13 research outputs found
Hyperhomocysteinemia in L-dopa treated patients with Parkinson's disease: potential implications in cognitive dysfunction and dementia?
Abstract: Background: Hyperhomocysteinemia has been associated with cognitive dysfunction and dementia. The incidence
of dementia in Parkinson’s Disease (PD) patients is higher than in the general population and plasma Homocysteine
concentrations are increased in L-dopa treated PD patients.
Objective: We evaluated the possible correlations between L-Dopa related hyperhomocysteinemia and cognitive dysfunction
in PD.
Methods: A Medline literature search was performed to identify all published studies on Homocysteine and cognitive dysfunction
and dementia during the course of PD from 1966 to 31/03/2010.
Results: Sixteen studies were found for review; ten studies focused on homocysteine and cognitive dysfunction in PD patients,
five on homocysteine and PD dementia and two on homocysteine and markers of neurodegeneration in PD. The design
of the study was retrospective in 14 studies, while 2 had a prospective design, with a variable follow-up period (from
24-weeks to 2 years). In most of the studies plasma homocysteine levels significantly correlated with cognitive functions,
dementia and markers of neurodegeneration in PD patients. However, some studies did not confirm these findings. Several
factors may concur to explain these partially conflicting results, including the retrospective design of the studies, their
small sample size, their high percentage of excluded patients, and the use of a wide range of neuropsychological tasks in
assessment of cognitive dysfunctions across the available studies.
Conclusions: Available data seem to indicate a potential role of L-dopa related hyperhomocysteinemia on cognitive impairment
and dementia during the course of PD
Plant-herbivore interactions in streams near Mt. St. Helens
1. In four separate field experiments near Mount St Helens (Washington, U.S.A.) during 1986, the grazing effects of two large benthic herbivores, tadpoles of the tailed frog Ascaphus truei and larvae of the caddisfly Dicosmoecus gilvipes, were investigated using streamside channels and in-stream manipulations. In the experimental channels, abundances of periphyton and small benthic invertebrates declined significantly with increasing density of these larger herbivores. 2. In eleven small, high-gradient streams affected to varying degrees by the May 1980 eruption, in-stream platforms were used to reduce grazing by A, truei tadpoles on tile substrates. Single platforms erected in each tributary and compared to grazed controls revealed only minor grazing effects, and no significant differences among streams varying in disturbance intensity (and, consequently, tadpole density). However, results probably were confounded by high variability among streams in factors other than tadpole abundance. 3. Grazing effects were further examined in two unshaded streams with different tadpole densities, using five platforms per stream. In the stream with five tadpoles m−2, grazing reduced periphyton biomass by 98% and chlorophyll a by 82%. In the stream lacking tadpoles, no significant grazing effects were revealed. Low algal abundance on both platforms and controls, and high invertebrate density in that stream (c. 30000m−2) suggests that grazing by small, vagile invertebrates was approximately equivalent to that of tadpoles. 4. The influence of large benthic herbivores on algal and invertebrate communities in streams of Mount St Helens can be important, but reponses vary spatially in relation to stream disturbance history, local environmental factors, and herbivore distributional patterns and abundanc