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Idiopathic Parkinson's disease: possible routes by which vulnerable neuronal
types may be subject to neuroinvasion by an unknown pathogen.

Braak H, Rub U, Gai WP, Del Tredici K.

Institute for Clinical Neuroanatomy, University of Frankfurt, Frankfurt/Main,
Germany.

The progressive, neurodegenerative process underlying idiopathic Parkinson's
disease is associated with the formation of proteinaceous inclusion bodies
that involve a few susceptible neuronal types of the human nervous system. In
the lower brain stem, the process begins in the dorsal motor nucleus of the
vagus nerve and advances from there essentially upwards through susceptible
regions of the medulla oblongata, pontine tegmentum, midbrain, and basal
forebrain until it reaches the cerebral cortex. With time, multiple
components of the autonomic, limbic, and motor systems become severely
impaired. All of the vulnerable subcortical grays and cortical areas are
closely interconnected. Incidental cases of idiopathic Parkinson's disease
may show involvement of both the enteric nervous system and the dorsal motor
nucleus of the vagus nerve. This observation, combined with the working
hypothesis that the stereotypic topographic expansion pattern of the lesions
may resemble that of a falling row of dominos, prompts the question whether
the disorder might originate outside of the central nervous system, caused by
a yet unidentified pathogen that is capable of passing the mucosal barrier of
the gastrointestinal tract and, via postganglionic enteric neurons, entering
the central nervous system along unmyelinated praeganglionic fibers generated
from the visceromotor projection cells of the vagus nerve. By way of
retrograde axonal and transneuronal transport, such a causative pathogen
could reach selectively vulnerable subcortical nuclei and, unimpeded, gain
access to the cerebral cortex. The here hypothesized mechanism offers one
possible explanation for the sequential and apparently uninterrupted manner
in which vulnerable brain regions, subcortical grays and cortical areas
become involved in idiopathic Parkinson's disease.

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