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Journal ArticleDOI

Possible environmental, occupational, and other etiologic factors for Parkinson's disease: A case‐control study in Germany

TLDR
A role for environmental and genetic factors in the etiology of PD is supported by a case-control study investigating possible etiologic relevance to Parkinson's disease of rural factors such as farming activity, pesticide exposures, well-water drinking, and animal contacts.
Abstract
In a case-control study, we investigated the possible etiologic relevance to Parkinson9s disease (PD) of rural factors such as farming activity, pesticide exposures, well-water drinking, and animal contacts; toxicologic exposures such as wood preservatives, heavy metals, and solvents; general anesthesia; head trauma; and differences in the intrauterine environment. We recruited 380 patients in nine German clinics, 379 neighborhood control subjects, and 376 regional control subjects in the largest case-control study investigating such factors and collected data in structured personal interviews using conditional logistic regression to control for educational status and cigarette smoking. The latter was strongly inversely associated with PD. There were significantly elevated odds ratios (OR) for pesticide use, in particular, for organochlorines and alkylated phosphates, but no association was present between PD and other rural factors. A significantly elevated OR was present for exposure to wood preservatives. Subjective assessment by the probands indicated that exposure to some heavy metals, solvents, exhaust fumes, and carbon monoxide was significantly more frequent among patients than control subjects, but this was not confirmed by a parallel assessment of job histories according to a job exposure matrix. Patients had undergone general anesthesia and suffered severe head trauma more often than control subjects, but a dose-response gradient was not present. Patients reported a significantly larger number of amalgam-filled teeth before their illness than control subjects. The frequency of premature births and birth order did not differ between patients and control subjects. Patients reported significantly more relatives affected with PD than control subjects. These results support a role for environmental and genetic factors in the etiology of PD.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology and etiology of Parkinson’s disease: a review of the evidence

TL;DR: Studies that assessed possible shared etiological components between PD and other diseases show that REM sleep behavior disorder and mental illness increase PD risk and that PD patients have lower cancer risk, but methodological concerns exist.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pesticides and human chronic diseases: evidences, mechanisms, and perspectives.

TL;DR: Genetic damages, epigenetic modifications, endocrine disruption, mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, endoplasmic reticulum stress and unfolded protein response (UPR), impairment of ubiquitin proteasome system, and defective autophagy as the effective mechanisms of action are introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Health effects of chronic pesticide exposure: cancer and neurotoxicity.

TL;DR: The routes of pesticide exposures occurring today are described, the epidemiologic studies of pesticide-related carcinogenicity and neurotoxicity in adults are summarized, and links between the animal toxicology data and human health effects are evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The risk of Parkinson's disease with exposure to pesticides, farming, well water, and rural living

TL;DR: It is suggested that Parkinson's disease is associated with occupational exposure to herbicides and insecticides and to farming and that the risk of farming cannot be accounted for by pesticide exposure alone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental risk factors and Parkinson's disease A case‐control study in Taiwan

TL;DR: The history of living in a rural environment, farming, use of herbicides/pesticides, and use of paraquat were associated with an increased PD risk in a dose-response relationship, and there was an inverse relationship between cigarette smoking and PD.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Accuracy of clinical diagnosis of idiopathic Parkinson's disease: a clinico-pathological study of 100 cases.

TL;DR: The pathological findings in 100 patients diagnosed prospectively by a group of consultant neurologists as having idiopathic Parkinson's disease are reported, and these observations call into question current concepts of Parkinson's Disease as a single distinct morbid entity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chronic Parkinsonism in humans due to a product of meperidine-analog synthesis

TL;DR: It is proposed that this chemical selectively damages cells in the substantia nigra in patients who developed marked parkinsonism after using an illicit drug intravenously.
Book

Case-Control Studies: Design, Conduct, Analysis

TL;DR: Case-control studies, often called 'retrospective' studies, provide a research method for investigating factors that may prevent or cause disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transition metals, ferritin, glutathione, and ascorbic acid in parkinsonian brains.

TL;DR: Reduced glutathione and the shift of the iron (II)/iron (III) ratio in favor of iron ( III) suggest that these changes might contribute to pathophysiological processes underlying PD.
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