The Gardner Center for Parkinson's Disease

and Movement Disorders

234 Goodman Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45219 | (866) 941-UCNI (8264)

Press Release Archives

New DBS Device Shows Promising Results; Heralds Arrival of New Manufacturer, Increased Competition
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505


CINCINNATI – A multi-site study of a new deep brain stimulation device for people with Parkinson’s disease has found the device to provide benefits to patients, potentially paving the way for unprecedented competition in the area of neurostimulation technology.

The study, whose co-authors included George Mandybur, MD, above left, a Mayfield Clinic neurosurgeon and Associate Professor of Neurosurgery, and Fredy J. Revilla, MD, above right, a UC Health neurologist and Associate Professor of Neurology, was published January 11, 2012 in the online edition of Lancet Neurology. Drs. Mandybur and Revilla are members of the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Center for Parkinson’s Disease at the University of Cincinnati (UC) Neuroscience Institute, a specialty center within UC Health.

Principal investigator of the study was Michael Okun, MD, a neurologist and Co-director of the Center for Movement Disorders and Neurorestoration at the University of Florida College of Medicine.

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) devices stimulate the subthalamic nucleus deep within the brain. Deep brain stimulation surgery has been shown to reduce symptoms of Parkinson’s and to improve quality of life.

The Lancet Neurology study examined the new Libra and LibraXP devices, which are manufactured by St. Jude Medical and which provide a constant, fixed-dose current. Medtronic, Inc., the only manufacturer with a DBS device currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), recently added a controlled-current option to its longstanding voltage-controlled stimulator.

Participants in the randomized, controlled trial whose stimulators were turned on shortly after surgery experienced an increase of four hours of “on time” (with minimal symptoms), 3 months into the study. These benefits were significantly greater – 2.5 more hours of “on time” -- than those experienced by participants in the control group, whose stimulators were not turned on until the three-month mark.

Dr. Mandybur, who implanted the devices in 12 study participants at UC Health / University Hospital, said the constant-current device compares favorably with the voltage-controlled device currently in widespread use. “This is the first study to look at constant-current effectiveness in Parkinson’s disease,” Dr. Mandybur says. “The new device appeared to be every bit as effective as the voltage-controlled device, but we won’t know for sure until there is a head-to-head comparison in future clinical trials. The devices are not identical.”

“With further study,” Dr. Revilla says, “we may be able to establish clearly the differences and similarities of these two technologies.” 

The St. Jude Neuromodulation Division, which funded the study, has applied for and is awaiting approval from the FDA for the Libra and LibraXP neurostimulators, which are currently available Europe, Latin America and Australia.

The study results likely signal the imminent arrival of a competitor into a market that Medtronic alone has occupied. “It will stir competition and it will light fires under people to develop new technology,” Dr. Mandybur says. “The same thing happened in the area of spinal cord stimulators.”

Researchers theorize that constant-current stimulation might provide more accurate control of the spread of the electrical field than voltage-controlled stimulation. “But fundamental differences are unlikely,” writes Jens Volkmann, MD, of University Hospital of Würzburg, Germany, in an accompanying editorial in Lancet Neurology.

Parkinson’s disease, which afflicts more than 1million Americans, is a degenerative neurological disorder involving the death of dopamine-producing nerve cells deep within the brain. There is no cure for Parkinson’s at this time, and scientists do not yet know how to halt its progression. Recent studies have shown that neurostimulation may slow the progression of the disease.

Candidates for deep brain stimulation are those who respond well to dopamine but over time have developed intolerable side-effects (mainly dyskinesias) and short duration of benefit. “When a person with Parkinson's develops wide motor fluctuations, requiring frequent doses of medications, along with intolerable side effects, it is time for DBS surgery,” Dr. Revilla says. “But it is still a requirement that the patient experience some benefit from the medications, even if it is short-lived.”

Dr. Revilla praised the 15 institutions whose close collaboration resulted in a study “that we expect will allow us to have alternative options for programming deep brain stimulation in patients who don’t respond well to conventional medical treatments.”

The Gardner Center team proved its mettle as a bustling movement disorders center by enrolling 12 patients, the second highest number of any of the participating centers. (The highest enrollment was 13.)

* * *

Disclosures: George Mandybur, MD, has received honoraria from Medtronic, Inc. Fredy J. Revilla, MD, is a consultant for Lundbeck, Inc.

Parkinson's Support Network Delivers $60k Gift
Monday, October 17, 2011
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505


Photo by Dan Davenport / UC Academic Health Center Communications Services.

The Parkinson's Disease Support Network of Ohio, Kentucky & Indiana (PDSNOKI) has donated $60,000 in proceeds from the 20th annual Jerry Wuest-Pete Hershberger Dinner Gala & Golf Classic to the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders at the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute (UCNI).


The donation, presented in a special ceremony on the UC Academic Health Center campus on Oct. 10, brought PDSNOKI's total giving since 2004 to $327,600.


"This group has spent countless hours getting the word out and fundraising for Parkinson’s research," said Gina Weitzel, Senior Director of Development for UCNI. "These donations come in addition to the Support Network's commitment to funding various exercise classes for people with movement disorders in the tri-state region. We extend our most sincere thanks to Sandy and Jerry WuestJan and Pete Hershberger and the PDSNOKI Board for all they do for our Parkinson's community."

Researchers Enlist Symptom-Specific Exercise in Battle Against Parkinson's Disease
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

CINCINNATI—The Parkinson’s Disease Exercise Initiative, a new collaboration between the Gardner Center at the University of Cincinnati (UC) Neuroscience Institute and the Cincinnati YMCA, is taking aim at a progressive disease by meeting it head-on with progressive exercise.


The comprehensive program, located at the Central Parkway YMCA, includes an array of exercises designed to target specific motor symptoms caused by Parkinson’s disease, a progressive neurological disorder that results in a shortened, shuffling stride, freezing in place, decreased speed of movement and a loss of balance. The Exercise Initiative seeks to add another modality to the current standard of Parkinson’s care, which includes medication and deep brain stimulation surgery.


Learn more >>

NIH Grant Funds Study of Genetic Mutations Associated with PD
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Keith Herrell
(513) 558-4559

UC researchers have received a $431,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to investigate the interaction between two genetic mutations associated with the development of Parkinson’s disease.


Sheila Fleming, PhD, an assistant professor of psychology and neurology and member of the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders within the UC Neuroscience Institute, is the principal investigator of the project, which will seek to enhance understanding of how cell death in the brain occurs in Parkinson’s disease. Gary Shull, PhD, a professor of molecular genetics, biochemistry and microbiology, is the co-investigator.


Learn more >> 
 

Nuclear Medicine Test Could Pinpoint Parkinson's Disease Earlier
Monday, August 29, 2011
Amanda Harper
(513) 558-4657

 CINCINNATI—Enabling earlier diagnosis and treatment of Parkinson’s disease is the goal of a nuclear medicine test now being offered at UC Health University Hospital. The test uses a unique imaging agent — known as DaTscan, the first and only radiopharmaceutical approved by the Food and Drug Administration to help physicians evaluate patients with tremors and other warning signs of Parkinson’s disease. The test may also assist doctors in the diagnosis of patients with atypical presentations, and for whom diagnostic uncertainty exists.


