June 13, 2005
Parkinson's Disease strikes the neurons of the Nigrostriatal pathway, that is, the dopamine-releasing neurons whose cell bodies reside in the Substantia Nigra and synapse in the striatum (also known as the caudate/putamen). You generally have to lose about 90% of those neurons to get any symptoms. Really. The CNS covers its own a$$.
Interestingly enough, Huntington's Disease strikes the reciprocal connections, from the caudate to the SN, and elsewhere.....
Here's a brainstem cross-section of a PD patient and a person who died from something else. Not surprisingly, the substantia nigra is the black band near the bottom-middle.

Posted by: caltechgirl at
10:59 AM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
Post contains 108 words, total size 1 kb.
73 queries taking 0.0525 seconds, 184 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.








