Journal article

Dopaminergic innervation of the human striatum in Parkinson's disease

M Porritt, D Stanic, D Finkelstein, P Batchelor, S Lockhart, A Hughes, R Kalnins, D Howells

Movement Disorders | WILEY | Published : 2005

Abstract

In Parkinson's disease (PD), dopaminergic input to the caudate nucleus and a band of putaminal tissue abutting the external globus pallidus seems well preserved on immunohistochemical staining for the dopamine transporter. Counting of dopaminergic terminals showed that terminal density in these regions in PD was the same as that in controls, which indicates that input is truly preserved and not a consequence of a compensatory upregulation of metabolism in a reduced pool of surviving terminals. When the branching pattern of dopaminergic axons coursing through the globus pallidus was examined, we found no evidence for increased axonal sprouting in PD that might have contributed to preservation..

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University of Melbourne Researchers