MDS Podcast

International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society
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Apr 6, 2026 • 0sec

History of Movement Disoders: The influence of videography

Dr. Mattia Rosso joins Dr. Sara Schaefer to discuss the historical use of videography in movement disorder clinical practice and education, and how it influenced the evolution of the field. Read the article.
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Mar 30, 2026 • 0sec

Ataxia Series: Deconstructing late-onset idiopathic ataxia

Cases of late-onset cerebellar ataxias are a challenge for neurologists. In this episode Dr. Orlando Barsottini and Dr. José Luiz Pedroso discuss new advances on the investigation of late-onset cerebellar ataxias and identification of new genes.
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Mar 23, 2026 • 0sec

Rethinking Parkinson’s: The Somato-Cognitive Action Network (SCAN) hypothesis

Dr. Michele Matarazzo interviews Prof. Hesheng Liu about his recent Nature paper proposing a major conceptual shift: Parkinson’s disease as a somato-cognitive action network (SCAN) disorder. Together they discuss how a large multimodal dataset suggests a characteristic pattern of hyperconnectivity between SCAN cortical areas and subcortical nuclei in Parkinson’s disease, how this signature changes with effective therapies, and why personalized SCAN targeting may help refine non-invasive stimulation and circuit-guided interventions. The conversation explores implications for biomarkers, patient-specific targeting, and key unanswered questions that will shape the next generation of studies. Read the article.
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Mar 16, 2026 • 0sec

Ataxia Series: The ataxia exam - Phenomenology, classification, and a practical diagnostic roadmap

In this episode, Dr. Orlando Barsottini and Dr. Bart van de Warrenburg discuss the importance of precise neurological examination and classification of ataxias. The further discuss the rational etiological investigation for cases of ataxia and how to utilize different clinical assessments.
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Mar 9, 2026 • 0sec

Long-Term Follow-Up of Patients with Mass Social Media-Induced Illness Presenting with Functional Tic-like Behaviors

In this episode, Dr. Kirsten Müller-Vahl explores one of the first long-term follow-up studies of mass social media–induced functional tic-like behaviors (MSMI-FTLB). She discusses what their findings mean for clinical counseling, why early diagnosis appears to improve outcomes, how factors such as psychiatric comorbidity and secondary gain influence recovery. She also examines the surprising finding that reduced screen time did not significantly affect prognosis and what this suggests about social media as a trigger versus a maintaining factor. Read the article.
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Mar 2, 2026 • 0sec

Revisiting the 2015 MDS clinical diagnostic criteria for Parkinson's disease

Dr. Eduardo de Pablo-Fernández is joined by Dr. Susan Fox and Dr. Claudia Trenkwalder to discuss how to improve the current MDS clinical diagnostic criteria for Parkinson's disease. Read the article.
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Feb 23, 2026 • 0sec

Distinguishing functional from idiopathic dystonia: A novel approach

Functional dystonia can closely mimic idiopathic dystonia, and objective physiological markers to support the diagnosis are still limited. In this episode, Dr. Michele Matarazzo speaks with Prof. Roberto Eleopra about a pilot study using poly-EMG during a controlled propofol sedation protocol to help differentiate functional from idiopathic dystonia. They discuss the study’s rationale and design, the key findings, and what this approach could (and could not) add to real-world diagnostic workflows in selected complex cases. Journal CME is available until February 19, 2027 Read the article.
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Feb 16, 2026 • 0sec

What is it? Exercise-induced episodic gait disorder in a young boy

A young boy presents with exercise-induced episodic gait disturbance. Dr. Shekeeb Mohammad analyses the clinical phenomenology alongside laboratory and neuroimaging findings, systematically exploring the differential diagnosis before arriving at the final diagnosis.
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Feb 9, 2026 • 0sec

CSF proenkephalin as a biomarker for premotor Huntington's disease

Dr. Mena Farag joins Dr. Eduardo de Pablo-Fernández to discuss how proenkephalin and other biomarkers can help monitor the earliest stages of Huntington's disease decades before the onset of motor symptoms. Journal CME is available until February 11, 2027 Read the article.
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Feb 2, 2026 • 0sec

Shame in Parkinson's disease: An unseen burden

This episode explores shame as an often-overlooked but impactful non-motor symptom of Parkinson’s disease. Drawing on her team's recent research, Dr. Vanessa Fleury discusses the psychological and clinical determinants of shame, its strong link to quality of life, and why it deserves greater attention in routine care. The conversation highlights how recognizing and addressing shame may open new avenues for more holistic, patient-centered management. Read the article.

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