Lewis Sudarsky
Brigham and Women's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Lewis Sudarsky.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Clemens R. Scherzer; Aron Charles Eklund; Lee Jae Morse; Zhixiang Liao; Joseph J. Locascio; Daniel Fefer; Michael A. Schwarzschild; Michael G. Schlossmacher; Michael A. Hauser; Jeffery M. Vance; Lewis Sudarsky; David G. Standaert; John H. Growdon; Roderick V. Jensen; Steven R. Gullans
Parkinsons disease (PD) progresses relentlessly and affects five million people worldwide. Laboratory tests for PD are critically needed for developing treatments designed to slow or prevent progression of the disease. We performed a transcriptome-wide scan in 105 individuals to interrogate the molecular processes perturbed in cellular blood of patients with early-stage PD. The molecular multigene marker here identified is associated with risk of PD in 66 samples of the training set comprising healthy and disease controls [third tertile cross-validated odds ratio of 5.7 (P for trend 0.005)]. It is further validated in 39 independent test samples [third tertile odds ratio of 5.1 (P for trend 0.04)]. Insights into disease-linked processes detectable in peripheral blood are offered by 22 unique genes differentially expressed in patients with PD versus healthy individuals. These include the cochaperone ST13, which stabilizes heat-shock protein 70, a modifier of α-synuclein misfolding and toxicity. ST13 messenger RNA copies are lower in patients with PD (mean ± SE 0.59 ± 0.05) than in controls (0.96 ± 0.09) (P = 0.002) in two independent populations. Thus, gene expression signals measured in blood can facilitate the development of biomarkers for PD.
Neurology | 1996
Isabel Silveira; I. Lopes-Cendes; Stephen J. Kish; P. Maciel; Claudia Gaspar; Paula Coutinho; M. I. Botez; H. Teive; W. Arruda; C. E. Steiner; W. Pinto-Junior; J. A. Maciel; S. Jain; G. Sack; Eva Andermann; Lewis Sudarsky; Roger N. Rosenberg; Patrick MacLeod; David Chitayat; Riyana Babul; Jorge Sequeiros; Guy A. Rouleau
Article abstract-The spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) are a heterogeneous group of neurodegenerative disorders varying in both clinical manifestations and mode of inheritance. Six different genes causing autosomal dominant SCA are mapped: SCA1, SCA2, Machado-Joseph disease (MJD)/SCA3, SCA4, SCA5, and dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA). Expansions of an unstable trinucleotide CAG repeat cause three of these disorders: SCA type 1 (SCA1), MJD, and DRPLA. We determined the frequency of the SCA1, DRPLA, and MJD mutations in a large group of unrelated SCA patients with various patterns of inheritance and different ethnic backgrounds. We studied 92 unrelated SCA patients. The frequency of the SCA1 mutation was 3% in the overall patient group and 10% in the non-Portuguese dominantly inherited SCA subgroup. We found the DRPLA mutation in only one Japanese patient, who was previously diagnosed with this disease. We identified the MJD mutation in 41% of the overall patient group, which included 38 autosomal dominant kindreds of Portuguese origin; the frequency of the MJD mutation among the non-Portuguese dominantly inherited cases was 17%. These results suggest that SCA may be occasionally caused by the SCA1 mutation and rarely caused by the DRPLA mutation and that, to date, the MJD mutation seems to be the most common cause of dominantly inherited SCA. Finally, our results suggest that recessively inherited cases of SCA are not caused by the known trinucleotide repeat expansions. NEUROLOGY 1996;46: 214-218
JAMA | 2015
Karl Kieburtz; Barbara C. Tilley; Jordan J. Elm; Debra Babcock; Robert A. Hauser; G. Webster Ross; Alicia H. Augustine; Erika U. Augustine; Michael J. Aminoff; Ivan G. Bodis-Wollner; James T. Boyd; Franca Cambi; Kelvin L. Chou; Chadwick W. Christine; Michelle Cines; Nabila Dahodwala; Lorelei Derwent; Richard B. Dewey; Katherine Hawthorne; David J. Houghton; Cornelia Kamp; Maureen A. Leehey; Mark F. Lew; Grace S. Liang; Sheng Luo; Zoltan Mari; John C. Morgan; Sotirios A. Parashos; Adriana Pérez; Helen Petrovitch
IMPORTANCE There are no treatments available to slow or prevent the progression of Parkinson disease, despite its global prevalence and significant health care burden. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Exploratory Trials in Parkinson Disease program was established to promote discovery of potential therapies. OBJECTIVE To determine whether creatine monohydrate was more effective than placebo in slowing long-term clinical decline in participants with Parkinson disease. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS The Long-term Study 1, a multicenter, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled, 1:1 randomized efficacy trial. Participants were recruited from 45 investigative sites in the United States and Canada and included 1741 men and women with early (within 5 years of diagnosis) and treated (receiving dopaminergic therapy) Parkinson disease. Participants were enrolled from March 2007 to May 2010 and followed up until September 2013. INTERVENTIONS Participants were randomized to placebo or creatine (10 g/d) monohydrate for a minimum of 5 years (maximum follow-up, 8 years). