scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Marie Vidailhet published in 1997"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that parkinsonian signs and LID are a reflection of at least two different anatomofunctional systems within the GP and that this functional organization of the GP needs to be considered when determining the optimal target for surgical treatment of PD.
Abstract: There has been renewed interest in functional surgery as treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD). Although pallidotomy and chronic pallidal stimulation are highly effective in suppressing levodopa-induced dyskinesia (LID), both methods also seem to be effective in reducing parkinsonian disability. However, the simultaneous improvement of LID and motor signs is hard to explain with the classic model of basal ganglia circuitry. Taking advantage of the fact that deep brain stimulation is reversible and that implanted electrodes contain four discrete stimulation sites, we investigated the effect of stimulation on different sites of the globus pallidus (GP) in five PD patients. Stimulation in the dorsal GP (upper contact) significantly improved gait, akinesia, and rigidity and could induce dyskinesia when patients were in the "off" state. In contrast, stimulation in the posteroventral GP (lower contact) significantly worsened gait and akinesia, although the reduction in rigidity remained. For patients in the "on" state, stimulation in the posteroventral GP dramatically reduced LID but, as in the "off" state, worsened gait and akinesia, thus canceling out the antiparkinsonian effect of levodopa. Our results indicate that stimulation had a striking different effect on parkinsonism and dyskinesia when applied at two different loci of the GP and that stimulation applied in the posteroventral GP produced opposite effects on rigidity and on akinesia. We conclude that parkinsonian signs and LID are a reflection of at least two different anatomofunctional systems within the GP and that this functional organization of the GP needs to be considered when determining the optimal target for surgical treatment of PD.

276 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The pattern of urinary symptoms and urodynamic dysfunction was analyzed in 15 SND and 35 PD patients with urinary complaints and found dysuria with or without chronic retention, frequently associated with a hypoactive detrusor and low urethral pressure permitted early and reliable diagnosis.
Abstract: Although urinary disturbances are more frequent in multiple system atrophy (MSA) than in Parkinson's disease (PD), the striatonigral degeneration (SND) type of MSA is difficult to distinguish from PD, especially when the latter is associated with orthostatic hypotension or urinary symptoms. The pattern of urinary symptoms and urodynamic dysfunction was analyzed in 15 SND and 35 PD patients with urinary complaints. In SND, dysuria with or without chronic retention, frequently associated with a hypoactive detrusor and low urethral pressure, permitted early and reliable diagnosis. In PD, urgency to void, with or without difficulty voiding, but without chronic retention, associated with detrusor hyperreflexia and normal urethral sphincter function, predominated. In clinical practice, the study of urinary symptoms and bladder function may help to distinguish SND from PD in patients with urinary disturbances.

66 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The sensitivity of visuospatial memory even at an early stage of Parkinson's disease is confirmed and the implication of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic system, and associated striato-frontal neuronal circuits, in executive processes needed for spatial location learning is suggested.

63 citations