PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Lower levels of uric acid and striatal dopamine in non-tremor dominant Parkinson's disease subtype.

  • Ismael Huertas,
  • Silvia Jesús,
  • José Antonio Lojo,
  • Francisco Javier García-Gómez,
  • María Teresa Cáceres-Redondo,
  • Juan Manuel Oropesa-Ruiz,
  • Fátima Carrillo,
  • Laura Vargas-Gonzalez,
  • Juan Francisco Martín Rodríguez,
  • Pilar Gómez-Garre,
  • David García-Solís,
  • Pablo Mir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0174644
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. e0174644

Abstract

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Parkinson's disease (PD) patients who present with tremor and maintain a predominance of tremor have a better prognosis. Similarly, PD patients with high levels of uric acid (UA), a natural neuroprotectant, have also a better disease course. Our aim was to investigate whether PD motor subtypes differ in their levels of UA, and if these differences correlate with the degree of dopamine transporter (DAT) availability. We included 75 PD patients from whom we collected information about their motor symptoms, DAT imaging and UA concentration levels. Based on the predominance of their motor symptoms, patients were classified into postural instability and gait disorder (PIGD, n = 36), intermediate (I, n = 22), and tremor-dominant (TD, n = 17) subtypes. The levels of UA and striatal DAT were compared across subtypes and the correlation between these two measures was also explored. We found that PIGD patients had lower levels of UA (3.7 vs 4.5 vs 5.3 mg/dL; P<0.001) and striatal DAT than patients with an intermediate or TD phenotype. Furthermore, UA levels significantly correlated with the levels of striatal DAT. We also observed that some PIGD (25%) and I (45%) patients had a predominance of tremor at disease onset. We speculate that UA might be involved in the maintenance of the less damaging TD phenotype and thus also in the conversion from TD to PIGD. Low levels of this natural antioxidant could lead to a major neuronal damage and therefore influence the conversion to a more severe motor phenotype.