Term
What is the prevalence of Parkinson's Disease? |
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Definition
2nd most common Neurodegenertaive disease
Affects 1.5 million in the US, 50000 new/yr
6:4 male to female (could be due to estorgen)
Rare under the age of 30
Economic impact = 25 billion $/yr |
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Term
T/F: Women are more likely to develop Parkinson's then males. |
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Definition
False; males are more likely. It is 6:4 ratio. |
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Term
What 2 things contribute to the movement disorders in peeps with Parkinsons? |
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Definition
1. Degeneration of DA producing neurons in the SN
2. Depletion of DA in the ST |
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Term
What % of total cases of PD does Early Onset represent? What about Late Onset? |
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Definition
Early onset = 5%
Late onset = 95 % |
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Term
Early onset of PD occurs around the age of _______ while Late onset occurs ____________. |
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Definition
35 yrs old
>60 yrs of age |
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Term
In Normal aging process you loss ________ per year of the Nigrostriatal DA pathway. |
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Definition
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Term
Some early symptoms of PD include |
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Definition
Less vivid facial expression = masked face
Cramped or small hand writting
a little shakiness and difficulty getting out of chair
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Term
Some late stage symptoms of PD include |
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Definition
1.Tremor ( like pill rolling, several beats/sec) that is worse at rest or when under stress.
2. Rigidity-- so emotionless face and cog-wheel arm movement.
3. Bradykinesia- is a slowing or loss of spontaneous and automatic movement
4. Posture instability that leads to shuffling and falling. |
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Term
T/F: there is no bio-marker for PD. |
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Definition
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Term
How is PD clinical diagnosed since there is no bio-marker? |
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Definition
By having at least 2 of the 3 cardinal clinical signs:
Bradykinesia
Rigidity
Resting tremor |
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Term
Out of all the imaging techniques used for determining PD, which is the most promising? |
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Definition
The Positron Emission Topography (PET) and the Single Photon Emission CT (SPECT) that measure the striatal presynaptic DA. |
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Term
How are some ways PD can impact a patients life? |
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Definition
1. The movement disorders can affect daily activity, it only worsens over time.
2. Injury due to falling
3. Difficulty swallowing can lead to choking
4. Severe disability |
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Term
What are the hallmark features in Postmortem Diagnosis of PD ? |
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Definition
1. Loss of neuromelannin rich DA neurons in the SN
2. Lewy Bodies |
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Term
Lewy Bodies are defined to be what? |
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Definition
Intracellular inclusions containing neurofilament proteins, lipids, ubiquiting and alpha-synuclein. |
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Term
What % of patients with PD also have Lewy Bodies? |
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Definition
85%. It is used as a definitive diagnositc marker. |
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Term
T/F: Lewy Bodies are the pathological hallmark of PD? |
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Definition
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Term
T/F: The direct pathway (D1) and the indirect pathway (D2) must be in balance for movement regulation. Release of DA in the ST serves to maintain this balance. |
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Definition
True. an inbalance leads to the movement disorders. |
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Term
Under normal conditions, (no PD), the direct pathway (D1) has an ___________ action on the GABA releasing neurons. While the indirect pathway (D2) maintains an ________ actional on the GABA releasing neurons. |
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Definition
inhibitory (GABA brake)
Stimulatory (Glutamate fuel) |
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Term
What happens to the direct and indirect pathways in PD? |
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Definition
The DA depletion in ST leads to
1. less stimulation on the striatal GABA releasing neurons . { the GABA brake is reduced, less inhibition)
2. Less inhibition via D2 ont he sTN Glut-releasing neurons. { Glut fuel on GABA releasing neurons is increased} |
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Term
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Definition
over active GABA releasing neurons in Gpi that makes excessive inhibitory output from the basal ganglia that results in inhibition of movement. |
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Term
What are some non-motor related symptoms of PD? |
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Definition
1. Sensory = pain, visual dysfunction
2. Sleep = insomnia, vivid dreaming
3. Psychiatric= Depression, anxiety, hallucinations, panic attack
4. GI = constipation
5. Bladder disturbance = frequent pee
6. fatigue |
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Term
What are the 4 DA pathways? |
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Definition
1. Mesolimibic: VTA to NAc = reward
2. Mesocortical: VTA to Nucleus Frontal Cortex= Motivation
3. Nigrostriatal: SN to ST = Movement
4. Tuberoinfundibular: Hypothalamus to pituitary gland = Prolactin secretion. |
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Term
Genetic causes for PD account for 5 % of all PD cases. How many known gene mutations are there? |
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Definition
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Term
Many encoded proteins play a role in normal processing of cellular proteins. if you have a mutation in these genes then you get protein misfolding, _____________ and cell damage like _____________. |
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Definition
Aggregation-- leads to lewy bodys
loss of DA neurons |
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Term
Park 1 gene is aka _____________ and normally plays a role in __________________________. |
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Definition
Alpha-synuclein
Synaptic vesicle recycling, storage and compartmentalizatio of NTs |
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Term
How is Park 1 associated with PD? |
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Definition
Its accumulation is found in Lewy Bodies; the build up blocks normal protein trafficking in ER and Golgi.