Learn more >>

Free Sunflower Revolution Symposium to Feature Former NBA, Xavier Star Brian Grant
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

CINCINNATI--The 2011 Sunflower Revolution symposium, building on the motto “Move to Live & Live to Move,” will feature former NBA and Xavier University basketball star Brian Grant, who was diagnosed with early-onset Parkinson’s disease three years ago at age 36. He will discuss his experience with the disease and how exercise plays a crucial role in his management of Parkinson’s.


The Sunflower symposium, a free educational event for patients, family members, and caregivers, is hosted by the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute, the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders and UC Health.


The event will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 10, at The Oasis in Loveland, Ohio. Registration is available at www.sunflowerrev.org or by phone at (866) 941-UCNI (8264).


Mr. Grant, 6’9” power forward who starred for Xavier University and played 12 seasons in the NBA, is the founder of the Brian Grant Foundation, which seeks to be “an informational and inspirational resource for a community of people empowered to live unique and fulfilling lives with Parkinson’s disease.” The organization recently launched a new Web site, www.poweringforward.org, to support newly diagnosed patients and their caregivers.


“My Foundation wants to assure newly diagnosed Parkinson’s patients that they are not alone,” Mr. Grant says. “We’re here to help them and their caregivers live their lives to the fullest.”


Parkinson’s disease is a chronic, degenerative neurological disorder that affects one in 100 people over the age of 60, the average age of disease onset. An estimated 5 to 10 percent of patients are diagnosed before age 40, with a subset of those afflicted before age 30. While the estimated number of people living with the disease varies, recent research indicates that at least one million people in the United States, and six million worldwide, suffer from Parkinson’s disease.


The Sunflower symposium will present information about the latest research and treatments, as well as lifestyle interventions, exercise and dance. Program directors are Fredy J. Revilla, MD, Director of the Gardner Center, and Kim Seroogy, PhD, Director of the Selma Schottenstein Harris Laboratory for Research in Parkinson’s. George Mandybur, MD, a neurosurgeon with the Mayfield Clinic and Gardner Center, will speak about current surgical management of Parkinson’s disease.


The Gardner Center, a component of the UC Neuroscience Institute, is a regional referral center for patients in Greater Cincinnati and the surrounding four-state region.


The Sunflower Revolution was named and founded in 2004 by Kathleen Krumme, a Cincinnati cyclist and bicycle shop manager whose father suffered from Parkinson’s disease. The sunflower is not only a ubiquitous sight at the Tour de France, the world’s most famous cycling event, it is also a symbol of hope. In founding the Sunflower Revolution, Ms. Krumme envisioned a future revolution in the treatment of a neurological disease that currently has no cure.


The Sunflower Revolution bike ride, which is not being held in 2011, will return in 2012.


*  *  *


The Mayfield Clinic is recognized as one of the nation's leading physician organizations for clinical care, education, and research of the spine and brain. Supported by 21 neurosurgeons, six neurointensivists, an interventional radiologist, and a pain specialist, the Clinic treats 20,000 patients from 35 states and 13 countries in a typical year. Mayfield's physicians have pioneered surgical procedures and instrumentation that have revolutionized the medical art of neurosurgery for brain tumors and neurovascular diseases and disorders.


The Brian Grant Foundation, established in 2010, supports efforts to build awareness and education of Parkinson’s disease in order to increase earlier diagnosis, educate patients and their families, and provide a viable forum for people affected by Parkinson’s. Its mission is to be an informational and inspirational resource for a community of people to live unique and fulfilling lives with Parkinson’s disease. After playing professional basketball for 12 seasons in the NBA as a power forward, Brian Grant was diagnosed in November of 2008 at age 36 with young-onset Parkinson’s disease. Since then, he has become an advocate and an inspiration for those living with PD.

Sunflower Revolution VIII Bike Ride Is Postponed Until 2012
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

Cincinnati, OH – The Sunflower Revolution VIII Bike Ride fundraising event will be revamped, with an eye towards enhancing the 2012 event, the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute announced. “We’ve chosen to forego the 2011 offering in order to make substantial improvements to this charity event,” said Gina Weitzel, Senior Director of Development for the UC Neuroscience Insitute. “The enhancements should allow the event to grow and help even more people in the future.”


The Sunflower Revolution is a celebratory, three-day event whose mission is to raise funds for Parkinson’s research that can benefit patients regionally, nationally, and globally; to promote wellness within the Cincinnati area’s Parkinson’s disease community; and to heighten the public’s awareness of Parkinson’s disease, a progressive and devastating neurological disorder that afflicts 1.5 million Americans and has no known treatment or cure at this time.


A shared project of UC Neuroscience Institute, University Hospital, and the UC Foundation, the Sunflower Revolution has involved a series of events, including a free educational symposium and expo for patients, caregivers, and healthcare professionals, as well as a fund-raising bike ride and run/walk that has attracted cyclists from around the nation.


The 2011 symposium and expo will be held Sept. 10 at the Oasis in Loveland, Ohio.

The annual bike ride and festival weekend is held in historic Milford, Ohio, by the Gardner Center at the UC Neuroscience Institute, with support from UC Health.


Feedback from previous ride participants and the city of Milford will contribute to the enhancements built into the revamped program, due to be announced during the 2012 spring biking season. Fredy J. Revilla, MD, Medical Director for the Gardner Center, noted with enthusiasm, “Sunflower Weekend continues to connect the general public to the needs of the Parkinson’s patient. There is no better way to raise awareness of this debilitating disease than with a fun-filled program that emphasizes the freedom of movement.”

UC Designated Parkinson's Information and Referral Center
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Keith Herrell
(513) 558-4559

CINCINNATI—For patients newly diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and family members looking for information and support, there’s now an important resource based at the University of Cincinnati (UC).


UC, home of the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the UC Neuroscience Institute, has been designated the official Information and Referral Center (IRC) for Ohio, southern Michigan and portions of Indiana and Kentucky by the American Parkinson’s Disease Association (APDA), officials with UC and the APDA announced today.


The Information and Referral Center will be based at the Stetson Building, which houses UC’s Department of Neurology. The center was previously based at Kettering Memorial Hospital in Kettering, Ohio.


Through its network of Information and Referral Centers, the APDA responds to the needs of persons affected by Parkinson's disease and their caregivers through education, referral, support and public awareness programs. The Information and Referral Center serves as a regional hub which processes requests received by mail, phone or on-site visits.


“This is a major development for the Greater Cincinnati community and the surrounding region,” says Fredy J. Revilla, MD, Associate Professor of Neurology at UC and Director of the Gardner Center. “We will be the place to call for resources, education and medical care for Parkinson’s disease.”


Revilla will serve as medical director of the Information and Referral Center. Maureen Gartner, a registered nurse, will be the information and referral nurse.


“We are thrilled to partner with Dr. Revilla, Maureen and the University of Cincinnati,” says Becca Huffman, chapter coordinator for Tri-State Parkinson’s Wellness, an affiliate chapter of the APDA. “We believe that this partnership will enable the chapter and the Information and Referral Center to significantly expand patient services and programming to better meet the growing and unmet needs of the regional Parkinson’s community.


“It is our hope that through our combined efforts, people with Parkinson’s disease, their families and caregivers will have a one-stop shop that truly improves their quality of life.”


The Gardner Center includes a multidisciplinary team of highly skilled physicians, deeply experienced research scientists and a dedicated support staff. The team is committed to accurately diagnosing and treating patients who suffer from Parkinson's disease and other movement disorders.


