Asymmetry in parkinsonism, spreading pathogens and the nose.

Parkinsonism Relat Disord

Department of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Deer Lodge Centre, 200 Woodlawn St., Winnipeg, MB R3J 2H7, Canada.

Published: January 2012

Parkinson's disease, as well as many other parkinsonisms, including most toxic, neurodegenerative and familial types are typically asymmetric. No explanation for this phenomenon exists. A summary of the frequency of asymmetry in a spectrum of parkinsonian disorders is provided. Evidence against asymmetry being the result of normal asymmetries of the substantia nigrais reviewed. Asymmetry either results from a greater susceptibility on one side or a spreading pathology entering or starting on one side of the CNS. With the increasing evidence for spreading pathologies (toxins, viruses, α-synuclein), knowledge of neuroanatomical connections, and literature implicating spreading pathogens from the enteric and olfactory nerves, potential explanations can be theorized and explored, including the possibility of a pathogen preferentially entering or originating in the olfactory bulb on one side, with subsequent involvement of the other side.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.parkreldis.2011.06.011DOI Listing

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