1,316 results on '"Sixel-Döring F"'
Search Results
2. Plasma proteomics identify biomarkers predicting Parkinson's disease up to 7 years before symptom onset.
- Author
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Hällqvist J, Bartl M, Dakna M, Schade S, Garagnani P, Bacalini MG, Pirazzini C, Bhatia K, Schreglmann S, Xylaki M, Weber S, Ernst M, Muntean ML, Sixel-Döring F, Franceschi C, Doykov I, Śpiewak J, Vinette H, Trenkwalder C, Heywood WE, Mills K, and Mollenhauer B
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Machine Learning, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder blood, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis, Case-Control Studies, Mass Spectrometry, Parkinson Disease blood, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Biomarkers blood, Proteomics methods
- Abstract
Parkinson's disease is increasingly prevalent. It progresses from the pre-motor stage (characterised by non-motor symptoms like REM sleep behaviour disorder), to the disabling motor stage. We need objective biomarkers for early/pre-motor disease stages to be able to intervene and slow the underlying neurodegenerative process. Here, we validate a targeted multiplexed mass spectrometry assay for blood samples from recently diagnosed motor Parkinson's patients (n = 99), pre-motor individuals with isolated REM sleep behaviour disorder (two cohorts: n = 18 and n = 54 longitudinally), and healthy controls (n = 36). Our machine-learning model accurately identifies all Parkinson patients and classifies 79% of the pre-motor individuals up to 7 years before motor onset by analysing the expression of eight proteins-Granulin precursor, Mannan-binding-lectin-serine-peptidase-2, Endoplasmatic-reticulum-chaperone-BiP, Prostaglaindin-H2-D-isomaerase, Interceullular-adhesion-molecule-1, Complement C3, Dickkopf-WNT-signalling pathway-inhibitor-3, and Plasma-protease-C1-inhibitor. Many of these biomarkers correlate with symptom severity. This specific blood panel indicates molecular events in early stages and could help identify at-risk participants for clinical trials aimed at slowing/preventing motor Parkinson's disease., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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3. Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder: devising controlled active treatment studies for symptomatic and neuroprotective therapy—a consensus statement from the International Rapid Eye Movement Sleep Behavior Disorder Study Group
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Schenck, CH, Montplaisir, JY, Frauscher, B, Hogl, B, Gagnon, J-F, Postuma, R, Sonka, K, Jennum, P, Partinen, M, Arnulf, I, de Cock, V Cochen, Dauvilliers, Y, Luppi, P-H, Heidbreder, A, Mayer, G, Sixel-Döring, F, Trenkwalder, C, Unger, M, Young, P, Wing, YK, Ferini-Strambi, L, Ferri, R, Plazzi, G, Zucconi, M, Inoue, Y, Iranzo, A, Santamaria, J, Bassetti, C, Möller, JC, Boeve, BF, Lai, YY, Pavlova, M, Saper, C, Schmidt, P, Siegel, JM, Singer, C, St Louis, E, Videnovic, A, and Oertel, W
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Brain Disorders ,Prevention ,Aging ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Neurodegenerative ,Parkinson's Disease ,Lewy Body Dementia ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Sleep Research ,Mental Health ,Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (ADRD) ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Dementia ,Neurological ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Clonazepam ,Consensus ,GABA Modulators ,Humans ,Melatonin ,Neuroprotective Agents ,Parkinson Disease ,REM Sleep Behavior Disorder ,Risk Factors ,REM sleep behavior disorder ,RBD ,Treatment studies ,Neuroprotective studies ,Parkinson disease ,PD ,alpha-Synucleinopathies ,Videopolysomnography ,α-Synucleinopathies ,Psychology ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesWe aimed to provide a consensus statement by the International Rapid Eye Movement Sleep Behavior Disorder Study Group (IRBD-SG) on devising controlled active treatment studies in rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) and devising studies of neuroprotection against Parkinson disease (PD) and related neurodegeneration in RBD.MethodsThe consensus statement was generated during the fourth IRBD-SG symposium in Marburg, Germany in 2011. The IRBD-SG identified essential methodologic components for a randomized trial in RBD, including potential screening and diagnostic criteria, inclusion and exclusion criteria, primary and secondary outcomes for symptomatic therapy trials (particularly for melatonin and clonazepam), and potential primary and secondary outcomes for eventual trials with disease-modifying and neuroprotective agents. The latter trials are considered urgent, given the high conversion rate from idiopathic RBD (iRBD) to Parkinsonian disorders (i.e., PD, dementia with Lewy bodies [DLB], multiple system atrophy [MSA]).ResultsSix inclusion criteria were identified for symptomatic therapy and neuroprotective trials: (1) diagnosis of RBD needs to satisfy the International Classification of Sleep Disorders, second edition, (ICSD-2) criteria; (2) minimum frequency of RBD episodes should preferably be ⩾2 times weekly to allow for assessment of change; (3) if the PD-RBD target population is included, it should be in the early stages of PD defined as Hoehn and Yahr stages 1-3 in Off (untreated); (4) iRBD patients with soft neurologic dysfunction and with operational criteria established by the consensus of study investigators; (5) patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI); and (6) optimally treated comorbid OSA. Twenty-four exclusion criteria were identified. The primary outcome measure for RBD treatment trials was determined to be the Clinical Global Impression (CGI) efficacy index, consisting of a four-point scale with a four-point side-effect scale. Assessment of video-polysomnographic (vPSG) changes holds promise but is costly and needs further elaboration. Secondary outcome measures include sleep diaries; sleepiness scales; PD sleep scale 2 (PDSS-2); serial motor examinations; cognitive indices; mood and anxiety indices; assessment of frequency of falls, gait impairment, and apathy; fatigue severity scale; and actigraphy and customized bed alarm systems. Consensus also was established for evaluating the clinical and vPSG aspects of RBD. End points for neuroprotective trials in RBD, taking lessons from research in PD, should be focused on the ultimate goal of determining the performance of disease-modifying agents. To date no compound with convincing evidence of disease-modifying or neuroprotective efficacy has been identified in PD. Nevertheless, iRBD patients are considered ideal candidates for neuroprotective studies.ConclusionsThe IRBD-SG provides an important platform for developing multinational collaborative studies on RBD such as on environmental risk factors for iRBD, as recently reported in a peer-reviewed journal article, and on controlled active treatment studies for symptomatic and neuroprotective therapy that emerged during the 2011 consensus conference in Marburg, Germany, as described in our report.
- Published
- 2013
4. Lysosomal and synaptic dysfunction markers in longitudinal cerebrospinal fluid of de novo Parkinson's disease.
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Bartl M, Nilsson J, Dakna M, Weber S, Schade S, Xylaki M, Fernandes Gomes B, Ernst M, Muntean ML, Sixel-Döring F, Trenkwalder C, Zetterberg H, Brinkmalm A, and Mollenhauer B
- Abstract
Lysosomal and synaptic dysfunctions are hallmarks in neurodegeneration and potentially relevant as biomarkers, but data on early Parkinson's disease (PD) is lacking. We performed targeted mass spectrometry with an established protein panel, assessing autophagy and synaptic function in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of drug-naïve de novo PD, and sex-/age-matched healthy controls (HC) cross-sectionally (88 PD, 46 HC) and longitudinally (104 PD, 58 HC) over 10 years. Multiple markers of autophagy, synaptic plasticity, and secretory pathways were reduced in PD. We added samples from prodromal subjects (9 cross-sectional, 12 longitudinal) with isolated REM sleep behavior disorder, revealing secretogranin-2 already decreased compared to controls. Machine learning identified neuronal pentraxin receptor and neurosecretory protein VGF as most relevant for discriminating between groups. CSF levels of LAMP2, neuronal pentraxins, and syntaxins in PD correlated with clinical progression, showing predictive potential for motor- and non-motor symptoms as a valid basis for future drug trials., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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5. Blood Markers of Inflammation, Neurodegeneration, and Cardiovascular Risk in Early Parkinson's Disease.
