At pains, neuroimmune interactions are bidirectional [19--22]. Thus, immune cells secrete cytokines, lipids, and growth factors that impact the peripheral nociceptors and neurons of the central nervous system, increasing pain sensitivity, and nociceptors actively release neuropeptides from their peripheral nerve endings that modulate the activity of innate and adaptive immune cells. parkinson's electrophysiological therapy
In our opinion, the study of the effect of stress and pain should not be limited only to cellular, immune, and hormonal studies but should also include electrophysiological phenomena which affect the intercellular transmission of the action potential. We name it as an electrophysiological target of therapy that changes the course of PD. Such electrophysiological phenomena as striatal spreading depolarization [23], spreading depression or spreading depolarization [24], cortical spreading depression [25] are actively studied in a number of neurological diseases [26], especially in elderly people [27, 28].
The language of description of the biophysical properties of the action potential (its conduction in different tissues (active media)) was formed in biophysics by the 80s of the XX century. We refer interested readers to the fundamental work on this topic [29]. As an example of using the language of biophysics to describe a possible target for therapy that changes the course of PD, we propose to call pathological variants of depolarization waves an “autowave penumbra”. In our opinion, not only ischemic stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, migraine, and brain injury but also inflammatory (infectious and non-infec- tious) diseases of the nervous system, including significant stress and pain syndromes, can change the pattern of propagation of depolarization waves in the nervous system with the formation of pathological electrophysiological, autowave modes. This “autowave penumbra” will also manifest as a change in immune responses (activation of cytokines, for example), excessive neurodegeneration (activation of neuronal apoptosis, for example), etc. that will eventually form the level of neuronal and dopamine deficiency in the striatonigral system sufficient for the clinical manifestation of PD. The prospects of studying the “autowave penumbra” are confirmed not only by the fact that some authors consider the similarity of the occurrence and propagation of depression waves in different animals as a property of the nervous system that has developed to control complex behavior that requires energy-consuming, fast information processing in a tightly regulated extracellular environment [30], which supports a systematic approach to understanding the electro- physiological basis of human neuropathology associated with migraine, stroke, and traumatic brain injury [30]. The prospects are also confirmed by the discovery of the connection of several electrophysiological phenomena with some clinical symptoms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (a fatal neurodegenerative disease) [31] and PD [23].
From our point of view, the study of electrophysiological phenomena in PD, as well as their connection with immune, morphological and other changes, is a very promising direction for the development of methods for controlling the onset and progression of the disease. However, even now we can talk about the need to develop preventive measures to control precipitating factors (pain, stress, etc.). We consider the use of anti-epileptic drugs to be scientifically justified.
In this article, we do not touch on mitochondrial, antioxidant, and synuclein targets for therapy that changes the course of PD. Speaking about this promising type of preventive treatment, we must first, in our opinion, determine the primary, leading and secondary, dependent mechanisms of the pathogenesis of the disease not only in general but also in every patient and person at risk of developing PD. Some authors believe [3] that the absence of primary application points that reflect the progression of PD at the prodromal stages remains a crucial vulnerability in clinical studies at the stage when the black substance is not affected or is only very weakly affected. Efforts should be undertaken in the methodological field to find new endpoints that are sensitive to therapy and reflect the progression of PD both inside and outside the brain. From our point of view, the possible clinical criteria for the effectiveness of therapy that changes the course of PD can be conditionally divided into the nearest, expected shortly after the start of the use and manifest as reducing the dose of dopaminergic replacement therapy, reducing the severity of motor and/or non-motor symptoms (without any changes at dopaminergic replacement therapy), as well as long-term criteria in the form of slowing the progression of the disease (motor and non-motor symptoms development) and slowing escalation of the dose of dopaminergic replacement therapy compared to patients who did not receive similar therapy. A change in the pattern of propagation of depolarization waves under the influence of therapy aimed at inhibiting the onset and/or progression of PD can also be considered a possible electrophysiological, autowave marker of the effectiveness of preventive therapy.
Conclusions
Pain syndromes and acute significant psychological stresses not only contribute to the onset of motor symptoms of PD but also lead to the rapid progression of the disease. The effect of these factors on the body may manifest itself not only in clinical, morphological, and laboratory changes but also in changes in the excitability of nerve cells. The electrophysiological penumbra (“autowave penumbra”) can be considered a possible target for a therapy method that modifies the course of PD.
