1/1. role of chronic infection and inflammation in the gastrointestinal tract in the etiology and pathogenesis of idiopathic parkinsonism. Part 1: eradication of Helicobacter in the cachexia of idiopathic parkinsonism.BACKGROUND: Neuronal damage in idiopathic parkinsonism may be in response to ubiquitous occult infection. Since peptic ulceration is prodromal, Helicobacter is a prime candidate. AIM: To consider the candidature of Helicobacter in parkinsonism with cachexia. methods: We explore the relationship between being underweight and inflammatory products in 124 subjects with idiopathic parkinsonism and 195 controls, and present the first case-series evidence of efficacy of Helicobacter eradication, in parkinsonism advanced to the stage of cachexia. RESULTS: association of a low body mass index with circulating interleukin-6 was specific to parkinsonism (p = .002), unlike that with antibodies against Helicobacter vacuolating-toxin and cytotoxicity-associated gene product (p < .04). Marked reversibility in both cachexia and disability of idiopathic parkinsonism followed helicobacter heilmannii eradication in one case, helicobacter pylori eradication in another, follow-up being > or = 3.5 years. The latter presented with postprandial bloating, and persistent nausea: following eradication, radioisotope gastric-emptying returned towards normal, and upper abdominal symptoms regressed. Reversibility of their cachexia/disability contrasts with the outcome of anti-Helicobacter therapy where eradication repeatedly failed (one case), and in non-Helicobacter gastritis (three cases). Anti-parkinsonian medication remained constant. intestinal absorption and barrier function were normal in all. CONCLUSION: Categorization, according to presence or absence of Helicobacter infection, was a useful therapeutic tool in late idiopathic parkinsonism.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = parkinsonism (Clic here for more details about this article) |