Mann D M, Yates P O
Mech Ageing Dev. 1983 Feb;21(2):193-203. doi: 10.1016/0047-6374(83)90074-x.
The numbers of nerve cells in the substantia nigra and locus caeruleus were counted, and the volume of their nucleolus and the amount of neuromelanin pigment they contain measured, in patients with Parkinson's disease and in age-matched and elderly individuals free from neurological illness. The number of pigmented nerve cells of both types is reduced by about 20% in the elderly when compared with age-matched controls. The melanin content of the remaining cells in the elderly is lessened (by 11% in substantia nigra and 21% in locus caeruleus) in such a way as to indicate that this age depletion in cell number results from a preferential loss of those nerve cells which contain the greatest amounts of melanin pigment. In Parkinson's disease there is a greater overall reduction in the amount of melanin within remaining cells (15% in substantia nigra, 25% in locus caeruleus) because of a more severe (80%) loss of the heavier pigmented cells. The basis for Parkinson's disease may therefore lie with an aggravation, possibly by secondary factors, of changes that occur within neurones of substantia nigra and locus caeruleus as part of their "normal" process of ageing.
对帕金森病患者以及年龄匹配的无神经系统疾病的老年人,计数黑质和蓝斑中的神经细胞数量,测量其核仁体积以及所含神经黑色素的量。与年龄匹配的对照组相比,老年人这两种类型的色素沉着神经细胞数量减少约20%。老年人剩余细胞中的黑色素含量减少(黑质减少11%,蓝斑减少21%),这表明细胞数量的这种年龄相关性减少是由于含有最多黑色素的神经细胞优先丢失所致。在帕金森病中,由于色素沉着较重的细胞丢失更为严重(80%),剩余细胞中的黑色素总量总体减少更为明显(黑质减少15%,蓝斑减少25%)。因此,帕金森病的发病基础可能在于,作为黑质和蓝斑神经元“正常”衰老过程的一部分而发生的变化,可能因继发因素而加剧。