References
1. Harms A.S., Ferreira S.A., Romero-Ramos M. Periphery and brain, innate and adaptive immunity in Parkinson's disease. Acta Neu- ropathologica. 2021. Vol. 141, 4. P. 527-545. doi: 10.1007/s00401- 021-02268-5.
2. Kouli A., Torsney K.M., Kuan W.L. Parkinson's Disease: Etiology, Neuropathology, and Pathogenesis. Chapter 1. Parkinson's Disease: Pathogenesis and Clinical Aspects [Internet]. In: Stoker T.B., Greenland J.C., editors. Brisbane (AU): Codon Publications, 2018. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK536722/ doi: 10.15586/codonpublications.parkinsonsdisease.2018.ch1.
3. Oertel W., Schulz J.B. Current and experimental treatments of Parkinson disease: A guide for neuroscientists. J. Neurochem. 2016. Vol. 139, Suppl. 1. P. 325-337. doi: 10.1111/jnc.13750.
4. Dauer W., Przedborski S. Parkinson's disease: mechanisms and models. Neuron. 2003. Vol. 39, 6. P. 889-909. doi: 10.1016/s0896- 6273(03)00568-3.
5. Fearnley J.M., Lees A.J. Ageing and Parkinson's disease: substantia nigra regional selectivity. Brain. 1991. Vol. 114. P. 2283-2301. doi: 10.1093/brain/114.5.2283.
6. BoikaA.V. Provocirujushhiefaktory debjuta motornyh simpto- mov bolezni Parkinsona. Mezhdunarodnyj Nevrologicheskij Zhurnal. 2017. 5 (91). P. 15-20.
7. Yapici-Eser H., Donmez-Demir B., Kilic K. et al. Stress modulates cortical excitability via alpha-2 adrenergic and glucocorticoid receptors: As assessed by spreading depression. Exp. Neurol. 2018. Vol. 307. P. 45-51. doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2018.05.024.
8. Chiu I.M., von Hehn C.A., Woolf C.J. Neurogenic inflammation and the peripheral nervous system in host defense and immunopa- thology. Nat. Neurosci. 2012. Vol. 15, 8. P 1063-1067. doi: 10.1038/ nn.3144.
9. Chiu I.M., Pnho-Ribeiro F.A., Woolf C.J. Pain and infection: pathogen detection by nociceptors. Pain. 2016. Vol. 157, 6. P. 11921193. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000559.
10. Pinho-Ribeiro F.A., Verri W.A. Jr., Chiu I.M. Nociceptor Sensory Neuron-Immune Interactions in Pain and Inflammation. Trends Immunol. 2017. Vol. 38, 1. P. 5-19. doi: 10.1016/ j.it.2016.10.001.
11. Michel P.P, Hirsch E.C., Hunot S. Understanding dopaminergic cell death pathways in Parkinson disease. Neuron. 2016. Vol. 90, 4. P. 675-691. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.03.038.
12. Alberico S.L., Cassell M.D., Narayanan N.S. The vulnerable ventral tegmental area in Parkinson's disease. Basal Ganglia. 2015. Vol. 5, 2-3. P. 51-55. doi: 10.1016/j.baga.2015.06.001.
13. Ridding M.C., Inzelberg R., Rothwell J.C. Changes in excitability of motor cortical circuitry in patients with Parkinson's disease. Ann. Neurol. 1995. Vol. 37, 2. P. 181-188. doi: 10.1002/ ana.410370208.
14. Vucic S., Kiernan M.C. Transcranial magnetic stimulation for the assessment of neurodegenerative disease. Neurotherapeutics. 2017. Vol. 14, 1. P 91-106. doi: 10.1007/s13311-016-0487-6.
15. Bozzi Y., Provenzano G., Casarosa S. Neurobiological bases of autism-epilepsy comorbidity: a focus on excitation/inhibition imbalance. Eur. J. Neurosci. 2018. Vol. 47, 6. P 534-548. doi: 10.1111/ ejn.13595.
16. Foss-Feig J.H., Adkinson B.D, Ji J.L. et al. Searching for Cross-Diagnostic Convergence: Neural Mechanisms Governing Excitation and Inhibition Balance in Schizophrenia and Autism Spectrum Disorders. Biol. Psychiatry. 2017. Vol. 81, 10. P. 848-861. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2017.03.005.