The APDA is the nation’s largest grassroots organization serving the Parkinson’s community. It is a not-for-profit organization and receives no governmental or public funding. Each year it contributes more than $2.5 million for research and another $2 million for direct patient and caregiver support through individual and corporate donations.


The Tri-State Parkinson’s Wellness chapter is based in Cincinnati and serves patients of Ohio, Kentucky, southern and central Indiana and southern Michigan. For information, call (877) 489-1110. (Office hours are Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.) You can also visit the chapter on the Web at www.parkinsonswellness.org.


To contact the Gardner Center, call (866) 941-8264 or visit www.ucneuroscience.com.

Cincinnati Regional Chamber Names John Tew, MD, a Great Living Cincinnatian
Friday, December 10, 2010
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505


John M. Tew, Jr., MD, a neurosurgeon with the Mayfield Clinic and Clinical Director of the University of Cincinnati (UC) Neuroscience Institute, has been named a Great Living Cincinnatian by the Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber.

In becoming a Great Living Cincinnatian, Dr. Tew follows in the footsteps of Frank H. Mayfield, MD, the founder of the Mayfield Clinic who earned the honor in 1980.

Like Dr. Mayfield, Dr. Tew earned international renown as a gifted and pioneering neurosurgeon, a compassionate doctor beloved by his patients, and a leader dedicated to excellence, continuous improvement, and the health and well-being of his community. Both Dr. Mayfield and Dr. Tew led the University of Cincinnati Department of Neurosurgery; both served as president of the Ohio State Neurosurgical Society; and both were at the forefront of technological innovations in their field.

Dr. Tew served as Professor and Chairman of UC's Department of Neurosurgery for 20 years before co-founding and taking the helm of the UC Neuroscience Institute in 1998. He is a retired colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve.

He continues to maintain an active medical practice and, in the role of Professor of Neurosurgery, continues to play a vital role in the training of tomorrow's neurosurgeons.

Dr. Tew grew up on a farm in North Carolina, where he was a 4H club leader and, at age 14, was crowned Cotton King. He learned his first surgical skills from his grandfather on the family farm. Encouraged by his mother, who was unable to attend college, and his father, who was unable to finish high school, Dr. Tew dreamed of a world beyond the farm and enrolled in Campbell Junior College, seven miles from home. He was unprepared for pre-med courses, but an organic chemistry professor saw promise and gave him a job sweeping floors and assisting in a laboratory.

Dr. Tew transferred to Wake Forest University for his final two years. After graduation he entered Wake Forest's medical school, where he was named "best anatomist" in his freshman class. It was the first academic prize of his life and an acknowledgement of his dexterity with tissue and his ability to confront the insides of the human body.

He performed his neurosurgical residency at the Harvard University-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital and Boston Children's Hospital. In a life-changing development, he won the prestigious Van Wagenen Fellowship, which allowed him to train under Gazi Yasargil, MD, the founder of micro-neurosurgery, at the University of Zurich and Zurich Kantonspittal. There Dr. Tew learned to use the new operating microscope, which was making the treatment of deadly brain aneurysms predictably successful for the first time. Recruited by Dr. Mayfield, Dr. Tew joined the Mayfield Clinic and UC in 1969.

Dr. Tew further developed the science of microsurgery to treat disorders of the nervous system; he introduced non-invasive radiofrequency for the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia and was the first to apply lasers in neurosurgery; he led the team that brought radiosurgery to North America for the treatment of brain tumors and vascular malformations; and he was part of the team that brought endovascular techniques to the treatment of vascular formations. Revered in his field, he has been elected President of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons and President of the Academy of Neurological Surgeons.

Early in his career Dr. Tew dreamed of creating a renowned Neuroscience Institute for Cincinnati. Today, the 11-year-old UC Neuroscience Institute features 10 collaborative centers and programs, has achieved a rarefied benchmark with national recognition in 13 neuroscience specialties, ranks among the top neuroscience centers in North America, and treats thousands of patients from around the region each year.

Dr. Tew is a member of the board of directors of the Cincinnati Opera, Cincinnati Museum Center, University of Cincinnati Foundation, University Hospital Foundation, University Hospital, Wake Forest School of Medicine, and Mayfield Clinic. He is a member of the Board of Advisors of the UC Brain Tumor Center and Campbell University, a member of the Clever Crazes for Kids Advisory Board, and a member of the Literary Club of Cincinnati and the Commonwealth and Commercial Clubs of Cincinnati. He is a former member of the Xavier University Board of Trustees. He is a member of Bellarmine Parish at Xavier University and a Knight of the Order of Malta.

Dr. Tew has been a member of the United Way of Greater Cincinnati's Tocqueville Society since 2004 and was a member of the cabinet for the 2009 campaign. Concerned about the social, financial and neurological implications of the increasing prevalence of obesity, poor fitness, and chronic disease, he has become a passionate advocate for healthy living (view his lecture "Change Your Brain, Change Your Life").
He received the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice medal, an honor by Pope John Paul and presented by Archbishop Daniel E. Pilarczyk, in 1989. He has received the Health Care Heroes Lifetime Achievement Award from the Cincinnati Business Courier, the Boy Scouts of America Eagle Court of Honor from the Dan Beard Council, the Daniel Drake Medal from the University of Cincinnati, the Distinguished Service Citation from the National Conference of Christians and Jews, the Leadership Medallion from Xavier University, and a Distinguished Alumni Award from Wake Forest College of Medicine. He was an Honored Guest of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons, and he has earned honorary doctorates from the College of Mount Saint Joseph and Campbell University.

He and Susan, his wife of 44 years, have three children and nine grandchildren. Meanwhile, Dr. Tew and his sister continue the family's farming tradition in Linden N.C., where additional acres are being cultivated in beautiful long leaf pine as an active forestry program. In Cincinnati, Dr. Tew enjoys biking, strength training and yoga and spends innumerable hours teaching his grandchildren to enjoy athletics and the arts.

Sandy and Jerry Wuest Honored with Sunflower Victory Award
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

From left, Sandy and Jerry Wuest are congratulated by Davis Phinney. Photo by Martha Headworth.

CINCINNATI–Sandy and Jerry Wuest of Lawrenceburg, Ind., longtime advocates for people with Parkinson’s disease, were honored at the Sunflower Revolution educational symposium on Sept. 11 in Loveland, Ohio. They were presented with the 2010 Sunflower Victory Award by Davis Phinney, the Parkinson’s advocate and former Tour de France cyclist.

The Sunflower Revolution symposium is an annual educational program of the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute (UCNI).

The Wuests, in conjunction with the Parkinson's Disease Support Network of Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, have donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to UC over the years in support of Parkinson's research. Jerry Wuest has lived with Parkinson’s for 33 years.

“The Sunflower Victory Award acknowledges those who inspire, empower and give hope in our Parkinson's disease community,” said Alberto Espay, MD, Assistant Professor of Neurology and a Parkinson’s specialist at the Gardner Center. “Sandy and Jerry Wuest represent this spirit and the ‘Move to Live, Live to Move’ philosophy of the Sunflower Revolution. The Wuests are community leaders in the generation of awareness, support groups and fund raising for Parkinson's disease well-being and research. They achieve incremental victories for the Parkinson's community every day!”

