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Featured researches published by Christine Schneider.


Neurology | 2013

Nonmotor fluctuations in Parkinson disease: severity and correlation with motor complications.

Alexander Storch; Christine Schneider; Martin Wolz; Yannic Stürwald; Angelika Nebe; Per Odin; Andreas Mahler; Gerd Fuchs; Wolfgang H. Jost; K. Ray Chaudhuri; Rainer Koch; Heinz Reichmann; Georg Ebersbach

Objective: To evaluate frequency, severity, and correlation of nonmotor symptoms (NMS) with motor complications in fluctuating Parkinson disease (PD). Methods: The Multicenter NonMotor Fluctuations in PD cross-sectional study used clinical examination of 10 NMS (dysphagia, anxiety, depression, fatigue, excessive sweating, inner restlessness, pain, concentration/attention, dizziness, bladder urgency) quantified using a visual analogue scale (VAS) in motor-defined on (NMSOn) and off state (NMSOff) combined with motor assessments and self-ratings at home in 100 patients with advanced PD. Results: All NMS except dysphagia, excessive sweating, and bladder urgency fluctuated in conjunction to motor fluctuations with more frequent and severe symptoms in off compared to on state. The proportions of patients experiencing autonomic/sensory NMS in both motor states were similar to those with these NMS exclusively in off state (ratios 0.4–1.3), while for mental/psychic NMS the proportions with exclusive manifestation in off state were higher (ratios 1.8–3.1). Demographic and clinical characteristics correlated neither with NMS frequency patterns and severities nor with ΔNMSOn/Off severities (defined as the differences of VAS scores between on and off). Severities of NMSon, NMSOff, and ΔNMSOn/Off did not correlate with motor function. Presence of anxiety, depression, fatigue, and pain had negative impact on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measured by Parkinsons Disease Questionnaire–8 scoring independent of their occurrence with respect to motor state. Fluctuations of these NMS but not of fatigue deteriorated HRQOL. Conclusion: Patterns of NMS fluctuations are heterogeneous and complex, but psychic NMS fluctuate more frequently and severely. Demographic parameters and motor function do not correlate with NMS or nonmotor fluctuation severities in fluctuating PD.


Movement Disorders | 2011

AFQ056 treatment of levodopa‐induced dyskinesias: Results of 2 randomized controlled trials

Daniela Berg; Jana Godau; Claudia Trenkwalder; Karla Eggert; IIona Csoti; Alexander Storch; Heiko Huber; Monica Morelli‐Canelo; Maria Stamelou; Vincent Ries; Martin Wolz; Christine Schneider; Thérèse Di Paolo; Fabrizio Gasparini; Sam Hariry; Marc Vandemeulebroecke; Walid Abi-Saab; Katy Cooke; Donald Johns; Baltazar Gomez-Mancilla

Study objectives were to assess the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of AFQ056 in Parkinsons disease patients with levodopa‐induced dyskinesia. Two randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, parallel‐group, in‐patient studies for Parkinsons disease patients with moderate to severe levodopa‐induced dyskinesia (study 1) and severe levodopa‐induced dyskinesia (study 2) on stable dopaminergic therapy were performed. Patients received 25–150 mg AFQ056 or placebo twice daily for 16 days (both studies). Study 2 included a 4‐day down‐titration. Primary outcomes were the Lang‐Fahn Activities of Daily Living Dyskinesia Scale (study 1), the modified Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (study 2), and the Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale–part III (both studies). Secondary outcomes included the Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale–part IV items 32–33. The primary analysis was change from baseline to day 16 on all outcomes. Treatment differences were assessed. Fifteen patients were randomized to AFQ056 and 16 to placebo in study 1; 14 patients were randomized to each group in study 2. AFQ056‐treated patients showed significant improvements in dyskinesias on day 16 versus placebo (eg, Lang‐Fahn Activities of Daily Living Dyskinesia Scale, P = .021 [study 1]; modified Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale, P = .032 [study 2]). No significant changes were seen from baseline on day 16 on the Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale‐part III in either study. Adverse events were reported in both studies, including dizziness. Serious adverse events (most commonly worsening of dyskinesias, apparently associated with stopping treatment) were reported by 4 AFQ056‐treated patients in study 1, and 3 patients (2 AFQ056‐treated patient and 1 in the placebo group) in study 2. AFQ056 showed a clinically relevant and significant antidyskinetic effect without changing the antiparkinsonian effects of dopaminergic therapy.


