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Dive into the research topics where Leon S. Dure is active.

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Featured researches published by Leon S. Dure.


Neuroscience | 1992

Excitatory amino acid binding sites in the basal ganglia of the rat: A quantitative autoradiographic study

Roger L. Albin; Richard L. Makowiec; Zane R. Hollingsworth; Leon S. Dure; John B. Penney; Anne B. Young

Quantitative receptor autoradiography was used to determine the distribution of excitatory amino acid binding sites in the basal ganglia of rat brain. alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid, N-methyl-D-aspartate, kainate, quisqualate-sensitive metabotropic and non-N-methyl-D-aspartate, non-kainate, non-quisqualate glutamate binding sites had their highest density in striatum, nucleus accumbens, and olfactory tubercle. Kainate binding was higher in the lateral striatum but there was no medial-lateral striatal gradient for other binding sites. N-Methyl-D-aspartate and alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid binding sites were most dense in the nucleus accumbens and olfactory tubercle. There was no dorsal-ventral gradient within the striatal complex for the other binding sites. Other regions of the basal ganglia had lower densities of ligand binding. To compare binding site density within non-striatal regions, binding for each ligand was normalized to the striatal binding density. When compared to the striatal complex, alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid and metabotropic binding sites had higher relative density in the globus pallidus, ventral pallidum, and subthalamic nucleus than other binding sites. Metabotropic binding also had a high relative density in the substantia nigra. Non-N-methyl-D-aspartate, non-kainate, non-quisqualate glutamate binding sites had a high relative density in globus pallidus, ventral pallidum, and substantia nigra. N-Methyl-D-aspartate binding sites had a low relative density in pallidum, subthalamic nucleus, substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area. Our data indicate heterogeneous distribution of excitatory amino acid binding sites within rat basal ganglia and suggest that the character of excitatory amino acid-mediated neurotransmission within the basal ganglia is also heterogeneous.


Neurology | 2002

Treatment of ADHD in children with tics: A randomized controlled trial

Roger Kurlan; C. G. Goetz; Michael P. McDermott; Sandra Plumb; Harvey Singer; Leon S. Dure; Peter Como; Floyd R. Sallee; Cathy L. Budman; Barbara Coffey; Jorge Juncos; Jonathan W. Mink; Glenn T. Stebbins; Paul Tuite; Lauren Seeberger; William E. Pelham; Donna Palumbo; Joseph Giuliano; Madeline Krieger; Jane B. Lane; Nancy Pearson; Lauren Sine; Kathy Parsons; Sara Peters; Denise Thorne-Petrizzi; Ken Parks; Grace Kim; Kathleen Craddock; Colleen Wood; Jennifer Randle

BACKGROUND The treatment of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and Tourette syndrome (TS) has been problematic because methylphenidate (MPH)--the most commonly used drug to treat ADHD--has been reported to worsen tics and because clonidine (CLON)--the most commonly prescribed alternative--has unproven efficacy. METHODS The authors conducted a multicenter, randomized, double-blind clinical trial in which 136 children with ADHD and a chronic tic disorder were randomly administered CLON alone, MPH alone, combined CLON + MPH, or placebo (2 x 2 factorial design). Each subject participated for 16 weeks (weeks 1-4 CLON/placebo dose titration, weeks 5-8 added MPH/placebo dose titration, weeks 9-16 maintenance therapy). RESULTS Thirty-seven children were administered MPH alone, 34 were administered CLON alone, 33 were administered CLON + MPH, and 32 were administered placebo. For our primary outcome measure of ADHD (Conners Abbreviated Symptom Questionnaire--Teacher), significant improvement occurred for subjects assigned to CLON (p < 0.002) and those assigned to MPH (p < 0.003). Compared with placebo, the greatest benefit occurred with combined CLON + MPH (p < 0.0001). CLON appeared to be most helpful for impulsivity and hyperactivity; MPH appeared to be most helpful for inattention. The proportion of individual subjects reporting a worsening of tics as an adverse effect was no higher in those treated with MPH (20%) than those being administered CLON alone (26%) or placebo (22%). Compared with placebo, measured tic severity lessened in all active treatment groups in the following order: CLON + MPH, CLON alone, MPH alone. Sedation was common with CLON treatment (28% reported moderate or severe sedation), but otherwise the drugs were tolerated well, including absence of any evident cardiac toxicity. CONCLUSIONS Methylphenidate and clonidine (particularly in combination) are effective for ADHD in children with comorbid tics. Prior recommendations to avoid methylphenidate in these children because of concerns of worsening tics are unsupported by this trial.