“Jerry and I are very honored to receive the award,” Sandy Wuest said during the ceremony. “Our main goal in life is to help people with Parkinson’s disease and to raise money for Parkinson’s research at UC.”

Kim Seroogy, PhD, a Parkinson’s researcher at the Gardner Center and Director of the Selma Schottenstein Harris Laboratory for Research in Parkinson’s, described the Wuests as truly inspirational. “I admire them on so many different levels -- as friends, as benefactors, and particularly as role models of how to face adversity with courage, determination and humor.  Jerry and Sandy are simply the best of Cincinnati.”

The Sunflower Symposium is a cornerstone of the Sunflower Revolution, a three-day event involving UCNI, the UC and University Hospital Foundations, the Mayfield Clinic, the Historic Milford Association, and the Davis Phinney Foundation, based in Boulder, Colo.

*  *  *

The Mayfield Clinic is recognized as one of the nation's leading physician organizations for clinical care, education, and research of the spine and brain. Supported by 20 neurosurgeons, five neurointensivists, an interventional radiologist, and a pain specialist, the Clinic treats 20,000 patients from 35 states and 13 countries in a typical year. Mayfield's physicians have pioneered surgical procedures and instrumentation that have revolutionized the medical art of neurosurgery for brain tumors and neurovascular diseases and disorders.

UCNI Part of Trial that Studies New Way to Deliver Parkinson's Medication
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Keith Herrell
(513) 558-4559

 

CINCINNATI—Most medications for Parkinson’s disease are taken orally, at certain times of the day. But doctors at the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute are participating in a clinical trial that significantly changes the Parkinson’s drug-delivery model. Read more »

 

The Promise of Purines: Gardner Center Part of National, Michael J. Fox-Funded Research
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

Read about new research into purines, as explained by Harvard University's Michael Schwarzschild, MD, PhD, in a recent lecture presented at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.

 

 

Davis Phinney Foundation Launches 'Every Victory Counts' Program to Help People Live Well With Parkinson's
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Wendy Emanuel
(773) 255-9580

To view the news release, please visit http://bit.ly/9is2ws

Fredy Revilla, MD, and Alberto Espay, MD, movement disorders specialists with UCNI's Gardner Center, reviewed material for the Davis Phinney Foundation's new Every Victory Counts project.

UC Neuroscience Institute Reaches 10-year Benchmark with National Recognition in 13 Neuroscience Specialties
Friday, October 16, 2009
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

CINCINNATI—The University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute (UCNI) celebrated its 10th anniversary today by announcing its arrival at a national benchmark with accreditations, certifications, or national association memberships in 13 of 14 important neuroscience specialties.

The accreditations and memberships denote excellence in sub-specialty neurological care and research and are highly coveted by academic health centers throughout the United States.

The UC Neuroscience Institute, first envisioned by John M. Tew, M.D., began with an intention to create a national benchmark in neurological care while leading the advance in humanity’s understanding of the brain. It was established in 1998 by neuroscience specialists at UC Health -- University Hospital, the Mayfield Clinic, and the UC College of Medicine. Initial funding for the venture came from the Health Alliance.

During the 10-year span, the Institute has achieved the following distinctions – all of which are publicly available -- from objective, nationally recognized organizations:

  1. Primary Stroke Center; designated by the Joint Commission
  2. Level I Trauma Center; verified by the American College of Surgeons
  3. Level 4 Epilepsy Center; designated by the National Association of Epilepsy Centers
  4. Neurocritical Care Fellowship Training; designated by the United Council of Neurologic Subspecialties
  5. Morris K. Udall Center for Parkinson’s Disease Research; designated by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
  6. Certified Member of the National MS Consortium
  7. Membership in the Acoustic Neuroma Association
  8. Membership in the Pituitary Tumor Network
  9. Membership in the Trigeminal Neuralgia Association
  10. Member Clinic of the Muscular Dystrophy Association
  11. Charter Member of the National Network of Depression Centers
  12. Member of the Specialized Programs of Translational Research in Acute Stroke (SPOTRIAS)
  13. Member of the Neurological Emergencies Treatment Trials (NETT)

The UC Neuroscience Institute's Alzheimer's Center, its 14th specialty area, is under development.

By comparison, the Cleveland Clinic and Ohio State University have achieved similar distinctions in 4 of these 14 neuroscience specialties; the Mayo Clinic and University of Pittsburgh have achieved 8; Johns Hopkins University has achieved 10; Massachusetts General has achieved 9; and the Barrow Neurological Institute has achieved 5.

The UC Neuroscience Institute is thanking supporters who have played an important role in the Institute’s accomplishments this evening at the new CARE/Crawley Building on the UC Academic Health Center campus.

“In developing the Neuroscience Institute we wanted to create a sense of trust and confidence in our community that would allow people to know that they did not have to go to another place for neurological care,” says Dr. Tew, the Institute’s Clinical Director and a neurosurgeon with the Mayfield Clinic. “We wanted people to know that, whether you have a problem that is simple or complex, you can come to us from all walks of life and know with confidence that we’ll provide you with best care available anywhere in the world.”

The Institute grew with the recruitment of pre-eminent physicians, researchers, and nursing specialists. Today it includes more than 100 faculty members in multiple neuroscience specialties, including neurosurgery, neurology, otolaryngology – head and neck surgery, radiology, emergency medicine, ophthalmology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and psychiatry. The Institute treats thousands of patients each year, many of whom travel to Cincinnati from around the United States and the world. In fiscal year 2008, the Institute recorded 3,893 inpatient and 35,307 outpatient visits.

“University Hospital is proud to be the medical home for the UC Neuroscience Institute,” says Lee Ann Liska, University Hospital’s Executive Director and Senior Vice President. “We are the region’s primary site of tertiary care for the sickest patients and most complex cases. Our advanced technologies include intraoperative MRI, continuous, 24-hour EEG monitoring, mobile CT scanning, a Level 4 epilepsy monitoring unit, and Lycox monitoring of brain temperature and oxygenation.”

“Patients come to the UCNI because of our terrific team of highly specialized physicians, nurses, and other healthcare providers,” says Joseph P. Broderick, M.D., Research Director at the Institute and Chair of the Department of Neurology. “We have a great passion to provide the best clinical care for those patients. And we share that passion with our referring physicians. But the reason they refer to us is because we have highly specialized physicians. Not just a neurologist, but a neurologist highly trained in epilepsy; not just a neurosurgeon, but a neurosurgeon who does the most difficult spine cases in the world. They also refer to us because we collaborate. We have five weekly subspecialty conferences where the most challenging cases are discussed. And they refer to us because we’re not satisfied with the standard care. Our frustration that we can do better is what fuels our research efforts.”

The Institute comprises seven centers of excellence, which are focused on brain tumors, cerebrovascular disease, epilepsy, disorders of the senses (swallowing, voice, hearing, pain, taste and smell), multiple sclerosis, neurotrauma, and Parkinson’s disease. A center for Alzheimer’s disease is in development.

“The future of the College of Medicine will be based more and more on developing centers of excellence in which we can provide ‘added value’ care, research and education for patients in our region and beyond,” says David Stern, M.D., Dean of the College of Medicine. “The UC Neuroscience Institute has been at the forefront in developing highly differentiated programs that meet our patients’ needs and push the field of neuroscience forward. Whether it is our world-renowned stroke program, or the programs in Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis, or the more recently launched brain tumor program, each of these initiatives has great potential to contribute to reducing morbidity and mortality for patients with neurological disorders in our region.”

