Korea  | Russia  |  Malaysia |   Kazakhstan
Indonesia  | Oman  | All Others

eg.stem cell, stem cell treatment
Stem cell treatment | Parkinson's Disease | Multiple Sclerosis | ALS | Brain Injury | Spinal Cord Injury | Cerebaral Palsy | Batten Disease | Stroke
MSA | Muscular Dystrophy | Epilepsy | Optic neuritis | Encephalomyelitis | SMA | Huntingdon's disease | Friedrich ataxia | Diabetes
HOME > News > Article Content

Parkinson's Disease Makes It Harder to Figure out How Other People Feel


http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/03/100303131807.htm

ScienceDaily (Mar. 3, 2010)

Scientists are beginning to find out why people with Parkinson's disease often feel socially awkward. Parkinson's patients find it harder to recognize expressions of emotion in other people's faces and voices, report two studies published by the American Psychological Association.

One of the studies raises questions about how deep brain stimulation, the best available treatment for patients who no longer respond to medication, more strongly affects the recognition of fear and sadness. A neurodegenerative disorder, Parkinson's causes tremors, stiffness and balance problems, as well as fairly frequent depression and dementia.

In the March issue of Neuropsychology, Heather Gray, PhD, and Linda Tickle-Degnen, PhD, report that people with Parkinson's disease, compared with matched controls, often have difficulty discerning how others are feeling.

Their meta-analysis of 34 different studies using data from 1,295 participants shows a robust link between Parkinson's and specific deficits in recognizing emotions, especially negative emotions, across different types of stimuli and tasks.

The meta-analysis, conducted at Harvard Medical School and Tufts University, found that patients typically had some degree of problem identifying emotion from faces and voices.

Further clarification is provided in a second study that showed that deep-brain stimulation, compared with medication, caused a consistently large deficit in the recognition of fear and sadness ¨C two key facial expressions that, when understood, aid survival. That study is published in the January issue of Neuropsychology.

Researchers led by Julie P¨¦ron, PhD, at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Rennes in France, compared the ability of people with Parkinson's in three different groups to recognize facial emotions: 24 advanced patients implanted with deep-brain stimulators after they didn't respond or were sensitive to oral levodopa (the usual drug for the disease); 20 advanced patients given apomorphine hydrochloride by injection or infusion pump while they waited an implant; and 30 healthy controls.

Researchers tested all participants using standard photographs of facial expression before and three months after they were treated. Before implantation of the stimulators, all participants read facial expressions equally well.

Patients in the surgical group were implanted with stimulators, electrical devices that prod the brain's subthalamic nucleus, a small, lens-shaped structure, to normalize the nerve signals that control movement. This nucleus is part of the basal ganglia system, which is thought to integrate movement, cognition and emotion.

Three months after treatment, only the patients with stimulators ¨C not the drug-treated patients or the healthy controls ¨C were significantly worse at recognizing fear and sadness. Patients with stimulators confused those expressions with others, such as surprise, or even no emotion. Medicated patients and healthy controls were either accurate about fear and sadness or occasionally mistook them for other negative emotions, such as disgust.

"Having Parkinson's predisposes an individual to errors in emotion recognition," said Gray. "The research in France, along with previous studies, indicates that deep-brain stimulation produces an even more severe deficit."

Why would treating a movement disorder affect the perception of emotions? Implants affect a part of the brain that reaches across functions, so the authors suggested that the same electrical stimulation that calms over-excited motor activity may also somehow inhibit emotional processing.

Although the impact of Parkinson's and deep-brain stimulation varies by patient, it's important to understand. "The first step is to educate patients and their close associates about the potential for emotion recognition difficulties, so they can learn to manage some of the social consequences, such as misunderstanding and frustration," said Gray and Tickle-Degnen. The next step might be training in emotion recognition, which they said has shown promise.

According to the National Institutes of Health, deep-brain stimulation is used to treat a variety of disabling neurological symptoms, including Parkinson's and essential tremor, a common neurological movement disorder.