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Bartl M, Dakna M, Schade S, Otte B, Wicke T, Lang E, Starke M, Ebentheuer J, Weber S, Toischer K, Schnelle M, Sixel-Döring F, Trenkwalder C, and Mollenhauer B
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- Humans, Cohort Studies, Risk Factors, Biomarkers, Inflammation, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Disease Progression, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Background: Recent studies point toward a significant impact of cardiovascular processes and inflammation on Parkinson's disease (PD) progression., Objective: The aim of this study was to assess established markers of neuronal function, inflammation, and cardiovascular risk by high-throughput sandwich immune multiplex panels in deeply phenotyped PD., Methods: Proximity Extension Assay technology on 273 markers was applied in plasma of 109 drug-naive at baseline (BL) patients with PD (BL, 2-, 4-, and 6-year follow-up [FU]) and 96 healthy control patients (HCs; 2- and 4-year FU) from the de novo Parkinson's cohort. BL plasma from 74 individuals (37 patients with PD, 37 healthy control patients) on the same platform from the Parkinson Progression Marker Initiative was used for independent validation. Correlation analysis of the identified markers and 6 years of clinical FU, including motor and cognitive progression, was evaluated., Results: At BL, 35 plasma markers were differentially expressed in PD, showing downregulation of atherosclerotic risk markers, eg, E-selectin and ß
2 -integrin. In contrast, we found a reduction of markers of the plasminogen activation system, eg, urokinase plasminogen activator. Neurospecific markers indicated increased levels of peripheral proteins of neurodegeneration and inflammation, such as fibroblast growth factor 21 and peptidase inhibitor 3. Several markers, including interleukin-6 and cystatin B, correlated with cognitive decline and progression of motor symptoms during FU. These findings were independently validated in the Parkinson Progression Marker Initiative., Conclusions: We identified and validated possible PD plasma biomarker candidates for state, fate, and disease progression, elucidating new molecular processes with reduced endothelial/atherosclerotic processes, increased thromboembolic risk, and neuroinflammation. Further investigations and validation in independent and larger longitudinal cohorts are needed. © 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)- Published
- 2023
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6. Prodromal dementia with Lewy bodies in REM sleep behavior disorder: A multicenter study.
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Joza S, Hu MT, Jung KY, Kunz D, Arnaldi D, Lee JY, Ferini-Strambi L, Antelmi E, Sixel-Döring F, De Cock VC, Montplaisir JY, Welch J, Kim HJ, Bes F, Mattioli P, Woo KA, Marelli S, Plazzi G, Mollenhauer B, Pelletier A, Razzaque J, Sunwoo JS, Girtler N, Trenkwalder C, Gagnon JF, and Postuma RB
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- Humans, Lewy Body Disease diagnosis, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis, Parkinson Disease, Parkinsonian Disorders, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Isolated/idiopathic rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) is a powerful early predictor of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Parkinson's disease (PD). This provides an opportunity to directly observe the evolution of prodromal DLB and to identify which cognitive variables are the strongest predictors of evolving dementia., Methods: IRBD participants (n = 754) from 10 centers of the International RBD Study Group underwent annual neuropsychological assessment. Competing risk regression analysis determined optimal predictors of dementia. Linear mixed-effect models determined the annual progression of neuropsychological testing., Results: Reduced attention and executive function, particularly performance on the Trail Making Test Part B, were the strongest identifiers of early DLB. In phenoconverters, the onset of cognitive decline began up to 10 years prior to phenoconversion. Changes in verbal memory best differentiated between DLB and PD subtypes., Discussion: In iRBD, attention and executive dysfunction strongly predict dementia and begin declining several years prior to phenoconversion., Highlights: Cognitive decline in iRBD begins up to 10 years prior to phenoconversion. Attention and executive dysfunction are the strongest predictors of dementia in iRBD. Decline in episodic memory best distinguished dementia-first from parkinsonism-first phenoconversion., (© 2023 The Authors. Alzheimer's & Dementia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2024
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7. The Increasing Prevalence of REM Sleep Behavior Disorder with Parkinson's Disease Progression: A Polysomnography-Supported Study.
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Sixel-Döring F, Muntean ML, Petersone D, Leha A, Lang E, Mollenhauer B, and Trenkwalder C
- Abstract
Objectives: Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is proposed as an early diagnostic marker in Parkinson's disease (PD). We investigated the frequency of RBD during the progression of PD in the advanced stages and identified potential risk factors for developing RBD earlier or later., Patients and Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis and determined the frequency of RBD in all PD in-patients (Hoehn and Yahr stages ≥3) with motor fluctuations who had undergone video-polysomnography (vPSG) for a sleep complaint or daytime sleepiness. To correct for selection bias, we analyzed the prevalence of RBD in PD patients from the DeNoPa cohort. PD patients with RBD were compared with PD without RBD. To identify potential risk factors, we performed multiple regression modeling., Results: A total of 504 PD patients had vPSG. 37 were excluded due to missing REM or artifacts during REM. RBD was present in 406/467 (86.9%) PD patients. PD + RBD patients were older than PDnonRBD (69 ± 7.7 vs. 64 ± 9.2 years, P < 0.01), were more likely to have postural instability [234 (59.1%) vs. 19 (33.9%), P < 0.01], and were treated more often with antidepressants (other than SSRIs) [141 (34.7%) vs. 7 (13%), P < 0.01]. Multiple regression modeling identified predictors of RBD with an AUC of 0.78., Conclusion: The prevalence of RBD in patients with advanced PD is high and increases with disease severity, motor deficits, postural instability, orthostatic symptoms, and age. This suggests RBD is a progression marker of PD in patients with sleep complaints., (© 2023 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
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- 2023
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8. HLA in isolated REM sleep behavior disorder and Lewy body dementia.
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Yu E, Krohn L, Ruskey JA, Asayesh F, Spiegelman D, Shah Z, Chia R, Arnulf I, Hu MTM, Montplaisir JY, Gagnon JF, Desautels A, Dauvilliers Y, Gigli GL, Valente M, Janes F, Bernardini A, Högl B, Stefani A, Ibrahim A, Heidbreder A, Sonka K, Dusek P, Kemlink D, Oertel W, Janzen A, Plazzi G, Antelmi E, Figorilli M, Puligheddu M, Mollenhauer B, Trenkwalder C, Sixel-Döring F, Cochen De Cock V, Ferini-Strambi L, Dijkstra F, Viaene M, Abril B, Boeve BF, Rouleau GA, Postuma RB, Scholz SW, and Gan-Or Z
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- Humans, HLA-DRB1 Chains genetics, HLA Antigens, Lewy Body Disease genetics, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder genetics, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder complications, Synucleinopathies genetics
- Abstract
Synucleinopathies-related disorders such as Lewy body dementia (LBD) and isolated/idiopathic REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) have been associated with neuroinflammation. In this study, we examined whether the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) locus plays a role in iRBD and LBD. In iRBD, HLA-DRB1*11:01 was the only allele passing FDR correction (OR = 1.57, 95% CI = 1.27-1.93, p = 2.70e-05). We also discovered associations between iRBD and HLA-DRB1 70D (OR = 1.26, 95%CI = 1.12-1.41, p = 8.76e-05), 70Q (OR = 0.81, 95%CI = 0.72-0.91, p = 3.65e-04) and 71R (OR = 1.21, 95%CI = 1.08-1.35, p = 1.35e-03). Position 71 (p
omnibus = 0.00102) and 70 (pomnibus = 0.00125) were associated with iRBD. Our results suggest that the HLA locus may have different roles across synucleinopathies., (© 2023 The Authors. Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Neurological Association.)- Published
- 2023
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9. Progression of clinical markers in prodromal Parkinson's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies: a multicentre study.
