Huntington's disease historical perspective

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Huntington's disease Microchapters

Home

Patient Information

Overview

Historical Perspective

Classification

Pathophysiology

Causes

Differentiating Huntington's disease from other Diseases

Epidemiology and Demographics

Risk Factors

Screening

Natural History, Complications and Prognosis

Neurocognitive Disorder Due to Hungtington's Disease

Diagnosis

History and Symptoms

Physical Examination

Laboratory Findings

CT

MRI

Other Imaging Findings

Other Diagnostic Studies

Treatment

Medical Therapy

Primary Prevention

Secondary Prevention

Cost-Effectiveness of Therapy

Future or Investigational Therapies

Case Studies

Case #1

Huntington's disease historical perspective On the Web

Most recent articles

Most cited articles

Review articles

CME Programs

Powerpoint slides

Images

American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Huntington's disease historical perspective

All Images
X-rays
Echo & Ultrasound
CT Images
MRI

Ongoing Trials at Clinical Trials.gov

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse

NICE Guidance

FDA on Huntington's disease historical perspective

CDC on Huntington's disease historical perspective

Huntington's disease historical perspective in the news

Blogs on Huntington's disease historical perspective

Directions to Hospitals Treating Huntington's disease

Risk calculators and risk factors for Huntington's disease historical perspective

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Syed Ahsan Hussain, M.D.[2]

Overview

Historical Perspective

  • The historical perpective of Huntington`s disease is given below:[1][2][3][4][5]
    • Middle Ages. People with the condition were probably persecuted as being witches or as being possessed by spirits, and were shunned, exiled or worse.
    • 1860 One of the early medical descriptions of HD was made in 1860 by a Norwegian district physician, Johan Christian Lund. He noted that in Setesdalen, a remote and rather secluded area, there was a high prevalence of dementia associated with a pattern of jerking movement disorders that tended to run in families.
    • 1872 George Huntington was the third generation of a family medical practice in Long Island. With their combined experience of several generations of a family with the same symptoms, he realised their conditions were linked and set about describing it. A year after leaving medical school, in 1872, he presented his accurate definition of the disease to a medical society in Middleport, Ohio.
    • C1923 Smith Ely Jelliffe (1866-1945) and Frederick Tilney (1875-1938) began analyzing the history of HD sufferers in New England.
    • 1932 P. R. Vessie expanded Jelliffe and Tilney's work, tracing about a thousand people with HD back to two brothers and their families who left Bures in Essex for Suffolk bound for Boston in 1630.
    • 1979 The U.S-Venezuela Huntington's Disease Collaborative Research Project began an extensive study which gave the basis for the gene to be discovered. This was conducted in the small and isolated Venezuelan fishing villages of Barranquitas and Lagunetas. Families there have a high presence of the disease, which has proved invaluable in the research of the disease.
    • 1983 James Gusella, David Housman, P. Michael Conneally, Nancy Wexler, and their colleagues find the general location of the gene, using DNA marking methods for the first time - an important first step toward the Human Genome Project.
    • 1992 Anita Harding,et al. find that trinucleotide repeats affect disease severity.
    • 1993 The Huntington's Disease Collaborative Research Group isolates the precise gene at 4p16.3.
    • 1996 A transgenic mouse ([the R6 line]) was created that could be made to exhibit HD greatly advancing how much experimentation can be achieved.
    • 1997 Researchers discovered that mHtt aggregates (misfolds) to form nuclear inclusions.

References

  1. Achievements of Hereditary Disease Foundation
  2. HDA research news - medical research into treatment & prevention on hda.org.uk
  3. Bates G, Harper PS, Jones L (2002) Huntington's disease, 3rd Edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  4. The brief history of HD on stanford.edu
  5. PMID 1303283

Template:WH Template:WS