Student Research · High School

Parkinson's Disease - Biomarkers, Current and GPR37

Mentored by Rajagopal Appavu · with Coach Jo

High School February 2022 Published in Journal of Student Research
Abstract

Parkinson’s disease, first diagnosed in 1817, is a progressive neurodegenerative disease widely known for its crippling motor symptoms, mainly tremors. The symptoms of Parkinson’s have a large range and differ from patient to patient, but nonetheless, they are crippling. Biomarkers have been researched for Parkinson’s for just as long, however, none have been truly reliable with high efficacy. For that reason, the search for biomarkers for Parkinson’s still continues, even today, and with the recent discovery of the GPR37 receiver within the cerebrospinal fluid, there is a possibility for the search to end. The unique properties of the receiver make it especially promising, warranting an increased amount of research with regards to its efficacy and reliability in order.

Cite this work

Citation

Mohapatra, S. (2022). Parkinson's Disease - Biomarkers, Current and GPR37. Gifted Gabber Research Archive. https://www.giftedgabber.com/paper/parkinson-disease-biomarkers-current-gpr37-mohapatra
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Parkinson's Disease - Biomarkers, Current and GPR37

About the author

Student researcher

S
Sarthak Mohapatra
Gifted Gabber Research Program

Completed through the 2022 Research Program at Gifted Gabber.

Original publication

Published in Journal of Student Research

Vol. 11 No. 1 (2022)

These links open archived snapshots — JSR's live site is currently unstable, so we route through the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine for reliable access to the original publication.

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