17. De Pablos R.M., Herrera A.J., Espinosa-Oliva A.M. et al. Chronic stress enhances microglia activation and exacerbates death of nigral dopaminergic neurons under conditions of inflammation. J. Neuroinflammation. 2014. Vol. 24, 11. P. 34. doi: 10.1186/17422094-11-34.
18. Smith A.D., Castro S.L., Zigmond M.J. Stress-induced Parkinson's disease: a working hypothesis. Physiol. Behav. 2002. Vol. 77, 4-5. P. 527-31. doi: 10.1016/s0031-9384(02)00939-3.
19. Schabrun S.M., Burns E., Thapa T., Hodges P. The response of the primary motor cortex to neuromodulation is altered in chronic low back pain: a preliminary study. Pain Med. 2018. Vol. 19, 6. P. 1227-1236. doi: 10.1093/pm/pnx168.
20. Thibaut A., Zeng D., Caumo W. et al. Corticospinal excitability as a biomarker of myofascial pain syndrome. Pain Rep. 2017. Vol. 2, 3. e594. doi: 10.1097/PR9.0000000000000594.
21. Cosentino G., Fierro B., Vigneri S. et al. Cyclical changes of cortical excitability and metaplasticity in migraine: evidence from a repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation study. Pain. 2014. Vol. 155, 6. P. 1070-1078. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2014.02.024.
22. Castillo Saavedra L., Mendonca M., Fregni F. Role of the primary motor cortex in the maintenance and treatment of pain in fibromyalgia. Med. Hypotheses. 2014. Vol. 83, 3. P. 332-336. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2014.06.007.
23. De Iure A, Napolitano F., Beck G. et al. Striatal spreading depolarization: Possible implication in levodopa-induced dyskinetic-like behavior. Mov Disord. 2019. Vol. 34, 6. P. 832-844. doi: 10.1002/mds.27632.
24. Leao A.A.P. Spreading depression of activity in the cerebral cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 1944. doi: 10.1152/jn.1944.7.6.359.
25. Pietrobon D, Moskowitz M.A. Chaos and commotion in the wake of cortical spreading depression and spreading depolarizations. Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2014. Vol. 15, 6. P. 379-93. doi: 10.1038/ nrn3770.
26. Taз Y.З., Solaroglu i., Gьrsoy-Ozdemir Y. Spreading Depolarization Waves in Neurological Diseases: A Short Review about its Pathophysiology and Clinical Relevance. Curr. Neuropharmacol. 2019. Vol. 17, 2. P. 151-164. doi: 10.2174/1570159X15666170915 160707.
27. Hertelendy P, Varga D.P, MenyhвrtA. et al. Susceptibility of the cerebral cortex to spreading depolarization in neurological disease states: The impact of aging. Neurochem. Int. 2019. Vol. 127. P. 125136. doi: 10.1016/j.neuint.2018.10.010.
28. Lauritzen M, Dreier J.P, Fabricius M. et al. Clinical relevance of cortical spreading depression in neurological disorders: migraine, malignant stroke, subarachnoid and intracranial hemorrhage, and traumatic brain injury. J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. 2011. Vol. 31, 1. P. 17-35. doi: 10.1038/jcbfm.2010.191.
29. Vasiliev V.A., Romanovskii Yu.M, Chernavskii D.S., Yakh- no V.G. Autowave Processes in Kinetic Systems. Spatial and Temporal Self-Organization in Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Medicine. D. Reidel Publishing Company. Dordrecht/Boston/Lancaster/ Tokyo, 1987. P. 262.
30. Robertson R.M., Dawson-Scully K.D., Andrew R.D. Neural shutdown under stress: an evolutionary perspective on spreading depolarization. J. Neurophysiol. 2020. Vol. 123, 3. P. 885-895. doi: 10.1152/jn.00724.2019.
31. Bae J.S., Menon P, Mioshi E. et al. Cortical hyperexcitability and the split-hand plus phenomenon: pathophysiological insights in ALS. Amyotroph. Lateral Scler. Frontotemporal Degener. 2014. Vol. 15, 3-4. P. 250-256. doi: 10.3109/21678421.2013.872150. Epub 2014 Feb 20.
