Parkinson's Disease: Neuropathology Flashcards

1
Q

Define Parkinson’s disease

A

Progressive neurological disorder defined by bradykinesia, tremor, rigidity and postural instability (at least two)

[commonly associated features: autonomic disfunction, cognitive disturbance, depression, dysphagia]

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2
Q

Define parkinsonism

A

Clinical syndrome with some/all of the following features:

  • bradykinesia
  • tremor
  • rigidity
  • postural instability
  • autonomic dysfunction/cognitive disturbance/depression/dysphagia
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3
Q

Define parkinsonian disorders

A

Disorders in which Parkinsonism is a prominent feature: akinetic-rigid disorders

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4
Q

What must occur before clinical symptoms of Parkinson’s appear?

A

Loss of 80-85% of dopaminergic neurons and deplete dopamine levels by 70%

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5
Q

Describe how Parkinson’s can be modelled in animals?

A

MPTP: a prodrug to the neurotoxin MPP+

Can be accidentally produced during manufacturing of the opioid drug desmethylprodine (MPPP)

Intoxication causes parkinsonism associated w/ degeneration of dopaminergic neurons

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6
Q

PD:

Site of LBs and clinical correlate?

A

LBs in substantia nigra

Akinetic-rigid syndrome

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7
Q

Parkinson’s w/ dementia (PDD):

Site of LBs and clinical correlate?

A

LBs in substantia nigra and cerebral cortex

Dementia ≥1 y after dx
of PD

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8
Q

Dementia w/ Lewy Bodies:

Site of LBs and clinical correlate?

A

LBs in substantia nigra and cerebral cortex

Dementia <1 y after
akinetic-rigid syndrome

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9
Q

How can we classify Parkinson’s?

A

Degenerative:

  • a-synuclein (PD, MSA)
  • tau (prog supra palsy, CTE)
  • TDP-43 (fronto-temporal lobar degen)
  • nonspecific (genetic)

Non-degenerative:

  • vascular
  • toxic (MPTP, manganese poisoning)
  • drug induced (antipsychotics
  • infectious (flu)
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10
Q

Pathological features of Parkinson’s disease

A

Neurodegeneration accompanied w/ neuronal inclusions composed of alpha-synuclein (Lewy Bodies)

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11
Q

Pathological correlate of the symptoms of Parkinson’s

A

Neuronal loss in the substantia nigra (ventrolateral) and dopaminergic denervation of the striatum

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12
Q

Describe physiological phenotype of DA neurons in the substantia nigra (SN)

A

Pacemaker-like properties lead to frequent intracellular calcium transients

Pacemaking maintains basal DA tone in target structures- without it there is no movement

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13
Q

Describe physiological phenotype of DA neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA)`

A

Slow pacemakers

No calcium transients

Less Ca2+ channel density

High levels of calbindin (Ca2+ buffer)

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14
Q

What is alpha-synuclein?

A

Abundant in brain

Unknown physiological function (maybe regulates synaptic plasticity and NT release?)

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15
Q

Diagnostic Gold Standard for PD?

A

alpha-synuclein immunostaining

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16
Q

Describe the oligomers of alpha-synuclein

A

A: normal
B: implants into membrane, forming pore -> cellular dysfunction

17
Q

Neuritic dystrophy hypothesis of neurodegradation

A

a-synuclein is transported from axon->synapse

Misfolding of a-helix to b-sheet -> aggregation -> axonal transport disrupted -> a-syn accumulates

18
Q

Braak PD staging

A
  1. dorsal motor nucleus of vagus nerve
  2. locus coeruleus
  3. substantia nigra
  4. basal forebrain
  5. cortex
19
Q

Braak’s perception of PD progression

A

Begins in dorsal motor nucleus of vagus nerve and anterior olfactory nucleus

Proceeds rostrally towards neocortex

20
Q

Role of gut in PD?

A

PD hypothesised to start in gut peripheral ganglia- Gut biopsies to test for PD, constipation may be presenting symptom

21
Q

Role of olfactory bulb in PD?

A

exposure to organophosphpates?

agricultural workers have higher PD incidence

Anosmia found 10-20 yrs prior to motor symptoms PD

22
Q

Dual hit hypothesis for PD?

A

Genetic susceptibility w/ environmental trigger -> PD

23
Q

MSA pathology?

A

glial inclusions of alpha-synuclein

24
Q

PDD/DLB vs AD clinical features?

A

PD: frontal-executive + visuospatial + memory retrieval

AD: memory presentation (encoding)

25
Q

Prion hypothesis of alpha-synuclein?

A

Prion like spread of pathology may underlie all proteinopathies- alpha-synuclein may spread in a prion-like fashion

26
Q

ALL PATHOLOGICAL EXAMPLES

A

CHECK OLDER YEARS NOTES FOR THESE AS STUDIES HAVE BEEN OMITTED FROM ALL MY FLASHCARDS LOL