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2009

Non-motor features of Parkinson's disease: depression and dementia

Heinz Reichmann; Christine Schneider; Matthias Löhle

Parkinsons disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disease and primarily considered as a movement disorder defined by the presence of motor symptoms, such as bradykinesia, tremor and rigidity. However, it is nowadays widely recognized that in addition there is impairment of cognitive function, mood and the autonomic nervous system in a high percentage of PD patients, which is sometimes even more harming quality of life. These symptoms not only occur during the course of the disease but may even precede the onset of motor symptoms. Typical examples of non-motor features of PD are depression, constipation, REM sleep behaviour disorder, and hyposmia.


Movement Disorders | 2010

Utility of the WHO‐five well‐being index as a screening tool for depression in Parkinson's disease

Christine Schneider; Maximilian Pilhatsch; Martina Rifati; Wolfgang H. Jost; Franziska Wodarz; Georg Ebersbach; Daniela Djundja; Gerd Fuchs; Arne Gies; Per Odin; Gerd Reifschneider; Martin Wolz; Antonia Bottesi; Michael Bauer; Heinz Reichmann; Alexander Storch

Beck depression inventory (BDI‐1A) is the gold standard screening tool for Parkinsons disease (PD) depression, but as a result of its complexity, it is of limited suitability as a quick and easy screening device. We, therefore, validate the 5‐item WHO‐Five Well‐being Index (WHO‐5) as a screening tool for PD depression. Two hundred thirteen of 215 recruited PD patients (99.1%) completed the WHO‐5. Receiver operating characteristic plots were used to calculate sensitivity/specificity for all cut‐off scores for the detection of depression and combined depression/dysthymia as assessed by an independent investigator using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI). Internal consistency of the WHO‐5 was good (Cronbachs α = 0.83). WHO‐5 showed high validity with adequate detection of depression without differences in the validity indices compared to BDI‐1A (P = 0.234). The optimal cut‐off value for detection of depression was 12 of 13 points. WHO‐5 is a useful, brief, and easy instrument for identifying PD subjects with depression in daily practice.


Neuroepidemiology | 2011

Parkinson’s Disease and Dementia: A Longitudinal Study (DEMPARK)

Monika Balzer-Geldsetzer; Ana S. Costa; Martin Kronenbürger; Jörg B. Schulz; Sandra Röske; Annika Spottke; Ullrich Wüllner; Thomas Klockgether; Alexander Storch; Christine Schneider; Oliver Riedel; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Carola Seifried; Rüdiger Hilker; Nele Schmidt; Karsten Witt; Günther Deuschl; Brit Mollenhauer; Claudia Trenkwalder; Inga Liepelt-Scarfone; Susanne Gräber-Sultan; Daniela Berg; Thomas Gasser; Elke Kalbe; Maren E. Bodden; Wolfgang H. Oertel; Richard Dodel

Background: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative motor disorder. However, non-motor complications frequently alter the course of the disease. A particularly disabling non-motor symptom is dementia. Methods/Design: The study is designed as a multicentre prospective, observational cohort study of about 700 PD patients aged 45–80 years with or without dementia and PD-mild cognitive impairment (MCI). The patients will be recruited in eight specialized movement disorder clinics and will be followed for 36 months. Information about the patients’ functional status will be assessed at baseline and 6-/12- month intervals. In addition, 120 patients with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) will be included. Well-established standardized questionnaires/tests will be applied for detailed neuropsychological assessment. In addition, patients will be asked to participate in modules including volumetric MRI, genetic parameters, and neuropsychology to detect risk factors, early diagnostic biomarkers and predictors for dementia in PD. Results: The study included 604 PD patients by March 2011; 56.3% were classified as having PD alone, with 30.6% of patients suffering from PD-MCI and 13.1% from PD with dementia. The mean age of the cohort was 68.6 ± 7.9 years, with a mean disease duration of 6.8 ± 5.4 years. There was a preponderance of patients in the earlier Hoehn and Yahr stages. Conclusion: The main aim of the study is to characterize the natural progression of cognitive impairment in PD and to identify factors which contribute to the evolution and/or progression of the cognitive impairment. To accomplish this aim we established a large cohort of PD patients without cognitive dysfunction, PD patients with MCI, and PD patients with dementia, to characterize these patients in a standardized manner, using imaging (serial structural MRI), genetic and proteomic methods in order to improve our understanding of the course of the PD process and the development of cognitive dysfunction and dementia in this disease. The inclusion of the DLB patients will start in the second quarter of 2011 in the BMBF-funded follow-up project LANDSCAPE.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2016