Резюме
Пошук цілей терапії, що змінює перебіг хвороби Паркінсона
Пономарьов В.В., Бойко А.В., Селицький М.М., Богомаз О.А.
Білоруська медична академія післядипломної освіти, м. Мінськ, Республіка Білорусь
Актуальність. Хвороба Паркінсона (ХП) -- це багатосистемне захворювання, що вимагає більш комплексного підходу до свого вивчення й лікування.
Мета дослідження: дати клініко-лабораторну характеристику пацієнтів із ХП, у яких розвиток рухових симптомів пов'язаний із дією провокуючих чинників, і навести теоретичне обґрунтування електрофізіологічних явищ, що лежать в основі захворювання і/або асоціюються з ним.
Матеріали та методи. Було обстежено 207 пацієнтів із ХП. Проведені анкетний аналіз, лабораторні дослідження.
Результати. Серед пацієнтів із швидко прогресуючим типом ХП біль при обстеженні відзначений у 49 (42,2 %) випадках, стрес -- у 73 (62,3 %). При повільно прогресуючому перебігу больові синдроми зареєстровані в 14 (15,4 %) випадках, стресові -- у 53 (58,2 %) випадках. Відзначено статистично значущі відмінності між пацієнтами зі швидко й повільно прогресуючим перебігом ХП за кількістю випадків герпетичних захворювань, запальних захворювань порожнини рота.
Результати лабораторних тестів також показали статистично значущі відмінності між цими групами за рівнем ІЬ-ір і кортизолу в сироватці крові, рівнем ГЬ-ір в спинномозковій рідині й коефіцієнтом альбуміну.
Виявлено більшу кількість провокуючих чинників розвитку ХП у пацієнтів зі швидко прогресуючим перебігом захворювання. У пацієнтів зі швидко прогресуючою ХП була виявлена кореляція між кількістю провокуючих чинників і рівнем антитіл до а-синуклеїну (г = --0,18), IL-10 (г = 0,31) і кортизолу (г = 0,18) у сироватці крові. Деякі об'єктивні характеристики нерухо- вих симптомів ХП статистично значущо корелювали з рівнем лабораторних показників у сироватці крові (значення MOCA з рівнем кортизолу (г = --0,4); значення PSQI з антитілами до а-синуклеїну (г = 0,31); значення ESS з рівнем IL-10 (г = --0,21)). Значні гострі психологічні стреси й больові синдроми можуть змінювати характер поширення хвиль деполяризації в нервовій системі з утворенням «автохвильової півтіні». Наведені можливі клінічні критерії ефективності терапії, що змінює перебіг ХП.
Висновки. Больові синдроми й гострі значні психологічні стреси призводять не тільки до виникнення рухових симптомів ХП, а й до швидкого прогресування захворювання. Дія провокуючих чинників може проявлятися не тільки клінічними, морфологічними й лабораторними змінами, а й змінами збудливості нервових клітин. Електрофізіологічна (автохвильова) півтінь може розглядатися як імовірна мішень для дії терапії, що змінює перебіг ХП.
Ключові слова: хвороба Паркінсона; провокуючі фактори; стрес; больовий синдром; автохвильова півтінь; хвиля деполяризації; критерії терапії
Размещено на Allbest.ru
...Подобные документы
Anatomy of the liver. Botkin’s disease is a viral disease that destroys the liver and bile ducts. Causes and treatment of the disease. Vaccinations and personal hygiene are the main means of prevention. Signs and symptoms of the Botkin’s disease.
презентация [3,5 M], добавлен 22.04.2013Infectious hepatitis - a widespread acute contagious disease. Botkin’s Disease is a viral disease that destroys the liver and bile ducts. Anatomy of the liver. The value of the liver to the body. Causes and signs of the disease. Treatment and prevention.
презентация [4,0 M], добавлен 24.04.2014Ulcer - is a defect of gastric or duodenal mucosa which interfere over lamina muscularis mucosae, submucosa. Pathogenesis of the disease, its provocative factors. Classification and types of ulcers. Symptoms of gastric ulcer disease, complications.
презентация [1,9 M], добавлен 16.04.2014Gastroesophageal reflux disease. Factors contributing to its the development. Esophageal symptoms of GERD. Aim of treatment. Change the life style. A basic medical treatment for GERD includes the use of prokinetic drugs with antisecretory agents.