Other major accomplishments celebrated by the UC Neuroscience Institute include:

  • An international role in the development of tPA for the treatment of stroke and a continuing international role in the research and treatment of stroke.
  • Recruitment of leading physicians, researchers, and staff from around the United States.
  • Major gifts that support two of the institute’s seven centers of excellence: the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders and the Virgilee and Oliver Waddell Center for Multiple Sclerosis.
  • The creation of public symposia that educate patients and caregivers who confront Parkinson’s disease, brain tumors, and epilepsy.
  • Community leadership, including a Board of Advisors led by William Burleigh, retired Chairman of the E. W. Scripps Company, and community-supported fundraising events, including the Sunflower Revolution and Celebrating Research Innovations for an Epilepsy Cure, that have raised millions of dollars for individual programs.

 

UC Designated Udall Center for Parkinson's Research
Friday, October 16, 2009
Keith Herrell
513-558-4559

CINCINNATI—The University of Cincinnati has been designated a Morris K. Udall Center for Parkinson’s Disease Research by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).

The designation carries with it a grant of $6.2 million over five years, which will enhance research at the UC Neuroscience Institute’s James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders. UC researchers will also be working with researchers at Michigan State University’s College of Human Medicine in Grand Rapids.

Parkinson’s disease is a chronic, degenerative neurological order that affects one in 100 people over the age of 60, the average age of disease onset. Symptoms include tremor, or trembling in hands, arms, legs, jaw and face; rigidity, or stiffness of the limbs and trunk; bradykinesia, or slowness of movement; and postural instability, or impaired balance and coordination.

At present, there is no cure for Parkinson’s disease. A variety of medications, however, can provide relief from its symptoms.

The Morris K. Udall Centers of Excellence Program, named in honor of the former U.S. congressman from Utah who died in 1991 after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease, comprises 14 centers including UC’s. Its goal is to create and foster an environment that enhances research effectiveness in a multidisciplinary setting.

“This is certainly an acknowledgment of the excellence of the program here and the talents of our accumulated science investigators,” says Tim Collier, PhD, Director of the Udall Center at UC. “And because community support is a factor in center designation, it’s also an acknowledgment of the generosity of the citizens of Greater Cincinnati and the Tristate region.”

Funding from the Udall Center designation will support a number of research projects, including research by Collier into progenitor cells, or adult stem cells, and how they might promote repair and recovery in the degenerated brain.

Additional research is focusing on such areas as deep brain stimulation, the response of the brain to the standard medication for Parkinson’s disease (levodopa) and the relationship between Parkinson’s disease and depression.

In addition to UC, Udall Centers across the country are Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School; Columbia University; Harvard University/McLean Hospital; Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; Massachusetts General Hospital/Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville (Fla.); Northwestern University; University of California, Los Angeles; University of Kentucky; University of Miami; University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine; University of Virginia; and University of Washington. The Parkinson’s Disease Data and Organizing Center at the University of Rochester is an associated program.
 

Florence and Ron Koetters Are Distinguished Honorees at Sunflower Revolution Benefit
Monday, September 14, 2009
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

Ron Koetters, center, and his wife, Florence, receive the Every Victory Counts Award from John M. Tew, MD

CINCINNATI–Cincinnati business leader Ron Koetters and his wife, Florence, were honored at Sunflower Revolution VI festivities on Sept. 12 in Milford, Ohio. They were presented with the “Every Victory Counts Award” by John M. Tew, M.D., Clinical Director of the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute, for their leadership in the search for a cure for Parkinson’s disease.

The Sunflower Revolution supports research at the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the UC Neuroscience Institute. The event is a collaboration involving the Institute, the University Hospital Foundation, the Mayfield Clinic, the Historic Milford Association, and the Davis Phinney Foundation, based in Boulder, Colo.

Ron Koetters, who has enjoyed a long career constructing commercial, industrial, and institutional buildings, is Chairman and CEO of Monarch Construction Company. In 2007 Monarch was awarded the coveted Construction Excellence Award by the Air Combat Command of the US Air Force for work performed at the National Air and Space Center.

Ron Koetters is currently a trustee of the Cincinnati Museum Center and the Cincinnati Art Museum, and he and Florence are active volunteers and supporters of numerous charities. In 2008 Ron Koetters chaired the Sunflower Corporate Steering Committee, helping to raise more than $200,000.

The 2009 Sunflower event included a streetfest, an educational symposium for patients and caregivers that drew more than 700 participants, and bike rides that drew more than 900 cyclists. Barb and Dale Ankenman served as honorary chairs, while Dave Szkutak chaired the Corporate Steering Committee. The presenting sponsor was Cintas.

The Neuroscience Institute, a regional center of excellence at University Hospital and the University of Cincinnati, is dedicated to patient care, research, education, and the development of new treatments for stroke, brain and spinal tumors, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, trauma, Parkinson’s disease, and Alzheimer’s disease.

The Mayfield Clinic, which is affiliated with UC’s Department of Neurosurgery, includes 21 neurosurgeons and treats 20,000 patients from 35 states and a dozen countries in a typical year. Mayfield's neurosurgeons are active participants in important clinical trials and have pioneered surgical procedures and instrumentation that have revolutionized the medical art of neurosurgery for brain tumors and neurovascular diseases and disorders.

Sunflower Revolution VI Parkinson's Disease Symposium & Expo
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

Savannah Center
5533 Chappell Crossing Blvd.
West Chester, Ohio 45069
Click here for a map »

The Gardner Center at the UC Neuroscience Institute is pleased to offer a
half-day symposium focused on the challenges of Parkinson's disease. We
invite you to join our experts for a candid discussion of disease
management, therapeutic options, ground-breaking research, and the
potential for wellness and fitness to maximize quality of life.

View the program brochure »

For more information, contact (513) 569-5354 or events@UCNeuroscience.com

Movement Disorders Video Rounds
Monday, May 11, 2009
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

CINCINNATI--How does a physician approach a complex medical condition that may or may not be what it appears? That is the challenge offered by the bi-monthly Movement Disorders Video Rounds, a collegial, academic exercise at the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute. The video rounds, which feature video of patients with ambiguous or complex diagnoses, are the brainchild of Alberto Espay, M.D., Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurology.

“During video rounds we get together and discuss challenging cases,” Dr. Espay says. “These are patients who have come to us with atypical presentations, and we have had a difficult time diagnosing them. They are not the bread-and-butter presentations for any of the conditions.

“During the sessions we think about these cases from the ground up,” Dr. Espay continues. “We consider the patient, the videotape of the examination, pertinent data and the patient’s medical history. Then we all brainstorm. Of course, the person who is presenting the case has more information, because presumably a number of investigations have already been undertaken to try to determine the diagnosis. And of course, therapy has been delivered to the patient.”

The goal of video rounds, Dr. Espay says, “is to learn one or two things about movement disorders that you didn’t know coming into this session.”

Dr. Espay, who came to UC in 2005, started the video rounds in 2006 as an enjoyable way for physicians and residents to better educate themselves about the spectrum of movement disorders, which is vast and dotted with rarities and exceptions. The field of movement disorders is by its nature highly visual, with patients experiencing a range of symptoms or side-effects related to movement, including balance problems, freezing of gait, stiffness, loss of coordination, tremor, and involuntary movements. Gardner Center neurologists routinely acquire video of patients to preserve a benchmark prior to treatment or disease progression.

