Andrew J. Lees
University College London
917 Papers
5.7K Citations
Andrew J. Lees is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Parkinson's disease & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 140, co-authored 877 publications. Previous affiliations of Andrew J. Lees include Toronto Western Hospital & San Antonio River Authority.
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Papers
Influence of motor fluctuations duration, levodopa dose and duration of use in efficacy responses of Parkinson's disease patients: Post-hoc analysis from combined BIPARK-I and II
A. Santos,Andrew J. Lees,Joaquim Armando Ferreira,Olivier Rascol,Angelo Antonini,F. Ikedo,Diogo Magalhães,F. Rocha,Patrício Soares-da-Silva,N. Savic +9 more
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Efficacy of opicapone in Parkinson’s disease patients with ‘early’ motor fluctuations: Patient and clinical global impression of change from the BIPARK-I double-blind experience
F. Rocha,Fabrizio Stocchi,Andrew J. Lees,Joaquim Armando Ferreira,Werner Poewe,Olivier Rascol,A. Santos,Diogo Magalhães,Patrício Soares-da-Silva +8 more
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A Brazilian Football Player Still on the Pitch After 10 Years of Parkinson's Disease with Severe Freezing of Gait.
Thiago Cardoso Vale,José Luiz Pedroso,Orlando Graziani Povoas Barsottini,Andrew J. Lees,Andrew J. Lees +4 more
TL;DR: Gait freezing is a poorly understood phenomenon commonly observed in Parkinson's disease after 5to 10-year disease duration and recent brain activation studies have suggested that circuits involving the medial frontoparietal cortex, including the supplementary motor area, may be involved in its causation.
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Finding the grave of Sir William Richard Gowers
TL;DR: William Richard Gowers, considered by some to be the father of clinical neurology, died 4 May 1915 at 34 Ladbroke Square, in Notting Hill, West London, and was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium on the same day.
A stimulus-sensitive tic disorder characterized by echophenomena and coprolalia.
TL;DR: A 24-year-old female teacher presented with fever, headache, and vomiting then an akinetic-rigid syndrome with tremor developed several days later, and after a 2-month treatment with Madopar, the patient recovered completely without any sequelae.
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