презентация [390,7 K], добавлен 27.03.2016Agranulocytosis - pathologic condition, which is characterized by a greatly decreased number of circulating neutrophils. Epidemiology and pathophysiology of this disease. Hereditary disease due to genetic mutations. Signs and symptoms, treatment.
презентация [1,8 M], добавлен 25.02.2014Analysis of factors affecting the health and human disease. Determination of the risk factors for health (Genetic Factors, State of the Environment, Medical care, living conditions). A healthy lifestyle is seen as the basis for disease prevention.
презентация [1,8 M], добавлен 24.05.2012Causes of ischemic stroke. Assessment of individual risk for cardiovascular disease in humans. The development in patients of hypertension and coronary heart disease. Treatment in a modern hospital disorders biomarkers of coagulation and fibrinolysis.
статья [14,8 K], добавлен 18.04.2015The major pathogens and symptoms of cholera - an acute intestinal anthroponotic infection caused by bacteria of the species Vibrio cholerae. Methods of diagnosis and clinical features of disease. Traditional methods of treatment and prevention of disease.
презентация [1,0 M], добавлен 22.09.2014Coma - a life-threatening condition characterized by loss of consciousness, the lack of response to stimuli. Its classification, mechanism of development and symptoms. Types of supratentorial and subtentorial brain displacement. Diagnosis of the disease.
презентация [1,4 M], добавлен 24.03.2015Pneumonia is an inflammatory condition of the lung—affecting primarily the microscopic air sacs known as alveoli. The bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae is a common cause of pneumonia. Symptoms, diagnostics, treatment and prevention of this disease.
презентация [279,8 K], добавлен 12.11.2013The concept and the main causes of atherosclerosis, primary symptom. The mechanisms of atherosclerosis, main causes The symptoms and consequences, prevention. Atherosclerosis treatments. Basic approaches to diagnosis and treatment of this disease.
презентация [813,1 K], добавлен 21.11.2013Areas with significant numbers of malaria cases: Africa, the Middle East, India, Southeast Asia, South America, Central America and parts of the Caribbean. Etiology, symptoms and diagnosis of the disease, methods of treatment and antimalarial immunity.
презентация [286,9 K], добавлен 02.10.2012Risk Factors. The following symptoms may indicate advanced disease. A barium contrast study of the small intestine. Surgical removal is the primary treatment for cancer of the small intestine. The association of small bowel cancer with underlying.
презентация [4,1 M], добавлен 28.04.2014The etiology of bronchitis is an inflammation or swelling of the bronchial tubes (bronchi), the air passages between the nose and the lungs. Signs and symptoms for both acute and chronic bronchitis. Tests and diagnosis, treatment and prevention disease.
презентация [1,8 M], добавлен 18.11.2015Testosterone is the primary male sex hormone that is present in both men and women. How to get a test for testosterone correctly. Testosterone in men: the norm and deviation. What diseases involve reduction of testosterone. Too much testosterone.
презентация [498,5 K], добавлен 26.05.2013Body Water Compartments. The main general physico-chemical laws. Disorders of water and electrolyte balance. Methods bodies of water in the body, and clinical manifestations. Planning and implementation of treatment fluid and electrolyte disorders.
презентация [1,1 M], добавлен 11.09.2014Disease of the calcified tissues of the teeth. Demineralization of the mineral portion of enamel and dentine followed by disintegration of their organic material. Classification of caries. Prevention and treatment of caries. The composition of the pulp.
презентация [424,6 K], добавлен 14.12.2016Concept and characteristics of focal pneumonia, her clinical picture and background. The approaches to the diagnosis and treatment of this disease, used drugs and techniques. Recent advances in the study of focal pneumonia. The forecast for recovery.
презентация [1,5 M], добавлен 10.11.2015Principles and types of screening. Medical equipment used in screening. identify The possible presence of an as-yet-undiagnosed disease in individuals without signs or symptoms. Facilities for diagnosis and treatment. Common screening programmes.
презентация [921,2 K], добавлен 21.02.2016The characteristic features of the two forms of eating disorders: anorexia nervosa and bulimia. Description body dysmorphic disorder syndrome as a teenager painful experiences of his "physical disability." Methods of treatment and prevention of disease.
курсовая работа [17,9 K], добавлен 31.03.2013