Because video rounds are held at the end of the day, and because attendance is voluntary, Dr. Espay offers a little wine and cheese to help the medicine go down. “It’s very informal,” Dr. Espay says. “No one has high brows about this.”

Last year Dr. Espay took the video rounds concept a step further, by inviting the University of Louisville and the Medical College of Georgia and turning it into the Tri-State Movement Disorders Competition, a CME-accredited educational session sponsored by an unrestricted educational grant from TEVA Pharmaceuticals.

During the competition, each team presents two or three cases, which the opposing schools then strive to think through and diagnose. “The test is to show that your thinking process is logical,” Dr. Espay says. “The answer is the diagnosis. It is a nurturing experience for all of us.”

The Gardner Center team triumphed in 2008 and 2009, and Dr. Espay proudly displays the official trophy in his office.

This year’s most difficult case is likely to be submitted for publication as a case study. It involved the diagnosis of a patient who developed a parkinsonian syndrome in her mid-teens. Dr. Espay, who first saw her in her late teens, disagreed with the initial diagnosis of dopa-responsive dystonia because of inconsistent features of her disease, including disease progression and prominent dyskinesias of the face. Although he had seen only one case like hers before, he correctly postulated that she was suffering from a rare condition known as neuronal intra-nuclear inclusion disease (NIID). A brain biopsy eventually affirmed Dr. Espay’s diagnosis. The patient, he says, “became only the sixth reported case of juvenile parkinsonism and only the second presenting in a way that, early on, was indistinguishable from dopa-responsive dystonia, but that eventually revealed other features that were not consistent with that condition.”

Physicians are not the only ones who benefit from seeing video of patients with movement disorders. “All of our patients are videotaped, and we review these videos with them,” Dr. Espay says. “If patients come back three years after their first assessment and wonder what they were like before, we can show them. It’s a great tool for us, and our patients really appreciate this resource.”

Cincinnati Marks April as Parkinson’s Awareness Month
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

CINCINNATI—Around the United States and the world, April is Parkinson’s Awareness Month. A proclamation signed by Mayor Mark Mallory has designated April as Parkinson’s Awareness Month in Cincinnati as well.

The proclamation recognizes that “efforts to ease the burden of Parkinson’s disease and find a cure are shared by an array of dedicated and like-minded institutions, organizations and groups,” including:

  • The Gardner Center for Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders at the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute at University Hospital;
    the expert healthcare providers at UC Physicians, Riverhills Healthcare, Mayfield Clinic, and other independent physician practices.
  • The Tri-State Parkinson's Wellness Chapter of the American Parkinson Disease Association.
  • The Parkinson’s Disease Support Network OKI and other community-based support groups consisting of patients, family members and caregivers.
  • The donors and volunteers of the annual Sunflower Revolution
  • And Cincinnati’s fundraising partner, the Davis Phinney Foundation, of Boulder, Colorado.

The Gardner Center is recognized as a national Davis Phinney Research Center and is actively involved in numerous laboratory and clinical studies that are improving the medical community’s understanding of Parkinson’s disease while leading to better treatments and a potential cure.

The proclamation recognizes the courage of patients, families and caregivers and commends the institutions, organizations and groups that are striving to overcome the disease and improve the quality of life of those living with it.

To learn more about what you can do to help people with Parkinson’s disease, contact Marc Young at Tri-State Parkinson’s Wellness at (513) 948-1100 or Michael Abney at the Gardner Center at (513) 558-4019, or visit http://ucgardnercenter.com/giving.

The UC Neuroscience Institute, a regional center of excellence at the UC College of Medicine and University Hospital, is dedicated to patient care, research, education and the development of new treatments for stroke, brain and spinal tumors, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spinal injury, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, disorders of the nerves and muscles, disorders of the senses (swallowing, voice, hearing, pain, taste and smell), and psychiatric conditions (bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and depression).

The Gardner Center for Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders is dedicated to improving care and to finding a cure for patients with Parkinson's disease. Since its inception, the Center has received generous contributions from both public and private donors to accelerate the pace of research findings and to advance patient care. To request an appointment, please call (513) 475-8730.

UC Researchers Seek Improved Targeting in Parkinson's Surgery
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

CINCINNATI–A $51,000 grant will enable University of Cincinnati (UC) researchers to determine whether sophisticated new imaging technologies can help them achieve pinpoint placement of deep-brain stimulation electrodes in patients with Parkinson’s disease. George Mandybur, MD, a neurosurgeon with the Mayfield Clinic and the UC Neuroscience Institute, is leading the pilot study, which will take place at University Hospital.

Mandybur and his team will use a 3-Tesla MRI scanner with high-resolution sequences, along with diffusion tensor imaging fiber tracking, in an attempt to quickly and accurately predict the size and position of the subthalamic nucleus, a small area deep within the brain. The size and location of the subthalamic nucleus can vary significantly from patient to patient.

Physicians have long known that by stimulating the subthalamic nucleus they can alleviate symptoms and improve the lives of some patients with Parkinson’s disease. Traditionally, surgeons have located the target by using standard medical atlases and multiple preoperative and intraoperative imaging techniques, including 1.5-Tesla MRI. “But current methods have drawbacks,” Mandybur says. “The borders of the subthalamic nucleus can be indistinct, to the extent that sometimes we cannot visualize the nucleus well.”

To be certain that the electrodes are in the right place, surgeons have relied on electrophysiological confirmation, stimulating the target while the patient is awake and often making multiple passes through brain tissue. When surgery is prolonged in an effort to define the target, the risk of complications can increase.

In their study, Mandybur and his co-investigators will use new imaging modalities, including the more powerful 3-Tesla MRI and diffusion tensor imaging, which provides a map of critical white-matter tracts in the brain. White-matter tracts are electrical connections that should not be surgically disrupted.  

The study will involve 20 patients at the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the UC Neuroscience Institute. Funding comes from the Sunflower Revolution, an annual fundraiser and bike ride held in Cincinnati. The Sunflower event is a collaboration among the UC Neuroscience Institute, the University Hospital Foundation and the Davis Phinney Foundation of Boulder, Colo.

Mandybur’s co-investigators are Gregory Toczyl, MD, a neurosurgeon and the 2008-2009 Davis Phinney-Donald Krumme Fellow in Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders; Jim Eliassen, PhD, and Jing-Huei Lee, PhD, of the UC Department of Psychiatry; Fredy J. Revilla, MD, of the UC Department of Neurology; and James Leach, MD, of the Department of Radiology at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.

The UC Neuroscience Institute, a regional center of excellence at UC and University Hospital, is dedicated to patient care, research, education, and the development of new treatments for stroke, brain and spinal tumors, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spinal injury, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, disorders of the nerves and muscles, disorders of the senses (swallowing, voice, hearing, pain, taste and smell) and psychiatric conditions (bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and depression).

The Mayfield Clinic is recognized as one of the nation's leading physician organizations for clinical care, education and research of the spine and brain. Supported by 20 neurosurgeons, three neurointensivists, an interventional radiologist and a pain specialist, the clinic treats 20,000 patients from 35 states and 13 countries in a typical year.

