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Dive into the research topics where Stanley Fahn is active.

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Featured researches published by Stanley Fahn.


Nature | 1998

Association of missense and 5 '-splice-site mutations in tau with the inherited dementia FTDP-17

Mike Hutton; C. L. Lendon; P. Rizzu; M. Baker; S. Froelich; Henry Houlden; S. M. Pickering-Brown; S. Chakraverty; Adrian M. Isaacs; Andrew Grover; J. Hackett; Jennifer Adamson; Sarah Lincoln; Dennis W. Dickson; Peter Davies; Ronald C. Petersen; Martijn Stevens; E. De Graaff; E. Wauters; J. Van Baren; M. Hillebrand; M. Joosse; Jennifer M. Kwon; Petra Nowotny; Lien Kuei Che; Joanne Norton; John C. Morris; L. A. Reed; John Q. Trojanowski; Hans Basun

Thirteen families have been described with an autosomal dominantly inherited dementia named frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17), historically termed Picks disease. Most FTDP-17 cases show neuronal and/or glial inclusions that stain positively with antibodies raised against the microtubule-associated protein Tau, although the Tau pathology varies considerably in both its quantity (or severity) and characteristics,. Previous studies have mapped the FTDP-17 locus to a 2-centimorgan region on chromosome 17q21.11; the tau gene also lies within this region. We have now sequenced tau in FTDP-17 families and identified three missense mutations (G272V, P301L and R406W) and three mutations in the 5′ splice site of exon 10. The splice-site mutations all destabilize a potential stem–loop structure which is probably involved in regulating the alternative splicing of exon10 (ref. 13). This causes more frequent usage of the 5′ splice site and an increased proportion of tau transcripts that include exon 10. The increase in exon 10+ messenger RNA will increase the proportion of Tau containing four microtubule-binding repeats, which is consistent with the neuropathology described in several families with FTDP-17 (refs 12, 14).


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2001

Transplantation of Embryonic Dopamine Neurons for Severe Parkinson's Disease

Curt R. Freed; Paul Greene; Robert E. Breeze; Wei-Yann Tsai; William DuMouchel; Richard Kao; Sandra Dillon; Howard Winfield; Sharon Culver; John Q. Trojanowski; David Eidelberg; Stanley Fahn

BACKGROUND Transplantation of human embryonic dopamine neurons into the brains of patients with Parkinsons disease has proved beneficial in open clinical trials. However, whether this intervention would be more effective than sham surgery in a controlled trial is not known. METHODS We randomly assigned 40 patients who were 34 to 75 years of age and had severe Parkinsons disease (mean duration, 14 years) to receive a transplant of nerve cells or sham surgery; all were to be followed in a double-blind manner for one year. In the transplant recipients, cultured mesencephalic tissue from four embryos was implanted into the putamen bilaterally. In the patients who received sham surgery, holes were drilled in the skull but the dura was not penetrated. The primary outcome was a subjective global rating of the change in the severity of disease, scored on a scale of -3.0 to 3.0 at one year, with negative scores indicating a worsening of symptoms and positive scores an improvement. RESULTS The mean (+/-SD) scores on the global rating scale for improvement or deterioration at one year were 0.0+/-2.1 in the transplantation group and -0.4+/-1.7 in the sham-surgery group. Among younger patients (60 years old or younger), standardized tests of Parkinsons disease revealed significant improvement in the transplantation group as compared with the sham-surgery group when patients were tested in the morning before receiving medication (P=0.01 for scores on the Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale; P=0.006 for the Schwab and England score). There was no significant improvement in older patients in the transplantation group. Fiber outgrowth from the transplanted neurons was detected in 17 of the 20 patients in the transplantation group, as indicated by an increase in 18F-fluorodopa uptake on positron-emission tomography or postmortem examination. After improvement in the first year, dystonia and dyskinesias recurred in 15 percent of the patients who received transplants, even after reduction or discontinuation of the dose of levodopa. CONCLUSIONS Human embryonic dopamine-neuron transplants survive in patients with severe Parkinsons disease and result in some clinical benefit in younger but not in older patients.