Over expression induces toxicity to DA neurons
Mutated Park 1 causes mitochondrial damage
a 3 mis-sense mutation and genomic triplication
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Term
Park 2 is aka ____________ and is an _______________________ in normal conditions. |
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Definition
Parkin
E3 ubiquitin protein ligase
(It targets misfolded proteins to the ubiquitin proteasome pathway for degradation) |
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Term
T/F: Park 2, under non PD conditions, seems to have an overall protective function for DA neurons. |
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Definition
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Term
In mutated Parkin there is a lack of the ________________ which affects the protein processing. This type of mutation accounts for ___________ of autosomal recessive PD. |
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Definition
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Term
What is the normal physiological role of Park 7 gene or aka DJ-1 gene? |
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Definition
Exists as a homodimer
Has an antioxidant protein
Is a transcriptional activator that upregulates the tyrosine hydroxylase expression |
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Term
T/F: Overexpression of mutated PINK 1 (PARK 6) or down regulation of wildtype PINK 1 increases sensitivity to DA toxins. |
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Definition
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Term
PARK 8 is aka _______________ which stands for ________________. |
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Definition
LRRK2
Leucine-rich-repeat-kinase 2 |
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Term
If you have a mutation in PARK 8 then you have _____________ that leads to damage to DA neurons. |
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Definition
increased kinase activity |
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Term
What are some potential risk factors for idiopathic PD? |
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Definition
1. Elevated exposure to pesticides and certain heavy metals and infectious agents/viruses
2. Traumatic brain injury like in boxing or war veterans. |
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Term
T/F: There is a lower incidence of PD found in coffee drinkers and cigarette smokers. |
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Definition
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Term
Why are DA neurons likely to undergo oxidative stress which leads to PD? |
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Definition
They have reduced anti-oxidant acitivy due to a lower content of glutathione
Have a high content of lipids, neuromelanin and iron which are all prone to free radicals. |
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Term
T/F: Mitochondrial dysfunction is a cell death mechanism in PD because the DA neurons carry defects in their complex 1. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the frozen addicts? |
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Definition
A college student tried to make synthetic heroin (MPPP) but instead make MPTP which lead to acute Parkinsonism. MPTP induces PD by killing the DA neurons after the formation of free radicals and decreased mitochondrial function. |
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Term
T/F: There is a racial, ethnic and gender difference in developing Huntingtons (HD). |
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Definition
False: There is no difference. everyone is as likely of getting it. It is a major genetic disorder though. |
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Term
There is a wide range of onset between _______ and a progression of ____________ for those with HD. |
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Definition
2-80 years old
1-40 years |
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Term
The peak onset of adult HD is ____________ while that of juvenile HD is ________. |
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Definition
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Term
The 3 types of clinical symptoms observed in HD patients are: |
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Definition
1. Movement disorders
2. Cognition disorders
3. Psychiatric disorders |
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Term
Movement disorders in HD can either be _______ or ____________. |
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Definition
Involuntary= Chorea
Voluntary = trouble with movement coordination |
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Term
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Definition
The uncontrollable dance like twisting and turning |
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Term
List the problems associated with Movement in HD patients as time progresses. |
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Definition
Early stage = clumsiness, balance problems
