Abstract: | When induced experimentally in rodents, hemispheric asymmetry in basal ganglia dopamine results in spontaneous asymmetric circling toward the hemisphere with the lower level of dopamine. A similar asymmetry has long been thought to exist in the brains of hemi-Parkinsonian patients. Using an electronic turn counter, we demonstrated that, like unilaterally lesioned rats, and without being aware of it, five ambulating outpatients with hemi-Parkinson's disease exhibit spontaneous rotation toward the hemisphere containing less striatal dopaminergic activity. |