Helicobacter Hypothesis for Idiopathic Parkinsonism: Before and Beyond |
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Authors: | R. John Dobbs,Sylvia M. Dobbs,Clive Weller,ré Charlett,Ingvar T. Bjarnason,Alan Curry,David S. Ellis,Mohammad A. A. Ibrahim,Maria V. McCrossan,John O'Donohue,Robert J. Owen,Norman L. Oxlade,Ashley B. Price,Jeremy D. Sanderson,Malur Sudhanva, John Williams |
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Affiliation: | Section of Clinical Neuropharmacology, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, London, UK;;Departments of Gastroenterology and;Immunology, and;South London Specialist Virology Centre, Health Protection Agency Regional Laboratory, Kings College Hospital, London, UK;;Statistics Unit and;Helicobacter Reference Unit, Health Protection Agency, London, UK;;Electronmicroscopy, Health Protection Agency North-West, Manchester, UK;;Electronmicroscopy and;Diagnostic Parasitology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK;;Department of Histopathology, Northwick Park and St. Mark's Hospitals, London, UK;;Department of Gastroenterology, Guy's and St Thomas's Hospital, London, UK |
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Abstract: | We challenge the concept of idiopathic parkinsonism (IP) as inevitably progressive neurodegeneration, proposing a natural history of sequential microbial insults with predisposing host response. Proof-of-principle that infection can contribute to IP was provided by case studies and a placebo-controlled efficacy study of Helicobacter eradication. "Malignant" IP appears converted to "benign", but marked deterioration accompanies failure. Similar benefit on brady/hypokinesia from eradicating "low-density" infection favors autoimmunity. Although a minority of UK probands are urea breath test positive for Helicobacter , the predicted probability of having the parkinsonian label depends on the serum H. pylori antibody profile, with clinically relevant gradients between this "discriminant index" and disease burden and progression. In IP, H. pylori antibodies discriminate for persistently abnormal bowel function, and specific abnormal duodenal enterocyte mitochondrial morphology is described in relation to H. pylori infection. Slow intestinal transit manifests as constipation from the prodrome. Diarrhea may flag secondary small-intestinal bacterial overgrowth. This, coupled with genetically determined intense inflammatory response, might explain evolution from brady/hypokinetic to rigidity-predominant parkinsonism. |
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Keywords: | Parkinson's Disease Helicobacter small-intestinal baterial overgrowth virus mitochrondria aetiology pathogenesis |
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