Mid stage = prominent chorea, difficulties with voluntary movements
Late stage = severe chorea, akinetic, severe rigidity and bedridden
Death due to difficulty swallowing/choking. |
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Term
List the problems with Cognitive in patients with HD as time progresses. |
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Definition
Early stage= Deficits in cognitive speed, trouble retrieving memory, lack of concentration
Mid Stage = difficulty to use/ understand words, inability to recognize familiar objects
Late stage = global impairment affecting memory, judgement and nonverbal |
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Term
What are some psychiatric disorders that can arise in HD patients? |
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Definition
Depression-
Irritability
Anxiety
Aggresive outbursts
Mood swing
social withdrawal |
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Term
What is the suicide rate in patients who have HD? |
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Definition
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Term
The most prominent pathway for developing HD is the: |
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Definition
Striatum. There is progressive loss of medium spiny projection GABA neurons accompanied by glial cell activation. |
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Term
How is Chorea associated with neuronal loss? |
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Definition
Loss of striatal medium spiny projection GABA neuron leads to:
1. reduced Glut released (indirect pathway) which leads to too little stimulation in next GABA neuron
2. The direct pathway becomes dominant so there is increased release of GABA which leads to too much inhibition on next GABA neuron.
in simpler words
Too little inhibitory output from basal ganglia to thalamus
and
too much stimulatory input into cortex/spinal cord/muscles |
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Term
Which mutated gene is said to cause HD? |
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Definition
Htt gene (Huntingtin)
it is mapped on chromo. 4
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Term
Htt gene is a ________________ gene so only 1 copy is needed to transmit to offspring. This leads to a ________ chance of getting HD. |
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Definition
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Term
Which repeats are at the end of the Htt gene? And how many repeats do you need to develop HD later on in life? |
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Definition
CAG (cytosine-adenine-guanine)
40 or more CAG repeats |
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Term
Normally, we have __________ CAG repeats that function as a multi domain cytoplasmic protein. |
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Definition
9-29 (this is normal)
the average tho is around 10 CAG repeats |
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Term
CAG repeat length in the Htt gene is _________ during intergenerational transmissions. This means that with every generation there is a change of 1 repeat. |
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Definition
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Term
If you have a CAG repeat between _____________ you will not develop HD, but you increase your freq of expansioin each generation. |
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Definition
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Term
If you have ___________ CAG repeats then you have <100% chance of developing HD in life and it will expand. This shows partial penetrance. |
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Definition
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Term
If you have ____________ CAG repeats then you are 100% certainly going to develop HD. And you have complete penetrance. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the common number of CAG repeats in adults with HD? Juveniles with HD? 2 yr olds with HD? |
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Definition
Adult HD = 40-55 CAG
Juvenile = >70 CAG
2 yo = 250 CAG |
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Term
T/F: With paternal transmission of HD, the expansion is more likely and addition of >1 repeat is more frequent. |
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Definition
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Term
Most Juvenile HD cases are ___________. |
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Definition
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Term
In Maternal transmission of HD there is an equal chance of ______________ and ____________ of CAG repeats. |
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Definition
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Term
Wha are some possible mechanism for expansion in paternal transmission of HD? |
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Definition
It is associated with spermatogenesis.
Sperm has more highly variable repeat lengths due to more cellular divisions.