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Joza S, Hu MT, Jung KY, Kunz D, Stefani A, Dušek P, Terzaghi M, Arnaldi D, Videnovic A, Schiess MC, Hermann W, Lee JY, Ferini-Strambi L, Lewis SJG, Leclair-Visonneau L, Oertel WH, Antelmi E, Sixel-Döring F, Cochen De Cock V, Liguori C, Liu J, Provini F, Puligheddu M, Nicoletti A, Bassetti CLA, Bušková J, Dauvilliers Y, Ferri R, Montplaisir JY, Lawton M, Kim HJ, Bes F, Högl B, Šonka K, Fiamingo G, Mattioli P, Lavadia ML, Suescun J, Woo KA, Marelli S, Martens KE, Janzen A, Plazzi G, Mollenhauer B, Fernandes M, Li Y, Cortelli P, Figorilli M, Cicero CE, Schaefer C, Guiraud L, Lanza G, Gagnon JF, Sunwoo JS, Ibrahim A, Girtler N, Trenkwalder C, Baldelli L, Pelletier A, and Postuma RB
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- Humans, Prospective Studies, Disease Progression, Biomarkers, Prodromal Symptoms, Parkinson Disease complications, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Lewy Body Disease diagnosis, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis
- Abstract
The neurodegenerative synucleinopathies, including Parkinson's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies, are characterized by a typically lengthy prodromal period of progressive subclinical motor and non-motor manifestations. Among these, idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder is a powerful early predictor of eventual phenoconversion, and therefore represents a critical opportunity to intervene with neuroprotective therapy. To inform the design of randomized trials, it is essential to study the natural progression of clinical markers during the prodromal stages of disease in order to establish optimal clinical end points. In this study, we combined prospective follow-up data from 28 centres of the International REM Sleep Behavior Disorder Study Group representing 12 countries. Polysomnogram-confirmed REM sleep behaviour disorder subjects were assessed for prodromal Parkinson's disease using the Movement Disorder Society criteria and underwent periodic structured sleep, motor, cognitive, autonomic and olfactory testing. We used linear mixed-effect modelling to estimate annual rates of clinical marker progression stratified by disease subtype, including prodromal Parkinson's disease and prodromal dementia with Lewy bodies. In addition, we calculated sample size requirements to demonstrate slowing of progression under different anticipated treatment effects. Overall, 1160 subjects were followed over an average of 3.3 ± 2.2 years. Among clinical variables assessed continuously, motor variables tended to progress faster and required the lowest sample sizes, ranging from 151 to 560 per group (at 50% drug efficacy and 2-year follow-up). By contrast, cognitive, olfactory and autonomic variables showed modest progression with higher variability, resulting in high sample sizes. The most efficient design was a time-to-event analysis using combined milestones of motor and cognitive decline, estimating 117 per group at 50% drug efficacy and 2-year trial duration. Finally, while phenoconverters showed overall greater progression than non-converters in motor, olfactory, cognitive and certain autonomic markers, the only robust difference in progression between Parkinson's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies phenoconverters was in cognitive testing. This large multicentre study demonstrates the evolution of motor and non-motor manifestations in prodromal synucleinopathy. These findings provide optimized clinical end points and sample size estimates to inform future neuroprotective trials., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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10. REM-Schlafverhaltensstörung – Status quo der diagnostischen Methoden und Bedeutung der Diagnose im Zusammenhang mit neurodegenerativen Erkrankungen
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Sixel-Döring, F., Mollenhauer, B., and Benes, H.
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- 2014
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11. REM-Schlaf-Verhaltensstörung als prodromales Stadium von α-Synukleinopathien: Klinik, Epidemiologie, Pathophysiologie, Diagnose und Behandlung
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Oertel, W.H., Depboylu, C., Krenzer, M., Vadasz, D., Ries, V., Sixel-Döring, F., and Mayer, G.
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- 2014
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12. REM Sleep behavior disorder in Parkinson's disease: a model for identification and prediction of its progression from the prodromal stage
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Cesari, M., Christensen, J.A.E., Sørensen, H.B.D., Mollenhauer, B., Muntean, M.-L., Trenkwalder, C., Sixel-Döring, F., Jennum, P., Cesari, M., Christensen, J.A.E., Sørensen, H.B.D., Mollenhauer, B., Muntean, M.-L., Trenkwalder, C., Sixel-Döring, F., and Jennum, P.
- Published
- 2019
13. Accurate Detection of α-Synuclein Seeds in Cerebrospinal Fluid from Isolated Rapid Eye Movement Sleep Behavior Disorder and Patients with Parkinson's Disease in the DeNovo Parkinson (DeNoPa) Cohort.
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Concha-Marambio L, Weber S, Farris CM, Dakna M, Lang E, Wicke T, Ma Y, Starke M, Ebentheuer J, Sixel-Döring F, Muntean ML, Schade S, Trenkwalder C, Soto C, and Mollenhauer B
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- Humans, Synucleinopathies diagnosis, alpha-Synuclein cerebrospinal fluid, alpha-Synuclein chemistry, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Parkinson Disease metabolism, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Misfolded α-synuclein (αSyn) aggregates (αSyn-seeds) in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) are biomarkers for synucleinopathies such as Parkinson's disease (PD). αSyn-seeds have been detected in prodromal cases with isolated rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (iRBD)., Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine the accuracy of the αSyn-seed amplification assay (αS-SAA) in a comprehensively characterized cohort with a high proportion of PD and iRBD CSF samples collected at baseline., Methods: We used a high-throughput αS-SAA to analyze 233 blinded CSF samples from 206 participants of the DeNovo Parkinson Cohort (DeNoPa) (113 de novo PD, 64 healthy controls, 29 iRBD confirmed by video polysomnography). Results were compared with the final diagnosis, which was determined after up to 10 years of longitudinal clinical evaluations, including dopamine-transporter-single-photon emission computed tomography (DAT-SPECT) at baseline, CSF proteins, Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, and various cognitive and nonmotor scales., Results: αS-SAA detected αSyn-seeds in baseline PD-CSF with 98% accuracy. αSyn-seeds were detected in 93% of the iRBD cases. αS-SAA results showed higher agreement with the final than the initial diagnosis, as 14 patients were rediagnosed as non-αSyn aggregation disorder. For synucleinopathies, αS-SAA showed higher concordance with the final diagnosis than DAT-SPECT. Statistically significant correlations were found between assay parameters and disease progression., Conclusions: Our results confirm αS-SAA accuracy at the first clinical evaluation when a definite diagnosis is most consequential. αS-SAA conditions reported here are highly sensitive, enabling the detection of αSyn-seeds in CSF from iRBD just months after the first symptoms, suggesting that αSyn-seeds are present in the very early prodromal phase of synucleinopathies. Therefore, αSyn-seeds are clear risk markers for synuclein-related disorders, but not for time of phenoconversion. © 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
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- 2023
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14. Früherkennung der Parkinson-Krankheit: Objektivierbare nichtmotorische Symptome und Biomarker
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Mollenhauer, B., Sixel-Döring, F., Storch, A., Schneider, C., Hilker, R., and Kalbe, E.
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- 2013
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15. Nachsorge nach tiefer Hirnstimulation bei Patienten mit M. Parkinson: Long-term care after deep brain stimulation of patients with Parkinson’s disease
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Sixel-Döring, F. and Ebersbach, G.
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- 2010
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16. No difference in serum ferritin levels between Parkinsonʼs disease patients with and without restless legs syndrome: 818
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Muntean, M.-L., Sixel-Döring, F., and Trenkwalder, C.
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- 2014
17. The evolution of REM sleep behaviour disorder in Parkinsonʼs disease patients with parkin mutations: A report from the DeNoPa cohort: 805
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Sixel-Döring, F., Lohmann, K., Klein, C., Mollenhauer, B., and Trenkwalder, C.
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- 2014
18. Tiefe Hirnstimulation bei Multiple-Sklerose-Tremor: Empfehlungen der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Tiefe Hirnstimulation
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Timmermann, L., Deuschl, G., Fogel, W., Hilker, R., Kupsch, A., Lange, M., Schrader, C., Sixel-Döring, F., Volkmann, J., and Benecke, R.
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- 2009
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19. Tiefe Hirnstimulation bei essenziellem Tremor: Empfehlungen der Deutschen Arbeitsgemeinschaft Tiefe Hirnstimulation
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Sixel-Döring, F., Benecke, R., Fogel, W., Hilker, R., Kupsch, A., Lange, M., Schrader, C., Timmermann, L., Volkmann, J., and Deuschl, G.
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- 2009
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20. Tiefe Hirnstimulation bei Dystonie: Empfehlungen der Deutschen Arbeitsgemeinschaft Tiefe Hirnstimulation
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Schrader, C., Benecke, R., Deuschl, G., Hilker, R., Kupsch, A., Lange, M., Sixel-Döring, F., Timmermann, L., Volkmann, J., and Fogel, W.
- Published
- 2009
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21. Tiefe Hirnstimulation bei idiopathischem Parkinson-Syndrom: Empfehlungen der Deutschen Arbeitsgemeinschaft Tiefe Hirnstimulation
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Hilker, R., Benecke, R., Deuschl, G., Fogel, W., Kupsch, A., Schrader, C., Sixel-Döring, F., Timmermann, L., Volkmann, J., and Lange, M.
