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Featured researches published by Roswell Eldridge.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1990

Neurofibromatosis 1 (Recklinghausen Disease) and Neurofibromatosis 2 (Bilateral Acoustic Neurofibromatosis): An Update

John J. Mulvihill; Dilys M. Parry; John L. Sherman; Anita Pikus; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Roswell Eldridge

The neurofibromatoses comprise at least two autosomal dominant disorders affecting an estimated 100,000 Americans with clinical manifestations that may require care from every type of clinician. Neurofibromatosis 1 and neurofibromatosis 2 have in common the occurrence of many neurofibromas but are distinctly different clinical disorders. The disease genes are on different chromosomes. Magnetic resonance imaging, particularly with gadolinium enhancement, has generally supplanted other techniques for visualizing brain, spinal, and other neural tumors in both disorders. The technique has rekindled the controversy over the nature and frequency of optic pathway tumors in patients with neurofibromatosis 1 and has revealed, throughout the brains of young patients, bright lesions that have uncertain clinical consequences and unknown pathologic bases. In patients with neurofibromatosis 2, small acoustic neuromas can be seen, leading to the possibility of excision with preservation of hearing and facial nerve function. Abnormal hearing may occur to excess in patients with neurofibromatosis 1, but acoustic neuroma has never been documented. In patients with neurofibromatosis 2, a battery of audiologic tests has a high positive predictive power. Lisch nodules or iris hamartomas, probably a universal sign in adults with the neurofibromatosis 1 gene, cause no problem with vision. Posterior capsular lens opacity in patients with neurofibromatosis 2 is a helpful diagnostic sign and a potential source of additional handicap in persons at risk for impaired hearing. Progress in the clinical delineation of the disorders has been matched with considerable research into the still obscure pathogenesis of the disorders. Such rapid advances may necessitate reconsideration of the conclusions of the National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference on Neurofibromatosis, especially those on the categories of persons in which a neurofibromatosis should be considered and the need for caution in recommending surgery. Watchful waiting may often be the best management for acoustic neuromas in neurofibromatosis 2.


Neurology | 1983

Parkinson's disease in 65 pairs of twins and in a set of quadruplets

Christopher D. Ward; Roger C. Duvoisin; Susan E. Ince; John Nutt; Roswell Eldridge; Donald B. Calne

Among 43 monozygotic (MZ) and 19 dizygotic (DZ) pairs in which an index case had definite Parkinsons disease (PD), only one MZ pair was definitely concordant for PD. When pairs with questionable clinical features were included, 4 of 48 MZ and 1 of 19 DZ pairs were concordant. The frequency of PD in MZ cotwins of index cases with PD was similar to that expected in an unrelated control group matched for age and sex. Although we were unable to identify a single environmental agent, we conclude that the major factors in the etiology of PD are nongenetic.


Neurology | 1981

Twin study of Parkinson disease.

Roger C. Duvoisin; Roswell Eldridge; Adrian Williams; John G. Nutt; Donald B. Calne

zero concordance for Parkinson disease was found in the first 12 monozygotic twin pairs examined in an ongoing twin study. One co-twin (subject without Parkinson disease) had essential tremor, another had cerebral vascular disease, and a third was an alcoholic. Cigarette smoking appeared to be less frequent in the probands than in the co-twins (11.9 versus 16.1 pack-years). There was also evidence of premorbid personality differences between probands and co-twins dating back to late adolescence or early adult years. These preliminary findings suggest that genetic factors do not play a major role in the etiology of Parkinson disease and point to a prodromal onset of the disease as early as late adolescence or early adult life.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1984

Hereditary Adult-Onset Leukodystrophy Simulating Chronic Progressive Multiple Sclerosis

Roswell Eldridge; Christo P. Anayiotos; Sandra Schlesinger; David Cowen; Christopher T. Bever; Nicholas Patronas; Henry F. McFarland

We studied a large kindred with a chronic progressive neurologic disorder affecting at least 10 men and 11 women in four generations in a pattern compatible with autosomal dominant inheritance. In 20 of the affected subjects, evaluated before the availability of computerized tomography and without regard to family history, the diagnosis was multiple sclerosis. Symptoms of the neurologic disorder begin in the fourth and fifth decades and include cerebellar, pyramidal, and autonomic abnormalities. The autonomic symptoms, which involve bowel and bladder regulation and orthostatic hypotension, may be the earliest changes but are frequently disregarded. Survival for 20 years after onset is common. The CT scan is striking and shows a symmetrical decrease in white-matter density, beginning in the frontal lobes but extending to all of the centrum ovale and the cerebellar white matter. Limited pathological observation reveals gross white-matter degeneration with microscopic vacuolation, preservation of U fibers and cortical structures, and no inflammatory changes or reactive gliosis. Because of its hereditary basis, the disorder should be susceptible to genetic definition and ultimately to treatment or prevention.


