Conference paper
PSYCHIATRIC COMORBIDITIES IN PARKINSON'S DISEASE SEEN THROUGH THE PRISM OF GENOMICS AND EPIGENETICS
Antonela Blažeković
orcid.org/0000-0002-3669-7941
; Department for Functional Genomics, Center for Translational and Clinical Research, University of Zagreb, School of Medicine, University Hospital Center Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
Fran Borovečki
; Department for Functional Genomics, Center for Translational and Clinical Research, University of Zagreb, School of Medicine, University Hospital Center Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia ; Department of Neurology, University Hospital Center Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder clinically characterized by motor dysfunctions due to progressive loss
of dopaminergic neurons and a broad spectrum of non-motor symptoms. Interestingly, non-motor symptoms like depression, anxiety
and psychosis are often present several years before the occurrence of classic motor features seriously affecting patient quality of
life. Their presence is often misleading, delaying the correct diagnosis of PD. Despite its high incidence, the pathophysiology and
aetiology of neuropsychiatric symptoms associated with PD remains unclear. Currently, a lot of interest lays in research looking for
genetic predictors of motor and non-motor symptoms in PD. The availability of next-generation sequencing technology for genome,
epigenetic and transcriptional analysis opens the door to a new way of studying multifactorial diseases like PD and their
comorbidities. In this review we will present new insights in the genomic and epigenetic background of psychiatric comorbidity in
Parkinson's disease.
Keywords
Parkinson's disease; neuropsychiatric symptoms; genomics; epigenetics
Hrčak ID:
271698
URI
Publication date:
19.10.2021.
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