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- 2009
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22. Comparison of automated methods forREM sleep without atonia detection
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Cesari, Matteo, Christensen, Julie Anja Engelhard, Mayer, G., Oertel, W.H., Sixel-Döring, F., Trenkwalder, C., Sørensen, Helge Bjarup Dissing, Jennum, Poul, Cesari, Matteo, Christensen, Julie Anja Engelhard, Mayer, G., Oertel, W.H., Sixel-Döring, F., Trenkwalder, C., Sørensen, Helge Bjarup Dissing, and Jennum, Poul
- Abstract
Objectives/Introduction:REM sleep without atonia (RSWA) detection is a prerequisite for REM sleep behaviour disorder (RBD)diagnosis. Since current visual methods for RSWA detection are sub-jective and tedious, several automated methods have been proposed.This study aims to compare their accuracies in identifying RSWA and to analyse the influence of respiration and arousal‐related movements in such accuracies. Methods:In a cohort including 27 healthy control subjects (C), 25 Parkinson's disease (PD) patients without RBD (PD‐RBD), 29 PD patients with RBD (PD+RBD), 29 idiopathic RBD patients and 36 patients with periodic limb movement disorder (PLMD), the following indices were calculated: The REM atonia index (RAI), the supra‐threshold‐REM‐activity metric (STREAM), the Frandsen index (FRI),the short/long muscle activity indices (sMAI/lMAI) and the Kempfner index (KEI). The indices were calculated in various cases: 1) considering all muscle activities; 2) excluding the ones related to arousals; 3)excluding the ones during apnea events; 4) excluding the ones before and after apnea events; 5) combining cases 2 and 3; and 6)combining cases 2 and 4. In each case, each index was used to train and test a logistic regression model with 10‐fold cross‐validationscheme to calculate accuracies in the followingcomparisons:1(C, PD-RBD, PLMD) vs (PD+RBD, RBD);2C vs RBD;3PLMD vs RBD;4C vs PD-RBD;5C vs PLMD;6PD-RBD vs PD+RBD; and7C vs PLMD vs RBD.Kruskal‐Wallis tests were used to assess whether the accuracies for each index and comparison were varying significantly across the cases.Results:The indices showed varying performances across cases and comparisons, making it impossible to identify one index as significantly better than the others. In all comparisons and cases, the average test accuracy of each index was lower than 80%. Moreover, apnea and arousal‐related movements did not influence significantly the performance of the algorithms in group distinctions.Conclusions:None of the
- Published
- 2018
23. External validation of a data-driven algorithm for muscular activity identification during sleep.
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Cesari M, Christensen JAE, Sorensen HBD, Jennum P, Mollenhauer B, Muntean ML, Trenkwalder C, and Sixel-Döring F
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- Aged, Algorithms, Female, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Movement physiology, Polysomnography methods, Sleep physiology
- Abstract
Several automated methods for scoring periodic limb movements during sleep (PLMS) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep without atonia (RSWA) have been proposed, but most of them were developed and validated on data recorded in the same clinic, thus they may be biased. This work aims to validate our data-driven algorithm for muscular activity detection during sleep, originally developed based on data recorded and manually scored at the Danish Center for Sleep Medicine. The validation was carried out on a cohort of 240 participants, including de novo Parkinson's disease (PD) patients and neurologically healthy controls, whose sleep data were recorded and manually evaluated at Paracelsus-Elena Klinik, Kassel, Germany. In the German cohort, the algorithm showed generally good agreement between manual and automated PLMS indices, and identified with 88.75% accuracy participants with PLMS index above 15 PLMS per hour of sleep, and with 84.17% accuracy patients suffering from REM sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) showing RSWA. By comparing the algorithm performances in the Danish and German cohorts, we hypothesized that inter-clinical differences may exist in the way limb movements are manually scored and how healthy controls are defined. Finally, the algorithm performed worse in PD patients, probably as a result of increased artefacts caused by abnormal motor events related to neurodegeneration. Our algorithm can identify, with reasonable performance, participants with RBD and increased PLMS index from data recorded in different centres, and its application may reveal inter clinical differences, which can be overcome in the future by applying automated methods., (© 2019 European Sleep Research Society.)
- Published
- 2019
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24. Results of a Randomized Clinical Trial of Speech After Early Neurostimulation in Parkinson's Disease.
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Pinto S, Nebel A, Rau J, Espesser R, Maillochon P, Niebuhr O, Krack P, Witjas T, Ghio A, Cuartero MC, Timmermann L, Schnitzler A, Hesekamp H, Meier N, Müllner J, Hälbig TD, Möller B, Paschen S, Paschen L, Volkmann J, Barbe MT, Fink GR, Becker J, Reker P, Kühn AA, Schneider GH, Fraix V, Seigneuret E, Kistner A, Rascol O, Brefel-Courbon C, Ory-Magne F, Hartmann CJ, Wojtecki L, Fradet A, Maltête D, Damier P, Le Dily S, Sixel-Döring F, Benecke P, Weiss D, Wächter T, Pinsker MO, Régis J, Thobois S, Polo G, Houeto JL, Hartmann A, Knudsen K, Vidailhet M, Schüpbach M, and Deuschl G
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Movement, Speech Intelligibility physiology, Treatment Outcome, Parkinson Disease complications, Subthalamic Nucleus physiology, Deep Brain Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Background: The EARLYSTIM trial demonstrated for Parkinson's disease patients with early motor complications that deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus (STN-DBS) and best medical treatment (BMT) was superior to BMT alone., Objective: This prospective, ancillary study on EARLYSTIM compared changes in blinded speech intelligibility assessment between STN-DBS and BMT over 2 years, and secondary outcomes included non-speech oral movements (maximum phonation time [MPT], oral diadochokinesis), physician- and patient-reported assessments., Methods: STN-DBS (n = 102) and BMT (n = 99) groups underwent assessments on/off medication at baseline and 24 months (in four conditions: on/off medication, ON/OFF stimulation-for STN-DBS). Words and sentences were randomly presented to blinded listeners, and speech intelligibility rate was measured. Statistical analyses compared changes between the STN-DBS and BMT groups from baseline to 24 months., Results: Over the 2-year period, changes in speech intelligibility and MPT, as well as patient-reported outcomes, were not different between groups, either off or on medication or OFF or ON stimulation, but most outcomes showed a nonsignificant trend toward worsening in both groups. Change in oral diadochokinesis was significantly different between STN-DBS and BMT groups, on medication and OFF STN-DBS, with patients in the STN-DBS group performing slightly worse than patients under BMT only. A signal for clinical worsening with STN-DBS was found for the individual speech item of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, Part III., Conclusion: At this early stage of the patients' disease, STN-DBS did not result in a consistent deterioration in blinded speech intelligibility assessment and patient-reported communication, as observed in studies of advanced Parkinson's Disease. © 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
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- 2023
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25. Polysomnographic diagnosis of REM sleep behavior disorder: a change is needed.
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Cesari M, Heidbreder A, St Louis EK, Sixel-Döring F, Bliwise DL, Baldelli L, Bes F, Fantini ML, Iranzo A, Knudsen-Heier S, Mayer G, McCarter S, Nepozitek J, Pavlova M, Provini F, Santamaria J, Sunwoo JS, Videnovic A, Högl B, Jennum P, Christensen JAE, and Stefani A
- Subjects
- Humans, Sleep, REM, Polysomnography, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder complications, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis
- Published
- 2023
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26. Implantation of directional deep brain stimulation electrodes under general anesthesia in Parkinson's disease patients - How much lead deviation from the optimal position can be revised?
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Malinova, V, Nerntengian, N, Dragaescu, C, Sixel-Döring, F, Trenkwalder, C, Rohde, V, Mielke, D, Malinova, V, Nerntengian, N, Dragaescu, C, Sixel-Döring, F, Trenkwalder, C, Rohde, V, and Mielke, D