Neurology | 1986

A case‐control study of twin pairs discordant for Parkinson's disease A search for environmental risk factors

Nadir E. Bharucha; Lynette Stokes; Bruce S. Schoenberg; Christopher D. Ward; Susan E. Ince; John G. Nutt; Roswell Eldridge; Donald B. Calne; Nathan Mantel; Roger C. Duvoisin

A previous study of twins with Parkinsons disease (PD) revealed low concordance, suggesting that genetic factors play a minor role in the etiology of PD. To identify possible environmental determinants of PD while maximally controlling for hereditary factors, 31 monozygotic twin pairs discordant for PD were interviewed by telephone. Information about possible risk factors was obtained from systematic and uniform interviews with cases and controls. The only statistically significant result was less cigarette smoking by PD patients (p < 0.05). Thirteen dizygotic discordant twin pairs were evaluated with the same techniques, but there were no statistically significant differences between affected and unaffected twins.


Neurology | 1980

Multiple sclerosis in twins

Adrian Williams; Roswell Eldridge; Henry F. McFarland; Sidney A. Houff; Helen Krebs; Dale E. McFarlin

We studied 30 sets of twins in whom one or both was suspected of having multiple sclerosis (MS). In 24 pairs, a firm clinical diagnosis was made on each twin. Among these 24 pairs, 6 of 12 monozygotic twins were concordant for clinical MS, compared with 2 of 12 dizygotic twins.Of those over the age of 50, two of three monozygotic pairs were concordant, but neither of the two dizygotic twin pairs were concordant. Because ascertainment was primarily through public announcement, this series may be biased in favor of twins concordant for MS. The individuals within monozygotic concordant twin pairs exhibited wide differences in severity and age at onset of disease; the more recently affected twin tended to have a lower cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) IgG and a higher IgM level. Although the frequency of HLA-B7 and Dw2 in this twin population was high, the HLA makeup did not differ appreciably between concordant and discordant MS twins. Furthermore, the two DZ-concordant twins were HLA-nonidentical. Unexplained neurologic signs were found in three asymptomatic twins, and a high proportion of clinically normal twins had abnormalities of CSF immunoglobulins. These latter findings suggest a high incidence of subclinical MS in this population.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1973

Elevated Plasma Dopamine-β-Hydroxylase Activity in Autosomal Dominant Torsion Dystonia

G. Frederick Wooten; Roswell Eldridge; Julius Axelrod; Robert S. Stern

Abstract Dopamine-β-hydroxylase, the enzyme that converts dopamine to norepinephrine, was measured in the plasma of 41 normal subjects, 24 patients with a clinical and genetic pattern compatible wi...


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1984

Family and Twin Studies in Multiple Sclerosis

Henry F. McFarland; Jeffrey I. Greenstein; Dale E. McFarlin; Roswell Eldridge; Xian-Hau Xu; Helen Krebs

A genetic influence in multiple sclerosis (MS) was initially suggested by the increased incidence of the disease in some families. The demonstration from population studies of an overrepresentation of HLA 8 7 and DR2 determinants among MS patients has provided further evidence for a genetic influence on the etiology of MS. These findings have led to the hypothesis that the genes coding for these HLA determinants may be closely associated with or in linkage dysequilibrium with genes that determine susceptibility to MS.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1974

Acoustic neuroma in the last months of pregnancy

Jeffrey D. Allen; Roswell Eldridge; Thelma Koerber

Abstract Six previously unreported examples of women with symptoms of acoustic neuroma occurring in pregnancy and two already in the literature are described. Seven of these women noted onset of significant worsening of symptoms in the last months of pregnancy. In no instance was acoustic neuroma diagnosed or even suspected before delivery. The association between acoustic neuroma symptoms and late pregnancy may be due to one or more of the hormonal changes at this time. Whatever the cause, it does not seem to exert its effect in every pregnancy since a number of women with this slow-growing tumor had subsequent pregnancies without further change in their symptoms.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 1993

Lens opacities in neurofibromatosis 2: further significant correlations.

Evrydiki A. Bouzas; Valeria Freidlin; DilysM Parry; Roswell Eldridge; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer

This prospective study of 96 individuals from 29 families with neurofibromatosis 2, 49 of whom were affected, confirms in an extended series the previously reported association between posterior subcapsular/capsular cataract and neurofibromatosis 2. Posterior subcapsular/capsular cataracts were found in 36 (80%) of the 45 affected individuals (four individuals were excluded from statistical analyses). In addition, the association of peripheral cortical lens opacities with neurofibromatosis 2 was found to be statistically significant. Seventeen of the patients with neurofibromatosis 2 (37.8%) had peripheral cortical cataracts in comparison with none of the unaffected family members (p < 0.0001). In three patients peripheral cortical opacities were present despite the absence of posterior subcapsular/capsular cataracts. These findings support the inclusion of cortical cataracts of early onset, in addition to posterior subcapsular/capsular cataracts, in the diagnostic criteria of neurofibromatosis 2.

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Henry F. McFarland

National Institutes of Health

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Sandra Schlesinger

National Institutes of Health

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Dilys M. Parry

National Institutes of Health

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Dale E. McFarlin

National Institutes of Health

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Anita Pikus

National Institutes of Health

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Helen Krebs

National Institutes of Health

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Jacob A. Brody

National Institutes of Health

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James M. Dambrosia

National Institutes of Health

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John D. Schwankhaus

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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