D
Donald L. Price
Researcher at Johns Hopkins University
Publications - 471
Citations - 93184
Donald L. Price is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cholinergic neuron & Senile plaques. The author has an hindex of 128, co-authored 471 publications receiving 90448 citations. Previous affiliations of Donald L. Price include Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine & Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center.
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Parkinson's disease: depletion of substantia nigra neurotensin receptors
George R. Uhl,George R. Uhl,George R. Uhl,Peter J. Whitehouse,Donald L. Price,Donald L. Price,W.W. Tourtelotte,Michael J. Kuhar +7 more
TL;DR: Results support a neurotensin-dopamine interaction in human nigro-striatal circuits and suggest changes in nigra from patients with Parkinson's disease result from receptor loss.
Journal Article
Primary dystonias: a review of the pathology and suggestions for new directions of study.
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Aged Non-Human Primates: An Animal Model of Age-Associated Neurodegenerative Disease
Donald L. Price,Lee J. Martin,Sangram S. Sisodia,Molly V. Wagster,Edward H. Koo,Lary C. Walker,Vassilis E. Koliatsos,Linda C. Cork +7 more
TL;DR: The complementary nature of studies of non‐human primates and human subjects is described, illustrating how these investigations can clarify factors that influence behavior and brain biology in age‐associated diseases.
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Distribution of Neurofilament Antigens after Axonal Injury
Jeffrey Rosenfeld,Mary E. Dorman,John W. Griffin,Ludwig A. Sternberger,Nancy H. Sternberger,Donald L. Price +5 more
TL;DR: This investigation indicates that one response of neurons to injury, or to disease, is an abnormal distribution of phosphorylated epitopes of NF proteins.
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Senile plaques in aged squirrel monkeys.
Lary C. Walker,Cheryl A. Kitt,Elias Schwam,Beth Buckwald,Felix G. Garcia,Jerry Sepinwall,Donald L. Price +6 more
TL;DR: Aged squirrel monkeys develop senile plaques in the brain that are similar to those occurring in aged rhesus monkeys and aged humans.