UC Researchers Seek Improved Targeting in Parkinson's Surgery
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

CINCINNATI–A $51,000 grant will enable University of Cincinnati (UC) researchers to determine whether sophisticated new imaging technologies can help them achieve pinpoint placement of deep-brain stimulation electrodes in patients with Parkinson’s disease. George Mandybur, MD, a neurosurgeon with the Mayfield Clinic and the UC Neuroscience Institute, is leading the pilot study, which will take place at University Hospital.

Mandybur and his team will use a 3-Tesla MRI scanner with high-resolution sequences, along with diffusion tensor imaging fiber tracking, in an attempt to quickly and accurately predict the size and position of the subthalamic nucleus, a small area deep within the brain. The size and location of the subthalamic nucleus can vary significantly from patient to patient.

Physicians have long known that by stimulating the subthalamic nucleus they can alleviate symptoms and improve the lives of some patients with Parkinson’s disease. Traditionally, surgeons have located the target by using standard medical atlases and multiple preoperative and intraoperative imaging techniques, including 1.5-Tesla MRI. “But current methods have drawbacks,” Mandybur says. “The borders of the subthalamic nucleus can be indistinct, to the extent that sometimes we cannot visualize the nucleus well.”

To be certain that the electrodes are in the right place, surgeons have relied on electrophysiological confirmation, stimulating the target while the patient is awake and often making multiple passes through brain tissue. When surgery is prolonged in an effort to define the target, the risk of complications can increase.

In their study, Mandybur and his co-investigators will use new imaging modalities, including the more powerful 3-Tesla MRI and diffusion tensor imaging, which provides a map of critical white-matter tracts in the brain. White-matter tracts are electrical connections that should not be surgically disrupted.  

The study will involve 20 patients at the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the UC Neuroscience Institute. Funding comes from the Sunflower Revolution, an annual fundraiser and bike ride held in Cincinnati. The Sunflower event is a collaboration among the UC Neuroscience Institute, the University Hospital Foundation and the Davis Phinney Foundation of Boulder, Colo.

Mandybur’s co-investigators are Gregory Toczyl, MD, a neurosurgeon and the 2008-2009 Davis Phinney-Donald Krumme Fellow in Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders; Jim Eliassen, PhD, and Jing-Huei Lee, PhD, of the UC Department of Psychiatry; Fredy J. Revilla, MD, of the UC Department of Neurology; and James Leach, MD, of the Department of Radiology at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.

The UC Neuroscience Institute, a regional center of excellence at UC and University Hospital, is dedicated to patient care, research, education, and the development of new treatments for stroke, brain and spinal tumors, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spinal injury, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, disorders of the nerves and muscles, disorders of the senses (swallowing, voice, hearing, pain, taste and smell) and psychiatric conditions (bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and depression).

The Mayfield Clinic is recognized as one of the nation's leading physician organizations for clinical care, education and research of the spine and brain. Supported by 20 neurosurgeons, three neurointensivists, an interventional radiologist and a pain specialist, the clinic treats 20,000 patients from 35 states and 13 countries in a typical year.

Sunflower Revolution VI Primed to Bloom
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

CONTACT:
Cindy Starr  (513) 558-3505
cstarr@mayfieldclinic.com

CINCINNATI--A fun-filled Sunflower Streetfest will highlight a new format for the region’s largest and most important fundraiser for Parkinson’s disease research and wellness, Sunflower Revolution organizers announced today.

The sixth-annual Sunflower Revolution will take place September 11, 12 and 13. The event is a collaboration involving the University Hospital Foundation, the UC Neuroscience Institute, the Mayfield Clinic, the Historic Milford Association, and the Davis Phinney Foundation, based in Boulder, Colo.

Sunflower Revolution VI will showcase:

  • the first Sunflower Streetfest, Sept. 11-12, in downtown Milford, Ohio;
  • a free educational symposium for patients, families and caregivers, Sept. 12, at the Savannah Center in West Chester, Ohio
  • and fundraising bike rides of 100K, 40K and 20K, Sept. 13, in Milford

Since 2004 the Sunflower Revolution and related events have raised $1.3 million for Parkinson’s disease research and wellness programs at the UC Neuroscience Institute at University Hospital.

Sunflower organizers also announced that Barb and Dale Ankenman (above) of Florence, Ky., will serve as the event’s honorary chairs. Dale Ankenman, who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease at age 46, is a cyclist and Parkinson’s advocate. Major sponsors include Reece-Campbell Construction, University Hospital, Kroger Company, the City of Milford, and Local 12.

Organizers will kick off the Sunflower season with a wine-tasting benefit from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 5, at the Miami Township Kroger. The wine-tasting benefit will feature award-winning wines from the 2009 International Wine Festival. Tickets are $40 each; call (513) 584-0695.

The cost of the Sept. 13 bike ride is $80 per cyclist. The 100k ride includes a Platinum Challenge for serious cyclists, while the 20k family ride includes a scavenger hunt along the Little Miami Bike Trail. New this year is the Peloton Club, which welcomes individual riders, rider teams, and donors who raise $1,000 or more, with special admission, VIP activities and custom jerseys.

For more information about the Sunflower Streetfest, educational Symposium, and bike rides, please visit www.sunflowerrev.org.

The Sunflower Revolution was founded in 2004 by Kathleen Krumme, a Cincinnati bicycle shop manager whose late father suffered from Parkinson’s disease, and cycling legend Davis Phinney, a former Tour de France stage-winner who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease at age 40. Phinney’s 18-year-old son, Taylor, is world cycling champion in the 4-kilometer individual pursuit.

Scientists at The Gardner Center for Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders recently received research grants totaling $153,000 from the annual Sunflower Revolution fundraiser. Professor Kim Seroogy, Ph.D., director of the Selma Schottenstein Harris Laboratory for Research in Parkinson’s, received $53,000 to study the effects of exercise therapy on stress-induced depression in an animal model. Professor Timothy Collier, Ph.D., received $50,000 to investigate the ability of antidepressants to protect dopamine neurons that are lost in the disease in an animal model. And associate professor Caryl Sortwell, Ph.D. received $50,000 to study the mechanism that may underlie some of the therapeutic benefits of deep brain stimulation in patients with Parkinson’s disease.

The Davis Phinney Foundation is dedicated to supporting research aimed at understanding, preventing, and treating Parkinson’s disease. The Foundation also seeks to find ways to improve the lives of individuals challenged by the disease.

The UC Neuroscience Institute, a regional center of excellence, is dedicated to patient care, research, education, and the development of new treatments for stroke, brain and spinal tumors, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spinal injury, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, disorders of the senses (swallowing, voice, hearing, pain, taste and smell), and psychiatric conditions (bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and depression).

Sunflower Revolution Funds Parkinson's Projects
Monday, September 8, 2008
Keith Herrell
(513) 558-4559

CINCINNATI—Scientists at the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute have received grants totaling $153,000 for research into Parkinson’s disease.
 
The funding was provided by the University Hospital Foundation, which co-hosts the annual Sunflower Revolution gala and bike ride with the Colorado-based Davis Phinney Foundation.

Kim Seroogy, PhD, a professor of neurology and director of the Selma Schottenstein Harris Laboratory for Research in Parkinson’s, received $53,000 to study the effects of exercise therapy on stress-induced depression in animal models of Parkinson’s disease.

