Horm Behav. 2012 Jun 8. [Epub ahead of print]
Savica R, Grossardt BR, Bower JH, Ahlskog JE, Rocca WA.
Source
Division
of Epidemiology, Department of Health Sciences Research, College of
Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA; Department of Neurology,
College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Abstract
Although
several environmental and genetic risk or protective factors have been
associated with Parkinson's disease (PD), their interactions overall
and in men and women separately remain unknown. We used the medical
records-linkage system of the Rochester Epidemiology Project to
identify 196 subjects who developed PD in Olmsted County, MN, from 1976
through 1995. Each incident case was matched by age (±1year) and sex to
a general population control. We considered the following 12 risk or
protective factors: personal history of head trauma, pesticide use,
immunologic diseases, anemia, hysterectomy (in women only), cigarette
smoking, coffee consumption, and education; and family history of
parkinsonism, essential tremor, dementia, or psychiatric disorders. We
used recursive partitioning analyses to explore interactions overall
and in men and women separately and used logistic regression analyses
to test for interactions. In the overall group, we observed the
independent effects of anemia, lack of coffee consumption (never vs.
ever), and head trauma; however, the findings were different in men and
women. In men, we observed the independent effects of lack of coffee
consumption (never vs. ever), head trauma, and pesticide use, and a
suggestive synergistic interaction between immunologic diseases and
family history of dementia. By contrast, in women, anemia was the most
important factor and we observed a suggestive synergistic interaction
between anemia and higher education. Risk factors for PD and their
interactions may differ in men and women.
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