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William G. Ondo

Researcher at Cornell University

Publications -  254
Citations -  22284

William G. Ondo is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Restless legs syndrome & Essential tremor. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 242 publications receiving 20124 citations. Previous affiliations of William G. Ondo include Baylor College of Medicine & Houston Methodist Hospital.

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A pilot study: Microlesion effects and tremor outcome in the ventrointermediate deep brain stimulation (VIM-DBS).

TL;DR: MLE has minimal long term clinical effect except for possibly allowing for lower DBS settings, including amplitude and pulse width, trended to be mildly lower in those with a marked MLE.
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The pharmacokinetic and clinical effects of tolcapone on a single dose of sublingual apomorphine in Parkinson's disease

TL;DR: Clinical measures suggested improvement during the APO "on" period after the addition of tolcapone, but neither reached statistical significance, and further trials, involving larger samples are needed to clearly establish the pharmacokinetic and clinical effect of to lcapone in PD patients taking APO.
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Resolution of Severe Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder After a Small Unilateral Nondominant Frontoparietal Infarct

TL;DR: A patient suffering with severe OCD whose symptoms disappeared immediately following a small right posterior frontoparietal infarct is presented, and it is speculated that the lesion modulated the cortical–subcortical circuits, likely through a change in input into in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
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Prodromal Markers of Parkinson's Disease in Patients With Essential Tremor.

TL;DR: Substantia nigra hyperechogenicity serves as a prodromal marker for predicting the development of PD in patients with ET and provides a reference for therapeutic strategies, and may enable further exploration of the relationship between ET and PD and the search for pathogenesis-based therapies.
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Alcohol dehydrogenase polymorphism and Parkinson's disease.

TL;DR: No strong evidence of an association was found between ADH A1 allele and PD susceptibility in study patients and there was also no suggestion of linkage disequilibrium between NACP-Rep 1 and ADh A1 alleles.