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R

R. M. A. de Bie

Researcher at University of Amsterdam

Publications -  29
Citations -  2640

R. M. A. de Bie is an academic researcher from University of Amsterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Deep brain stimulation & Pallidotomy. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 25 publications receiving 2435 citations. Previous affiliations of R. M. A. de Bie include University of Toronto.

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A comparison of continuous thalamic stimulation and thalamotomy for suppression of severe tremor

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of these two procedures on the functional abilities of patients with drug-resistant tremor due to Parkinson's disease, essential tremor, or multiple sclerosis were examined.
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Unbiased screen for interactors of leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 supports a common pathway for sporadic and familial Parkinson disease

Alexandra Beilina, +168 more
TL;DR: It is shown, using the specific example of Parkinson disease, that identification of protein–protein interactions can help determine the most likely candidate for several GWAS loci, and proposed that three different genes for PD have a common biological function.
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A Two-Stage Meta-Analysis Identifies Several New Loci for Parkinson's Disease

Vincent Plagnol, +106 more
- 30 Jun 2011 - 
TL;DR: Using a dataset of post-mortem brain samples assayed for gene expression and methylation, methylation and expression changes associated with PD risk variants in PARK16/1q32, GPNMB/7p15, and STX1B/16p11 loci are identified, suggesting potential molecular mechanisms and candidate genes at these risk loci.
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Unilateral pallidotomy versus bilateral subthalamic nucleus stimulation in PD: a randomized trial.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the efficacy of unilateral pallidotomy and bilateral subthalamic nucleus (STN) stimulation in patients with advanced Parkinson disease (PD) in a randomized, observer-blind, multicenter trial.
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Evolution of mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson disease

TL;DR: Almost one-third of patients with newly diagnosed PD fulfill the consensus criteria for PD-MCI; after 5 years, this proportion is approximately 50% of patients without dementia.