Cell | 1997

Ectopically Expressed CAG Repeats Cause Intranuclear Inclusions and a Progressive Late Onset Neurological Phenotype in the Mouse

Jared Ordway; Sara J. Tallaksen-Greene; Claire-Anne Gutekunst; Eve M. Bernstein; Jamie A. Cearley; Howard W. Wiener; Leon S. Dure; Russell Lindsey; Steven M. Hersch; Richard S. Jope; Roger L. Albin; Peter J. Detloff

The mutations responsible for several human neurodegenerative disorders are expansions of translated CAG repeats beyond a normal size range. To address the role of repeat context, we have introduced a 146-unit CAG repeat into the mouse hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase gene (Hprt). Mutant mice express a form of the HPRT protein that contains a long polyglutamine repeat. These mice develop a phenotype similar to the human translated CAG repeat disorders. Repeat containing mice show a late onset neurological phenotype that progresses to premature death. Neuronal intranuclear inclusions are present in affected mice. Our results show that CAG repeats do not need to be located within one of the classic repeat disorder genes to have a neurotoxic effect.


Neurology | 2005

Atomoxetine treatment in children and adolescents with ADHD and comorbid tic disorders

Albert J. Allen; Roger Kurlan; Donald L. Gilbert; Barbara J. Coffey; Steven L. Linder; Donald W. Lewis; Paul Winner; David W. Dunn; Leon S. Dure; Floyd R. Sallee; Denái Milton; Mark Mintz; Randall K. Ricardi; Gerald Erenberg; L. L. Layton; Peter D. Feldman; Douglas Kelsey; Thomas J. Spencer

Objective: To test the hypothesis that atomoxetine does not significantly worsen tic severity relative to placebo in children and adolescents with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and comorbid tic disorders. Methods: Study subjects were 7 to 17 years old, met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders–IV criteria for ADHD, and had concurrent Tourette syndrome or chronic motor tic disorder. Patients were randomly assigned to double-blind treatment with placebo (n = 72) or atomoxetine (0.5 to 1.5 mg/kg/day, n = 76) for up to 18 weeks. Results: Atomoxetine treatment was associated with greater reduction of tic severity at endpoint relative to placebo, approaching significance on the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale total score (–5.5 ± 6.9 vs –3.0 ± 8.7, p = 0.063) and Tic Symptom Self-Report total score (–4.7 ± 6.5 vs –2.9 ± 5.2, p = 0.095) and achieving significance on the Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) tic/neurologic severity scale score (–0.7 ± 1.2 vs –0.1 ± 1.0, p = 0.002). Atomoxetine patients also showed greater improvement on the ADHD Rating Scale total score (–10.9 ± 10.9 vs –4.9 ± 10.3, p < 0.001) and CGI severity of ADHD/psychiatric symptoms scale score (–0.8 ± 1.1 vs –0.3 ± 1.0, p = 0.015). Discontinuation rates were not significantly different between treatment groups. Atomoxetine patients had greater increases in heart rate and decreases of body weight, and rates of treatment-emergent decreased appetite and nausea were higher. No other clinically relevant treatment differences were seen in any other vital sign, adverse event, or electrocardiographic or laboratory measures. Conclusions: Atomoxetine did not exacerbate tic symptoms. Rather, there was some evidence of reduction in tic severity with a significant reduction of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms. Atomoxetine treatment appeared safe and well tolerated.


Neurology | 2003

Tic reduction with pergolide in a randomized controlled trial in children.

Donald L. Gilbert; Leon S. Dure; Gopalan Sethuraman; D. Raab; J. Lane; Floyd R. Sallee

Objective: To determine whether pergolide, a mixed D1/D2/D3 dopamine agonist, is efficacious and safe in the treatment of children with chronic tic disorders and Tourette syndrome. Background: Neuroleptics, which block dopamine transmission, are currently used to treat children with severe tics, but major side effects and limited efficacy reduce clinical utility. Prior open-label and crossover studies of pergolide suggest potential benefit. Methods: The authors enrolled 57 children and adolescents, ages 7 to 17 years, randomizing them in a 2:1 ratio to either pergolide (0.15 to 0.45 mg per day) or placebo. Tic symptoms had to be >30 on the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS). The primary outcome measure was change in tic severity assessed by YGTSS. Results: Compared to placebo treatment, pergolide treatment was associated with lower tic severity scores (treatment effect 8.8, pergolide vs placebo; 95% CI 0.1 to 17.6; p = 0.05) and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder symptoms scores (treatment effect 3.8; 95% CI 0.7 to 6.8; p = 0.02). No patient had a serious adverse event and pergolide was well tolerated. Conclusions: In this randomized, placebo-controlled trial, pergolide appeared to be an efficacious and safe medication for tic reduction in children, and may also improve attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder symptoms.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1989

