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Funded Studies

The Foundation supports research across basic, translational and clinical science to speed breakthroughs that can lead to the creation of new treatments and a better quality of life for people with Parkinson's disease.

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Previously funded studies appear chronologically, with the most recent appearing first.

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  • MJFF Research Grant, 2005
    Nebraska Parkinson's Disease Registry

    The American Parkinson Disease Association (APDA) and The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research (MJFF) are co-funding the Nebraska Parkinson's Disease Registry with a three-year...

  • LEAPS, 2005
    Michael J. Fox Foundation Validation Study

    The role of genetics in PD continues to be a major focus in the field and much of what we know about possible underlying mechanisms of PD cause and pathogenesis has come through studies of genes (e.g...

  • Clinical Discovery Awards, 2005
    Executive, ADL, and Cholinergic Functions in PD

    Parkinson's disease is a disorder that is most known for motor impairments of tremor, slowness in moving, and loss of balance. Patients with Parkinson's disease also suffer from non-motor symptoms...

  • Clinical Discovery Awards, 2005
    Ability to Slow Disease Progression and Safety and Tolerability of Green Tea Polyphenols in Early Parkinson’s Disease

    Objective/Rationale:
    Previous studies have shown that tea drinking is associated with a reduced of risk for Parkinson's disease (PD). Green tea polyphenols (GTPs), the major components of green tea...

  • Clinical Discovery Awards, 2005
    Dysfunction of the Blood-Brain Barrier: The Cause of Parkinson's Disease

    The causes of Parkinson's disease are still unclear. Genetic vulnerability and exposure to environmental neurotoxins are assumed to be contributors to nerve cell loss (neurodegeneration) in certain...

  • Clinical Discovery Awards, 2005
    Strength training patients with Parkinson’s Disease for Dysphagia

    Patients with Parkinson's disease have difficulty swallowing, and this difficulty typically worsens as the disease progresses. When foreign material enters into the airway it is called aspiration and...

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