Publication | Open Access
Parkinson's Disease: A Genetic Study
48
Citations
13
References
1986
Year
Mendelian DisorderGenetic DisorderGeneticsParkinson DiseaseGenetic EpidemiologyFamily HistoryA Genetic StudyGenetic FoundationNeurologyNeuroscienceNeurodegenerationGenetic LoadNeuropathologyMedicinePositive Family History
A sample of 122 patients with Parkinson's Disease was studied for the purpose of investigating if the frequency of relatives affected with Parkinson in this group was higher than in a control group and to see if the genetic load was more important in some of the subtypes of Parkinson described by Barbeau and Pourcher (1982). In our 122 patients, we found that 1.7% were post-encephalic parkinsonian, 12.3% were symptomatic cases and 86% of the idiopathic variety. There were 16.1% early onset patients in the idiopathic group and among these we found 23.5% with a positive family history of Parkinson in the first-degree relatives. In 6 cases with the tremor onset form of the disease, the family history was positive and 5 patients, 4.7% had familial essential tremor-related Parkinsonism. Our results support Barbeau's hypothesis that Parkinson is a heterogeneous disease in which some subtypes (such as early onset Parkinson) have an important genetic susceptibility component.
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