Subtypes of mild cognitive impairment in patients with Parkinson's disease: evidence from the LANDSCAPE study

Elke Kalbe; Sarah Petra Rehberg; Ines Ann Heber; Martin Kronenbuerger; Jörg B. Schulz; Alexander Storch; Katharina Linse; Christine Schneider; Susanne Gräber; Inga Liepelt-Scarfone; Daniela Berg; Judith Dams; Monika Balzer-Geldsetzer; Rüdiger Hilker; Carola Oberschmidt; Karsten Witt; Nele Schmidt; Brit Mollenhauer; Claudia Trenkwalder; Annika Spottke; Sandra Roeske; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Oliver Riedel; Richard Dodel

Objective Inconsistent results exist regarding the cognitive profile in patients with Parkinsons disease with mild cognitive impairment (PD-MCI). We aimed at providing data on this topic from a large cohort of patients with PD-MCI. Methods Sociodemographic, clinical and neuropsychological baseline data from patients with PD-MCI recruited in the multicentre, prospective, observational DEMPARK/LANDSCAPE study were analysed. Results 269 patients with PD-MCI (age 67.8±7.4, Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS-III) scores 23.2±11.6) were included. PD-MCI subtypes were 39.4% non-amnestic single domain, 30.5% amnestic multiple domain, 23.4% non-amnestic multiple domain and 6.7% amnestic single domain. Executive functions were most frequently impaired. The most sensitive tests to detect cognitive dysfunctions were the Modified Card Sorting Test, digit span backwards and word list learning direct recall. Multiple stepwise regression analyses showed that global cognition, gender and age, but not education or disease-related parameters predicted PD-MCI subtypes. Conclusions This study with the so far largest number of prospectively recruited patients with PD-MCI indicates that non-amnestic PD-MCI is more frequent than amnestic PD-MCI; executive dysfunctions are the most typical cognitive symptom in PD-MCI; and age, gender and global cognition predict the PD-MCI subtype. Longitudinal data are needed to test the hypothesis that patients with PD-MCI with specific cognitive profiles have different risks to develop dementia.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2013

Reduced body mass index in Parkinson's disease: contribution of comorbid depression.

Maximilian Pilhatsch; Nils B. Kroemer; Christine Schneider; Georg Ebersbach; Wolfgang H. Jost; Gerd Fuchs; Per Odin; Gerd Reifschneider; Michael Bauer; Heinz Reichmann; Alexander Storch

Abstract Courses of Parkinson’s disease (PD) that are complicated by weight loss result in poorer overall treatment outcome and lower quality of life. To determine the contribution of depression, which has not yet been specified in the etiology of weight loss in PD, symptomatology and anamnesis from 215 outpatients diagnosed with PD were assessed using a comprehensive battery of neuropsychiatric scales. A percentage of 31 comorbid depressed patients and a comparison with a control population allowed an accurate characterization of effect sizes, sex differences, and patterns of the contribution of comorbid depression to weight loss. Our study showed that comorbid depression had a clinically relevant effect concerning reduced body mass index in male (0.3; Hedges’ g) but not in female PD patients. Although some possible confounders are not controlled here, our results support the need of monitoring depressive symptoms in the courses of PD, particularly in male patients.