Movement Disorders | 2008

Movement Disorder Society-Sponsored Revision of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS): Scale Presentation and Clinimetric Testing Results

Christopher G. Goetz; Barbara C. Tilley; Stephanie R. Shaftman; Glenn T. Stebbins; Stanley Fahn; Pablo Martinez-Martin; Werner Poewe; Cristina Sampaio; Matthew B. Stern; Richard Dodel; Bruno Dubois; Robert G. Holloway; Joseph Jankovic; Jaime Kulisevsky; Anthony E. Lang; Andrew J. Lees; Sue Leurgans; Peter A. LeWitt; David L. Nyenhuis; C. Warren Olanow; Olivier Rascol; Anette Schrag; Jeanne A. Teresi; Jacobus J. van Hilten; Nancy R. LaPelle; Pinky Agarwal; Saima Athar; Yvette Bordelan; Helen Bronte-Stewart; Richard Camicioli

We present a clinimetric assessment of the Movement Disorder Society (MDS)‐sponsored revision of the Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale (MDS‐UPDRS). The MDS‐UDPRS Task Force revised and expanded the UPDRS using recommendations from a published critique. The MDS‐UPDRS has four parts, namely, I: Non‐motor Experiences of Daily Living; II: Motor Experiences of Daily Living; III: Motor Examination; IV: Motor Complications. Twenty questions are completed by the patient/caregiver. Item‐specific instructions and an appendix of complementary additional scales are provided. Movement disorder specialists and study coordinators administered the UPDRS (55 items) and MDS‐UPDRS (65 items) to 877 English speaking (78% non‐Latino Caucasian) patients with Parkinsons disease from 39 sites. We compared the two scales using correlative techniques and factor analysis. The MDS‐UPDRS showed high internal consistency (Cronbachs alpha = 0.79–0.93 across parts) and correlated with the original UPDRS (ρ = 0.96). MDS‐UPDRS across‐part correlations ranged from 0.22 to 0.66. Reliable factor structures for each part were obtained (comparative fit index > 0.90 for each part), which support the use of sum scores for each part in preference to a total score of all parts. The combined clinimetric results of this study support the validity of the MDS‐UPDRS for rating PD.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009

Multicenter Analysis of Glucocerebrosidase Mutations in Parkinson's Disease

Ellen Sidransky; Michael A. Nalls; Jan O. Aasly; Judith Aharon-Peretz; Grazia Annesi; Egberto Reis Barbosa; Anat Bar-Shira; Daniela Berg; Jose Bras; Alexis Brice; Chiung-Mei Chen; Lorraine N. Clark; Christel Condroyer; Elvira Valeria De Marco; Alexandra Durr; Michael J. Eblan; Stanley Fahn; Matthew J. Farrer; Hon-Chung Fung; Ziv Gan-Or; Thomas Gasser; Ruth Gershoni-Baruch; Nir Giladi; Alida Griffith; Tanya Gurevich; Cristina Januário; Peter Kropp; Anthony E. Lang; Guey-Jen Lee-Chen; Suzanne Lesage

BACKGROUND Recent studies indicate an increased frequency of mutations in the gene encoding glucocerebrosidase (GBA), a deficiency of which causes Gauchers disease, among patients with Parkinsons disease. We aimed to ascertain the frequency of GBA mutations in an ethnically diverse group of patients with Parkinsons disease. METHODS Sixteen centers participated in our international, collaborative study: five from the Americas, six from Europe, two from Israel, and three from Asia. Each center genotyped a standard DNA panel to permit comparison of the genotyping results across centers. Genotypes and phenotypic data from a total of 5691 patients with Parkinsons disease (780 Ashkenazi Jews) and 4898 controls (387 Ashkenazi Jews) were analyzed, with multivariate logistic-regression models and the Mantel-Haenszel procedure used to estimate odds ratios across centers. RESULTS All 16 centers could detect two GBA mutations, L444P and N370S. Among Ashkenazi Jewish subjects, either mutation was found in 15% of patients and 3% of controls, and among non-Ashkenazi Jewish subjects, either mutation was found in 3% of patients and less than 1% of controls. GBA was fully sequenced for 1883 non-Ashkenazi Jewish patients, and mutations were identified in 7%, showing that limited mutation screening can miss half the mutant alleles. The odds ratio for any GBA mutation in patients versus controls was 5.43 across centers. As compared with patients who did not carry a GBA mutation, those with a GBA mutation presented earlier with the disease, were more likely to have affected relatives, and were more likely to have atypical clinical manifestations. CONCLUSIONS Data collected from 16 centers demonstrate that there is a strong association between GBA mutations and Parkinsons disease.