Chiari type I malformation in children

Leon S. Dure; Alan K. Percy; William R. Cheek; John P. Laurent

We reviewed the recent experience at Texas Childrens Hospital by examining the records of 11 children who underwent suboccipital decompression for symptomatic Chiari type I malformation. Presenting complaints included neck pain (1 child), scoliosis (4 children), back pain (1 child), torticollis (1), motor dysfunction (1), and apnea (3 children). Neurologic findings were normal in 7 of the 11 children. The craniocervical junction and medulla were studied by magnetic resonance imaging, which revealed anatomy consistent with Chiari type I malformation in all cases. At surgery, all patients had tonsillar herniation to the first cervical vertebra or below. Three patients had syringomyelia. Postoperatively, either the patients were symptom free or, in the cases of scoliosis and torticollis, there was no progression. Our experience suggests that Chiari type I malformation may occur in childhood with varied and unusual clinical findings. Magnetic resonance imaging was essential to the diagnosis; the presence of tonsillar herniation was confirmed at surgery. The results of suboccipital decompression were favorable in this series.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2011

Streptococcal upper respiratory tract infections and exacerbations of tic and obsessive-compulsive symptoms: A prospective longitudinal study

James F. Leckman; Robert A. King; Donald L. Gilbert; Barbara J. Coffey; Harvey S. Singer; Leon S. Dure; Heidi Grantz; Liliya Katsovich; Haiqun Lin; Paul J. Lombroso; Ivana Kawikova; Dwight R. Johnson; Roger Kurlan; Edward L. Kaplan

OBJECTIVE The objective of this blinded, prospective, longitudinal study was to determine whether new group A β hemolytic streptococcal (GABHS) infections are temporally associated with exacerbations of tic or obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptoms in children who met published criteria for pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infections (PANDAS). A group of children with Tourette syndrome and/or OC disorder without a PANDAS history served as the comparison (non-PANDAS) group. METHOD Consecutive clinical ratings of tic and OC symptom severity were obtained for 31 PANDAS subjects and 53 non-PANDAS subjects. Clinical symptoms and laboratory values (throat cultures and streptococcal antibody titers) were evaluated at regular intervals during a 25-month period. Additional testing occurred at the time of any tic or OC symptom exacerbation. New GABHS infections were established by throat swab cultures and/or recent significant rise in streptococcal antibodies. Laboratory personnel were blinded to case or control status, clinical (exacerbation or not) condition, and clinical evaluators were blinded to the laboratory results. RESULTS No group differences were observed in the number of clinical exacerbations or the number of newly diagnosed GABHS infections. On only six occasions of a total of 51 (12%), a newly diagnosed GABHS infection was followed, within 2 months, by an exacerbation of tic and/or OC symptoms. In every instance, this association occurred in the non-PANDAS group. CONCLUSIONS This study provides no evidence for a temporal association between GABHS infections and tic/OC symptom exacerbations in children who meet the published PANDAS diagnostic criteria.


Neurology | 2003

Predictors of nursing home placement in Huntington disease

Vicki Wheelock; Teresa Tempkin; Karen Marder; Martha Nance; Richard H. Myers; Hongwei Zhao; Elise Kayson; Constance Orme; Ira Shoulson; Phillipa Hedges; Elizabeth McCusker; Samantha Pearce; Ronald Trent; David A. Abwender; Peter Como; Irenita Gardiner; Charlyne Hickey; Karl Kieburtz; Frederick Marshall; Nancy Pearson; Carol Zimmerman; Elan D. Louis; Carol Moskowitz; Carmen Polanco; Naomi Zubin; Catherine Brown; Jill Burkeholder; Mark Guttman; Sandra Russell; Dwight Stewart