Seroogy has previously shown that experimental depression exacerbates Parkinson’s symptoms in an animal model of the debilitating movement disorder. Depression is highly correlated with Parkinson’s disease, and exercise is known to produce antidepressant responses in individuals who have depression.

Seroogy’s team will attempt to determine the effect of repetitive exercise on coexisting Parkinson’s disease, stress and depression, with the hope that the research will lead to non-pharmocological therapies that will alleviate both mood and motor symptoms of Parkinson’s.

Tim Collier, PhD, a professor of neurology, received $50,000 to investigate the ability of antidepressants to protect dopamine neurons that are lost in the disease in an animal model of Parkinson’s. Although many studies have evaluated the safety and effectiveness of antidepressants in the Parkinson’s disease population, no one has directly investigated whether antidepressants impact the continuing progression of the disease.

About 40-50 percent of Parkinson’s patients are diagnosed with depression and take antidepressants daily. Therefore, it is important to determine whether antidepressants have any effects on the cells that are normally lost in Parkinson’s disease in addition to their ability to relieve the symptoms of depression.

Collier hopes that a better understanding of the impact antidepressants have on the degenerating dopamine system will help clinicians provide better treatment to patients with both depression and Parkinson’s disease.

Caryl Sortwell, PhD, associate professor of neurology, received $50,000 to study the mechanism that may underlie some of the therapeutic benefits of deep brain stimulation in patients with Parkinson’s disease. More than 20,000 patients had received deep brain stimulation—electrical stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus via implanted electrodes—as of 2006.

Sortwell and her co-investigators will use an existing rodent model of Parkinson’s to study the effects of acute and chronic deep brain stimulation on the neurotransmitter glutamate. In a previous study funded by the Davis Phinney Foundation and the University Hospital Foundation, Sortwell found that the act of stimulating neurons with electrodes boosted the amount of a nurturing, growth-promoting protein in the rats’ brains.

In her new study, Sortwell will incorporate state-of-the-art technology to detect low levels of glutamate in the substantia nigra, an area of the brain that receives inervation from the subthalamic nucleus and that contains dopamine neurons. Sortwell also will use the study to document the extent to which deep brain stimulation protects healthy dopamine neurons in the rodents’ brains.

The UC Neuroscience Institute, a regional center of excellence at UC and University Hospital, is dedicated to patient care, research, education, and the development of new treatments for stroke, brain and spinal tumors, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spinal injury, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, disorders of the nerves and muscles, disorders of the senses (swallowing, voice, hearing, pain, taste, and smell) and psychiatric conditions (bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and depression).

Surgical Technique Halts Cell Loss, Parkinson's Researchers Find
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Cindy Starr
(513) 558-3505

 

CINCINNATI–Deep brain stimulation, a surgical technique often viewed as a last resort for people with Parkinson’s disease, halts the progression of dopamine-cell loss in animal models, according to preliminary research by scientists at the Neuroscience Institute at the University of Cincinnati (UC) and University Hospital.

 

The scientists also discovered clues to why the technique works. The act of stimulating neurons with electrodes boosted the amount of an important protein in animals’ brains. The protein, a trophic factor known as BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor), is a nurturing, growth-promoting chemical.

 

Parkinson’s disease is a degenerative neurological disorder involving the death of dopamine-producing brain cells, or neurons.

 

“Demonstrating that deep brain stimulation halts the progression of dopamine-cell loss was basically a confirmation and extension of previous findings,” says Caryl Sortwell, PhD, associate professor of neurology at UC and the study’s lead investigator. “But finding the mechanism is a novel discovery that is even more critical. We now know not only that it works, we also are beginning to understand how it is working.”

 

Sortwell recently announced her team’s results at a professional conference held by the Cleveland Clinic and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

 

The research holds important implications for patients with Parkinson’s disease and could alter the current recommended timetable for surgical intervention.

 

In a typical treatment scenario, a patient has lost about 50 percent of his or her dopamine-producing neurons when symptoms first appear and a diagnosis is made. The typical patient then waits an average of 14 additional years before undergoing deep brain stimulation surgery. During that 14-year span, medications can offer symptomatic relief, but cell loss continues unabated. There is at present no cure for the disease.

 

Sortwell’s research was a response to an observation by physicians, including co-investigator George Mandybur, M.D., associate professor of neurosurgery, who have long been able to neutralize, in certain patients, some of the most debilitating symptoms of Parkinson’s disease, including tremor, stiffness, and slowness, by stimulating an area deep within the brain. 

 

“The surgery for Parkinson's disease has been available for over 10 years, and in that time we have noticed that in some patients the disease does not seem to progress as rapidly after surgery as it did before the surgery,” says Mandybur, a neurosurgeon with the Mayfield Clinic. As a result, he and others theorized that DBS not only alleviated symptoms, but also provided neuroprotection.

 

The UC study, Mandybur says, “helps us to understand why this is going on and what may be happening in the brain. It also gives some evidence to support performing the surgery earlier to slow the overall progression of Parkinson's disease.”

 

Sortwell’s study, which is continuing, is supported by a $120,000 grant from the Sunflower Revolution fundraiser, a partnership of the University Hospital Foundation and the Davis Phinney Foundation. The 2008 Sunflower Revolution, scheduled for Sept. 5-7, includes a gala, a free educational symposium for patients, families and caregivers, and bike rides of 20, 40, and 100 kilometers. (See www.sunflowerrev.org.)

 

During the DBS study, researchers implanted high-frequency stimulating electrodes in the subthalamic nucleus, an area of the brain associated with movement, in rats and then induced dopamine neuron loss. When the rats had experienced a 50 percent loss of dopamine neurons, the researchers initiated brain stimulation in half of the group. Measurements of surviving, functioning dopamine neurons in rats implanted with active stimulators were then compared to a control group implanted with inactive stimulators. While the control group’s loss of dopamine neurons increased to 75 percent after two weeks, the rats implanted with active stimulators experienced no further loss of cells during that time.

 

Subsequent tissue analysis revealed that in rats implanted with active stimulators the trophic factor BDNF had tripled in the striatum, a part of the brain that houses dopamine terminals and “receives” the dopamine neurotransmitters that are produced in the substantia nigra.

 

The study has brought together investigators from four academic disciplines: Sortwell, and Timothy Collier, PhD., and doctoral student Anne Spieles-Engemann, from UC’s department of neurology; Michael Behbehani, PhD, from the department of physiology; Jack Lipton, PhD, from the department of psychiatry; and Mandybur, from the department of neurosurgery. Michael Behbehani, PhD, professor of molecular and cellular physiology and anesthesia, established the method for implanting the electrodes in the rat’s tiny subthalamic nucleus.

 

The initial study platform was funded by UC’s Millennium Fund and subsequently by the Neuroscience Institute.

 

The Davis Phinney Foundation, named for the former Tour de France cyclist Davis Phinney and based in Boulder, Colo., is dedicated to supporting research aimed at understanding, preventing and treating Parkinson’s disease, which affects an estimated 1.5 million Americans. In 2006 the foundation named the Neuroscience Institute and Stanford University its first Davis Phinney Research Centers.

 

The Neuroscience Institute, a regional center of excellence at the University of Cincinnati and University Hospital, is dedicated to patient care, research, education and the development of new treatments for stroke, brain and spinal tumors, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spinal injury, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, disorders of the senses (swallowing, voice, hearing, pain, taste and smell) and psychiatric conditions (bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and depression).