Parkinson's Diseases Specialist Arlington VA

In the more likely scenario, having only one copy of the mutation increases the risk of the disease, but the disease will only express itself in the presence of other genetic or environmental factors.

Francisco Marconi Ferraz, MD
703-845-1552
611 S Carlin Springs Rd Ste 105
Arlington, VA
Alberto Chalmeta
(703) 671-5400
611 S Carlin Springs Rd
Arlington, VA
Kenneth Michael Kudelko, MD
Arlington, VA
Taeun Chang, MD
Arlington, VA
Daniel Richard Glor, MD
202-872-7226
2100 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Washington, DC
Janice A Miller, MD
303-449-3566
Arlington, VA
John Robert Cutler, MD
2101 Wilson Blvd Ste 700
Arlington, VA
Timea Hodics, MD
Arlington, VA
William Danl Sherman, MD
2700 Virginia Ave NW # 405
Washington, DC
Norma H Horwitz
(202) 741-2750
2150 Pennsylvania Ave Nw
Washington, DC
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Another Genetic Risk for Parkinson's

By Kathryn Ayers

A number of small studies have suggested that a mutation in the gene that produces the protein alpha-synuclein (SNCA) may play a role in the onset of the degenerative neurological condition known as Parkinson’s disease. Now a large multi-nation study confirms that the mutation can increase the risk of Parkinson’s by 50 percent. Researchers at the Mayo Clinic sifted data on some 2,700 Parkinson’s patients and an equal number of age- and sex-matched healthy individuals and determined that “the SNCA gene is not only a rare cause of autosomal dominant Parkinson’s disease in some families, but also a susceptibility gene for Parkinson’s disease at the population level.” People who have the misfortune of inheriting copies of the gene mutation from both parents—a rare occurrence—will contract Parkinson’s. In the more likely scenario, having only one copy of the mutation increases the risk of the disease, but the disease will only express itself in the presence of other genetic or environmental factors. The researchers estimate that the SNCA gene accounts for roughly 3 percent of all Parkinson’s cases—about the same, they say, “as the population effect of other common variants implicated in Parkinson’s disease.”

Author: Kathryn Ayers

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