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome measure was a difference in clinical decline from baseline to 5-year follow-up, compared between the 2 treatment groups using a global statistical test. Clinical status was defined by 5 outcome measures: Modified Rankin Scale, Symbol Digit Modalities Test, PDQ-39 Summary Index, Schwab and England Activities of Daily Living scale, and ambulatory capacity. All outcomes were coded such that higher scores indicated worse outcomes and were analyzed by a global statistical test. Higher summed ranks (range, 5-4775) indicate worse outcomes. RESULTS The trial was terminated early for futility based on results of a planned interim analysis of participants enrolled at least 5 years prior to the date of the analysis (n = 955). The median follow-up time was 4 years. Of the 955 participants, the mean of the summed ranks for placebo was 2360 (95% CI, 2249-2470) and for creatine was 2414 (95% CI, 2304-2524). The global statistical test yielded t1865.8 = -0.75 (2-sided P = .45). There were no detectable differences (P < .01 to partially adjust for multiple comparisons) in adverse and serious adverse events by body system. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Among patients with early and treated Parkinson disease, treatment with creatine monohydrate for at least 5 years, compared with placebo did not improve clinical outcomes. These findings do not support the use of creatine monohydrate in patients with Parkinson disease. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00449865.
Environmental Health Perspectives | 2010
Marc G. Weisskopf; Jennifer Weuve; Huiling Nie; Marie-Helene Saint-Hilaire; Lewis Sudarsky; David K. Simon; Bonnie P. Hersh; Joel Schwartz; Robert O. Wright; Howard Hu
Background Research using reconstructed exposure histories has suggested an association between heavy metal exposures, including lead, and Parkinson’s disease (PD), but the only study that used bone lead, a biomarker of cumulative lead exposure, found a nonsignificant increase in risk of PD with increasing bone lead. Objectives We sought to assess the association between bone lead and PD. Methods Bone lead concentrations were measured using 109Cd excited K-shell X-ray fluorescence from 330 PD patients (216 men, 114 women) and 308 controls (172 men, 136 women) recruited from four clinics for movement disorders and general-community cohorts. Adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for PD were calculated using logistic regression. Results The average age of cases and controls at bone lead measurement was 67 (SD = 10) and 69 (SD = 9) years of age, respectively. In primary analyses of cases and controls recruited from the same groups, compared with the lowest quartile of tibia lead, the OR for PD in the highest quartile was 3.21 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.17–8.83]. Results were similar but slightly weaker in analyses restricted to cases and controls recruited from the movement disorders clinics only (fourth-quartile OR = 2.57; 95% CI, 1.11–5.93) or when we included controls recruited from sites that did not also contribute cases (fourth-quartile OR = 1.91; 95% CI, 1.01–3.60). We found no association with patella bone lead. Conclusions These findings, using an objective biological marker of cumulative lead exposure among typical PD patients seen in our movement disorders clinics, strengthen the evidence that cumulative exposure to lead increases the risk of PD.
Movement Disorders | 2002
Tricia Zawacki; Janet Grace; Joseph H. Friedman; Lewis Sudarsky
Machado‐Joseph disease (MJD) is an autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxia. Few studies have examined the neuropsychological and neurobehavioral profiles of patients with MJD. In this study, six individuals with MJD were given a battery of neuropsychological tests. Relative impairments on timed verbal attention tasks and verbal fluency (Stroop, Oral Symbol Digit Modalities, and Controlled Oral Word Association Test) were found. Other executive impairments also were seen on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, independent of motor dysfunction severity. Moderate‐ to severe levels of depressive symptoms were endorsed by four of the six patients, and caregivers observed increased apathy in the patients. Impaired executive and emotional functioning in MJD does not appear to be related to ataxia severity. These patients did not meet the criteria for dementia. General cognitive abilities, language, list learning, story recall, and untimed tasks of attention were within normal limits. Impaired executive abilities and emotional functioning in MJD patients is consistent with disruption of frontal‐subcortical systems.
Movement Disorders | 2003
Joseph H. Friedman; Hubert H. Fernandez; Lewis Sudarsky
We reported previously that behavior suggestive of rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) was markedly increased in a small population of SCA‐3 patients. We, therefore, asked patients and nonpatient attendees at an SCA‐3 annual clinic to complete a questionnaire soliciting RBD‐like behavior. Our results support the previous observation that RBD‐like behaviors are significantly increased in SCA‐3.