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Term
As the paternal age increases then the chance of transmitting an expanded repeat of HD has ____________. |
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Definition
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Term
There is an association of CAG repeats and disease severity. If you have longer repeats then the disease is (more/less) severe? |
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Definition
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Term
There is an association of the number of CAG repeats and the rate of the HD progression. If you have more repeats then you have a (slower/faster) progression of the disease. |
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Definition
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Term
What is the most common neurodegenerative disease? |
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Definition
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Term
Alzheimer's is the _______ leading cause of death in the US |
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Definition
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Term
Who has a greater risk for getting Alzheimers? |
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Definition
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Term
If you are 85 yrs or older, you have a __________ % chance of developing Alzheimers. |
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Definition
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Term
How much of a economical impact does Alzheimers have? |
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Definition
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Term
In 2000 there was 4 million AD cases in the US, how many is there expected to be by the year of 2050? How about worldwide 2050? |
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Definition
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Term
AD can be either sporadic or Familial. Which represents 90% of all cases? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the age of onset for Sporadic AD? |
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Definition
65 yr old
Has a slow progression 8-25 yrs |
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Term
Familial AD represents less than 10% of total cases and has an early onset _______________. |
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Definition
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Term
Familial AD is linked to mutations of which genes? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the clinical stages of AD? |
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Definition
Mild AD
Moderate AD
Severe AD |
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Term
What features are included with Mild AD? |
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Definition
Passive mood
forget directions to familiar places
lose the concept of money
forget math
remembering recent events is hard
Daily activities are not that much interfered. |
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Term
In Moderate AD the daily activites are __________________ which means that routine tasks such as brushing teeth/hair, eating, etc are difficult to do because they dont remember how to. |
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Definition
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Term
Severe AD is when the person wanders, forgets identity, speech-less and has movement disorders. With this form one needs _____________. |
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Definition
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Term
Where does the degeneration occur in Early stage AD? And what do these people tend to lose? |
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Definition
Degeneration of the hippocampal neurons
They lose their short term memory |
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Term
In Mid Stage AD neurodegeneration spreads to _________________. This affects what? |
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Definition
the frontal lobe
Affects judgement, safety awareness, planning and other complex thinking |
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Term
By the time of Late Stage AD, neurodegeneration has spread to _____________________ and affects multiple functions of the brain. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Medical history/status
Ability to carryout daily activities
Mini Mental State Exam that determines math/language ability
Lab tests for exclusions
Brain imaging via CT, MRI, PET
Exclusion of other disorders that affect memory and cognition. |
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Term
What are the new clinical diagnosis guidelines for AD? |
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Definition
The aim is to diagnose pre-clinical dementia. (~ 10 yrs before memory related symptoms appear)
Imaging for amyloid plaques and tangles in brain and imaging for amyloid peptides and tau proteins in the CSF. |
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Term
What are the definitive diagnosis for AD? |
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Definition
Cortical atrophy
ventricular dilation
amyloid plaques
tangles |
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Term
For AD, cortical atrophy iis the thinning of the cortex due to _____________________. |
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Definition
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Term
In Cortical Atrophy in AD you have ________________________ and ______________________. |
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Definition
Narrowed gyrus
Widened sulcus |
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Term
T/F: In AD patients the ventricles are significantly enlarged due to brain mass loss. |
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Definition
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Term
Amyloid plaques are the miliary foci in AD and is ____________. There is an _____________ in AD brains. |
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Definition
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Term
Neurofibrillary Tangles are thickened fibers that are ______________ and found inside affected neurons. |
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Definition
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Term
What does the structure of amyloid plaques look like? |
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Definition
They are spherical and multi-cellular
There is a amyloid proteind deposit core
Degenerating neuronal processes
And reactive brain Ig's |
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Term
What are the components of Amyloid Plaques? |
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Definition
1. Beta Amyloid peptides
2. Apolipoprotein E
3. Protease inhibitors
4. complement problems
5. metal irons |
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Term
T/F: Beta amyloid pepetides make up the plaque core in AD patients. |
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Definition
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Term
APP is the precursor to the amyloid peptide that makes up the core. It has 3 major variants. What are they and on what chromosome? |
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Definition
APP695, APP751, APP770
chromosome 21 |
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Term
The APP is a large protein up to 770 AA with a long extracellular ____ terminus and a short trans membrane _____terminus. |
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Definition
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Term
Alpha secretase cleaves at the 687 AA and releases ________ into the extracellular space. |
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Definition
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Term
What are some features of sAPPα? |
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Definition
May have growth factor like activity because it promtes progenitor cell proliferation in the brain.
