Neuroanatomy And Pathology Of Sporadic Parkinsons Disease

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Last edited by MARC Bot
April 29, 2025 | History

Neuroanatomy And Pathology Of Sporadic Parkinsons Disease

The proteinopathy sporadic Parkinson's disease (sPD) is the second most frequent degenerative disorder of the human nervous system after Alzheimer's disease. The a-synuclein inclusion body pathology (Lewy pathology) associated with sPD is distributed throughout the central, peripheral, and enteric nervous systems. The resulting nonrandom neuronal dysfunction and, in some regions, neuronal loss is reflected by a distinctive topographic distribution pattern of the Lewy pathology that, in the brain, has been staged. Except for olfactory structures and spinal cord constituents of the pain system, sensory components of the nervous system remain uninvolved or virtually intact. The most disease-related damage revolves around motor areas -- particularly around superordinate centers of the limbic and visceromotor systems as well as portions of the somatomotor system. Vulnerable regions are interconnected anatomically and susceptible nerve cell types are not neurotransmitter-dependent. Not all clinical symptoms emerging in the course of sPD can be explained by a lack of dopamine in the nigrostriatal system. These include autonomic dysfunction, pain, hyp- or anosmia, excessive daytime sleepiness, REM sleep behavioral disorder, depression, anxiety, cognitive decline, and dementia. Against the background of the normal morphology and anatomy, the authors analyze the pathoanatomy of sPD in the nervous system at various neuropathological stages and summarize the potential functional consequences of the lesions.

Publish Date
Publisher
Springer
Language
English
Pages
119

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Book Details


Classifications

Library of Congress
R-RZ, QL801 .E67 vol.201

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL26054990M
ISBN 13
9783540798491
LCCN
2008932111
OCLC/WorldCat
300465686, 233933728

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL17469405W

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