Nature Genetics | 1997

The early-onset torsion dystonia gene (DYT1) encodes an ATP-binding protein

Laurie J. Ozelius; Jeffrey W. Hewett; Curtis E. Page; Susan B. Bressman; Patricia L. Kramer; Christo Shalish; Deborah de Leon; Mitchell F. Brin; Deborah Raymond; David P. Corey; Stanley Fahn; Neil Risch; Alan J. Buckler; James F. Gusella; Xandra O. Breakefield

Early-onset torsion dystonia is a movement disorder, characterized by twisting muscle contractures, that begins in childhood. Symptoms are believed to result from altered neuronal communication in the basal ganglia. This study identifies the DYT1 gene on human chromosome 9q34 as being responsible for this dominant disease. Almost all cases of early-onset dystonia have a unique 3-bp deletion that appears to have arisen independently in different ethnic populations. This deletion results in loss of one of a pair of glutamic-acid residues in a conserved region of a novel ATP-binding protein, termed torsinA. This protein has homologues in nematode, rat, mouse and humans, with some resemblance to the family of heat-shock proteins and Clp proteases.


Neurology | 1985

Validity and reliability of a rating scale for the primary torsion dystonias

Robert E. Burke; Stanley Fahn; C. D. Marsden; Susan B. Bressman; Carol Moskowitz; Joseph H. Friedman

For quantitative assessment of the primary torsion dystonias, a rating scale is proposed that has two sections—a Movement Scale, based on examination, and a Disability Scale, based on the patients statements about seven activities of daily living. We assessed the validity of the Movement Scale by comparing scores with a ranking of patients according to dystonia severity and with ratings of the patients on the Disability Scale. In addition, we assessed the inter-and intra-rater reliability of the scale by comparing independent scorings of patients by four examiners and by comparing scorings by the same examiners performed at different times. We found that the Movement Scale was a valid and reliable indicator of the severity of primary torsion dystonia.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006

Description of Parkinson's Disease as a Clinical Syndrome

Stanley Fahn

Abstract: Parkinsonism is a clinical syndrome comprising combinations of motor problems—namely, bradykinesia, resting tremor, rigidity, flexed posture, “freezing,” and loss of postural reflexes. Parkinsons disease (PD) is the major cause of parkinsonism. PD is a slowly progressive parkinsonian syndrome that begins insidiously and usually affects one side of the body before spreading to involve the other side. Pathology shows loss of neuromelanin‐containing monoamine neurons, particularly dopamine (DA) neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. A pathologic hallmark is the presence of cytoplasmic eosinophilic inclusions (Lewy bodies) in monoamine neurons. The loss of DA content in the nigrostriatal neurons accounts for many of the motor symptoms, which can be ameliorated by DA replacement therapy—that is, levodopa. Most cases are sporadic, of unknown etiology; but rare cases of monogenic mutations (10 genes at present count) show that there are multiple causes for the neuronal degeneration. The pathogenesis of PD remains unknown. Clinical fluctuations and dyskinesias are frequent complications of levodopa therapy; these, as well as some motor features of PD, improve by resetting the abnormal brain physiology towards normal by surgical therapy. Nonmotor symptoms (depression, lack of motivation, passivity, and dementia) are common. As the disease progresses, even motor symptoms become intractable to therapy. No proven means of slowing progression have yet been found.