Neurology | 2013
Hongliu Ding; Kaltra Dhima; Kaitlin C. Lockhart; Joseph J. Locascio; Ashley N. Hoesing; Karen Duong; Ana Trisini-Lipsanopoulos; Michael T. Hayes; U. Shivraj Sohur; Anne Marie Wills; Brit Mollenhauer; Alice W. Flaherty; Albert Y. Hung; Nicte I. Mejia; Vikram Khurana; Stephen N. Gomperts; Dennis J. Selkoe; Michael A. Schwarzschild; Michael G. Schlossmacher; Bradley T. Hyman; Lewis Sudarsky; John H. Growdon; Clemens R. Scherzer
Objective: To conclusively test for a specific association between the biological marker 25-hydroxy-vitamin D3, a transcriptionally active hormone produced in human skin and liver, and the prevalence and severity of Parkinson disease (PD). Methods: We used liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry to establish an association specifically between deficiency of 25-hydroxy-vitamin D3 and PD in a cross-sectional and longitudinal case-control study of 388 patients (mean Hoehn and Yahr stage of 2.1 ± 0.6) and 283 control subjects free of neurologic disease nested in the Harvard Biomarker Study. Results: Plasma levels of 25-hydroxy-vitamin D3 were associated with PD in both univariate and multivariate analyses with p values = 0.0034 and 0.047, respectively. Total 25-hydroxy-vitamin D levels, the traditional composite measure of endogenous and exogenous vitamin D, were deficient in 17.6% of patients with PD compared with 9.3% of controls. Low 25-hydroxy-vitamin D3 as well as total 25-hydroxy-vitamin D levels were correlated with higher total Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale scores at baseline and during follow-up. Conclusions: Our study reveals an association between 25-hydroxy-vitamin D3 and PD and suggests that thousands of patients with PD in North America alone may be vitamin D–deficient. This finding has immediate relevance for individual patients at risk of falls as well as public health, and warrants further investigation into the mechanism underlying this association.
Muscle & Nerve | 1997
Marjorie H. Ross; Michael E. Charness; Lewis Sudarsky; Eric L. Logigian
Over a 5‐year period, 40 patients, 11 with musicians and 29 with writers cramp, were treated with botulinum toxin A using a precise injection technique in which the hollow‐bore electromyography (EMG) needle was positioned by both standard EMG and by muscle twitch evoked by stimulating current passed through it. Moderate to complete improvement in dystonia occurred in 28 patients (70%) after the first injection and in 34 patients (85%) after the second injection with better outcome in nonmusicians than in musicians. Of note, weakness of uninjected muscles, immediately adjacent to those injected, was found in 25/40 patients (63%). The most common patterns of toxin spread were from flexor digitorum sublimis to profundus, extensor carpi radialis to extensor digitorum communis, and extensor indicis proprius to extensor pollicis brevis. Spread to, and weakness of, adjacent uninjected muscles was a major factor contributing to suboptimal outcome in 6/39 (15%) such patients.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Anne J. Blood; John K. Kuster; Sandra C. Woodman; Namik Kirlic; Miriam L. Makhlouf; Trisha Multhaupt-Buell; Nikos Makris; Martin Parent; Lewis Sudarsky; Greta Sjalander; Henry Breiter; Hans C. Breiter; Nutan Sharma
Background There has been increasing interest in the interaction of the basal ganglia with the cerebellum and the brainstem in motor control and movement disorders. In addition, it has been suggested that these subcortical connections with the basal ganglia may help to coordinate a network of regions involved in mediating posture and stabilization. While studies in animal models support a role for this circuitry in the pathophysiology of the movement disorder dystonia, thus far, there is only indirect evidence for this in humans with dystonia. Methodology/Principal Findings In the current study we investigated probabilistic diffusion tractography in DYT1-negative patients with cervical dystonia and matched healthy control subjects, with the goal of showing that patients exhibit altered microstructure in the connectivity between the pallidum and brainstem. The brainstem regions investigated included nuclei that are known to exhibit strong connections with the cerebellum. We observed large clusters of tractography differences in patients relative to healthy controls, between the pallidum and the brainstem. Tractography was decreased in the left hemisphere and increased in the right hemisphere in patients, suggesting a potential basis for the left/right white matter asymmetry we previously observed in focal dystonia patients. Conclusions/Significance These findings support the hypothesis that connections between the basal ganglia and brainstem play a role in the pathophysiology of dystonia.
Neurology | 1982
A. F. Sabra; Mark Hallett; Lewis Sudarsky; William Mullally
Four patients with disabling action tremor in the setting of MS were treated with isoniazid (800 to 1200 mg per day). All patients showed significant improvement of the tremor, allowing more functional use of their extremities. To the best of our knowledge, this is the only medical treatment for this type of tremor.