American Journal of Alzheimers Disease and Other Dementias | 2017

Accelerated Age-Dependent Hippocampal Volume Loss in Parkinson Disease With Mild Cognitive Impairment

Christine Schneider; Markus Donix; Katharina Linse; Annett Werner; Mareike Fauser; Lisa Klingelhoefer; Matthias Löhle; Rüdiger von Kummer; Heinz Reichmann; Alexander Storch

Background: Patients with Parkinson disease are at high risk of developing dementia. During the course of the disease, a substantial number of patients will experience a cognitive decline, indicating the dynamics of the underlying neuropathology. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has become increasingly useful for identifying structural characteristics in radiological brain anatomy existing prior to clinical symptoms. Whether these changes reflect pathology, whether they are aging related, or both often remains unclear. We hypothesized that aging-associated brain structural changes would be more pronounced in the hippocampal region among patients with Parkinson disease having mild cognitive deficits relative to cognitively unimpaired patients. Methods: Using MRI, we investigated 30 cognitively healthy patients with Parkinson disease and 33 patients with nondemented Parkinson disease having mild cognitive impairment. All participants underwent structural MRI scanning and extensive clinical and neuropsychological assessments. Results: Irrespective of the study participants’ cognitive status, older age was associated with reduced cortical thickness in various neocortical regions. Having mild cognitive impairment was not associated with an increased rate of cortical thinning or volume loss in these regions, except in the hippocampus bilaterally. Conclusion: Patients with Parkinson disease having mild cognitive impairment show an accelerated age-dependent hippocampal volume loss when compared with cognitively healthy patients with Parkinson disease. This may indicate pathological processes in a key region for memory functioning in patients with Parkinson disease at risk of developing dementia. Structural MRI of the hippocampal region could potentially contribute to identifying patients who should receive early treatment aimed at delaying the clinical onset of dementia.


Fortschritte Der Neurologie Psychiatrie | 2013

Die Epidemiologie des idiopathischen Parkinson-Syndroms und assoziierter Demenz und Depression in Dresden

Oliver Riedel; Christine Schneider; Jens Klotsche; Heinz Reichmann; Alexander Storch; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen

BACKGROUND Parkinsons disease (PD) is frequently compounded by dementia and depression. Yet local total estimates on the prevalence of PD with dementia/depression are still lacking. These are socioeconomically important, especially for the eastern federal states in Germany due to the demographic structures. METHODS We conducted a two-staged total estimation in the area of Dresden. First, all local office-based neurologists, hospitals and retirement homes were asked to list their patients/residents with PD on a single study day. Then a random sample of patients/home residents was neuropsycholoigcally examined, including the Mini-mental-state exam and the Montgomery-Asberg Depression rating scale. Dementia was diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria. RESULTS Overall, 886 PD cases (95 % CI: 809 - 926) were estimated, of which 252 (95 % CI: 226 - 279) suffered from dementia and 216 (95 % CI: 191 - 242) from depression. Dementia rates increased by age with 13.8 % (≤ 65 years) to 40.2 % (≥ 76 years). Depression rates ranged from 23.3 % to 28.0 %. Overall, 20.6 % of all ambulatory treated PD patients and 85.7 % of all home residents with PD had dementia. CONCLUSION The prevalence of PD in Dresden dovetails with previous reported estimates. Dementia and depression are frequent complications in outpatients as well as home residents with PD.


Nervenarzt | 2013

[Early recognition of Parkinson's disease. Objectifiable non-motor symptoms and biomarkers].

Brit Mollenhauer; F. Sixel-Döring; Alexander Storch; Christine Schneider; Rüdiger Hilker; E. Kalbe

The clinical diagnosis of Parkinsons disease (PD) according to the UK Brain Bank criteria is based on the presence of motor symptoms and the response to dopaminergic medication. According to these criteria the clinical diagnosis is delineated too late when more than 50 % of the dopaminergic neurons are already degenerated. In recent years interest has shifted increasingly more towards non-motor symptoms (NMS), such as rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD), constipation, hyposmia and neuropsychiatric as well as cognitive symptoms. It was shown that NMS can precede the motor symptoms by some years and may thus possibly enable support of an earlier clinical diagnosis. Furthermore, cerebrospinal fluid or blood biomarkers as well as brain imaging techniques can objectively support an earlier diagnosis of PD. This article reviews important NMSs (e.g. RBD, hyposmia and neuropsychiatric/cognitive symptoms) as well as the current status on biomarkers and brain imaging in early (premotor) phases of PD and their relevance for the early diagnosis.

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Alexander Storch

Dresden University of Technology

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Heinz Reichmann

Dresden University of Technology

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Martin Wolz

Dresden University of Technology

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Georg Ebersbach

Humboldt State University

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Daniela Berg

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Rüdiger Hilker

Goethe University Frankfurt

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