Publications by authors named "Sangwon Yoo"

Article Synopsis
  • This study investigated how different types of smell loss (normosmia, hyposmia-converter, and hyposmia) progress in early Parkinson's disease, particularly looking at their relationship with motor symptoms, heart function, and cognitive abilities over time.
  • Out of 203 early PD patients, 85.7% experienced a decline in their sense of smell within an average follow-up of 3 years, with hypo-converters showing faster cognitive decline compared to others.
  • The findings indicate that the different olfactory subtypes reflect varying neuro-biochemical influences throughout the disease, with consistent worsening of motor symptoms and heart function across all groups.
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Parkinson's disease is a degenerative brain disorder characterized by dopamine neuronal degeneration and dopamine transporter loss. In this study, we generated an induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) line, KNIHi001-A, from the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of a 76-year-old man with Parkinson's disease. The non-integrating Sendai virus was used to reprogram iPSCs.

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Background: Parkinson's disease (PD) is a multifaceted disease that encompasses diverse clinical phenotypes. The diversity of PD could be subtyped based on the temporal dynamic status of cardiac sympathetic innervation; (1) initially, denervated myocardium (peripheral nervous system-predominant; PNS-predominant), (2) preserved myocardium (central nervous system-predominant; CNS-predominant), and (3) preserved myocardium who developed cardiac sympathetic denervation (CSD) on the subsequent imaging (Converter; delayed cardiac denervation). This study assessed how the cardiac denervation could reflect the pathobiology.

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Background: Hyposmia is a common nonmotor symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD) and reportedly associated with dysautonomia in PD. The smell identification test for measuring olfactory function consists of multiple items to discriminate specific scents. In the present study, factor analysis of the smell identification test was performed, and the correlation of extracted factors with cardiac sympathetic denervation (CSD) in patients with PD was investigated.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists studied 122 people with early Parkinson’s disease to see how their heart nerves worked over 4-5 years.
  • They looked for patterns in how these heart nerves were affected and if it related to memory and thinking skills.
  • The findings showed that changes in the heart could reflect what’s happening in the brain during early stages of Parkinson's disease.
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Epidemiological studies have reported a link between essential tremor (ET) and Parkinson's disease (PD). Recent studies have suggested ET as a possible neurodegenerative disease whose subgroup contained Lewy bodies in the brainstem, as in PD. PD with antedated ET (PD) might exhibit traits different from those of the pure form of ET or PD.

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In Parkinson's disease (PD), cardiovascular dysautonomia accumulates with disease progression, but studies are lacking on the natural history behind each subtype except orthostatic hypotension. This study investigated the early natural history of orthostatic blood pressure (BP) subtypes in PD. Two hundred sixty-seven early PD patients were included.

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Movement disorders have been identified as a rare early manifestation of the Moyamoya disease. Herein, we present a case of a 34-year-old man with a genetically confirmed Moyamoya disease who showed unilateral myoclonus as an initial manifestation. Neuroimaging studies showed prominent asymmetrically developed Moyamoya disease on the right hemisphere with near-complete loss of normal vessels while the left hemisphere was adjunctively fed with extension of posterior cerebral artery: uneven progression of vasculature.

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F-Florbetaben is a tracer used to evaluate the metabolic activity of and amyloid accumulation in the brain when measured in early- and late-phase, respectively. The metabolism of neural substrates could be viewed as a network and might be an important factor in cognition. Orthostatic hypotension (OH) might play an indirect moderating role in cognition, and its latent influence could modify the inherent cognitive network.

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Recently, new disease phenotyping has been proposed based on the origin site of α-synuclein pathology in Parkinson's disease (PD). In addition, a great deal of evidences suggested of parallel degeneration in the central nervous system and peripheral nervous system in PD. The myocardial uptake pattern of I-meta-iodobenzylguanidine can be a surrogate imaging biomarker for the peripheral nervous system involvement in PD.

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Considering brain structural alterations as neurodegenerative consequences of Parkinson's disease (PD), we sought to infer the progression of PD via the ordering of brain structural alterations from cross-sectional MRI observations. Having measured cortical thinning in gray matter (GM) regions and disintegrity in white matter (WM) regions as MRI markers of structural alterations for 130 patients with PD (69 ± 10 years, 72 men), stochastic simulation based on the probabilistic relationship between the brain regions was conducted to infer the ordering of structural alterations across all brain regions and the staging of structural alterations according to changes in clinical status. The ordering of structural alterations represented WM disintegrity tending to occur earlier than cortical thinning.

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Decreased cancer risk has been reported in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), and cancer prior to PD can have a protective effect on PD risk. We investigated cancer history prior to PD diagnosis to determine if such history can enhance motor reserve in PD by assessing the association between motor deficits and striatal subregional dopamine depletion. A total of 428 newly diagnosed, drug-naïve PD patients was included in the study.

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Drug-induced parkinsonism (DIP) is caused by a dopamine receptor blockade and is a major cause of misleading diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD). Striatal dopamine activity has been investigated widely in DIP; however, most studies with dopamine transporter imaging have focused on the clinical characteristics and prognosis. This study investigated differences in striatal subregional monoamine availability among patients with DIP, normal controls, and patients with early PD.

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Objectives: This study aimed to compare susceptibility map-weighted imaging (SMwI) using various MRI machines (three vendors) with N-3-fluoropropyl-2-β-carbomethoxy-3-β-(4-iodophe nyl)nortropane (F-FP-CIT) PET in the diagnosis of neurodegenerative parkinsonism in a multi-centre setting.

Methods: We prospectively recruited 257 subjects, including 157 patients with neurodegenerative parkinsonism, 54 patients with non-neurodegenerative parkinsonism, and 46 healthy subjects from 10 hospitals between November 2019 and October 2020. All participants underwent both SMwI and F-FP-CIT PET.

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Article Synopsis
  • - This study validated early-phase F-18 Florbetaben PET (eFBB PET) as a brain perfusion test for detecting early Parkinson's disease, comparing it with Tc-99m ECD SPECT in 27 patients.
  • - Six reference regions were tested to determine the best for calculating standardized uptake value ratios (SUVR), with the whole cerebellum, cerebellum plus brain stem, and cerebellar grey matter showing the highest correlation with cortex measurements.
  • - The results indicated that eFBB PET can extract more independent component network signals compared to ECD SPECT and effectively differentiate Parkinson’s disease from dementia with Lewy bodies, suggesting its reliability as a perfusion test.
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Article Synopsis
  • * In a sample of 227 PD patients, it was found that a low heart-to-mediastinum (H/M) ratio indicative of poor I-MIBG uptake was present in 69.6% of cases, and many with low uptake also had worse disease symptoms.
  • * Results indicated that the connection between cardiac sympathetic denervation (measured by I-MIBG uptake) and overall disease burden was significant, and this relationship was not affected by changes in blood pressure
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Dilated perivascular space (dPVS) has recently been reported as a biomarker for cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, comprehensive interrelationships between various clinical risk factors, dPVS, white-matter hyperintensities (WMH), cognition, and motor function in PD have not been studied yet. The purpose of this study was to test whether dPVS might mediate the effect of clinical risk factors on WMH, cognition, and motor symptoms in PD patients.

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