Ergun Uc, MD
Current Positions
- Professor of Neurology
- Director, Division of Movement Disorders, Neurology
- Specialty: Movement Disorders
Education
- MD, Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul, Turkey
- Resident in Neurology, Hacettepe University Hospital, Ankara, Turkey
- Internship in Medicine - Preliminary, Worcester City Hospital, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States
- Resident in Neurology, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa, United States
- Fellow in Movement Disorders, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa, United States
Graduate Program Affiliations
Center, Program and Institute Affiliations
Licenses & Certifications
- Board Certified, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Iowa
- Iowa Medical License, Iowa Board of Medicine, Iowa
- American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology
Research Concentration
Certain conditions and illnesses can drastically affect a person's driving capabilities. However, determining if an illness-related impairment makes someone an unsafe driver is a complicated decision. Ideally, that decision should be based on an ability to accurately predict how certain aspects of a disease contribute to risky driving.
Using a five-year, $1.6 million grant from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, a team of University of Iowa researchers will study how Parkinson's disease affects driver safety. The team, led by principal investigator Ergun Uc, M.D., (left) assistant professor of neurology in the UI Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, and co-principal investigator Matthew Rizzo, M.D., UI professor of neurology, engineering and public policy, aims to generate data that will help predict driver safety for individuals with this condition.
"Parkinson's disease affects people in many ways that can have an impact on their ability to drive," Uc said. "Most people know about the motor effects of the disease -- the tremors and difficulty walking -- but the disease affects lots of systems in the brain and the body. Mental functions -- including the ability to think and make decisions, memory and attention -- are affected, as are reaction times. Parkinson's disease also can affect psychology, causing depression and anxiety, and can alter sleep rhythms and vision."
Uc also noted that the medications designed to alleviate tremors and stiffness caused by the disease can actually worsen other functions by making the patient sleepy or decreasing attention span.
- Clinical trials in movement disorders
- Cognition, vision, quality of life in Parkinson’s disease
- Effects of physical exercise and cognitive training in Parkinson’s disease
- Parkinson's disease and exercise
- Prediction of driving safety and driver rehabilitation in Parkinson’s disease
- Parkinson's disease and driving safety
- Parkinson's disease and cognition, vision, and quality of life