- Published
- 2020
27. Genome-wide association study of REM sleep behavior disorder identifies polygenic risk and brain expression effects.
- Author
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Krohn L, Heilbron K, Blauwendraat C, Reynolds RH, Yu E, Senkevich K, Rudakou U, Estiar MA, Gustavsson EK, Brolin K, Ruskey JA, Freeman K, Asayesh F, Chia R, Arnulf I, Hu MTM, Montplaisir JY, Gagnon JF, Desautels A, Dauvilliers Y, Gigli GL, Valente M, Janes F, Bernardini A, Högl B, Stefani A, Ibrahim A, Šonka K, Kemlink D, Oertel W, Janzen A, Plazzi G, Biscarini F, Antelmi E, Figorilli M, Puligheddu M, Mollenhauer B, Trenkwalder C, Sixel-Döring F, Cochen De Cock V, Monaca CC, Heidbreder A, Ferini-Strambi L, Dijkstra F, Viaene M, Abril B, Boeve BF, Scholz SW, Ryten M, Bandres-Ciga S, Noyce A, Cannon P, Pihlstrøm L, Nalls MA, Singleton AB, Rouleau GA, Postuma RB, and Gan-Or Z
- Subjects
- Humans, Genome-Wide Association Study, Brain, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder genetics, Parkinson Disease genetics, Synucleinopathies
- Abstract
Rapid-eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD), enactment of dreams during REM sleep, is an early clinical symptom of alpha-synucleinopathies and defines a more severe subtype. The genetic background of RBD and its underlying mechanisms are not well understood. Here, we perform a genome-wide association study of RBD, identifying five RBD risk loci near SNCA, GBA, TMEM175, INPP5F, and SCARB2. Expression analyses highlight SNCA-AS1 and potentially SCARB2 differential expression in different brain regions in RBD, with SNCA-AS1 further supported by colocalization analyses. Polygenic risk score, pathway analysis, and genetic correlations provide further insights into RBD genetics, highlighting RBD as a unique alpha-synucleinopathy subpopulation that will allow future early intervention., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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28. Analysis of dominant and recessive parkinsonism genes in REM sleep behavior disorder
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Mufti, K., primary, Rudakou, U., additional, Yu, E., additional, Ruskey, J.A., additional, Asavesh, F., additional, Laurent, S.B., additional, Arnulf, I., additional, Hu, M.T.M., additional, Dauvilliers, Y., additional, Högl, B., additional, Stefani, A., additional, Holzknecht, E., additional, Monaca, C.C., additional, Abril, B., additional, Plazzi, G., additional, Antelmi, E., additional, Ferini-Strambi, L., additional, Heidbreder, A., additional, Young, P., additional, De Cock, V. Cochen, additional, Mollenhauer, B., additional, Sixel-Döring, F., additional, Trenkwalder, C., additional, Sonka, K., additional, Kemlink, D., additional, Figorilli, M., additional, Puligheddu, M., additional, Dijkstra, F., additional, Viaene, M., additional, Oertel, W., additional, Boeve, B.F., additional, Gigli, G.L., additional, Valente, M., additional, Gagnon, J.-F., additional, Desautels, A., additional, Montplaisir, J.Y., additional, Postuma, R.B., additional, Rouleau, G.A., additional, and Gan-Or, Z., additional
- Published
- 2020
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29. GBA variants in REM sleep behavior disorder risk and conversion: a multicenter study
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Krohn, L., primary, Ruskey, J.A., additional, Rudakou, U., additional, Leveille, E., additional, Asayesh, F., additional, Hu, M.T.M., additional, Arnulf, I., additional, Dauvilliers, Y., additional, Högl, B., additional, Stefani, A., additional, Monaca, C.C., additional, Abril, B., additional, Plazzi, G., additional, Antelmi, E., additional, Ferini-Strambi, L., additional, Heidbreder, A., additional, Boeve, B.F., additional, Espay, A.J., additional, Cochen de Cock, V., additional, Mollenhauer, B., additional, Sixel-Döring, F., additional, Trenkwalder, C., additional, Sonka, K., additional, Kemlink, D., additional, Figorilli, M., additional, Puligheddu, M., additional, Dijkstra, F., additional, Viaene, M., additional, Oertel, W., additional, Janzen, A., additional, Toffoli, M., additional, Gigli, G.L., additional, Valente, M., additional, Gagnon, J.-F., additional, Desautels, A., additional, Montplaisir, J.Y., additional, Postuma, R.B., additional, Rouleau, G.A., additional, and Gan-Or, Z., additional
- Published
- 2020
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30. Genetic stratification of motor and QoL outcomes in Parkinson's disease in the EARLYSTIM study.
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Weiss D, Landoulsi Z, May P, Sharma M, Schüpbach M, You H, Corvol JC, Paschen S, Helmers AK, Barbe M, Fink G, Kühn AA, Courbon CB, Wojtecki L, Damier P, Fraix V, Houeto JL, Regis J, Sixel-Döring F, Pinsker MO, Thobois S, Gharabaghi A, Stoker V, Timmermann L, Schnitzler A, Krack P, Vidailhet M, Deuschl G, and Krüger R
- Subjects
- Humans, Quality of Life, Genetic Markers, Treatment Outcome, Subthalamic Nucleus physiology, Parkinson Disease genetics, Parkinson Disease therapy, Parkinson Disease complications, Deep Brain Stimulation
- Abstract
Purpose: The decision for subthalamic deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) in Parkinson's disease (PD) relies on clinical predictors. Whether genetic variables could predict favourable or unfavourable decisions is under investigation., Objective: First, we aimed to reproduce the previous observation that SNCA rs356220 was associated with favourable STN-DBS motor response. In additional exploratory analyses, we studied if other PD risk and progression variants from the latest GWAS are associated with therapeutic outcome. Further, we evaluated the predictive value of polygenic risk scores., Methods: We comprehensively genotyped patients from the EarlyStim cohort using NeuroChip, and assessed the clinico-genetic associations with longitudinal outcome parameters., Results: The SNCA rs356220 variant did not predict UPDRS III outcomes. However, it was associated with quality of life improvement in secondary analyses. Several polymorphisms from previously identified GWAS hits predicted motor or quality of life outcomes in DBS patients. Polygenic risk scores did not predict any outcome parameter., Conclusions: Our findings support the hypothesis that different common genetic markers are associated with favourable quality of life outcomes of STN-DBS in PD. These findings can be the basis for further validation in larger and independent cohorts., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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31. REM Sleep behavior disorder in Parkinson's disease: a model for identification and prediction of its progression from the prodromal stage
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Cesari, M., primary, Christensen, J.A.E., additional, Sorensen, H.B.D., additional, Mollenhauer, B., additional, Muntean, M.-L., additional, Trenkwalder, C., additional, Sixel-Döring, F., additional, and Jennum, P., additional
- Published
- 2019
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32. Die REM-Schlafverhaltensstörung bei neurodegenerativen Erkrankungen.
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Sixel-Döring, F. and Muntean, M.-L.
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- 2016
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33. Diagnostic value of cerebrospinal fluid alpha-synuclein seed quantification in synucleinopathies.
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Poggiolini I, Gupta V, Lawton M, Lee S, El-Turabi A, Querejeta-Coma A, Trenkwalder C, Sixel-Döring F, Foubert-Samier A, Pavy-Le Traon A, Plazzi G, Biscarini F, Montplaisir J, Gagnon JF, Postuma RB, Antelmi E, Meissner WG, Mollenhauer B, Ben-Shlomo Y, Hu MT, and Parkkinen L
- Subjects
- Disease Progression, Humans, alpha-Synuclein analysis, Multiple System Atrophy diagnosis, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis, Synucleinopathies diagnosis
- Abstract
Several studies have confirmed the α-synuclein real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) assay to have high sensitivity and specificity for Parkinson's disease. However, whether the assay can be used as a robust, quantitative measure to monitor disease progression, stratify different synucleinopathies and predict disease conversion in patients with idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder remains undetermined. The aim of this study was to assess the diagnostic value of CSF α-synuclein RT-QuIC quantitative parameters in regard to disease progression, stratification and conversion in synucleinopathies. We performed α-synuclein RT-QuIC in the CSF samples from 74 Parkinson's disease, 24 multiple system atrophy and 45 idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder patients alongside 55 healthy controls, analysing quantitative assay parameters in relation to clinical data. α-Synuclein RT-QuIC showed 89% sensitivity and 96% specificity for Parkinson's disease. There was no correlation between RT-QuIC quantitative parameters and Parkinson's disease clinical scores (e.g. Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale motor), but RT-QuIC positivity and some quantitative parameters (e.g. Vmax) differed across the different phenotype clusters. RT-QuIC parameters also added value alongside standard clinical data in diagnosing Parkinson's disease. The sensitivity in multiple system atrophy was 75%, and CSF samples showed longer T50 and lower Vmax compared to Parkinson's disease. All RT-QuIC parameters correlated with worse clinical progression of multiple system atrophy (e.g. change in Unified Multiple System Atrophy Rating Scale). The overall sensitivity in idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder was 64%. In three of the four longitudinally followed idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder cohorts, we found around 90% sensitivity, but in one sample (DeNoPa) diagnosing idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder earlier from the community cases, this was much lower at 39%. During follow-up, 14 of 45 (31%) idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder patients converted to synucleinopathy with 9/14 (64%) of convertors showing baseline RT-QuIC positivity. In summary, our results showed that α-synuclein RT-QuIC adds value in diagnosing Parkinson's disease and may provide a way to distinguish variations within Parkinson's disease phenotype. However, the quantitative parameters did not correlate with disease severity in Parkinson's disease. The assay distinguished multiple system atrophy patients from Parkinson's disease patients and in contrast to Parkinson's disease, the quantitative parameters correlated with disease progression of multiple system atrophy. Our results also provided further evidence for α-synuclein RT-QuIC having potential as an early biomarker detecting synucleinopathy in idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder patients prior to conversion. Further analysis of longitudinally followed idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder patients is needed to better understand the relationship between α-synuclein RT-QuIC signature and the progression from prodromal to different synucleinopathies., (© The Author(s) (2021). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)
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- 2022
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34. Video-polysomnography procedures for diagnosis of rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) and the identification of its prodromal stages: guidelines from the International RBD Study Group.