Objective: To determine whether motor, behavioral, or psychiatric symptoms in Huntington disease (HD) predict skilled nursing facility (SNF) placement. Methods: Subjects were participants in the Huntington Study Group’s Unified Huntington Disease Rating Scale Database (Rochester, NY) between January 1994 and September 1999. Specific motor, psychiatric, and behavioral variables in subjects residing at home and in SNF were analyzed using χ2 and Student’s t-tests. For a subset of subjects for whom longitudinal data existed, a Cox proportional hazards model controlling for age, sex, and disease duration was used. Results: Among 4,809 subjects enrolled, 3,070 had clinically definite HD. Of these, 228 (7.4%) resided in SNF. The SNF residents’ average age was 52 years, average disease duration was 8.6 years, and they were predominantly women (63%). The SNF residents had worse motor function (chorea, bradykinesia, gait abnormality, and imbalance, p < 0.0001); were more likely to have obsessions, compulsions, delusions, and auditory hallucinations; and had more aggressive, disruptive (p < 0.0001), and irritable behaviors (p = 0.0012). For 1,559 subjects, longitudinal data existed (average length of follow-up, 1.9 years), and 87 (5%) moved from home to SNF. In the Cox model, bradykinesia (HR 1.965, 95% CI 1.083 to 3.564), impaired gait (HR 3.004, 95% CI 1.353 to 6.668), and impaired tandem walking (HR 2.546, 95% CI 1.460 to 4.439) were predictive of SNF placement. Conclusions: Institutionalized patients with HD are more motorically, psychiatrically, and behaviorally impaired than their counterparts living at home. However, motor variables alone predicted institutionalization. Treatment strategies that delay the progression of motor dysfunction in HD may postpone the need for institutionalization.


Annals of Human Genetics | 2007

The Relationship Between CAG Repeat Length and Age of Onset Differs for Huntington's Disease Patients with Juvenile Onset or Adult Onset

J. Michael Andresen; Javier Gayán; Luc Djoussé; Simone Roberts; Denise Brocklebank; Stacey S. Cherny; Lon R. Cardon; James F. Gusella; Marcy E. MacDonald; Richard H. Myers; David E. Housman; Nancy S. Wexler; Judith Lorimer; Julie Porter; Fidela Gomez; Carol Moskowitz; Kelly Posner Gerstenhaber; Edith Shackell; Karen Marder; Graciela K. Penchaszadeh; Simone A. Roberts; Adam M. Brickman; Jacqueline Gray; Stephen R. Dlouhy; Sandra Wiktorski; Marion E. Hodes; P. Michael Conneally; John B. Penney; Jang Ho Cha; Micheal Irizarry

Age of onset for Huntingtons disease (HD) varies inversely with the length of the disease‐causing CAG repeat expansion in the HD gene. A simple exponential regression model yielded adjusted R‐squared values of 0.728 in a large set of Venezuelan kindreds and 0.642 in a North American, European, and Australian sample (the HD MAPS cohort). We present evidence that a two‐segment exponential regression curve provides a significantly better fit than the simple exponential regression. A plot of natural log‐transformed age of onset against CAG repeat length reveals this segmental relationship. This two‐segment exponential regression on age of onset data increases the adjusted R‐squared values by 0.012 in the Venezuelan kindreds and by 0.035 in the HD MAPS cohort. Although the amount of additional variance explained by the segmental regression approach is modest, the two slopes of the two‐segment regression are significantly different from each other in both the Venezuelan kindreds [F(2, 439) = 11.13, P= 2 × 10−5] and in the HD MAPS cohort [F(2, 688) = 38.27, P= 2 × 10−16]. In both populations, the influence of each CAG repeat on age of onset appears to be stronger in the adult‐onset range of CAG repeats than in the juvenile‐onset range.


Neuroscience Letters | 1990

Excitatory amino acid binding sites in the periaqueductal gray of the rat

Roger L. Albin; Richard L. Makowiec; Zane R. Hollingsworth; Leon S. Dure; John B. Penney; Anne B. Young

We used receptor autoradiography to determine the distribution of excitatory amino acid (EAA) binding site subtypes in the periaqueductal gray (PAG) of the rat. N-Methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), kainate, quisqualate-ionotropic, and quisqualate-metabotropic binding sites were all present in the PAG. Distribution was inhomogeneous with greatest density of all binding site subtypes in the dorsolateral subdivision and lowest density in the ventrolateral subdivision. Relative to regions of brain with high densities of EAA binding site subtypes, quisqualate-metabotropic binding sites had the highest relative density and NMDA binding sites the least. The presence of all subtypes of EAA binding sites in the PAG suggests that EAA action within the PAG is likely to be complex.

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Paul G. Rothberg

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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