Regulates Ca2+ levles
stimulates signal transduction.
Intracellular domain may act as an adaptor protein for G-protein |
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Term
To make amyloid plaques which 2 enzymes are used? |
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Definition
β-secretase- cuts at 671
γ-secretase - cuts at 711 and 713 |
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Term
The main components of amyloid plaques is _______ and ___________. |
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Definition
Aβ (1-40) and Aβ (1-42)
they aggregate together to form insoluble fibers |
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Term
Which Aβ is more insoluble and aggregates more rapidly into amyloid fibrils? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some effects of Aβ peptides? |
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Definition
Activate protein phsophorylation. (Tau)
inhibit neuritic outgrowth (Affects plasticity)
Are toxic to neurons |
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Term
What has been linked to the development of early onset AD? |
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Definition
mutations in genes that lead to an increased A-beta peptide production |
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Term
If you have a mutation at AA671 then 672 ______________ the efficiency of B-secretase leading to increased production of _______________ |
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Definition
increases
AB 1-40 and AB 1-42 |
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Term
If you have a mutation at AA713 then you have increased efficiency of _________________ leading to increased production of ____________. |
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Definition
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Term
If you have a mutation at AA692-694 then you ____________ the efficiency of alpha secretase leading to increased production of ________________. |
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Definition
decrease
AB 1-40 and AB 1-42 |
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Term
How can you shunt more APP to Beta and gamma secretases? |
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Definition
By reducing activity by alpha secretase |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
PS1 and PS2 are multiple transmembrane domain proteins that are localized to ER and golgi in neurons. They can bind to the ______________ transmeembrane region of the APP. |
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Definition
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Term
Mutations in ____________ increase ______________ activity leading to an increased AB generation. |
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Definition
PS1 and PS2
gamma secretase |
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Term
Increased formation of what leads to increased formation of amyloid plaques and finally neurodegeneration? |
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Definition
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Term
T/F: Presenillins associate with a number of proteins to form gamma secretase complex. |
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Definition
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Term
There are over 150 different mutations in _____ which is responsible for _______ of early onset AD. |
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Definition
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Term
There are 11 mutations found in ____________ and represents ______ of early onset AD. |
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Definition
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Term
How is the APP gene and Down Syndrome associated? |
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Definition
Trisomy 21 has 3 copies of APP gene.
There is increased APP expression so increased generation of AB 1-40 and 1-42.
By age of 12 a plaque forms and neuropathology of AD develops in the 40-50 yrs of age. |
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Term
___________________ is a hallmark of AD. |
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Definition
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Term
Tau is a cytoplasmic protein that is mostly found in neurons. They are associated with _______________ thru C terminal domain to stabilize neuronal cytoskeletal structure. |
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Definition
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Term
Tau is a substrate for many protein kinases so proper _________________ regulates its affinity to microtubules. |
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Definition
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Term
In AD there is a _________ of Tau which leads to the increased formation of neurofibrilliary tangles. |
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Definition
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Term
Once Tau detaches from the microtubles,t hen tau moelcules aggregate to form _______________. |
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Definition
Paired helical filaments
PHF |
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Term
What causes neuronal damage ? |
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Definition
Collapse of microtubules once tau has been removed. |
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Term
T/F: Apolipoprotein 4 gene on chrom.19 is a risk factor for AD. |
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Definition
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Term
There are multiple alles for Apo Gene. What are they. Which is the most abundant? Which is associated with having AD? |
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Definition
E2, E3 and E4
E3 is the most abundant
E4 is associated with AD
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Term
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Definition
it doesnt affect the APP expression, but instead enhances aggregation of AB.
It decreases the clearance of AB and increases GSK-3B activity. |
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Term
What are the 2 different drug treatments for AD? |
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Definition
1. Inhibitors for ACH esterase
2. NMDA antagonists |
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Term
In AD, ____________ s lost, so we use __________ inhibitors to reduce the breakdown of ____________. |
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Definition
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Term
What leads to a loss of ACh in AD? |
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Definition
An increase stimulation of Glutamate of NMDA receptors because of toxicity |
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