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Cesari M, Heidbreder A, St Louis EK, Sixel-Döring F, Bliwise DL, Baldelli L, Bes F, Fantini ML, Iranzo A, Knudsen-Heier S, Mayer G, McCarter S, Nepozitek J, Pavlova M, Provini F, Santamaria J, Sunwoo JS, Videnovic A, Högl B, Jennum P, Christensen JAE, and Stefani A
- Subjects
- Humans, Movement, Polysomnography, Prodromal Symptoms, Sleep, REM physiology, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis
- Abstract
Video-polysomnography (v-PSG) is essential for diagnosing rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD). Although there are current American Academy of Sleep Medicine standards to diagnose RBD, several aspects need to be addressed to achieve harmonization across sleep centers. Prodromal RBD is a stage in which symptoms and signs of evolving RBD are present, but do not yet meet established diagnostic criteria for RBD. However, the boundary between prodromal and definite RBD is still unclear. As a common effort of the Neurophysiology Working Group of the International RBD Study Group, this manuscript addresses the need for comprehensive and unambiguous v-PSG recommendations to diagnose RBD and identify prodromal RBD. These include: (1) standardized v-PSG technical settings; (2) specific considerations for REM sleep scoring; (3) harmonized methods for scoring REM sleep without atonia; (4) consistent methods to analyze video and audio recorded during v-PSGs and to classify movements and vocalizations; (5) clear v-PSG guidelines to diagnose RBD and identify prodromal RBD. Each section follows a common template: The current recommendations and methods are presented, their limitations are outlined, and new recommendations are described. Finally, future directions are presented. These v-PSG recommendations are intended for both practicing clinicians and researchers. Classification and quantification of motor events, RBD episodes, and vocalizations are however intended for research purposes only. These v-PSG guidelines will allow collection of homogeneous data, providing objective v-PSG measures and making future harmonized multicentric studies and clinical trials possible., (© Sleep Research Society 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Sleep Research Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2022
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35. Management of Sleep Disturbances in Parkinson's Disease.
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Schütz L, Sixel-Döring F, and Hermann W
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- Humans, Quality of Life, Sleep, Parkinson Disease, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder complications, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder therapy, Sleep Wake Disorders etiology, Sleep Wake Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is defined by its motor symptoms rigidity, tremor, and akinesia. However, non-motor symptoms, particularly autonomic disorders and sleep disturbances, occur frequently in PD causing equivalent or even greater discomfort than motor symptoms effectively decreasing quality of life in patients and caregivers. Most common sleep disturbances in PD are insomnia, sleep disordered breathing, excessive daytime sleepiness, REM sleep behavior disorder, and sleep-related movement disorders such as restless legs syndrome. Despite their high prevalence, therapeutic options in the in- and outpatient setting are limited, partly due to lack of scientific evidence. The importance of sleep disturbances in neurodegenerative diseases has been further emphasized by recent evidence indicating a bidirectional relationship between neurodegeneration and sleep. A more profound insight into the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms intertwining sleep and neurodegeneration might lead to unique and individually tailored disease modifying or even neuroprotective therapeutic options in the long run. Therefore, current evidence concerning the management of sleep disturbances in PD will be discussed with the aim of providing a substantiated scaffolding for clinical decisions in long-term PD therapy.
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- 2022
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36. Rare PSAP Variants and Possible Interaction with GBA in REM Sleep Behavior Disorder.
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Sosero YL, Yu E, Estiar MA, Krohn L, Mufti K, Rudakou U, Ruskey JA, Asayesh F, Laurent SB, Spiegelman D, Trempe JF, Quinnell TG, Oscroft N, Arnulf I, Montplaisir JY, Gagnon JF, Desautels A, Dauvilliers Y, Gigli GL, Valente M, Janes F, Bernardini A, Sonka K, Kemlink D, Oertel W, Janzen A, Plazzi G, Antelmi E, Biscarini F, Figorilli M, Puligheddu M, Mollenhauer B, Trenkwalder C, Sixel-Döring F, Cochen De Cock V, Monaca CC, Heidbreder A, Ferini-Strambi L, Dijkstra F, Viaene M, Abril B, Boeve BF, Postuma RB, Rouleau GA, Ibrahim A, Stefani A, Högl B, Hu MTM, and Gan-Or Z
- Subjects
- Glucosylceramidase genetics, Humans, Parkinson Disease complications, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis, Saposins genetics, Synucleinopathies
- Abstract
Background: PSAP encodes saposin C, the co-activator of glucocerebrosidase, encoded by GBA. GBA mutations are associated with idiopathic/isolated REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD), a prodromal stage of synucleinopathy., Objective: To examine the role of PSAP mutations in iRBD., Methods: We fully sequenced PSAP and performed Optimized Sequence Kernel Association Test in 1,113 iRBD patients and 2,324 controls. We identified loss-of-function (LoF) mutations, which are very rare in PSAP, in three iRBD patients and none in controls (uncorrected p = 0.018)., Results: Two variants were stop mutations, p.Gln260Ter and p.Glu166Ter, and one was an in-frame deletion, p.332_333del. All three mutations have a deleterious effect on saposin C, based on in silico analysis. In addition, the two carriers of p.Glu166Ter and p.332_333del mutations also carried a GBA variant, p.Arg349Ter and p.Glu326Lys, respectively. The co-occurrence of these extremely rare PSAP LoF mutations in two (0.2%) GBA variant carriers in the iRBD cohort, is unlikely to occur by chance (estimated co-occurrence in the general population based on gnomAD data is 0.00035%). Although none of the three iRBD patients with PSAP LoF mutations have phenoconverted to an overt synucleinopathy at their last follow-up, all manifested initial signs suggestive of motor dysfunction, two were diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment and all showed prodromal clinical markers other than RBD. Their probability of prodromal PD, according to the Movement Disorder Society research criteria, was 98% or more., Conclusion: These results suggest a possible role of PSAP variants in iRBD and potential genetic interaction with GBA, which requires additional studies.
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- 2022
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37. Arousal characteristics in patients with Parkinson's disease and isolated rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder.
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Brink-Kjær A, Cesari M, Sixel-Döring F, Mollenhauer B, Trenkwalder C, Mignot E, Sorensen HBD, and Jennum P
- Subjects
- Arousal physiology, Humans, Polysomnography methods, Sleep, REM physiology, Parkinson Disease complications, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder complications, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis
- Abstract
Study Objectives: Patients diagnosed with isolated rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) and Parkinson's disease (PD) have altered sleep stability reflecting neurodegeneration in brainstem structures. We hypothesize that neurodegeneration alters the expression of cortical arousals in sleep., Methods: We analyzed polysomnography data recorded from 88 healthy controls (HC), 22 iRBD patients, 82 de novo PD patients without RBD, and 32 with RBD (PD + RBD). These patients were also investigated at a 2-year follow-up. Arousals were analyzed using a previously validated automatic system, which used a central electroencephalography lead, electrooculography, and chin electromyography. Multiple linear regression models were fitted to compare group differences at baseline and change to follow-up for arousal index (ArI), shifts in electroencephalographic signals associated with arousals, and arousal chin muscle tone. The regression models were adjusted for known covariates affecting the nature of arousal., Results: In comparison to HC, patients with iRBD and PD + RBD showed increased ArI during REM sleep and their arousals showed a significantly lower shift in α-band power at arousals and a higher muscle tone during arousals. In comparison to HC, the PD patients were characterized by a decreased ArI in non-REM (NREM) sleep at baseline. ArI during NREM sleep decreased further at the 2-year follow-up, although not significantly., Conclusions: Patients with PD and iRBD present with abnormal arousal characteristics as scored by an automated method. These abnormalities are likely to be caused by neurodegeneration of the reticular activation system due to alpha-synuclein aggregation., (© Sleep Research Society 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Sleep Research Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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38. Corticospinal tract diffusion tensor imaging in deep brain stimulation procedure for Parkinson's disease: Correlation to intraoperative stimulation and to clinical outcome at one year
- Author
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von Eckardstein, K, Sixel-Döring, F, Trenkwalder, C, Rohde, V, Malinova, V, von Eckardstein, K, Sixel-Döring, F, Trenkwalder, C, Rohde, V, and Malinova, V
- Published
- 2018
39. Role of macrostimulation on clinical outcome (UDPRS-III) in subthalamic deep brain stimulation procedure for Parkinson's disease
- Author
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Pinter, A, von Eckardstein, K, Sixel-Döring, F, Behm, T, Rohde, V, and Trenkwalder, C
- Subjects
ddc: 610 ,610 Medical sciences ,Medicine - Abstract
Objective: Subthalamic (STN) lead placement for Parkinson’s disease typically involves MR-based target planning, microelectrode recording (MER), and macrostimulation. Macrostimulation in the awake patient is used to test for clinical responses as well as stimulation induced side effects and is[for full text, please go to the a.m. URL], 68. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie (DGNC), 7. Joint Meeting mit der Society of British Neurological Surgeons (SBNS)
- Published
- 2017
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40. [Intravenous iron supplementation therapy Restless-Legs-Syndrome].