At present, the procedure is used only for patients whose symptoms cannot be adequately controlled with medications. According to P¨¦ron, about 15 percent of Parkinson's disease patients are thought capable of benefiting from the surgery

 



Related Information:

  • The Chinese Government Gives Top Priority to Stem Cell Research and Development   
  • The Washington Post report regarding our center and specialized stem cell treatment   
  • Stem cell therapy, a promising novel endeavor for neurological disorders   
  • Brain Imaging Differences Evident at 6 Months in High-Risk Infants Who Later Develop Autism   
  • New Treatment for Traumatic Brain Injury Shows Promise in Animals   
  • Stem Cell Treatments Improve Heart Function After Heart Attack   
  • Cognitive Stimulation Beneficial in Dementia   
  • New Imaging Methods Show Challenges of Identifying Cognitive Abilities in Severely Brain-Injured Patients   
  • Huntington Disease Breakthrough New Potential Therapy That Restores Motor Function Being Planned for Clinical Trial   
  • In Mouse Model Bexarotene Quickly Reverses Alzheimer's Symptoms   
  • Study of Live Human Neurons Reveals Parkinson's Origins   
  • New Drug Doesn't Improve Disability Among Stroke Patients, Researchers Find   
  • Anemia May More Than Triple Your Risk of Dying After a Stroke   
  • Researchers Visualize the Development of Parkinson's Cells   
  • Surprisingly High Number of Adults With Severe Learning Disabilities Also Have Autism   
  • Brain Glia Cells Increase Their DNA Content to Preserve Vital Blood-Brain Barrier   
  • Stem Cells   
  • PET Effectively Detects Dementia, Decade of Research Shows   
  • Neurons Grown from Skin Cells May Hold Clues to Autism   
  • Stem Cell Therapy Reverses Diabetes: Stem Cells from Cord Blood Used to Re-Educate Diabetic's Own T Cells   
  • Research Demonstrating Link Between Virus and MS Could Point the Way to Treatment and Prevention   
  • Low Vitamin D Levels Linked to Depression, Psychiatrists Report   
  • New Hope for Diseases of Protein Folding Such as Alzheimer¡¯s, Parkinson¡¯s Diseases, ALS, Cancer and Diabetes   
  • Autism May Be Linked to Abnormal Immune System Characteristics and Novel Protein Fragment   
  • Alzheimer's Damage Occurs Early   
  • Another Potential Risk Factor for Developing Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in Women   
  • Brain Cell Malfunction in Schizophrenia Identified   
  • Alzheimer's: Diet Patterns May Keep Brain from Shrinking   
  • 'Rare' Brain Disorder May Be More Common Than Thought, Scientists Say   
  • Turn 'Signals' for Neuron Growth Identified   
  • Treatment
    The Parkinson's Clinical Center
    Doctor Blogs
    Treatment Data
    Contact Us

  • What are stem cells and how do they work to treat various diseases?   
  • How do stem cells know where to go and what to do?   
  • What kinds of stem cells does your medical center use and are they safe?   
  • Where do the stem cells come from?   
  • Is stem cell treatment safe? Is it really effective?   
  • How do I know if I am a good candidate for stem cell therapy?   
  • How long should I expect to stay in Beijing for the treatment?   
  • Can you use adult stem cells from my own bone marrow?   
  • What methods do you use to transplant stem cells into the patient's body?   
  • What should I expect to experience during the stem cell treatment?   
  • Do the doctors use anesthesia during the operation?   
  • What other drugs does the doctor combine with the stem cells for therapy?   
  • How long after surgery will it be before I can bathe or shower?   
  • For Batten disease treatment, what type of stem cells are used?   
  • About the neural growth factors that your medical center use   
  • If your hospitals have an age restriction on patients?   
  • What medications do you use on Batten disease patients?   
  • Is it possible for you to manufacture the TPP1 enzyme and deliver it?   
  • When I send my records to your hospital, does a doctor read them?   
  • Is general anesthesia used?   
  • Is other therapy done in addition to stem cell infusion?   
  • What types of rehabilitation training is done?   
  • What will my treatment schedule be like?   
  • Does the doctor have to penetrate the spinal canal to infuse the stem cells   
  • If I have to have surgery, how long will it take for the wound to heal?   
  • Will I lose very much blood?   
  • If there is surgery, can I fly back home before the wound has healed?   
  • Does your medical center also offer conventional treatment?   
  • What is the most effective way to contact us?   
  • Are stem cells pre-tested for HIV and Hepatitis? What else do you test?   
  • Send Inquiry Contact Us Sitemap Help

    Link:Like Cell Research Center | stemcellshezhong.com
    Copyright © 2011 unistemcells.com All rights reserved.