W
Wilfried Kuhn
Researcher at Ruhr University Bochum
Publications - 107
Citations - 8079
Wilfried Kuhn is an academic researcher from Ruhr University Bochum. The author has contributed to research in topics: Parkinson's disease & Homocysteine. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 104 publications receiving 7711 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Ala30Pro mutation in the gene encoding alpha-synuclein in Parkinson's disease.
Rejko Krüger,Wilfried Kuhn,Thomas Müller,Dirk Woitalla,Manuel B. Graeber,Sigfried Kösel,Horst Przuntek,Jörg T. Epplen,Ludger Schöls,Olaf Riess +9 more
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Increased susceptibility to sporadic Parkinson's disease by a certain combined alpha-synuclein/apolipoprotein E genotype.
Rejko Krüger,Ana Maria Menezes Vieira-Saecker,Wilfried Kuhn,Daniela Berg,Thomas Müller,Natalia Kühnl,G. Fuchs,Alexander Storch,Marcel Hungs,Dirk Woitalla,Horst Przuntek,Jörg T. Epplen,Ludger Schöls,Olaf Riess +13 more
TL;DR: A highly significant difference between the group of PD patients and control individuals has been found, suggesting interactions or combined actions of these proteins in the pathogenesis of sporadic PD.
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Facial expression recognition in people with medicated and unmedicated Parkinson's disease.
Reiner Sprengelmeyer,Andrew W. Young,K. Mahn,Ulrike Schroeder,Dirk Woitalla,Th. Büttner,Wilfried Kuhn,Horst Przuntek +7 more
TL;DR: Although both Parkinson's disease groups showed impairments of facial expression recognition, the consistently worse recognition of disgust in the unmedicated group is consistent with the hypothesis from previous studies that brain regions modulated by dopaminergic neurons are involved in the Recognition of disgust.
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S-100 Protein: Serum Marker of Focal Brain Damage After Ischemic Territorial MCA Infarction
TL;DR: The S-100 concentrations in serum were significantly higher in patients with severe neurological deficits at admission, with extensive infarctions and a space-occupying effect of ischemic edema as compared with the rest of the population.
Journal ArticleDOI
Disgust implicated in obsessive–compulsive disorder
Reiner Sprengelmeyer,Andrew W. Young,I. Pundt,A. Sprengelmeyer,Andrew J. Calder,G. Berrios,R. Winkel,W. Vollmöeller,Wilfried Kuhn,Gudrun Sartory,Horst Przuntek +10 more
TL;DR: Impaired recognition of disgust is consistent with the neurology of OCD and with the idea that abnormal experience of disgust may be involved in the genesis of obsessions and compulsions.