- Author
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Bartl M, Trenkwalder C, Muntean ML, and Sixel-Döring F
- Subjects
- Dietary Supplements, Humans, Iron, Leg, Restless Legs Syndrome diagnosis, Restless Legs Syndrome drug therapy
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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41. Heterogeneity of prodromal Parkinson symptoms in siblings of Parkinson disease patients.
- Author
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Baldelli L, Schade S, Jesús S, Schreglmann SR, Sambati L, Gómez-Garre P, Halsband C, Calandra-Buonaura G, Adarmes-Gómez AD, Sixel-Döring F, Zenesini C, Pirazzini C, Garagnani P, Bacalini MG, Bhatia KP, Cortelli P, Mollenhauer B, Franceschi C, Mir P, Trenkwalder C, and Provini F
- Abstract
A prodromal phase of Parkinson's disease (PD) may precede motor manifestations by decades. PD patients' siblings are at higher risk for PD, but the prevalence and distribution of prodromal symptoms are unknown. The study objectives were (1) to assess motor and non-motor features estimating prodromal PD probability in PD siblings recruited within the European PROPAG-AGEING project; (2) to compare motor and non-motor symptoms to the well-established DeNoPa cohort. 340 PD siblings from three sites (Bologna, Seville, Kassel/Goettingen) underwent clinical and neurological evaluations of PD markers. The German part of the cohort was compared with German de novo PD patients (dnPDs) and healthy controls (CTRs) from DeNoPa. Fifteen (4.4%) siblings presented with subtle signs of motor impairment, with MDS-UPDRS-III scores not clinically different from CTRs. Symptoms of orthostatic hypotension were present in 47 siblings (13.8%), no different to CTRs (p = 0.072). No differences were found for olfaction and overall cognition; German-siblings performed worse than CTRs in visuospatial-executive and language tasks. 3/147 siblings had video-polysomnography-confirmed REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD), none was positive on the RBD Screening Questionnaire. 173/300 siblings had <1% probability of having prodromal PD; 100 between 1 and 10%, 26 siblings between 10 and 80%, one fulfilled the criteria for prodromal PD. According to the current analysis, we cannot confirm the increased risk of PD siblings for prodromal PD. Siblings showed a heterogeneous distribution of prodromal PD markers and probability. Additional parameters, including strong disease markers, should be investigated to verify if these results depend on validity and sensitivity of prodromal PD criteria, or if siblings' risk is not elevated., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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42. Abszess in der Impulsgeneratortasche nach apikaler Parodontitis: Eine Hardware-assoziierte Komplikation nach tiefer Hirnstimulation
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Sixel-Döring, F., Trenkwalder, C., Kappus, C., and Hellwig, D.
- Published
- 2006
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43. Invasive Therapien bei fortgeschrittener Parkinson- Krankheit: Was wann für wen?
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Sixel-Döring, F., Ebentheuer, J., Mollenhauer, B., Bürk, K., and Trenkwalder, C.
- Published
- 2016
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44. Polysomnographic findings in restless legs syndrome (RLS) patients with severe augmentation
- Author
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Muntean, M.-L., primary, Walther, S., additional, Zimmermann, J., additional, Sixel-Döring, F., additional, and Trenkwalder, C., additional
- Published
- 2017
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45. Incidence and Progression of Rapid Eye Movement Behavior Disorder in Early Parkinson's Disease.
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Zimansky L, Muntean ML, Leha A, Mollenhauer B, Trenkwalder C, and Sixel-Döring F
- Abstract
Background: Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is associated with neurodegenerative diseases; however, few longitudinal studies assess the individual evolution of RBD and REM sleep without atonia (RWA) in Parkinson's disease (PD)., Objectives: We aimed to evaluate RBD and RWA changes over time as well as potentially influential factors., Methods: RBD and RWA were analyzed using video-supported polysomnography (vPSG) in initially de novo PD patients at baseline and every 2 years for a total of 6 years. The influence of time, age, sex, levodopa equivalent daily dose (LEDD), unified Parkinson's disease rating scale (UPDRS) sum scores, benzodiazepine intake, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) total scores, and dyskinesia on RWA were investigated using mixed-effect models to account for intra-individual correlations., Results: After 6 years, vPSG data were available from 98 of the initial 159 de novo PD patients. RBD prevalence increased from 25% at baseline to 52%. Of the 31 PD patients with RBD and valid vPSGs at all time-points, RWA increased from an average of 19% at baseline to 41% at 6-year follow-up modeled to grow by 29.7% every 2 years ( P < 0.001). Time was an independent factor ( P < 0.001) for RWA increase. Age was an independent factor influencing RWA increase ( P = 0.04). Sex, LEDD, UPDRS sum scores, benzodiazepines, MMSE total scores, and dyskinesia did not have any significant influence., Conclusions: RBD and RWA increased significantly over time in PD; time and age were independent factors in a prospective cohort. RBD and RWA can be considered PD progression markers., Competing Interests: The study was funded by unrestricted grants from the Paracelsus‐Elena Klinik, Kassel, Germany, and TEVA Pharma/Lundbeck, as well as funding from GE Healthcare. The authors report no conflicts., (© 2021 The Authors. Movement Disorders Clinical Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
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- 2021
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46. Insomnia in neurological diseases.
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Mayer G, Happe S, Evers S, Hermann W, Jansen S, Kallweit U, Muntean ML, Pöhlau D, Riemann D, Saletu M, Schichl M, Schmitt WJ, Sixel-Döring F, and Young P
- Abstract
Insomnia is defined as difficulties of initiating and maintaining sleep, early awakening and poor subjective sleep quality despite adequate opportunity and circumstances for sleep with impairment of daytime performance. These components of insomnia - namely persistent sleep difficulties despite of adequate sleep opportunity resulting in daytime dysfunction - appear secondary or co-morbid to neurological diseases. Comorbid insomnia originates from neurodegenerative, inflammatory, traumatic or ischemic changes in sleep regulating brainstem and hypothalamic nuclei with consecutive changes of neurotransmitters. Symptoms of neurological disorders (i.e motor deficits), co-morbidities (i.e. pain, depression, anxiety) and some disease-specific pharmaceuticals may cause insomnia and/or other sleep problems.This guideline focuses on insomnias in headaches, neurodegenerative movement disorders, multiple sclerosis, traumatic brain injury, epilepsies, stroke, neuromuscular disease and dementia.The most important new recommendations are: Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBTi) is recommended to treat acute and chronic insomnia in headache patients. Insomnia is one of the most frequent sleep complaints in neurodegenerative movement disorders. Patients may benefit from CBTi, antidepressants (trazodone, doxepin), melatonin and gaba-agonists. Insomnia is a frequent precursor of MS symptoms by up to 10 years. CBTi is recommended in patients with MS, traumatic brain injury and. Melatonin may improve insomnia symptoms in children with epilepsies. Patients with insomnia after stroke can be treated with benzodiazepine receptor agonists and sedating antidepressants. For patients with dementia suffering from insomnia trazodone, light therapy and physical exercise are recommended.
