Lewy Bodies
lewy bodies
Attending to the ups and downs of Lewy body dementia: An exploration of cognitive fluctuations
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Parkinson's disease dementia (PDD) share similarities in pathology and clinical presentation and come under the umbrella term of Lewy body dementias (LBD). Fluctuating cognition is a key symptom in LBD and manifests as altered levels of alertness and attention, with a marked difference between best and worst performance. Cognition and alertness can change over seconds or minutes to hours and days of obtundation. Cognitive fluctuations can have significant impacts on the quality of life of people with LBD as well as potentially contribute to the exacerbation of other transient symptoms including, for example, hallucinations and psychosis as well as making it difficult to measure cognitive effect size benefits in clinical trials of LBD. However, this significant symptom in LBD is poorly understood. In my presentation I will discuss the phenomenology of cognitive fluctuations, how we can measure it clinically and limitations of these approaches. I will then outline the work of our group and others which has been focussed on unpicking the aetiological basis of cognitive fluctuations in LBD using a variety of imaging approaches (e.g. SPECT, sMRI, fMRI and EEG). I will then briefly explore future research directions.
Multimodal imaging in Dementia with Lewy bodies
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is a synucleinopathy but more than half of patients with DLB also have varying degrees of tau and amyloid-β co-pathology. Identifying and tracking the pathologic heterogeneity of DLB with multi-modal biomarkers is critical for the design of clinical trials that target each pathology early in the disease at a time when prevention or delaying the transition to dementia is possible. Furthermore, longitudinal evaluation of multi-modal biomarkers contributes to our understanding of the type and extent of the pathologic progression and serves to characterize the temporal emergence of the associated phenotypic expression. This talk will focus on the utility of multi-modal imaging in DLB.
Neurotoxicity is a major health problem in Africa: focus on Parkinson's / Parkinsonism
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most present neurodegenerative disease in the world after Alzheimer's. It is due to the progressive and irreversible loss of dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra Pars Compacta. Alpha synuclein deposits and the appearance of Lewi bodies are systematically associated with it. PD is characterized by four cardinal motor symptoms: bradykinesia / akinesia, rigidity, postural instability and tremors at rest. These symptoms appear when 80% of the dopaminergic endings disappear in the striatum. According to Braak's theory, non-motor symptoms appear much earlier and this is particularly the case with anxiety, depression, anhedonia, and sleep disturbances. In 90 to 95% of cases, the causes of the appearance of the disease remain unknown, but polluting toxic molecules are incriminated more and more. In Africa, neurodegenerative diseases of the Parkinson's type are increasingly present and a parallel seems to exist between the increase in cases and the presence of toxic and polluting products such as metals. My Web conference will focus on this aspect, i.e. present experimental arguments which reinforce the hypothesis of the incrimination of these pollutants in the incidence of Parkinson's disease and / or Parkinsonism. Among the lines of research that we have developed in my laboratory in Rabat, Morocco, I have chosen this one knowing that many of our PhD students and IBRO Alumni are working or trying to develop scientific research on neurotoxicity in correlation with pathologies of the brain.
Accumulation of phospho-alpha synuclein and oligomeric tau in presynapses in Parkinson’s disease and Dementia with Lewy Bodies
FENS Forum 2024
Coactivation pattern analysis reveals changes in prodromal dementia with Lewy bodies
FENS Forum 2024
Development of a novel viral vector-based model of dementia with Lewy bodies in mice
FENS Forum 2024
Early hippocampal hyperexcitability and mitochondrial changes in a transgenic mouse model of dementia with Lewy bodies
FENS Forum 2024
Exploring the combinatorial, diagnostic utility of multimodal biomarkers in differentially diagnosing Dementia with Lewy Bodies from Alzheimer’s through predictive statistical modelling
FENS Forum 2024
Influence of the APOE4 risk factor on hippocampal epigenetic and transcriptomic signatures in a physiological and pathological environment indicative of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB)
FENS Forum 2024
miR-302 induced by glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) signaling reduces the α-synuclein neurotoxicity linked to dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB)
FENS Forum 2024
Synergistic effects of α-synuclein, tau, and amyloid pathology on mitophagy in dementia with Lewy bodies
FENS Forum 2024