| Literature DB >> 31920948 |
Alexander Kilzheimer1, Thomas Hentrich1, Simone Burkhardt1, Julia M Schulze-Hentrich1.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the most common neurodegenerative movement disorder that affects extensive regions of the nervous system. Its current clinical diagnosis is based on motor symptoms that appear late during disease progression when substantial proportions of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic neuron population are lost already. Although disturbances in sleep and other biofunctions often surface years prior to motor impairments and point to a long prodromal phase, these phenotypic signs in a person's midlife lack predictive power. They do, however, signal the unfolding of the disease and suggest molecular correlates that begin deviating early on. Revealing such trajectories, hence, promises not only a better understanding of prodromal PD but may also enable a much-needed earlier diagnosis. A nexus that may harbor such molecular trajectories is the epigenome as key etiological factors of PD-genetics, age, and environment-influence this substrate. An earlier diagnosis would also allow earlier interventions and lifestyle adjustments to improve brain function and reduce symptoms. In this review, we describe the challenges of diagnosing PD early on and highlight the opportunities that may arise from steering research efforts towards comprehensive interrogations of molecular layers during the long-time neglected midlife phase. In particular, we emphasize how existing cohorts of at-risk individuals, available animal models, and suitable markers may come together and aid in revealing molecular trajectories that offer diagnostic utility for PD in its prodromal stage.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson's disease; biomarker; diagnosis; midlife; molecular prodrome; prodromal
Year: 2019 PMID: 31920948 PMCID: PMC6928126 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.01328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Prodromal and clinical symptomology of Parkinson's disease over the course of life. Schematic representation of the course of life from early childhood to old age and associated brain health trajectories that deviate in PD patients from the healthy norm (upper and lower curves). Current clinical diagnosis of PD is based on hallmark motor phenotypes that occur in advanced disease stages. They are preceded by prodromal symptomology that surfaces years to decades earlier during midlife but is less specific and varies considerably with respect to timing and features between individuals (44). Tracing deviating molecular trajectories from clinical stages into midlife would enable a prodromal diagnosis of PD, thereby widening the beneficial impact (shown as angle under raised brain health trajectories) of neuroprotective lifestyle adjustments or treatment options.
Figure 2Midlife is still largely neglected in PD research. (A) Relative publication shares over the past 5 years (2015–2019) examining PD, Alzheimer's disease (AD), Huntington's disease (HD), type II diabetes, and stroke with respect to young, middle, and old age. (B) As in (A) but focusing on PD and AD at greater temporal resolution for the past 10 years. While research on the role of midlife in context of AD is continuously increasing, this trend is less obvious and seemingly lagging behind for PD. Numbers are derived from PubMed searches, querying publication titles and abstracts. For diseases, the terms [parkinson*] for PD, [alzheimer*] for AD, [huntington*] for HD, [maturity-onset diabetes, noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, diabetes mellitus type II, type 2 diabetes mellitus] for type II diabetes, and [ischemic stroke, cerebrovascular accident, cerebral infarction] for stroke were used. For the “young” phase, the terms [adolescen*, youth*, juven*, young adult*, early*life, early adulthood, childhood], for the “middle age” phase, the terms [mid*life, middle*age*, mid*adulthood, middle*adulthood] and for the “old age” phase, the terms [late life, old*age*, senescence, elder*, senior*, geriatr*, aged] were used, respectively.