Movement Disorders | 2013

Phenomenology and classification of dystonia: A consensus update

Alberto Albanese; Kailash P. Bhatia; Susan Bressman; Mahlon R. DeLong; Stanley Fahn; Victor S.C. Fung; Mark Hallett; Joseph Jankovic; H.A. Jinnah; Christine Klein; Anthony E. Lang; Jonathan W. Mink; Jan K. Teller

This report describes the consensus outcome of an international panel consisting of investigators with years of experience in this field that reviewed the definition and classification of dystonia. Agreement was obtained based on a consensus development methodology during 3 in‐person meetings and manuscript review by mail. Dystonia is defined as a movement disorder characterized by sustained or intermittent muscle contractions causing abnormal, often repetitive, movements, postures, or both. Dystonic movements are typically patterned and twisting, and may be tremulous. Dystonia is often initiated or worsened by voluntary action and associated with overflow muscle activation. Dystonia is classified along 2 axes: clinical characteristics, including age at onset, body distribution, temporal pattern and associated features (additional movement disorders or neurological features); and etiology, which includes nervous system pathology and inheritance. The clinical characteristics fall into several specific dystonia syndromes that help to guide diagnosis and treatment. We provide here a new general definition of dystonia and propose a new classification. We encourage clinicians and researchers to use these innovative definition and classification and test them in the clinical setting on a variety of patients with dystonia.


Neurology | 1999

Falling asleep at the wheel: Motor vehicle mishaps in persons taking pramipexole and ropinirole

Steven J. Frucht; J.D. Rogers; Paul Greene; M.F. Gordon; Stanley Fahn

Article abstract The authors report a new side effect of the dopamine agonists pramipexole and ropinirole: sudden irresistible attacks of sleep. Eight PD patients taking pramipexole and one taking ropinirole fell asleep while driving, causing accidents. Five experienced no warning before falling asleep. The attacks ceased when the drugs were stopped. Neurologists who prescribe these drugs and patients who take them should be aware of this possible side effect.


Movement Disorders | 2007

Movement Disorder Society-sponsored revision of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS): Process, format, and clinimetric testing plan.

Christopher G. Goetz; Stanley Fahn; Pablo Martinez-Martin; Werner Poewe; Cristina Sampaio; Glenn T. Stebbins; Matthew B. Stern; Barbara C. Tilley; Richard Dodel; Bruno Dubois; Robert G. Holloway; Joseph Jankovic; Jaime Kulisevsky; Anthony E. Lang; Andrew J. Lees; Sue Leurgans; Peter A. LeWitt; David L. Nyenhuis; C. Warren Olanow; Olivier Rascol; Anette Schrag; Jeanne A. Teresi; Jacobus J. van Hilten; Nancy R. LaPelle

This article presents the revision process, major innovations, and clinimetric testing program for the Movement Disorder Society (MDS)–sponsored revision of the Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS), known as the MDS‐UPDRS. The UPDRS is the most widely used scale for the clinical study of Parkinsons disease (PD). The MDS previously organized a critique of the UPDRS, which cited many strengths, but recommended revision of the scale to accommodate new advances and to resolve problematic areas. An MDS‐UPDRS committee prepared the revision using the recommendations of the published critique of the scale. Subcommittees developed new material that was reviewed by the entire committee. A 1‐day face‐to‐face committee meeting was organized to resolve areas of debate and to arrive at a working draft ready for clinimetric testing. The MDS‐UPDRS retains the UPDRS structure of four parts with a total summed score, but the parts have been modified to provide a section that integrates nonmotor elements of PD: I, Nonmotor Experiences of Daily Living; II, Motor Experiences of Daily Living; III, Motor Examination; and IV, Motor Complications. All items have five response options with uniform anchors of 0 = normal, 1 = slight, 2 = mild, 3 = moderate, and 4 = severe. Several questions in Part I and all of Part II are written as a patient/caregiver questionnaire, so that the total rater time should remain approximately 30 minutes. Detailed instructions for testing and data acquisition accompany the MDS‐UPDRS in order to increase uniform usage. Multiple language editions are planned. A three‐part clinimetric program will provide testing of reliability, validity, and responsiveness to interventions. Although the MDS‐UPDRS will not be published until it has successfully passed clinimetric testing, explanation of the process, key changes, and clinimetric programs allow clinicians and researchers to understand and participate in the revision process.

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Steven J. Frucht

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Cheryl Waters

Columbia University Medical Center

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Elan D. Louis

Columbia University Medical Center

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Paul Greene

Columbia University Medical Center

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Susan B. Bressman

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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