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- 2021
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47. Novel Associations of BST1 and LAMP3 With REM Sleep Behavior Disorder.
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Mufti K, Yu E, Rudakou U, Krohn L, Ruskey JA, Asayesh F, Laurent SB, Spiegelman D, Arnulf I, Hu MTM, Montplaisir JY, Gagnon JF, Desautels A, Dauvilliers Y, Gigli GL, Valente M, Janes F, Bernardini A, Högl B, Stefani A, Holzknecht E, Sonka K, Kemlink D, Oertel W, Janzen A, Plazzi G, Antelmi E, Figorilli M, Puligheddu M, Mollenhauer B, Trenkwalder C, Sixel-Döring F, Cochen De Cock V, Monaca CC, Heidbreder A, Ferini-Strambi L, Dijkstra F, Viaene M, Abril B, Boeve BF, Trempe JF, Rouleau GA, Postuma RB, and Gan-Or Z
- Subjects
- Aged, Computer Simulation, Databases, Genetic, Female, GPI-Linked Proteins genetics, Genetic Variation, Genome-Wide Association Study, Heterozygote, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Polysomnography, Protein Structure, Secondary, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder epidemiology, ADP-ribosyl Cyclase genetics, Antigens, CD genetics, Lysosomal Membrane Proteins genetics, Neoplasm Proteins genetics, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder genetics
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the role of genes identified through genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of Parkinson disease (PD) in the risk of isolated REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD)., Methods: We fully sequenced 25 genes previously identified in GWASs of PD in a total of 1,039 patients with iRBD and 1,852 controls. The role of rare heterozygous variants in these genes was examined with burden tests. The contribution of biallelic variants was further tested. To examine the potential effect of rare nonsynonymous BST1 variants on the protein structure, we performed in silico structural analysis. Finally, we examined the association of common variants using logistic regression adjusted for age and sex., Results: We found an association between rare heterozygous nonsynonymous variants in BST1 and iRBD ( p = 0.0003 at coverage >50× and 0.0004 at >30×), driven mainly by 3 nonsynonymous variants (p.V85M, p.I101V, and p.V272M) found in 22 (1.2%) controls vs 2 (0.2%) patients. All 3 variants seem to be loss-of-function variants with a potential effect on the protein structure and stability. Rare noncoding heterozygous variants in LAMP3 were also associated with iRBD ( p = 0.0006 at >30×). We found no association between rare heterozygous variants in the rest of genes and iRBD. Several carriers of biallelic variants were identified, yet there was no overrepresentation in iRBD., Conclusion: Our results suggest that rare coding variants in BST1 and rare noncoding variants in LAMP3 are associated with iRBD. Additional studies are required to replicate these results and to examine whether loss of function of BST1 could be a therapeutic target., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2021
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48. Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder:devising controlled active treatment studies for symptomatic and neuroprotective therapy—a consensus statement from the International Rapid Eye Movement Sleep Behavior Disorder Study Group
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Schenck, C H, Montplaisir, J Y, Frauscher, B, Hogl, B, Gagnon, J-F, Postuma, R, Sonka, K, Jennum, P, Partinen, M, Arnulf, I, Cochen de Cock, V, Dauvilliers, Y, Luppi, P-H, Heidbreder, A, Mayer, G, Sixel-Döring, F, Trenkwalder, C, Unger, M, Young, P, Wing, Y K, Ferini-Strambi, L, Ferri, R, Plazzi, G, Zucconi, M, Inoue, Y, Iranzo, A, Santamaria, J, Bassetti, C, Möller, J C, Boeve, B F, Lai, Yoke-Chin, Pavlova, M, Saper, C, Schmidt, P, Siegel, J M, Singer, C, St Louis, E, Videnovic, A, Oertel, W, Schenck, C H, Montplaisir, J Y, Frauscher, B, Hogl, B, Gagnon, J-F, Postuma, R, Sonka, K, Jennum, P, Partinen, M, Arnulf, I, Cochen de Cock, V, Dauvilliers, Y, Luppi, P-H, Heidbreder, A, Mayer, G, Sixel-Döring, F, Trenkwalder, C, Unger, M, Young, P, Wing, Y K, Ferini-Strambi, L, Ferri, R, Plazzi, G, Zucconi, M, Inoue, Y, Iranzo, A, Santamaria, J, Bassetti, C, Möller, J C, Boeve, B F, Lai, Yoke-Chin, Pavlova, M, Saper, C, Schmidt, P, Siegel, J M, Singer, C, St Louis, E, Videnovic, A, and Oertel, W
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- 2013
49. A data-driven system to identify REM sleep behavior disorder and to predict its progression from the prodromal stage in Parkinson's disease.
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Cesari M, Christensen JAE, Muntean ML, Mollenhauer B, Sixel-Döring F, Sorensen HBD, Trenkwalder C, and Jennum P
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- Humans, Polysomnography, Prodromal Symptoms, Sleep, REM, Parkinson Disease complications, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder diagnosis
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Objectives: To investigate electroencephalographic (EEG), electrooculographic (EOG) and micro-sleep abnormalities associated with rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) and REM behavioral events (RBEs) in Parkinson's disease (PD)., Methods: We developed an automated system using only EEG and EOG signals. First, automatic macro- (30-s epochs) and micro-sleep (5-s mini-epochs) staging was performed. Features describing micro-sleep structure, EEG spectral content, EEG coherence, EEG complexity, and EOG energy were derived. All features were input to an ensemble of random forests, giving as outputs the probabilities of having RBD or not (P (RBD) and P (nonRBD), respectively). A patient was classified as having RBD if P (RBD)≥P (nonRBD). The system was applied to 107 de novo PD patients: 54 had normal REM sleep (PDnonRBD), 26 had RBD (PD + RBD), and 27 had at least two RBEs without meeting electromyographic RBD cut-off (PD + RBE). Sleep diagnoses were made with video-polysomnography (v-PSG)., Results: Considering PDnonRBD and PD + RBD patients only, the system identified RBD with accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity over 80%. Among the features, micro-sleep instability had the highest importance for RBD identification. Considering PD + RBE patients, the ones who developed definite RBD after two years had significantly higher values of P (RBD) at baseline compared to the ones who did not. The former were distinguished from the latter with sensitivity and specificity over 75%., Conclusions: Our method identifies RBD in PD patients using only EEG and EOG signals. Micro-sleep instability could be a biomarker for RBD and for proximity of conversion from RBEs, as prodromal RBD, to definite RBD in PD patients., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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50. Comprehensive Analysis of Familial Parkinsonism Genes in Rapid-Eye-Movement Sleep Behavior Disorder.
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Mufti K, Rudakou U, Yu E, Krohn L, Ruskey JA, Asayesh F, Laurent SB, Spiegelman D, Arnulf I, Hu MTM, Montplaisir JY, Gagnon JF, Desautels A, Dauvilliers Y, Gigli GL, Valente M, Janes F, Högl B, Stefani A, Holzknecht E, Šonka K, Kemlink D, Oertel W, Janzen A, Plazzi G, Antelmi E, Figorilli M, Puligheddu M, Mollenhauer B, Trenkwalder C, Sixel-Döring F, Cochen De Cock V, Monaca CC, Heidbreder A, Ferini-Strambi L, Dijkstra F, Viaene M, Abril B, Boeve BF, Postuma RB, Rouleau GA, and Gan-Or Z
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- Heterozygote, Humans, Sleep, Parkinson Disease genetics, Parkinsonian Disorders genetics, REM Sleep Behavior Disorder genetics
- Abstract
Background: There is only partial overlap in the genetic background of isolated rapid-eye-movement sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) and Parkinson's disease (PD)., Objective: To examine the role of autosomal dominant and recessive PD or atypical parkinsonism genes in the risk of iRBD., Methods: Ten genes, comprising the recessive genes PRKN, DJ-1 (PARK7), PINK1, VPS13C, ATP13A2, FBXO7, and PLA2G6 and the dominant genes LRRK2, GCH1, and VPS35, were fully sequenced in 1039 iRBD patients and 1852 controls of European ancestry, followed by association tests., Results: We found no association between rare heterozygous variants in the tested genes and risk of iRBD. Several homozygous and compound heterozygous carriers were identified, yet there was no overrepresentation in iRBD patients versus controls., Conclusion: Our results do not support a major role for variants in these genes in the risk of iRBD. © 2020 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2020 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
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- 2021
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